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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 results.
PublicationBorsi Attila János2023Pages: 37--48

A keresztyén élet értelmezése református megközelítésben kiemelt figyelmet szentel a megszentelődésről szóló tanításnak. ami gyakran így is a megigazulástan „árnyékába” kerül. A ’mit hiszünk’ és ’mit cselekedjünk kapcsolatának’ kérdése ez. Az előadás ennek egy inverz megközelítésére tesz kísérletet Bonhoeffernek a Közösségben és a Követés című művei alapján. Annak kérdéskörét vizsgálja, hogy a keresztyén lelkiségértelmezés, keresztyén életgyakorlat miként ad meghatározó impulzusokat magának a keresztyén etikának.

PublicationVass Lehel202112Pages: 7--57

The Textual and Redactional History of Genesis 46:8–27 -- Genesis 46:8–27 lists the names of those who went down along with Jacob to Egypt during the famine in Canaan. However, this passage has some features that inspire to further study. These include seemingly pointless repetitions, tensions within the text and contradictions with other verses in the book of Genesis, which lead us to conclude that the text of the pericope in question has undergone significant changes over time. In this study, we will attempt to deduce possible textual layers and reconstruct the sources used, starting from the canonical text and working backwards in time.

PublicationBalogh Csaba20091211Pages: 48--69

This article argues that Isa 29,15-24 is composed of five coherent segments. The early Isaianic word, 29,15+21, was reinterpreted in a new way by an exilic author in 29,16-17+20. The presupposed blindness of Yhwh serving as a motivation for an ungodly life by those addressed in 29,15, is reconsidered as the ideology of desperate people who deem the blindness of Yhwh explains the present desolate condition of Jerusalem. The former injustice in Isaiah's society (29,21) is reinterpreted as the injustice of the foreign tyrant against the people of Yhwh. Isa 29,18+24 (the blindness of the people) and 29,19+23d-e (the oppressed Yhwh-fearing people) elaborate on the same theme in a larger context and presuppose a similar situation and author as implied by 29,16-17+21, probably to be identified with Deutero-Isaiah.

PublicationKozma Zsolt2012Pages: 153--154