Acts: an exegetical commentary 1 Introduction and 1:1 - 2:47
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Grand Rapids, Mich.
Baker Academic
2012
|
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke |
Beschreibung: | XLII, 1038 S. CD-ROM (12 cm) |
ISBN: | 9780801048364 |
Internformat
MARC
LEADER | 00000nam a2200000 cc4500 | ||
---|---|---|---|
001 | BV040628163 | ||
003 | DE-604 | ||
005 | 20180123 | ||
007 | t | ||
008 | 121212s2012 |||| 00||| eng d | ||
020 | |a 9780801048364 |c hbk. |9 978-0-8010-4836-4 | ||
035 | |a (OCoLC)844024128 | ||
035 | |a (DE-599)BVBBV040628163 | ||
040 | |a DE-604 |b ger |e rakwb | ||
041 | 0 | |a eng | |
049 | |a DE-12 |a DE-11 |a DE-19 |a DE-29 |a DE-20 | ||
100 | 1 | |a Keener, Craig S. |d 1960- |e Verfasser |0 (DE-588)120546221 |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Acts |b an exegetical commentary |n 1 |p Introduction and 1:1 - 2:47 |c Craig S. Keener |
264 | 1 | |a Grand Rapids, Mich. |b Baker Academic |c 2012 | |
300 | |a XLII, 1038 S. |e CD-ROM (12 cm) | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
500 | |a Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke | ||
773 | 0 | 8 | |w (DE-604)BV040628162 |g 1 |
856 | 4 | 2 | |m SWB Datenaustausch |q application/pdf |u http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=025455493&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |3 Inhaltsverzeichnis |
999 | |a oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-025455493 |
Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804149737864036352 |
---|---|
adam_text | CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS XV
ABBREVIATIONS XVII
INTRODUCTION
PROLEGOMENON: INITIAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR
READING
THIS
COMMENTARY 3
1.
THE
FOCUS
OF THIS COMMENTARY
2. ACADEMIC AND SOCIAL-HISTORICAL EMPHASIS
3.
LIMITATIONS
OF THIS WORK
A. A BROAD
SWEEP
B.
TEXT CRITICISM
C. SOCIAL
HISTORY
AND SOCIAL
SCIENCE
D.
MODERN SECONDARY LITERATURE
E. EARLY RECEPTION HISTORY
4. THE LEGITIMACY OF SOCIAL-HISTORICAL
INQUIRY
A. THE CONNECTION BETWEEN
HISTORICAL
AND
LITERARY
QUESTIONS
B.
ANCIENT APPROACHES
C. THE VALUE OF THE ANCIENT CONTEXTS
D.
OTHER
PURPOSES
FOR
HISTORICAL
INQUIRY
E. THIS COMMENTARY S SOCIORHETORICAL APPROACH
5. QUESTIONS OF
HISTORICAL
RELIABILITY
A. THE VALUE OF
THESE
QUESTIONS
B. HISTORICAL
PROBABILITIES
C. COMMON GROUND FOR
HISTORIOGRAPHY
6. THE QUESTION OF
SOURCES
A.
EARLY
JEWISH
SOURCES
B.
GRECO-ROMAN
SOURCES
AND ARCHAEOLOGY
C. MODERN
SOURCES
7. THIS COMMENTARY S GENRE
A. FRESH
RESEARCH
B.
UTILITY
FOR CHRISTIAN BELIEVERS
C. FURTHER
RESEARCH
8. NOMENCLATURE
A. RELIGIOUS LABELS
B.
GEOGRAPHIC LABELS
CONCLUSION
1. WRITING AND PUBLISHING ACTS 43
1.
WRITING
LARGE
NARRATIVE
WORKS
A. LENGTH
B.
DRAFTING
THE WORK
2. PUBLISHING ACTS
A.
RELEASED
IN
STAGES
B.
PLINY S EXAMPLE
CONCLUSION
2. PROPOSED GENRES FOR ACTS 51
1.
THE IMPORTANCE OF GENRE
2. TRAVEL
NARRATIVE
3. BIOGRAPHY
A. NATURE OF
ANCIENT
BIOGRAPHY
B.
PROBLEMS
WITH
BIOGRAPHY AS THE PRIMARY
GENRE FOR ACTS
C. THE
SAME
GENRE FOR BOTH VOLUMES?
4. NOVEL
A. LITERARY COMPARISONS
B.
LIMITATIONS OF SUCH COMPARISONS
C. SIMILAR LITERARY
FEATURES
IN HISTORIES
D.
PERSPECTIVES
AND
BIASES
IN
HISTORIOGRAPHY
E.
HISTORIOGRAPHY
INFERENCE, AND MISTAKES?
F.
MORE
SERIOUS
FLAWS IN THE COMPARISON OF
ACTS TO NOVELS
G.
VALUE AND
WEAKNESSES
OF THIS APPROACH
H.
CLOSING COMMENTS ON NOVELS
5. EPICS
6. ACTS
CONCLUSION
3. ACTS AS A WORK OF ANCIENT
HISTORIOGRAPHY 90
1.
THE
HISTORICAL-MONOGRAPH
THESIS
A. THE VALUE OF THIS PROPOSAL
B.
BOUNDARIES BETWEEN NOVEL AND HISTORY?
VII
CONTENTS
C. MODERN
VERSUS
ANCIENT HISTORIOGRAPHY
D. ANCIENT HISTORY AS
NONHISTORY?
2. WHAT
KIND
OF HISTORY?
A.
TYPES
OF
HISTORY
B.
OVERLAP
WITH
BIOGRAPHIC APPROACHES
C. ACTS TYPE OF
HISTORY
CONCLUSION
4. THE
CHARACTER
OF ANCIENT
HISTORIOGRAPHY
116
1.
CONCERNS
FOR HISTORICAL INFORMATION
A. HISTORIANS CONCERN FOR ACCURACY?
B.
HISTORIANS AND CRITICAL THINKING
C. POLYBIUS S
HIGH
IDEAL STANDARD
D.
EARLIER
VERSUS
LATER
SOURCES
2.
CONCERNS
FOR RHETORICAL PRESENTATION
A. HISTORIANS AND RHETORIC
B.
LUKE S HISTORY AND RHETORIC
C. EXPANDING AND
ABRIDGING
ACCOUNTS
CONCLUSION
5. HISTORICAL
PERSPECTIVES,
TENDENZ,
AND
PURPOSE
148
1.
HISTORY AND AGENDAS
A. POLITICAL AND NATIONAL AGENDAS
B.
MORAL AGENDAS IN OTHER
GENRES
C. HISTORIANS MORAL AGENDAS
D.
THE VALUE OF
MORAL
EXAMPLES
E. THE
ROLE
OF
PRAISE
AND
BLAME
F. HISTORIANS THEOLOGY
2. IS LUKE S
TENDENZ
COMPATIBLE
WITH
TRUE
HISTORY?
3. APOLOGETIC HISTORIOGRAPHY
CONCLUSION
6. APPROACHING ACTS AS A HISTORICAL
SOURCE
166
1.
EVALUATING
DEGREES
OF
HISTORICAL
RELIABILITY
2. LUKE S USE OF
SOURCES
A. OTHER HISTORIANS USE OF
SOURCES
B.
LUKE S PROLOGUE IN THE
QUEST
FOR
SOURCES
C. LUKE S USE OF
SOURCES
D.
SOURCES
IN ACTS
E. INVESTIGATION AND THOROUGH KNOWLEDGE (LUKE
1:3)
F. COMPARISON
WITH
JOSEPHUS
G. CHRONOLOGY?
H
OMISSIONS
3. LUKE-ACTS AS A HISTORICAL
SOURCE
A. PLAUSIBILITY STRUCTURES
B.
SCHOLARLY VIEWS
C. EVALUATING LUKE S
USEFULNESS
AS AN ANCIENT
HISTORICAL
WRITER
4.
EXAMPLES
WHERE ACTS ACCOUNTS ARE HISTORICALLY
PROBABLE
A. ACCURATE LOCAL COLOR
B.
THE
JERUSALEM
CHURCH
C. THE PAULINE MISSION
D.
PAUL IN ROMAN CUSTODY
E.
PERSPECTIVES
CONCLUSIONS REGARDING LUKE S HISTORIOGRAPHY
7. ACTS AND PAUL 221
1.
LUKE S
PERSPECTIVE
ON PAUL
A. APOLOGETIC FOR PAUL
B.
PAULINE MATERIAL IN ACTS
C. NO PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION OF PAUL
2. SCHOLARLY VIEWS
3. WHAT NOT TO
EXPECT
IN COMPARISONS
A. INCOMPLETE INFORMATION
B.
DIFFERENT
PERSPECTIVES
C. DIFFERENT
EMPHASES
4. WHY NOT TO PRIVILEGE PAUL AGAINST LUKE
A. COMPARING OTHER HISTORIES AND LETTERS
B.
LIMITATIONS OF
PAUL S
LETTERS
5. COULD LUKE HAVE KNOWN
PAUL S
LETTERS?
6.
CORRESPONDENCES
BETWEEN LUKE AND PAUL
A. EARLIER LISTS OF
CORRESPONDENCES
B.
PAULINE CORRELATIONS
WITH
ACTS
I.
PAUL S
EARLY
YEARS
AND COMPANIONS
II.
PAUL S
MISSIONARY
JOURNEYS
III.
PAUL S
COLLECTION AND ROMAN CUSTODY
7.
PAUL S
THEOLOGY IN ACTS
A.
CRITIQUING
VIELHAUER S CRITIQUE
B.
OTHER ALLEGED INCOMPATIBILITIES
CONCLUSION
8.
SPEECHES
IN ACTS 258
1.
LUKE S
SPEECH
MATERIAL
A. ELITE RHETORIC
VERSUS
ACTS
SPEECHES
B.
QUANTITY OF
SPEECH
MATERIAL
C. KINDS OF
SPEECHES
D.
PURPOSE
AND FUNCTION OF
SPEECHES
E.
SOME
COMPOSITIONAL
ISSUES
I.
SETTINGS
OF
SPEECHES
II.
SPEECHES
AND NARRATIVE
DEVICES
III.
UNUSUAL
ASPECTS
OF LUKE S
SPEECHES
2.
AUTHENTICITY
OF THE
SPEECHES
A. HISTORIANS CREATING
SPEECHES
I.
DIVERGENT
REPORTS
OF
SPEECHES
IN
ANTIQUITY
II.
PSEUDEPIGRAPHIC
SPEECH
COMPOSITION IN
OTHER
GENRES
III.
HISTORIANS COMPOSED
SPEECHES
IV.
THE IDEAL OF
CAPTURING
THE GIST
V.
CRITICISMS OF INAPPROPRIATE CREATIVITY
VI.
THE ACTUAL
PRACTICE
OF
LIVY
VII.
THE QUESTION OF ACTS
B.
PROSOPOPOEIA
C.
PRESERVED
SPEECHES
I.
SPEAKERS
NOTES AND MANUSCRIPTS
II.
NOTE-TAKING BY HEARERS
(1) ACADEMIC NOTE-TAKING
(2) NOTE-TAKING ON
SPEECHES
(3) OTHER
PERSONAL
NOTES
III.
THE POTENTIAL FOR ORAL MEMORY
(1) ORAL CULTURES?
(2) ACADEMIC MEMORY
(3)
SAYINGS
TRADITIONS
(4) ORATORICAL MEMORY
(5) ANCIENT MNEMONICS IN OTHER
SETTINGS
IV.
RELEVANCE
FOR
ACTS?
D.
EXPANDING
SPEECHES
E. COMPARING HELLENISTIC
JEWISH
SPEECHES
F. COMPARING
JOSEPHUS
VIII
CONTENTS
I.
SKEPTICISM ABOUT
JOSEPHUS S
APPROACH
II.
COMPOSING
SPEECH
WITHOUT
WITNESSES
III.
JOSEPHUS
NOT THE STANDARD
3.
UNITY
AMONG THE
SPEECHES?
A.
UNITY
AND THE
AUTHENTICITY
QUESTION
B.
LITERARY
UNITY
OF
SPEECHES
I.
REASONS
FOR SIMILARITIES?
II.
VALUE OF
REPETITION
C.
UNITY
VERSUS
HISTORICAL
TRADITION?
I.
STYLISTIC
UNITY
AND
AUTHENTICITY?
II.
STYLISTIC
UNITY
IN OTHER HISTORIANS
D.
THE
SPEECHES:
ACCURATE OR INVENTED?
E.
HISTORICAL
TRADITION
IN THE
SPEECHES?
I.
SEMITISMS AND
PRIMITIVE
CHRISTOLOGY
II.
NEED FOR A BALANCED
APPRAISAL
III.
PETRINISMS, PAULINISMS
IV.
WEIGHING CRITERIA
F.
CONCLUSIONS REGARDING
HISTORICAL
TRADITION
9. SIGNS AND HISTORIOGRAPHY 320
1.
THE PROBLEM
2.
SOME
INTRODUCTORY
QUESTIONS
A. EVIDENCE
FOR
JESUS S
MIRACLES
B.
METHODOLOGICAL QUESTIONS
3. ANCIENT MIRACLE ACCOUNTS OUTSIDE EARLY
CHRISTIANITY
A. GENTILE GRECO-ROMAN MIRACLE ACCOUNTS
I.
HEALING
SANCTUARIES
II.
PAGAN MIRACLE WORKERS
(1) MAGICAL ASSOCIATIONS
(2) THE
DIVINE
MAN
(3) PHILOSTRATUS S CLAIMS ABOUT
APOLLONIUS
(4) JEWISH
DIVINE
MEN ?
B.
EARLY
JEWISH MIRACLE WORKERS
C. COMPARISON OF
EARLY
CHRISTIAN AND PAGAN
MIRACLE
ACCOUNTS
D.
COMPARISON OF
EARLY
CHRISTIAN
AND
JEWISH
MIRACLE
ACCOUNTS
E. PARALLELS AND THE
AUTHENTICITY
QUESTION
4.
ANTISUPERNATURALISM
AS AN
AUTHENTICITY
CRITERION?
A. ANCIENT SKEPTICISM
TOWARD
MIRACLES
I.
POLYBIUS S CRITIQUE OF SENSATIONALIST
HISTORIANS
II.
SIGNS
IN
CRITICAL
HISTORIANS
III.
ANCIENT
PLAUSIBILITY
STRUCTURES
B.
MODERN SKEPTICISM
TOWARD
SUPERNATURAL
PHENOMENA
I.
OUR
CULTURAL
LIMITATIONS
II.
SHOULD WE PRIVILEGE OUR
WORLDVIEW?
III.
MODERN OBJECTIONS CONSIDERED
(1)
SOME
HISTORIC PHILOSOPHIC
OBSTACLES
(2) THE SHIFT IN THE WESTERN
WORLDVIEW
C.
MAJORITY
WORLD
VERSUS MODERNIST WESTERN
ASSUMPTIONS
I.
MANY MIRACLE CLAIMS TODAY
(1) A
MULTICULTURAL
APPROACH
(2) COLLECTING REPORTS
II.
MAJORITY
WORLD
VOICES
(1) LEARNING
FROM
OTHER CULTURES
(2)
MAJORITY
WORLD
CLAIMS WIDESPREAD
(3) EXAMPLES IN THE
MAJORITY
WORLD
D.
PREMODERN AND EARLIER MODERN MIRACLE
REPORTS
E.
MODERN
WESTERN
PERSPECTIVES
I.
SUPERNATURALIST CHRISTIAN CLAIMS IN THE
TWENTIETH-CENTURY
WEST
II.
SUPERNATURALIST CHRISTIAN CLAIMS IN
RECENT
DECADES
F.
PROPOSED EXPLANATIONS
I.
NATURAL
EXPLANATIONS
II.
SUPRAHUMAN EXPLANATIONS?
5.
APPROACHING
LUKE S MIRACLE CLAIMS
10. DATE 383
1.
IN
THE 60S
A. ARGUMENT
FROM
ACTS ENDING
B.
OTHER
ARGUMENTS
FOR A
PRE-70
DATE
C.
AFTER
PAUL, BEFORE 70
2.
AFTER
70
A.
BASED
ON MARK AND LUKE 21
B.
ACTS BEFORE LUKE?
C.
MAJORITY
RANGE
D.
SOON AFTER 70
3.
AFTER
90
4.
SECOND
CENTURY
5. THE DATE OF ACTS
11.
THE
AUTHOR OF
LUKE-ACTS
402
1.
QUESTIONS ABOUT
AUTHORSHIP
2. THE
AUTHOR S
PROBABLE BACKGROUND
A. JEWISH OR GENTILE CHRISTIAN?
B.
AFTER
JERUSALEM
3. THE LIKELIEST
AUTHOR
A. A COMPANION OF PAUL
B.
LUKE THE PHYSICIAN AS THE AUTHOR?
I.
PATRISTIC EVIDENCE
II.
COMPANIONS IN PAULINE LITERATURE
C. PHYSICIANS AND LUKE
EXCURSUS
: ANCIENT PHYSICIANS
416
1.
PHYSICIANS AND THEIR
LIMITATIONS
A. MEDICINE AND SUPERSTITION
B.
SOUNDER MEDICINE
2. PHYSICIANS
STATUS
AND BACKGROUND
3. PAGANISM, JUDAISM, AND PHYSICIANS
12.
LUKE
S AUDIENCE 423
1.
OF
HIGH
STATUS
AND EDUCATED?
A. THEOPHILUS AND MARKS OF
STATUS
B.
LIMITATIONS
OF SUCH INFERENCES
C.
STATUS
AND SURMOUNTING
STATUS
D.
LIKELY
STATUS
OF
AUDIENCE
2. JEWISH, GENTILE, OR GOD-FEARING?
3. GEOGRAPHICAL
RANGE
OF
AUDIENCE
A.
ROME?
B.
CORINTH
OR
EPHESUS
C.
PHILIPPI
D.
ANCIENT
WRITERS
GEOGRAPHIC ASSUMPTIONS
E. LUKE S GEOGRAPHIC ASSUMPTIONS
CONCLUSION
13. THE PURPOSE OF ACTS 435
1.
SOME
PROPOSED
PURPOSES
FOR ACTS
2. SALVATION
HISTORY
AND MISSION
IX
A. FROM HERITAGE TO MISSION
B.
MODEL AND APOLOGETIC
3. ACTS AS APOLOGETIC
A. POTENTIAL APOLOGETIC AUDIENCES
I.
EMPHASIZING
PAUL S INNOCENCE
II.
RADICAL BUT NOT SUBVERSIVE
III.
APOLOGETIC
ELEMENTS
B.
A
RELIGIO
LICITA?
C. APPEALS TO ROMAN TOLERATION
I.
ROMAN
TOLERANCE
TOWARD VARIOUS CULTS
II.
JOSEPHUS S
APPEAL TO FAVORABLE
DECREES
III.
LUKE S APPEAL TO
PRECEDENT
D.
ARGUMENTS
FROM
ANTIQUITY
I.
EGYPTIAN AND
JEWISH
ARGUMENTS
II.
PART OF ANCIENT JUDAISM
E. THE VALUE OF
PRECEDENTS
F. CONTEXTUALIZING LUKE S APOLOGETIC
CONCLUSION
14. ISRAELS STORY 459
1.
ACTS AND JUDAISM
A. ANTI-JUDAISM IN
ACTS?
B.
CONFLICT
REPORTS
I.
EMPHASIZING OR DE-EMPHASIZING CONFLICT?
II.
GENUINE HISTORY OF CONFLICT
III.
INTRA-JEWISH CONFLICT
C. GENUINELY ANTI-JEWISH POLEMIC IN
ANTIQUITY
D.
INTRA-JEWISH
POLEMIC?
I.
WAS LUKES AUDIENCE
JEWISH?
II.
PARTLY
JEWISH
SELF-IDENTITY
E. DIVERSE
JEWISH
ROLES
IN LUKE-ACTS
I.
LAW-OBSERVING PROTAGONISTS
II.
CHARACTERIZATION
III.
DIVERSE GROUPS
RESPONSES
F. PRO-JUDAISM IN
ACTS?
I.
ARGUMENTS FOR LUKE S PRO-JUDAISM
II.
DIVISION,
NOT WHOLESALE REJECTION
2. ACTS AND
ISRAEL S
SCRIPTURE
A.
EXPECTED
LEVEL OF BIBLICAL LITERACY
I.
GREEK
AND BIBLICAL ALLUSIONS
II.
RANGE
OF BIBLICAL LITERACY
B.
SOURCES
FOR LUKE S QUOTATIONS
I.
SEPTUAGINT USE
II.
PARTS
OF THE CANON EMPHASIZED
C. LUKE S PROMISE-FULFILLMENT
SCHEMA
D.
EXTENDING BIBLICAL HISTORY
E. LUKE S TYPOLOGICAL
APPLICATION
I.
FINDING NARRATIVE
PATTERNS
II.
COMPARING
PESHER
AND
CHARACTER TYPES
CONCLUSION
15. SOME LUKAN EMPHASES 492
1.
WHAT IS LUKAN THEOLOGY ?
A. THEOLOGY PROPER
I.
THE GOD OF
ALL
HUMANITY
II.
THE GOD OF SALVATION HISTORY
B.
EMPHASES
BEYOND TRADITIONAL THEOLOGICAL
CATEGORIES
I.
LUKE AS HISTORIAN
II.
APOLOGETIC
EMPHASES
2.
SOME
THEOLOGICAL
THEMES
A. INTRODUCTORY COMMENTS
B.
JESUS
AS
GOD S
AGENT OF SALVATION
C. SALVATION
D.
SUFFERING
3. THE GENTILE MISSION
A. LUKE S
EMPHASIS
ON THE GENTILE MISSION
I.
PREPARING FOR THE GENTILE MISSION
II.
REASONS
FOR THIS
EMPHASIS
III.
A MODEL FOR MISSION
B.
COMPARING THE
SOCIAL
CONTEXT
I.
JUDAISM AND A GENTILE MISSION?
(1) VIEWS REGARDING GENTILES
(2) APPROACHES TO
PROSELYTES
II.
PAGAN
UNIVERSAL IDEALS
III.
GENTILE
MULTICULTURALISM
4. LUKE S ESCHATOLOGY
5. THE
HOLY
SPIRIT
A. EMPOWERMENT BY THE SPIRIT
I.
THE SPIRIT MANDATORY FOR MISSION
II.
SPIRIT BAPTISM AND DIVERSE
EXPERIENCES
III.
PROPHETIC EMPOWERMENT
B.
A SURVEY OF
SOME
OTHER
THEMES
ABOUT THE
SPIRIT
IN ACTS
I.
REALIZED ESCHATOLOGY
II.
CROSS-CULTURAL EMPOWERMENT
III.
FOR
ALL
BELIEVERS
IV.
GOOD NEWS FOR THE SOCIALLY MARGINAL
V.
OTHER
ACTIVITIES
C. THE SPIRIT AND GOD
EXCURSUS:
BACKGROUND FOR LUKE S VIEW
OF
THE
SPIRIT
529
1.
GENTILE
BACKGROUNDS?
A. SPIRIT AND THE DIVINE
B.
SPIRIT AND INSPIRATION
2. THE SPIRIT OF
PURIFICATION
IN EARLY JUDAISM
3. THE SPIRIT OF KNOWLEDGE AND PROPHECY IN EARLY
JUDAISM
A. EARLY JUDAISM IN GENERAL
B.
IN RABBINIC LITERATURE
6. THE FUNCTION OF
SIGNS
A. EXPECTING CONTINUING
SIGNS
B.
SIGNS
IN THE CONTEXT OF LUKE S MISSIOLOGY AND
OTHER
THEMES
I.
SIGNS
AND THE GOSPEL
II.
SIGNS
AND PROMISE FULFILLMENT
III.
DEMONSTRATING DIVINE COMPASSION
IV.
SIGNS
AND LUKE S AUDIENCE
C.
SIGNS
FOR AUTHENTICATION
I.
PAGAN
MODELS
II.
BIBLICAL AND EARLY
JEWISH
MODELS
III.
RABBINIC MISTRUST OF MIRACLES
IV.
WHO IS AUTHENTICATED?
CONCLUSION
16. THE UNITY AND STRUCTURE OF
LUKE-ACTS
550
1.
UNITY
A. CONSIDERING OBJECTIONS TO
UNITY
I.
RECEPTION HISTORY
II.
DISTINCT
GENRES?
B.
UNITY FROM
AN ANCIENT
PERSPECTIVE
C. NARRATIVE PARALLELS BETWEEN LUKE AND ACTS
I.
FROM UNDER TUBINGEN S SHADOW
II.
EARLY PARALLELISMS IN THE GOSPEL
X
CONTENTS
III.
LUKE-ACTS PARALLELS
IV.
GOULDER S MORE DETAILED PARALLELS
V.
GOULDER
ON
JESUS
AND THE CHURCH
VI.
PETER-PAUL PARALLELS
D.
PARALLELS VERSUS HISTORICAL TRADITION?
I.
GOULDER S SKEPTICISM
II.
UNITY
AND
TENSIONS
E.
WHERE LUKE OMITS PARALLELS FOR ACTS
F. PARALLEL LIVES IN ANCIENT BIOGRAPHY AND
HISTORY
I.
IDEAL
TYPES?
II.
PARALLELS IN HISTORY
III.
THE TECHNIQUE OF COMPARISON
IV.
PARALLEL BIOGRAPHIES
V.
BIBLICAL MODELS
2. STRUCTURE OF ACTS
A. SUMMARY
STATEMENTS
B.
GEOGRAPHIC
PLANS
C.
CHARACTERS
AND
ACTION
D.
VARIOUS OUTLINES
POSSIBLE
E. A
SAMPLE
PARTIAL OUTLINE
17. GEOGRAPHIC BACKGROUND
582
1.
TRAVEL AND GEOGRAPHY IN ACTS
A. GEOGRAPHIC
INFORMATION
B.
CULTIC ASSOCIATIONS OF LOCATIONS
C.
SAFETY
AND HARDSHIP OF
TRAVEL
D.
SPEED
OF
TRAVEL
AND STOPPING
PLACES
E.
TRAVEL AND COMPANIONS
2. URBAN VERSUS RURAL LIFE
A. URBANIZATION AND
CULTURAL
CHASMS
B.
URBAN DISDAIN FOR RURAL LIFE
C.
RUSTIC SIMPLICITY
D.
DESPISING CITIES
CONCLUSION
18. LUKE S PERSPECTIVE ON WOMEN AND
GENDER
597
1.
GENDER IN LUKE-ACTS
A. THE
DEBATE
B.
EXAMPLES IN LUKE-ACTS
2. WOMEN IN
ANTIQUITY
A. GENERAL OBSERVATIONS
B.
PROMINENT WOMEN
C.
WOMEN S ADVANCEMENT IN
SOCIETY
D.
GENDER IDEOLOGIES
E.
JEWISH
PERSPECTIVES
F. WOMEN AND
MORALITY
G.
WOMANLY IDEALS
H.
MARRIAGE
ROLES
I.
WOMEN IN
MYTH
AND RELIGION
J.
WOMEN S EDUCATION
3. WOMEN SPEAKING IN PUBLIC
4. IMPLICATIONS
FOR
LUKE S
PERSPECTIVE
COMMENTARY
PART
1:
THE
FIRST
OUTPOURING
1.
TRANSITIONAL FUNCTION
2. SEMITIC
CHARACTER?
3. TITLE
NARRATIVE INTRODUCTION AND RECAPITULATION
(1:1-11)
646
1.
INTRODUCING
INTRODUCTIONS
2. LUKE S RECAPITULATION
3.
PREFACE
(1:1-2)
A.
PREFACES
B.
LUKE S OWN
PREFACE
IN ACTS
(1:1-2)
I.
RELATION TO VOLUME ONE
(1:1)
II.
DEDICATIONS (1:1; LUKE
1:3)
III.
WHO
IS
THEOPHILUS?
C.
LUKE S
PREFACE
TO VOLUME ONE (LUKE
1:1-4)
D.
JESUS S
ORDERS
UNTIL
HIS TAKING UP (ACTS
1:2)
4. PROMISE OF THE
HOLY
SPIRIT
(1:3-8)
A. SUMMARY OF THE FORTY DAYS
(1:3)
I.
APPEARANCES, PROOFS
(1:3)
II.
CONVINCING PROOFS
(1:3)
III.
FORTY DAYS
(1:3)
B.
JESUS S
TEACHING ABOUT THE KINGDOM
(1:3)
EXCURSUS:
GOD S
KINGDOM
IN
EARLY
JEWISH
AND
CHRISTIAN
TEACHING
671
C.
THE PROMISE OF THE SPIRIT
(T.4-5)
I.
A
FINAL GATHERING
(1:4)
II.
WAITING
IN
JERUSALEM
(1:4)
III.
THE PROMISE
THE
SPIRIT
(1:1-2:47)
641
IV.
BAPTIZED IN THE SPIRIT
(1:5)
D.
WHEN THE KINGDOM?
(1:6-7)
I.
VIEWS CONCERNING LUKE
S
ESCHATOLOGY
II.
LUKE S FUTURE ESCHATOLOGY
E.
POWER FOR TESTIMONY TO THE NATIONS
(1:8)
I.
POWER
(1:8)
II.
WITNESSES
(1:8)
(1) BACKGROUND OF WITNESS HERE
(2) WHO ARE LUKE S
WITNESSES?
(3) CONTENT OF WITNESS
F.
JERUSALEM
TO THE ENDS OF THE EARTH
(1:8)
I.
JERUSALEM
II.
JUDEA
AND
SAMARIA
III.
BACKGROUND FOR THE
PHRASE
ENDS OF THE
EARTH
IV.
WHERE WERE THE ENDS OF THE
EARTH ?
V.
AN OUTLINE FOR
ACTS?
VI.
GEOGRAPHIC KNOWLEDGE
5.
JESUS
S ASCENSION AND PROMISE
TO
RETURN
(1:9-11)
A.
SUCCESSION
NARRATIVES
I.
PASSING
ON
MINISTRY
II.
ELIJAH IN LUKE-ACTS
III.
ELIJAH TRADITIONS IN EARLY JUDAISM
B.
ASCENSION IN ITS ANCIENT SETTING
I.
ASCENSION NARRATIVES
II.
THE MEANING OF
JESUS S
ASCENSION
III.
HOW CAN MODERN INTERPRETERS APPROACH
THIS NARRATIVE S COSMOLOGY?
XI
CONTENTS
C. SIGNS OF
GLORY:
CLOUD,
ANGELS, HEAVEN,
AND
RETURN
(1:9-11)
I.
THE
CLOUD
(1:9)
II.
THE ANGELS
(1:10)
III.
HEAVEN
(1:11)
IV.
RETURNING THE
SAME
WAY HE LEFT
(1:11)
PREPARATION
FOR
PENTECOST:
AWAITING
THE PROMISE
(1:12-26) 733
1.
PRAYING TOGETHER
(1:12-14)
A. THE
SETTING
(1:12)
EXCURSUS: THE SABBATH IN EARLY JUDAISM
736
B.
THE
UPPER ROOM
(1:13)
I.
LARGE UPPER ROOMS
II.
WHICH
UPPER
ROOM?
C. THE
LIST
OF
APOSTLES
(1:13)
I.
NAME LISTS
II.
HISTORICAL
TRADITION
III.
SIMON
PETER
IV.
OTHER NAMES
EXCURSUS: ZEALOTS
744
D.
THE WOMEN AND SIBLINGS
(1:14)
I.
MARY
AND
THE
OTHER WOMEN
II.
JESUS S
BROTHERS
E.
JOINED FOR PRAYER
(1:14)
2. ESTABLISHING LEADERS AND THEIR TESTIMONY FOR
THE FUTURE
(1:15-26)
A. THE
SETTING
(1:15)
B.
SCRIPTURE
ON
REPLACING
A
FALLEN LEADER
(1:16-20)
I.
JUDAS S
APOSTASY AND GODS PLAN
(1:16)
II.
JUDASS
PORTION
(1:17)
III.
JUDASS
GORY END
(1:18-19)
IV.
THE
TRADITION
(1:18-19)
V.
APPLYING
THE
FATE
OF
THE PSALMS ENEMY
(1:20)
C. A
NEW
APOSTLE
(1:21-26)
I.
THE
QUALIFICATIONS
(1:21-22)
II.
THE
CANDIDATES
(1:23)
IN.
GOD S CHOICE
(1:24)
IV.
JUDASS PLACE (1:25)
V.
THE
ELEVEN
(1:26)
VI.
LOTS
(1:26)
THE
EVENT OF PENTECOST
(2:1-13) 780
1.
THE
PASSAGE S
MESSAGE
A. THE
SPIRIT S EMPOWERMENT
B.
THE
SPIRIT
INAUGURATES THE AGE
TO
COME
C.
COVENANT RENEWAL AND
THE PENTECOST
FESTIVAL
D.
AN
AUTHENTIC
PENTECOST
TRADITION?
E.
COMPATIBLE
WITH
JOHNS
TRADITION
OF
RECEIVING
THE SPIRIT?
F.
THE
EVENT AND
THE
PATTERN
2.
SIGNS
OF
PENTECOST
(2:1-4)
A.
UNITED
AT PENTECOST (2:1)
I.
THEIR LOCATION
II.
THE
FESTIVAL
B.
LIFE-GIVING
WIND
(2:2)
I.
THE
HOUSE
II.
SPIRIT
AND
WIND
III.
BIBLICAL
ALLUSIONS
C.
ESCHATOLOGICAL AND/OR THEOPHANIC FIRE
(2:3)
D.
SPIRIT
FILLING
AND TONGUES
(2:4)
I.
FILLED
WITH
THE
HOLY
SPIRIT
II.
INTRODUCTORY
COMMENTS
ON
TONGUES
SPEAKING HERE
III.
PROPOSED JEWISH SETTINGS FOR TONGUES
IV.
GREEK PAGANISM
V.
TONGUES IN EARLY
CHRISTIANITY
VI.
STUDIES
OF
MODERN
CHRISTIAN GLOSSOLALIA
VII.
OTHER TONGUES
AS
FOREIGN LANGUAGES
VIII.
MEANING AND FUNCTION
OF
TONGUES IN ACTS
IX.
TONGUES
AS
EVIDENCE
OF
SPIRIT
BAPTISM?
3.
THE
DIASPORA CROWD S
RESPONSES TO SIGNS
(2:5-13)
A. THE
CROWD
(2:5-8)
B.
WERE
THE
DIASPORA
JEWS
VISITORS
OR RESIDENTS?
C.
LISTS
OF
NATIONS,
LANGUAGES
(2:9-11)
I.
ARRANGEMENT
II.
SPECIFIC PRE-LUKAN
SOURCES?
III.
ZODIACAL
OR
MORE GENERAL LISTS
OF
NATIONS?
EXCURSUS: ASTROLOGY
837
IV.
TABLE
OF
NATIONS
IN
GENESIS 10
V.
A
REVERSAL
OF
BABEL
(GEN 11:1-9)
VI.
PROLEPTIC UNIVERSALISM
D.
PARTICULAR NATIONS IN
2:9-11
I.
PARTHIANS
II.
MEDES AND ELAMITES
III.
RESIDENTS
OF
MESOPOTAMIA
IV.
JUDEA
V.
CAPPADOCIA, PONTUS
;
AND ASIA
VI.
PHRYGIA AND PAMPHYLIA
VII.
EGYPT
VIII.
LIBYA AROUND CYRENE
IX.
VISITORS
FROM
ROME,
BOTH
JEWS
AND
PROSELYTES
X. CRETANS AND ARABS
E.
HECKLERS IN
THE
CROWD
(2:13)
I.
ECSTATIC
BEHAVIOR?
EXCURSUS: WINE AND EXCESSIVE DRINKING
853
1.
WINE
2. OBJECTIONS
TO
DRUNKENNESS
3.
INEBRIATION
AS
POSITIVE
II.
SWEET
WINE
PETER S
CALL
TO
REPENTANCE
(2:14-40) 862
1.
STRUCTURE
2.
INTRODUCING
THE
SPEECH (2:14-15)
A. PETER S PEERS,
POSTURE, AND TONE
B.
THE ADDRESS
C. THE
THIRD
HOUR
3. BIBLICAL EXPLANATION FOR THE EVENT
(2:16-21)
A.
COMPARISONS
TO PESHER
APPLICATION
(2:16)
B.
ADAPTING
JOEL S
TEXT
(2:17)
C.
LAST DAYS AND ESCHATOLOGICAL
FULFILLMENT
(2:17)
D. ALL
FLESH AND
ALL
THE
LAST DAYS
E.
SURMOUNTING
GENDER AND OTHER BARRIERS
XII
CONTENTS
EXCURSUS: PROPHECY
(2:17-18)
886
1.
ANCIENT ISRAELITE AND ANCIENT NEAR EASTERN
ANTECEDENTS
2. DEPARTURE OF THE SPIRIT AND CESSATION
OF
PROPHECY
A. PROPHECY S CESSATION GENERALLY
B.
CESSATION OF PROPHECY IN THE
RABBIS
3. THE CONTINUANCE OF PROPHECY
4. RECIPIENTS OF THE SPIRIT AND/OR PROPHECY
5. THE NATURE OF PROPHECY
A. NON-JEWISH
SOURCES
B.
NONRABBINIC
JEWISH LITERATURE
C.
PROPHECY IN THE
RABBIS
D.
INSPIRATION
OF
WORKS
IN
ANTIQUITY
F.
LUKE AND THE SPIRIT OF PROPHECY
EXCURSUS: DREAMS AND VISIONS
(2:17)
911
G.
OTHER ESCHATOLOGICAL IMAGERY
I.
POURING OUT
(2:17-18)
II.
COSMIC
SIGNS
(2:19-20)
III.
THE DAY OF THE
LORD
(2:20)
IV.
SALVATION
(2:21)
H.
CALLING ON THE LORDS NAME
(2:21)
I.
PETER S
POINT AND THE LORD S NAME
II.
THE TITLE
LORD
4.
NARRATION
ABOUT
JESUS S
DEATH AND RESURRECTION
(2:22-24)
A.
APPEALING
TO
JESUS S
SIGNS
(2:22)
B.
JESUS S
DEATH AND GOD S PLAN
(2:23)
I.
DIVINE
PURPOSE AND LUKE S PLOT
EXCURSUS: PROVIDENCE, FATE, AND
PREDESTINATION
927
1.
FATE
AND FORTUNE
A. POPULAR VIEWS ABOUT
FATE
B.
PHILOSOPHIC NOTIONS OF
FATE
C.
FATE
AND
ASTROLOGY
D.
JUDAISM ON
FATE
AND PROVIDENCE
2. ALTERNATIVES TO
FATE
A.
FREE
WILL
B.
LIBERATION
FROM
FATE
3.
EARLY
JEWISH PREDESTINATION
II.
JESUS S
DEATH
EXCURSUS: THE CROSS AND CRUCIFIXION
939
III.
RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE
CROSS
C.
RELEASED
FROM
DEATHS POWER
(2:24)
5.
JESUS AS
LORD
IN
LIGHT
OF SCRIPTURE ABOUT HIS
RESURRECTION
(2:25-36)
A. PSALM
16
AND
JESUS S
RESURRECTION
(2:25-28)
I.
THE
PSALMS
MEANING
II.
THE LORD S
PRESENCE
AND RIGHT HAND
(2:25)
III.
JOY
AND HOPE
(2:26)
IV.
HADES AND
DECAY
(2:27)
V.
WAYS OF
LIFE
AND GOD S
PRESENCE (2:28)
B.
JESUS,
NOT
DAVID,
IS
THE EXALTED
KING
(2:29-36)
I.
DAVID
DIED AND WAS BURIED
(2:29)
II.
DAVID
PREDICTED CHRIST
(2:30-31)
III.
APPEAL TO TESTIMONY
(2:32-33)
IV.
CHRIST S EXALTATION
(2:33)
V.
THE SPIRIT-GIVER
(2:33)
VI.
LUKE S CHRISTOLOGY IN
2:33
VII.
THE EXALTED
LORD
OF PSALM
110
(2:34)
VIII.
UNTIL
HIS
ENEMIES
BECOME
HIS FOOTSTOOL
(2:35)
IX.
CONCLUSION:
LORD
AND
KING
(2:36)
EXCURSUS: MESSIAHSHIP
964
1.
VIEWS OF MESSIAHSHIP
2.
JESUS
AND MESSIAHSHIP
6. THE
RESPONSE
AND THE PROMISE
(2:37-40)
A. THE CROWD S
RESPONSE
(2:37)
B.
REPENTANCE
AND BAPTISM
(2:38)
I.
REPENTANCE
II.
BAPTISM
EXCURSUS: PROPOSED BACKGROUNDS FOR
BAPTISM
977
1.
RITUAL
WASHINGS
2. CONVERSION BAPTISM
III.
BAPTISM
IN
JESUS S
NAME
C.
THE PROMISED
GIFT
OF THE SPIRIT
(2:38-39)
I.
THE
GIFT
(2:38)
II.
THE PROMISE AND
THOSE
AFAR OFF
(2:39)
D.
SUMMARY OF
PETER S
CLOSING EXHORTATION
(2:40)
THE
LIFE
OF THE EMPOWERED COMMUNITY
(2:41-47)
991
EXCURSUS:
SUMMARY
SECTIONS AND
STATEMENTS
992
1.
LUKE S CONVERSION REPORT
(2:41)
A.
JERUSALEM S
WATER
RESOURCES
B.
INFLATING
NUMBERS
C.
JERUSALEM S
POPULATION
D.
OTHER
FEATURES
OF 2:41
2.
COMMUNITY
LIFE IN
2:42
A. EARLY CHURCH ORDER?
B.
APOSTOLIC TEACHING
C.
KOINONIA
D.
BREAKING BREAD
E.
COMMON MEALS
F.
MEALS AND RELATIONSHIPS
G.
LOGISTICS OF MEALS
H.
PRAYER
3. AWE,
SIGNS,
AND WONDERS
(2:43)
4. SHARING
POSSESSIONS
(2:44-45)
A. HELLENISTIC UTOPIAN IDEALS
B.
GREEK IDEALS OF COMMON PROPERTY
C.
FRIENDSHIP IDEALS
D.
QUMRAN EXAMPLES
E.
ANCIENT ISRAELITE MODELS
F.
ROOTED
IN
JESUS S
MODEL
EXCURSUS: POSSESSIONS
1023
G.
HOW
THEY SUPPORTED THE POOR
(2:45)
H.
AUTHENTICITY
XIII
CONTENTS
5.
COMMUNITY
LIFE
IN
2:46-47 E.
RENEWAL OF TEMPLE WORSHIP
A.
UNITY
OF PURPOSE
(2:46) F.
PRAYER AND
WORSHIP
(2:46-47)
B.
HOUSE MEETINGS
(2:46) G. PRAISE (2:47)
C.
MEETING IN
THE
TEMPLE
(2:46) H.
FAVOR AND
GROWTH
(2:47)
D.
JESUS S
MOVEMENT AND
THE
TEMPLE
(2:46)
THE
BIBLIOGRAPHY AND
INDEXES
FOR
THIS
VOLUME MAY BE FOUND ON THE ENCLOSED
CD-ROM.
XIV
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Keener, Craig S. 1960- |
author_GND | (DE-588)120546221 |
author_facet | Keener, Craig S. 1960- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Keener, Craig S. 1960- |
author_variant | c s k cs csk |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV040628163 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)844024128 (DE-599)BVBBV040628163 |
format | Book |
fullrecord | <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><collection xmlns="http://www.loc.gov/MARC21/slim"><record><leader>01172nam a2200289 cc4500</leader><controlfield tag="001">BV040628163</controlfield><controlfield tag="003">DE-604</controlfield><controlfield tag="005">20180123 </controlfield><controlfield tag="007">t</controlfield><controlfield tag="008">121212s2012 |||| 00||| eng d</controlfield><datafield tag="020" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">9780801048364</subfield><subfield code="c">hbk.</subfield><subfield code="9">978-0-8010-4836-4</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="035" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(OCoLC)844024128</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="035" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(DE-599)BVBBV040628163</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="040" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">DE-604</subfield><subfield code="b">ger</subfield><subfield code="e">rakwb</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="041" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">eng</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="049" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">DE-12</subfield><subfield code="a">DE-11</subfield><subfield code="a">DE-19</subfield><subfield code="a">DE-29</subfield><subfield code="a">DE-20</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="100" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Keener, Craig S.</subfield><subfield code="d">1960-</subfield><subfield code="e">Verfasser</subfield><subfield code="0">(DE-588)120546221</subfield><subfield code="4">aut</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="245" ind1="1" ind2="0"><subfield code="a">Acts</subfield><subfield code="b">an exegetical commentary</subfield><subfield code="n">1</subfield><subfield code="p">Introduction and 1:1 - 2:47</subfield><subfield code="c">Craig S. Keener</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="264" ind1=" " ind2="1"><subfield code="a">Grand Rapids, Mich.</subfield><subfield code="b">Baker Academic</subfield><subfield code="c">2012</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="300" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">XLII, 1038 S.</subfield><subfield code="e">CD-ROM (12 cm)</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="336" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="b">txt</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacontent</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="337" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="b">n</subfield><subfield code="2">rdamedia</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="338" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="b">nc</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacarrier</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="500" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="773" ind1="0" ind2="8"><subfield code="w">(DE-604)BV040628162</subfield><subfield code="g">1</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="856" ind1="4" ind2="2"><subfield code="m">SWB Datenaustausch</subfield><subfield code="q">application/pdf</subfield><subfield code="u">http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=025455493&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA</subfield><subfield code="3">Inhaltsverzeichnis</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="999" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-025455493</subfield></datafield></record></collection> |
id | DE-604.BV040628163 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T00:27:47Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780801048364 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-025455493 |
oclc_num | 844024128 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 DE-11 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-29 DE-20 |
owner_facet | DE-12 DE-11 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-29 DE-20 |
physical | XLII, 1038 S. CD-ROM (12 cm) |
publishDate | 2012 |
publishDateSearch | 2012 |
publishDateSort | 2012 |
publisher | Baker Academic |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Keener, Craig S. 1960- Verfasser (DE-588)120546221 aut Acts an exegetical commentary 1 Introduction and 1:1 - 2:47 Craig S. Keener Grand Rapids, Mich. Baker Academic 2012 XLII, 1038 S. CD-ROM (12 cm) txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke (DE-604)BV040628162 1 SWB Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=025455493&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Keener, Craig S. 1960- Acts an exegetical commentary |
title | Acts an exegetical commentary |
title_auth | Acts an exegetical commentary |
title_exact_search | Acts an exegetical commentary |
title_full | Acts an exegetical commentary 1 Introduction and 1:1 - 2:47 Craig S. Keener |
title_fullStr | Acts an exegetical commentary 1 Introduction and 1:1 - 2:47 Craig S. Keener |
title_full_unstemmed | Acts an exegetical commentary 1 Introduction and 1:1 - 2:47 Craig S. Keener |
title_short | Acts |
title_sort | acts an exegetical commentary introduction and 1 1 2 47 |
title_sub | an exegetical commentary |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=025455493&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV040628162 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT keenercraigs actsanexegeticalcommentary1 |