Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

All Outputs (196)

Reading “House of Jacob” in Isaiah 48:1–11 in Light of Benjamin (2018)
Journal Article
Quine, C. (2018). Reading “House of Jacob” in Isaiah 48:1–11 in Light of Benjamin. Journal of Biblical Literature, 137(2), 339-357. https://doi.org/10.15699/jbl.1372.2018.292881

Isaiah 48:1-11 has been described as a difficult passage due to a perceived discord between its harsh tone and the message of comfort espoused elsewhere in Isaiah 40-55. This paper analyses this passage with regard to four groups of arguments, namely... Read More about Reading “House of Jacob” in Isaiah 48:1–11 in Light of Benjamin.

One or two cups? The text of Luke 22:17–20 again (2018)
Book Chapter
O'Loughlin, T. (2018). One or two cups? The text of Luke 22:17–20 again. In Liturgy and the living text of the New Testament: papers from the tenth Birmingham colloquium on the textual criticism of the New Testament (47-64). Piscataway, New Jersey, USA: Gorgias Press

Reading Micaiah’s heavenly vision (1 Kgs 22:19–23) and 1 Kings 22 as interpretive keys (2018)
Journal Article
Quine, C. (2018). Reading Micaiah’s heavenly vision (1 Kgs 22:19–23) and 1 Kings 22 as interpretive keys. Zeitschrift für die Alttestamentliche Wissenschaft, 130(2), https://doi.org/10.1515/zaw-2018-2006

This paper argues that Micaiah’s heavenly vision (1Kgs 22:19–23) and 1Kgs 22 as a whole function as interpretive keys which explain subsequent material to the reader. Micaiah’s heavenly vision explains that the following Aramean victory and the death... Read More about Reading Micaiah’s heavenly vision (1 Kgs 22:19–23) and 1 Kings 22 as interpretive keys.

Non-Competitive Agency and Luther's Experiential Argument Against Virtue: Non-Competitive Agency (2018)
Journal Article
Zahl, S. (2019). Non-Competitive Agency and Luther's Experiential Argument Against Virtue: Non-Competitive Agency. Modern Theology, 35(2), 199-222. https://doi.org/10.1111/moth.12410

This article examines a critique that has been levied against Martin Luther’s account of the passivity of the human agent in salvation, and his corresponding critique of Aristotelian and Scholastic accounts of virtue. According to Reinhard Hütter and... Read More about Non-Competitive Agency and Luther's Experiential Argument Against Virtue: Non-Competitive Agency.

Theology as Translation: Ibn Taymiyya's Fatwa permitting Theology and its Reception into his Averting the Conflict between Reason and Revealed Tradition (Dar? Ta??ru? al-?Aql wa l-Naql): Ibn Taymiyya's Fatwa permitting Theology (2018)
Journal Article
Hoover, J., & Mahajneh, M. A. G. (2018). Theology as Translation: Ibn Taymiyya's Fatwa permitting Theology and its Reception into his Averting the Conflict between Reason and Revealed Tradition (Dar? Ta??ru? al-?Aql wa l-Naql): Ibn Taymiyya's Fatwa permitting Theology. Muslim World, 108(1), 40-86. https://doi.org/10.1111/muwo.12229

The Ḥanbalī jurist Ibn Taymiyya (d. 728/1328) wrote his famous tome Darʾ Taʿāruḍ al-ʿAql waʾl-Naql (Averting the Conflict between Reason and Revealed Tradition) in Damascus sometime after 713/1313 to critique the “universal rule” (qānūn kullī) of the... Read More about Theology as Translation: Ibn Taymiyya's Fatwa permitting Theology and its Reception into his Averting the Conflict between Reason and Revealed Tradition (Dar? Ta??ru? al-?Aql wa l-Naql): Ibn Taymiyya's Fatwa permitting Theology.

Some hermeneutical assumptions latent within the gospel apparatus of Eusebius of Caesarea (2017)
Book Chapter
O'Loughlin, T. (2017). Some hermeneutical assumptions latent within the gospel apparatus of Eusebius of Caesarea. In M. Vinzent (Ed.), The Fourth Century; Cappadocian Writers : Papers presented at the Seventeenth International Conference on Patristic Studies held in Oxford 2015. Peeters

The presence of Eusebius’s gospel apparatus (often incorrectly referred to as ‘the Eusebian Canons’) in the margins of so many of gospel codices, both in Greek and over the whole range of versions, is sufficient evidence of the importance of that wor... Read More about Some hermeneutical assumptions latent within the gospel apparatus of Eusebius of Caesarea.

Revisiting ‘the nature of Protestantism’: justification by faith five hundred years on (2017)
Journal Article
Zahl, S. (2018). Revisiting ‘the nature of Protestantism’: justification by faith five hundred years on. New Blackfriars, 99(1080), https://doi.org/10.1111/nbfr.12347

This essay is about the state of the doctrine of justification by faith alone today in light of recent critiques, and about the ways in which the doctrine continues to shape Protestants who no longer formally subscribe to it. The argument is first an... Read More about Revisiting ‘the nature of Protestantism’: justification by faith five hundred years on.

Richard Wagner’s prose sketches for Jesus of Nazareth: historical and theological reflections on an uncompleted opera (2017)
Journal Article
Bell, R. H. (in press). Richard Wagner’s prose sketches for Jesus of Nazareth: historical and theological reflections on an uncompleted opera. Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus, 15(2-3), https://doi.org/10.1163/17455197-01502007

In May 1849 Wagner fled Dresden after the failure of the uprising of which he was a leader. His last creative work in Dresden was prose sketches for an opera Jesus of Nazareth, the result of his study of the Graeco-Roman world and the New Testament t... Read More about Richard Wagner’s prose sketches for Jesus of Nazareth: historical and theological reflections on an uncompleted opera.