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The Hebrew Gospel and the development of the synoptic tradition / [manuscript] / by James R. Edwards.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Grand Rapids, Mich. : William B. Eerdmans Pub. Co., c2009.Description: xxxiv, 360 p. ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 9780802862341 (pbk. : alk. paper) :
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 226/.066 22
LOC classification:
  • BS2555.52 .E39 2009
Contents:
Introduction -- Genesis of a thesis -- A panorama of modern research on the Hebrew Gospel -- References to a "Hebrew Gospel" in early Christianity -- Papias -- Irenaeus -- Pantaenus -- Clement of Alexandria -- Hegesippus -- Hippolytus -- Origen -- Eusebius -- Ephrem the Syrian -- Didymus of Alexandria -- Epiphanius -- John Chrysostom -- Jerome -- Theodoret of Cyrrhus -- Marius Mercator -- Philip Sidetes -- Venerable Bede -- Scholia in codex sinaiticus -- Islamic hadith -- Quotations from the Hebrew Gospel in early Christianity -- Ignatius -- Origen -- Eusebius -- Epiphanius -- Jerome -- Taking stock of the Hebrew Gospel in early Christianity -- The Hebrew Gospel was widespread and widely known in early Christianity -- The Hebrew Gospel was endowed with unusual authority in early Christianity -- The Hebrew Gospel is not a compilation -- Of the synoptic gospels, but repeatedly and distinctly similar to Luke -- The Hebrew Gospel was most plausibly a source of the Gospel of Luke -- The relation of the Hebrew Gospel to other "Jewish Christian Gospels" -- Semitisms in the Gospel of Luke -- Luke's semitic vocabulary -- The nature of semitisms -- Semitisms in the Gospel of Luke -- Luke's prologue -- The Hebrew Gospel -- The task -- The Septuagint hypothesis -- The Aramaic hypothesis -- The use of Hebrew and Aramaic among Jews in first-century Palestine -- The probability of a Christian text like the Hebrew Gospel being written in Hebrew -- Luke's use of a Hebrew source -- The neglect of the Hebrew Gospel in Christian tradition -- Why is there no extant copy of Hebrew Matthew? -- Resistance to a Hebrew ancestor in the family -- Adieu to "Q" -- The challenge -- The genesis of "Q" -- Is there a precedent for "Q" in early Christianity? -- "Q" and Luke -- Adieu to "Q" -- The Hebrew Gospel and the Gospel of Matthew -- Matthean posteriority -- The authorship of canonical Matthew.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Barcode
Books Books Ethiopian Graduate School of Theology Library Available at Circulation Section 226.066 Edw 2009 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 21073

Includes bibliographical references (p. 336-341) and indexes.

Introduction -- Genesis of a thesis -- A panorama of modern research on the Hebrew Gospel -- References to a "Hebrew Gospel" in early Christianity -- Papias -- Irenaeus -- Pantaenus -- Clement of Alexandria -- Hegesippus -- Hippolytus -- Origen -- Eusebius -- Ephrem the Syrian -- Didymus of Alexandria -- Epiphanius -- John Chrysostom -- Jerome -- Theodoret of Cyrrhus -- Marius Mercator -- Philip Sidetes -- Venerable Bede -- Scholia in codex sinaiticus -- Islamic hadith -- Quotations from the Hebrew Gospel in early Christianity -- Ignatius -- Origen -- Eusebius -- Epiphanius -- Jerome -- Taking stock of the Hebrew Gospel in early Christianity -- The Hebrew Gospel was widespread and widely known in early Christianity -- The Hebrew Gospel was endowed with unusual authority in early Christianity -- The Hebrew Gospel is not a compilation -- Of the synoptic gospels, but repeatedly and distinctly similar to Luke -- The Hebrew Gospel was most plausibly a source of the Gospel of Luke -- The relation of the Hebrew Gospel to other "Jewish Christian Gospels" -- Semitisms in the Gospel of Luke -- Luke's semitic vocabulary -- The nature of semitisms -- Semitisms in the Gospel of Luke -- Luke's prologue -- The Hebrew Gospel -- The task -- The Septuagint hypothesis -- The Aramaic hypothesis -- The use of Hebrew and Aramaic among Jews in first-century Palestine -- The probability of a Christian text like the Hebrew Gospel being written in Hebrew -- Luke's use of a Hebrew source -- The neglect of the Hebrew Gospel in Christian tradition -- Why is there no extant copy of Hebrew Matthew? -- Resistance to a Hebrew ancestor in the family -- Adieu to "Q" -- The challenge -- The genesis of "Q" -- Is there a precedent for "Q" in early Christianity? -- "Q" and Luke -- Adieu to "Q" -- The Hebrew Gospel and the Gospel of Matthew -- Matthean posteriority -- The authorship of canonical Matthew.

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