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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 results.Publication
› Balogh Csaba
› 2009
› 142
› 1
› Pages: 47--52
This article discusses the MT of Isa 33,12 and argues that the verse line "the nations will be burned to lime (שִׂיד)" is difficult in its context and distorts the parallelism, describing the fall of the enemy of Judah with the help of plant-imagery. Although Am 2,1 is often mentioned in connection with Isa 33,12, closer analysis shows that there are differences between the two texts. It is suggested that the LXX should be followed here, which goes back to a Hebrew text reading שָׂדַי, "field", "(agricultural) land" instead of שִׂיד, "lime". This emendation (metathesis) is most likely also supported by the independent tradition of the Targum (ניר, "field, land (to be ploughed)" < נור). The metaphor of burning field not only fits its present context well, but it has biblical parallels and it is supported by agricultural customs known from the Near East.
Publication
› Pásztori-Kupán István
› 2011
› 3
› 1
› Pages: 25--34
This study presents the doctrinal environment of the Nicaeno-Constantinopolitanum, including its lost Tomus, mentioned by the synodal epistle of 382, in light of which the Creed’s theology ought to be explained. Despite some lacunae, modern scholarship established links between the West (Rome), the Antiochene council of 379 and the ecumenical council of 381. The Fathers’ attempts to find new methods of expressing a pneumatology based on the threefold ὁμοούσια demonstrate that the consubstantiality was meant to be extended to the Spirit. The Early Church regarded the Nicene Creed as being “the faith” (ἡ πίστις) or “the symbol” (τὸ σύμβολον). The other three formulae (of 381, 433 and 451) were definitions or explanations (ὅροι) of, yet by no means additions to “the ancient faith of the 318 holy Fathers”.
Publication
› Kató Szabolcs Ferencz
› 2012
› 6
› Pages: 153--163
Das alttestamentliche Weltbild und seine Rezeption bei Calvin Die Initialfrage meines Aufsatzes ist die, ob es ein konsistentes, übergreifendes, alttestament-liches Weltbild gibt. C. Houtman hat mit seiner herausragenden Arbeit Der Himmel im AT viel dazu beigetragen, dass man die Mannigfaltigkeit der kosmologischen Konzepte wahrnimmt. Ich versuche im ersten Teil meines Artikels auf die Frage zu antworten,wie man die vielfältigen Auffassungen zu einem gemeinsamen Bild zusammenstellen kann. Ich denke, dass uns die Hochkulturen des AOs die nötigen Anhaltspunkte für eine diesbezügliche Zu-sammenstellung liefern. Aufgrund der Babylonischen Weltkarte und der Abbildung der Himmelskuh aus Ägypten kann man eine gemeinsame, im AO gängige Grundstruktur eines Weltbildes erkennen. Danach rekonstruiere ich eine Version des alttestamentlichen Weltbil-des, das im semitischen Weltverständnis verwurzelt ist.