The LNTS list is bringing you many exciting new titles over the coming weeks. Two books are coming out in February, starting with the enlightening ‘What Does the Scripture Say?’ Studies in the Function of Scripture in Early Judaism and Christianity. This two-volume work focuses on the function of Scripture in the New Testament Gospels and the letters of the apostle Paul. These essays explore new methods and overlooked traditions that shed light on how the founders of the Christian movement understood the older sacred tradition and sought new and creative ways to let it speak to their own times.
February will also see the publication of Christology, Hermeneutics, and Hebrew, a radical consideration of the theological impact of the Letter to the Hebrews. The history of the interpretation of Hebrews over the last two millennia is discussed and assessed. Beginning with the Patristic period, the book goes on to examine the responses of Thomas Aquinas, Martin Luther, John Calvin, as well as more recent figures such as Karl Barth. This radical academic project moves the study of Hebrews away from perennial arguments about its authorship and provenance and engages instead with it from a theological perspective; the issue of the Christological message in the Letter to the Hebrews is at the forefront and is considered both in terms of the interpreter's context and historical setting.
The beginning of March brings us another wonderful book. Jeffrey E. Brickle’s Aural Design and Coherence in the Prologue of First John is also set to appear on 01.03.12! It is the first sustained investigation of the oral patterning of 1 John 1:1–4, examining underlying design and organisation. Unlike literature in the modern western world, ancient documents were typically crafted for the ear rather than the eye. Brickle examines, describes, and depicts graphically the patterns of sound that emerge as the text is read aloud. He uses the approaches to Greek pronunciation and orality advocated in recent New Testament research to determine the impact on the Prologue’s soundscape, followed by an analysis employing the principles for beautiful and effective composition elucidated by the ancient teacher of rhetoric, Dionysius of Halicarnassus, in his treatise, On Literary Composition.
Don’t miss these fantastic and diverse new titles!
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