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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 results.
PublicationNémeth Tamás2023Pages: 184--193

Az idő, amelyet értünk és mégsem értünk: sem pontos definícióját, sem pontos mérését, sem lelki megértését nem sikerült tisztáznunk, mivel nem tudjuk kívülről szemlélni. Ha áttekintjük az időről való gondolkodás filozófiáját, sok érdekes és részlegességében igaz megoldásra találunk. A Szentírás alapján viszont közelebb kerülhetünk az idő lényegéhez, a teremtett idő jelentőségéhez ugyanúgy, mint a teremtetlen idő valóságához. Az idő megértése az Örökkévaló szempontjából nézve oldódik meg, mert aki Krisztusban van, annak örök élete van – minden időfogalom eszkatológiai értelmet nyer tehát; nem félelmet kelt az idő múlása, hanem értelmet nyer az örökkévalóság fényében.

ThesisKiss Dávid2023Pages: 48Supervisor: Visky Sándor Béla, Horváth Levente

If we are commanded to remember the Sabbath in the Ten Commandments, why do we go to worship on Sunday? In my paper, I am seeking possible answers to this question. At the beginning of my research, I outline the position of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. In the following sections, I aim to present a biblical alternative to this position. I argue that the Sabbath institution was not known to the Jewish people before their wilderness wanderings. But here it becomes the sign of the Mosaic covenant. Since the covenant was made with the Jews, the Lord does not require foreign nations to observe the Sabbath. But God promises to make a new covenant that will not only apply to the Jews. This has been realised in Jesus Christ. He is the one to whom the Sabbath points. In light of this, we cannot cling to the shadow when the light of the world has come among us.

PublicationBalogh Csaba2009Pages: 481

This is a study of Isaiah 18-20, three chapters in the so-called Isaianic prophecies concerning the nations, Isaiah 13-23 (24-27). Beyond being located close to each other in this literary corpus, there is at least one common element that ties these three chapters together: Isaiah 18-20 deal with two neighbouring countries of the Nile, Kush and Egypt respectively. The two lands were politically closely related in the era of the prophet Isaiah, so that addressing them in proximity to each other should not be surprising in a book set in the period of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah (Isaiah 1:1). Through a detailed analysis of the three chapters I hope to contribute to a better understanding of the collection of prophecies on the nations in the book of Isaiah and, more remotely, of the wider phenomenon of prophecies concerning the nations, so prevalent in the Hebrew Bible.

PublicationMárkus Mihály20145Pages: 35--42

PublicationFekete Csaba20145Pages: 46--60

PublicationKozma Zsolt2010Pages: 5--5