Staff publication

This collection includes the publications of current or former staff of the Protestant Theological Institute, which are available in PDF.

שׂיד or שׂדי? A Note on Isaiah 33,12

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".

„Amikor történelmet írnak…”

A Dávid és Góliát-elbeszélés redakciótörténete (1 Sám 17)

A Dávid és Góliát-elbeszélés ókori szövegtanúi között nagy eltérések vannak, ti. a Codex Vaticanus (LXXB) egy jóval rövidebb tudósítást tartalmaz Góliát legyőzéséről. A 12–31; 41; 48b; 50; 55–58 versek hiányoznak a LXXB 17. fejezetéből, melyeket csak a masszoréta szöveg (MSZ) tartalmaz: . Ezzel kapcsolatosan felmerül a kérdés: melyik a régebbi olvasat? Hogyan és miért jön létre ekkora eltérés? A tanulmány ezekre a kérdésekre keresi a választ, és közöl egy új magyarázati lehetőséget.

The formation and ecumenical importance of the so-called 'Nicaeno-Constantinopolitanum'

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.

Foreword / Előszó

The studies of this volume were presented originally at a Brueggemann-conference in the Protestant Theological Institute of Cluj-Napoca, Romania (April 24-25, 2012). This symposium was part of a study week organised by ministers from The Netherlands and Transylvania in Györgyfalva, near Cluj-Napoca, on the eve of the publication of the Hungarian translation of one of Brueggemann's most significant books, the Theology of the Old Testament.

Tracing the Pre-Massoretic text of the Book of Habakkuk

The Book of Habakkuk is well-known for using a very sophisticated language in terms of semantics, poetics, or rhetorical structure, causing tremendous difficulties to later interpreters, both ancient and modern. For this reason, from a diachronic perspective, textual deviations from the canonical Massoretic tradition could be mere relics of the perplexity of confused translators or scribes.