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Filling Up the Word : = The Fulfillment Citations in Matthew's Gospel.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Filling Up the Word :/
其他題名:
The Fulfillment Citations in Matthew's Gospel.
作者:
Phillips, Zack C.
面頁冊數:
1 online resource (370 pages)
附註:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 79-05, Section: A.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International79-05A.
標題:
Biblical studies. -
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=10619330click for full text (PQDT)
ISBN:
9780355237481
Filling Up the Word : = The Fulfillment Citations in Matthew's Gospel.
Phillips, Zack C.
Filling Up the Word :
The Fulfillment Citations in Matthew's Gospel. - 1 online resource (370 pages)
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 79-05, Section: A.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Duke University, 2017.
Includes bibliographical references
It is often assumed, occasionally argued, that when Matthew writes, in his ten "fulfillment citations" (FCs), that Scripture was "fulfilled," he means that the occurrence of certain events "verify" scriptural "predictions." This study argues that the FCs have another primary function-namely, to show how Jesus (or, in two cases, Israel's leaders) brings the scriptural word to an unsurpassable, "full" limit. The key verb πληρоu˜υ, that is, has a basic meaning of "fill up." The starting point is an examination of three rhetorically significant texts in Matthew's gospel that are not FCs. In Matt 3:13-17, 5:17-20, and 23:32-36, Matthew consistently uses πληρоu˜υ to mean "fill up" some ethical/ moral quantum. A survey of the way in which "limit-adjectives/ adverbs" (adjectives/ adverbs, that convey a limit being reached, e.g., "all") cluster around the FCs points in the same direction-towards the hypothesis that πληρоu˜υ means "fill up" in the FCs as well. A potential linguistic objection is then addressed: is it possible to use πληρоu˜υ in this way in Matthew's Umwelt? Considering the instances of πληρоu˜υ + a word" formulations in koin? Greek, the study concludes that such language would have no default idiomatic meaning in the ears of Matthew's speakers and could be used in the manner proposed. After establishing the methodological principle that Matthew controlled the size of his FCs-and, thus, quoted precisely what he needed-exegesis of the specific FCs attempts to confirm the study's central thesis. Consideration of relevant textual features of the narrative context in which the FCs are embedded (e.g., repetition of limit-adverbs/ adjectives, narrative-enacted "fullness") would show that many, but not all, of the FCs point towards such a meaning for πληρоu˜υ. Those FCs lacking such textual features can and probably should be read within the framework derived from Matthew's normal usage of πληρоuυ. Finally, the study considers several hermeneutical implications of this exegesis. Ultimately, it would situate Matthew's hermeneutic within scholarly discussion of "the Old in the New" and offer a contribution to Matthean christology. With the FCs, Matthew sets forth a vision of myriad images from Israel's past (Emmanuel; Son; nazirite; light; healing Servant; nonviolent king; prophet; meek king) converging on the Jesus who fully embodies them to save Israel from the fullness of her exile.
Electronic reproduction.
Ann Arbor, Mich. :
ProQuest,
2023
Mode of access: World Wide Web
ISBN: 9780355237481Subjects--Topical Terms:
2122820
Biblical studies.
Subjects--Index Terms:
Gospel ofIndex Terms--Genre/Form:
542853
Electronic books.
Filling Up the Word : = The Fulfillment Citations in Matthew's Gospel.
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It is often assumed, occasionally argued, that when Matthew writes, in his ten "fulfillment citations" (FCs), that Scripture was "fulfilled," he means that the occurrence of certain events "verify" scriptural "predictions." This study argues that the FCs have another primary function-namely, to show how Jesus (or, in two cases, Israel's leaders) brings the scriptural word to an unsurpassable, "full" limit. The key verb πληρоu˜υ, that is, has a basic meaning of "fill up." The starting point is an examination of three rhetorically significant texts in Matthew's gospel that are not FCs. In Matt 3:13-17, 5:17-20, and 23:32-36, Matthew consistently uses πληρоu˜υ to mean "fill up" some ethical/ moral quantum. A survey of the way in which "limit-adjectives/ adverbs" (adjectives/ adverbs, that convey a limit being reached, e.g., "all") cluster around the FCs points in the same direction-towards the hypothesis that πληρоu˜υ means "fill up" in the FCs as well. A potential linguistic objection is then addressed: is it possible to use πληρоu˜υ in this way in Matthew's Umwelt? Considering the instances of πληρоu˜υ + a word" formulations in koin? Greek, the study concludes that such language would have no default idiomatic meaning in the ears of Matthew's speakers and could be used in the manner proposed. After establishing the methodological principle that Matthew controlled the size of his FCs-and, thus, quoted precisely what he needed-exegesis of the specific FCs attempts to confirm the study's central thesis. Consideration of relevant textual features of the narrative context in which the FCs are embedded (e.g., repetition of limit-adverbs/ adjectives, narrative-enacted "fullness") would show that many, but not all, of the FCs point towards such a meaning for πληρоu˜υ. Those FCs lacking such textual features can and probably should be read within the framework derived from Matthew's normal usage of πληρоuυ. Finally, the study considers several hermeneutical implications of this exegesis. Ultimately, it would situate Matthew's hermeneutic within scholarly discussion of "the Old in the New" and offer a contribution to Matthean christology. With the FCs, Matthew sets forth a vision of myriad images from Israel's past (Emmanuel; Son; nazirite; light; healing Servant; nonviolent king; prophet; meek king) converging on the Jesus who fully embodies them to save Israel from the fullness of her exile.
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