Wonders Never Cease

The Purpose of Narrating Miracle Stories in the New Testament and Its Religious Environment

Wonders Never Cease cover

Wonders Never Cease

The Purpose of Narrating Miracle Stories in the New Testament and Its Religious Environment

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Description

Early Christians articulated their christological claims by narrating miracles of Jesus. The Gospels depict Jesus as a healer and an exorcist who preaches the nearness of the kingdom of God. The miracles he reportedly performed are often regarded as eschatological signs of the nearness of the kingdom. Thus Jesus the miracle worker is understood from the perspective of Jesus the preacher of the kingdom. In a history-of-religions approach, however, the narratives on Jesus' miracles do not stand apart, but should be interpreted as part of the religious vocabulary of antiquity. They are closely related to other miracle stories narrated in the world within which the early Christian movement originated.

Given the need to position miracle stories on Jesus within their religious and historical contexts, the present volume discusses evidence on miracles and the narrating of miracle stories from both the New Testament itself and its religious environment. It asks for the literary and religious dynamics of miracle stories and studies different contexts out of which miracle stories originated. The various contributions intend to demonstrate for what reason miracle stories were told in different religious, political and historical circumstances. All authors are experts in their field and position the narrating of miracle stories within a specific literary and religio-historical context.

This is volume 288 in the JSNTS series and is part of the ESCO series.

Table of Contents

 

Jacques van Ruiten


A Miraculous Birth of Isaac in the Book of Jubilees?


 


Jan den Boeft


            Asklepios' Healings Made Known


 


Ulrike Riemer


Miracle Stories and Their Narrative Intent in the Context of the Ruler Cult of Classical Antiquity


 


Michael Becker


Miracle-traditions in Early Rabbinic Literature
Some Questions on their Pragmatics


 


Erkki Koskenniemi


The Function of the Miracle-Stories in Philostratus' Vita Apollonii Tyanensis


 


 


Part II


 


Geert Van Oyen


Markan Miracle Stories in Historical Jesus Research, Redaction Criticism and Narrative Analysis


 


Reinhard von Bendemann


'Many-coloured Illnesses ...' (Mk 1.34).


On the Significance of Illnesses in New Testament Therapy Narratives


 


Michael Labahn


Fishing for Meaning.


The Miraculous Catch of Fish in John 21


 


Matti Myllykoski


            Being There


The Function of the Supernatural in Acts 1-12


           


Bert Jan Lietaert Peerbolte


            Paul the Miracle Worker.


Development and Background of Pauline Miracle Stories­


 


Beate Kowalski


Eschatological Signs and their Function in Revelation of John


 


Part III


 


Lautaro Roig Lanzillotta


Cannibals, Myrmidonians, Sinopeans or Jews?


The Five Versions of The Acts Andrew and Matthias and their Source(s)


 


Bernd Kollmann


Images of Hope
Towards an Understanding of New Testament Miracle Stories


 


 

Product details

Published Jan 07 2006
Format Ebook (Epub & Mobi)
Edition 1st
Extent 312
ISBN 9780567595980
Imprint T&T Clark
Series The Library of New Testament Studies
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Bert Jan Lietaert Peerbolte

Bert Jan Lietaert Peerbolte holds the chair in NT…

Author

Michael Labahn

Michael Labahn is Wissenchaftlicher Assistant for…

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