The collected works of Edward Schillebeeckx: 6 Jesus : an experiment in Christology
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
London [u.a.]
Bloomsbury T&T Clark
2014
|
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXV, 671 S. |
ISBN: | 9780567014825 9780567429223 9780567317797 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | CONTENTS
Introduction
to Collected Works of Edward Schillebeeckx
xv
Introduction to the new edition Jesus: an experiment in Christology
xix
Foreword
xxv
WHY THIS BOOK WAS WRITTEN
1
I. The story of a crippled man
1
II. The situation in outline
2
III. A challenge
15
IV. Note on exegesis and theology
18
PART ONE: QUESTIONS OF METHOD, AND CRITERIA
Section One:
Jesus of Nazareth, norm and criterion of any interpretation of
Jesus
25
Chapter
1:
The believer s historical access to Jesus of Nazareth
27
§1
Structure of the offer of salvation and the Christian response
27
A. The human person, focus of manifold relationships
27
B. Revelation and
le croyable
disponible 31
C.
The constant
unitive
factor
35
D.
Disharmony between Jesus and the New Testament
39
§2
Jesus of Nazareth, acclaimed as the Christ, object of historico-critical
inquiry
44
A. Diverse images of Jesus and Jesus as Object of historical inquiry
45
B. Old and new: the critical approach
47
C. Modern historiography and Jesus of Nazareth
48
D. Theological significance of the historical quest for Jesus
51
Chapter
2:
Renewed need for a post-critical, narrative history
57
Section Two:
Criteria for a critical identification of the historical Jesus
61
§1
Background against which the historical criteria must be viewed:
matrix of the various criteria
61
Contents
§2
Why then search for criteria to direct the sifting process?
65
§3
Cataloguing of valid, positive criteria
68
A. Redaction history as a criterion: traditions incorporated willy-
nilly
70
B. Criterion of form criticism: the principle of dual irreducibility
71
C. Tradition history as a criterion: principle of the cross-section
74
D. Consistency of content as a criterion
75
E. Criterion of the rejection of Jesus message and praxis
76
§4
Frequently employed but invalid criteria
77
§5
Note on the
Q
hypothesis
79
Section Three:
Justification for the structure of this book in terms of the method,
hermeneutics and criteria discussed
83
PART TWO: THE GOSPEL OF JESUS CHRIST
By way of introduction: euaggelion
от
good news
87
Section One:
What Jesus proclaimed and how he lived
95
Chapter
1:
Jesus message of God s coming salvation
97
§1
Prophetic and apocalyptic penitential movements in Israel
98
§2
Message and praxis of John the Baptist
106
§3
Jesus first prophetic act: his baptism by John
117
§4
Underlying impulse of Jesus message and preaching
120
A. God s rule directed to humaneness: the kingdom of God
120
B. The praxis of the kingdom of God: Jesus parables
133
C. Eschatological revolution: Jesus beatitudes
149
Chapter
2:
Jesus Praxis
157
§1
Jesus caring and abiding presence among people experienced as
salvation from God
157
A. Beneficent reality (Mk.
7:37)
of God s lordship, made present in
Jesus mighty acts
157
(a) Hermeneutic horizon of Jesus miracles
158
(b) Jesus miraculous freedom to do good (Mk.
3:4) 160
(c) Jesus call to faith in and return to God. Faith and mighty
works
170
B. Jesus liberating and joyous dealing with people: table fellowship
with Jesus
175
(a) Existential impossibility of mourning in Jesus presence: the
Contents
non-fasting of his disciples
176
(b) Jesus liberating table fellowship with his circle and with
outcasts , tax collectors and sinners
181
(i) Eschatological messenger of God s openness towards
sinners
181
(ii) Jesus as host: a bounteous gift of God
188
C. Pre-Easter fellowship with Jesus of disciples who go after him
193
§2
Man s cause as God s cause: the God of Jesus
203
A. Jesus liberating mankind from a constricting view of God: Jesus
and the Law
203
(a) Difficulty of exegetical research
204
(b) Q
traditions and
Markan
traditions about Jesus and the Law
206
(c) The cleansing of the temple
215
(d) The law as love of God and love of one s neighbour
220
B. Jesus original Abba experience, source of his life s secret, message
and praxis
227
Conclusion and definition of the problem: reality or illusion?
239
Section Two:
Kingdom of God, rejection and death of Jesus
241
Chapter
1;
Rejection and death of Jesus
243
§1
The death of Jesus as interpreted in early Christianity
243
A. The eschatological prophet-martyr: contrast scheme
244
B. The divine plan of salvation: salvation history scheme
251
С
A redemptive, atoning death: soteriological scheme
260
§2
The death of Jesus, viewed in the context of his earthly life
263
A. Rejection of Jesus message and praxis
263
B. Jesus in the face of his approaching death
267
(a) Growing certainty of a violent death
267
(b) The unavoidable question of Jesus own interpretation
269
(c) Logion of unconditional readiness to serve
271
(d) The last supper: unshaken assurance of salvation in the face of
death
274
§3
Historical legal grounds for Jesus execution
279
Chapter
2:
Jesus last prophetic sign: his death left for others to interpret
285
Contents
Section
Three:
The Christian story after Jesus death: the kingdom of God takes on
the appearance of Jesus Christ
287
Chapter
1:
The disciples scandalized by the arrest and execution of Jesus
289
§1
Historicity and superimposed interpretation in the gospels
289
§2
The disciples scatter and reassemble: the problem entailed
297
Chapter
2:
Why do you seek the living among the dead? (Lk.
24:5) 299
Introduction: local and official traditions of early Christianity
299
§1
Traditions centred on the Jerusalem site of the holy sepulchre
303
A. Mk.
16:1-8:
apostolic resurrection kerygma in the context of the
holy sepulchre
303
B. Mt.
28:1-10:
the
Markan
account transposed to a polemical context
307
C. Lk.
24:1-12:
the
Markan
narrative in the context of the (Judaeo-)
Greek rapture model
309
D. Rekigious experience and eschatological religious terminology
313
§2
The official apostolic tradition: We believe that God raised him
from the dead
(1
Thess.
1:10) 315
A. Jesus made himself seen
(1
Cor.
15:3-8) 315
(a) A unifying formula
315
(b) Manifestation, preaching and act of faith
320
B. Jesus showed himself to Peter and the Eleven
321
С
On the road Paul saw the Lord (Acts
9:27):
the Damascus
narrative (Acts
9:22,26) 329
(a) Acts
9:
the conversion vision
335
(b) Acts
22 337
(c) Acts
26 340
Chapter
3:
The Easter experience: being converted, at Jesus initiative, to Jesus as the
Christ
-
salvation found conclusively in Jesus
347
§1
An account of some converts. A Jewish conversion model?
347
§2
Jesus disciples reassembled at the historical initiative of Peter
352
§3
The experience of grace as forgiveness
357
§4
Critical question: ambiguity of the term Easter experience
359
Contents
PART THREE: CHRISTIAN INTERPRETATION OF THE CRUCIFIED-
AND-RISEN ONE
Section One:
The gospels: general hermeneutics of the risen Jesus
367
Chapter
1:
Early Christian movement centred on Jesus: different echoes of the one
Jesus of Nazareth
369
§1
Taking stock of early Christian credal trends
369
§2
Early Christian creeds and their historical foundation in Jesus
370
A. Maranatha or parousia Christology:
Jesus, bringer
of the
approaching salvation, Lord of the future and judge of the world
370
(a) Basic trend of this creed
371
(b) The creed in the tradition of the
Q
community
375
(c) The Lord of the future in Mark s Christology
382
B. Theios
anèr
Christology
(?):
Jesus the divine miracle worker.
Christology of the Solomonic son of David
388
C. Wisdom Christologies: Jesus, the messenger and teacher of
wisdom; Jesus, pre-existent, incarnate, humbled yet exalted
Wisdom
393
D. Easter Christologies: Jesus, the crucified-and-risen one
396
Conclusion
400
Chapter
2:
First identification of the person: link between the earthly Jesus and the
earliest Christian creeds
403
§1
Existing Jewish models of end-time saviour figures
404
A. The end-time prophet, filled with God s Spirit , who brings the
good news of salvation to the oppressed: God s reign has begun
404
B. The end-time messianic son of David
413
(a) National, dynastic Davidic messianism
414
(b) Prophetic sapiential Davidic messianism
419
C. The son of man
422
§2
The Christian first option among existing Jewish models of end-
time saviour figures
434
A. Early Christianity: a Jewish interpretation of Jesus
434
B. Jesus, presumed to be the end-time prophet
437
C. Jesus, the end-time messenger from God, source of the earliest
credal strands and main source of the earliest Christian use of the
titles Christ, the Lord, the Son
441
D. Christian prophetic/ sapiential interpretation of Jesus as the
messianic son of David and rejection of dynastic/Davidic
Contents
messianism
459
Conclusion
473
Section Two:
Direct hermeneutics of the resurrection in the New Testament
475
Chapter
1:
Raised from the dead
477
§1
Late Jewish ideas about life after death
477
§2
It was God who raised him from the dead
482
§3
The third day he rose again according to the Scriptures : Jesus
resurrection as a conclusive eschatological event
485
Conclusion
490
Chapter
2:
Resurrection, exaltation, sending of the Spirit. The parousia
493
Conclusion
503
Section Three:
From a theology of Jesus to a Christology
505
Chapter
1:
Theology raised to the second power
507
Chapter
2:
Growing reflection in the New Testament traditions
513
Section Four:
Post-New Testament reflection in the early church: christological
dogma
521
Conclusion of Part Three and definition of the problem
532
PART FOUR: WHO DO WE SAY THAT HE IS
Section One:
The present christological crisis and its presuppositions
537
Chapter
1:
Conjunctural hermeneutic horizon of ideas and
а
-synchronous rhythm
in the complex transformation of a culture
539
Chapter
2:
The break with tradition since the Enlightenment
545
§1
Lessing s view against the background of the Enlightenment
545
§2
Contemporary christological tendencies in the wake of the En¬
lightenment
547
§3
Acknowledged and tacit assumptions
549
§4
Universality via historically particular mediation
552
Contents
Section
Two:
A universal hermeneutic horizon not amenable to theorizing
557
Chapter
1:
Unique universality of a historically particular human being
559
§1
The concept of human transcendence
559
§2
Unique universality: universal appeal of what is worthy of man
565
A. Definition of the problem
565
B. The
humánum
we seek
568
C. The human and the religious
569
Conclusion
573
Chapter
2:
The history of human suffering in search of meaning and liberation
575
§1
The problem of universal history
575
§2
Impossibility of theorizing ultimate meaning and of a universal
hermeneutic horizon
579
Section Three:
Jesus, parable of God and paradigm of humanity
587
Chapter
1:
God s saving action in history
589
§1
Historical discourse and discourse in religious language
589
§2
Revelation or God s salvation-historical acts as experienced and
articulated in religious language
591
A. God s creative activity in our world: human person and being
of God
591
Б.
God s saving activity in history
595
C. God s definitive saving acts in history
596
Chapter
2:
The christological problem
599
§1
Definitive salvation-in-Jesus imparted by God
599
A. God s message in Jesus
599
B. Salvation in Jesus or in the risen crucified one?
602
С
Intrinsic significance of Jesus resurrection for salvation
605
§2
The necessity, difficulty and limits of a theoretical christological
identification of the person
610
§3
In search of the basis of Jesus Abba experience: soul of his message,
life and death, and disclosure of the mystery of his life
612
Chapter
3:
Theoretical Christology, story and praxis of the kingdom of God
629
Epilogue: postscript to the story of the crippled man
632
Contents
Ыпка
information
A. Explanation of some technical and unfamiliar terms
635
B. Abbreviations
654
С
Pseudepigrapha (or non-canonical intertestamentary literature)
655
D.
Sigla
employed (periodicals, dictionaries, series]
E. Bibliographical index of subjects
F. Index of authors
|
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spelling | Schillebeeckx, Edward 1914-2009 Verfasser (DE-588)118607618 aut The collected works of Edward Schillebeeckx 6 Jesus : an experiment in Christology [Series ed.: Ted Mark Schoof ...] London [u.a.] Bloomsbury T&T Clark 2014 XXV, 671 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Schoof, Ted M. 1933- Sonstige (DE-588)119262924 oth (DE-604)BV040488535 6 Digitalisierung UB Augsburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=025335617&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Schillebeeckx, Edward 1914-2009 The collected works of Edward Schillebeeckx |
title | The collected works of Edward Schillebeeckx |
title_auth | The collected works of Edward Schillebeeckx |
title_exact_search | The collected works of Edward Schillebeeckx |
title_full | The collected works of Edward Schillebeeckx 6 Jesus : an experiment in Christology [Series ed.: Ted Mark Schoof ...] |
title_fullStr | The collected works of Edward Schillebeeckx 6 Jesus : an experiment in Christology [Series ed.: Ted Mark Schoof ...] |
title_full_unstemmed | The collected works of Edward Schillebeeckx 6 Jesus : an experiment in Christology [Series ed.: Ted Mark Schoof ...] |
title_short | The collected works of Edward Schillebeeckx |
title_sort | the collected works of edward schillebeeckx jesus an experiment in christology |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=025335617&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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