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Displaying 1 - 44 of 44 results.Publication
› Visky Sándor Béla
› 2024
› Pages: 365
Ez a kötet a Kolozsvári Protestáns Teológiai Intézet által szervezett II. Tavaszy-napok konferencia előadásait tartalmazza.
Publication
› Visky Sándor Béla
› 2023
› Pages: 368
Ez a kötet a Kolozsvári Protestáns Teológiai Intézet által szervezett I. Tavaszy-konferencia előadásainak publikált változatait tartalmazza.
The Problem with Isaiah's So-Called ‘Refrain Poem’. A New Look at the Compositional History of Isaiah 9.7–20
Publication
› Balogh Csaba
› 2018
› 42
› 3
› Pages: 363--390
This article argues that Isaiah's so-called ‘refrain poem’ (Kehrvergedicht) in Isa. 9.7–20 is a composite text, going back to two early prophecies with different concerns. Isaiah 9.7–17* focused originally on the arrogant refusal of the divine word, while Isa. 9.18–20* reflected on the chaotic social circumstances in Samaria in the eighth century. The refrains in vv. 9,11cd, 16ef and 20cd were added to these two already connected prophecies at a later stage. The theological summary in v. 12 is yet another addition, closely affiliated with 5.24–25. Unlike v. 12, the refrains do not have the repentance of Israel in view, nor its final destruction, but the fall of Assyria in Isa. 10.5–15, 24–27. The refrains support the theory that the Isaianic collection was formed by means of reusing, restructuring and reinterpreting earlier material. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0309089216690385
Publication
› Balogh Csaba
› 2014
› 64
› 4
› Pages: 519--538
In studies on the composition of prophetic literature, the larger textual layers reinterpreting earlier texts, the so-called Fortschreibungen, received much attention. It is well-known that beside these larger literary elaborations prophetic books also contain shorter explanatory interpolations, often called glosses, which intend to clarify a particular imagery of the prophecy (e.g., Isa 9:14). A systematic reading of these short annotations has been neglected, however, in studying the formation of prophetic books. The present article reconsiders the Isaiah-Memoir from this perspective. It identifies editorial interpolations in three distinct pericopes, Isa 8:2, 8:6-7a and 8:23b. It is argued here that the identification of such explanatory additions is the key to understanding notorious textual complexities. Moreover, it points out that these interpolations tend to expose recognisable patterns and common hermeneutical principles.
Society of Biblical Literature Nemzetközi Találkozó. St. Andrews, Nagy-Britannia, 2013. július 7–11.
Publication
› Zabán Bálint Károly
› 2014
› 107
› 3
› Pages: 353--355
Határkérdések a teológiában. III. Tehetséggondozási nap a Kolozsvári Protestáns Teológiai Intézetben
Publication
› Balogh Csaba
› 2019
› 112
› 2
› Pages: 220--223
Család és atyafiság: kinek számít ez ma? A rokoni kapcsolatok jelentőségéről és jelentéktelenségéről. Beszámoló a Holland és Közép-Kelet-Európai Teológiai Fakultások VII. Konferenciájáról (Conference of Protestant Theological Faculties from Central and Eastern Europe and the Netherlands)
Publication
› Simon János
› 2012
› 105
› 5
› Pages: 348--352
Publication
› Rezi Elek, Adorjáni Dezső Zoltán, Sógor Csaba, Kiss Jenő, Benkő Timea
› 2011
› 104
› 4
› Pages: 351--355
Rektori köszöntés - Rezi Elek, a Kolozsvári Protestáns Teológia rektora. Védnöki beszédek - Adorjáni Dezső-Zoltán, a Romániai Evangélikus-Lutheránus Egyház püspöke; Sógor Csaba európai parlamenti képviselő, RMDSZ és ENP Képviselőcsoport. Témafelvezetés - Benkő Tímea és Kiss Jenő a Kolozsvári Protestáns Teológia tanárai
Invocation of biblical authority in a secular decision. The theocratic relevance of the Torda Edict (1568)
Publication
› Pásztori-Kupán István
› 2008
› 101
› 6
› Pages: 677--699
It is often argued that the sixteenth-century Reformation initiated a chain of events that ultimately led not only to religious pluralism within the body of the Western Christian Church, but also to the rise and dispersion of mutual acceptance among various religious groups. The fact, however, that these two things (i.e. religious pluralism and tolerance) did not emerge directly and immediately (almost as a matter of course) from the Reformation itself, is similarly undeniable. As we shall see below, we have sufficient evidence to claim that although the Reformers – including John Calvin, Theodore Beza and others, with whom this paper is partly concerned – at some point in their lives (mostly in their youth) advocated and invocated the cultivation of the spirit of tolerance, most of them refrained from upholding such positions once their situation as leaders within a newly emerged (both religious and political) community or realm became established.