Τετάρτη 17 Φεβρουαρίου 2021

Δευτέρα 15 Φεβρουαρίου 2021

Στο τρέχον τεύχος του RHPR / In the current issue of RHPR

Revue d'Histoire et de Philosophie religieuses 100/4 (2020)

  • Simon Butticaz, "Aux origines du christianisme : l’événement, la mémoire et la foi: II. Les christianismes de Luc et de Jean," 467-485 (abstract)
  • Jean Marcel Vincent, "Une interprétation historico-littéraire du Psaume 110 par Jean Masson à l’orée du XVIIIe siècle," 487-512 (abstract)

Κυριακή 14 Φεβρουαρίου 2021

Open access: ένας νέος συλλογικός τόμος για τους Κανόνες του Ευσεβίου / Open access: a new volume on Eusebius' Canon Tables

 Alessandro Bausi, Bruno Reudenbach and Hanna Wimmer (επιμ.), Canones: The Art of Harmony: The Canon Tables of the Four Gospels. Studies in Manuscript Cultures, 18. Berlin: deGruyter 2020 (pdf / epub)

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110625844

Στο τρέχον τεύχος του Electrum / In the current issue of Electrum

 Electrum 27 (2020)

Το τρέχον τεύχος του Textus / The current issue of Textus

 Textus 30 (2021)

Το τρέχον τεύχος του CBQ / The current issue of CBQ

 Catholic Biblical Quarterly 82/1 (2021)

  • Blažej Štrba, "Sight or Skin? Revisiting Deuteronomy 34:7c,"  1-17 (abstract)
  • Stephen J. Smith, "The Shape and Message of Psalms 73–78," 18-37 (abstract)
  • David G. Horrell, "Religion, Ethnicity, and Way of Life: Exploring Categories of Identity," 38-55 (abstract)
  • Christopher A. Decaen,"An Embedded Chiastic Order in Matthew?"  56-74 (abstract)
  • Nicholas A. Elder, "Scribes and Demons: Literacy and Authority in a Capernaum Synagogue (Mark 1:21–28)," 75-94 (abstract)
  • Mark B. Giszczak, "The Rhetoric and Social Practice of Excommunication in 2 Thessalonians 3: 6–15," 95-114 (abstract)

Τρίτη 9 Φεβρουαρίου 2021

Το τρέχον τεύχος του DWJ / The current issue of DWJ

 Distant World Journal 5 (2020)



Άρθρα βιβλικού ενδιαφέροντος στα τελευταία τεύχη του PRSt / Articles of biblical interest in the last issues of PRSt

Perspectives in Religious Studies 47/3 (2020)

Ivan Bankhead, "The Dual Impairments of the “Paralytic” of the Synoptic Gospels," 267–82
The “paralytic” who was lowered through a roof into Jesus’ presence is commonly seen as having been an adult, lame, and cognitively unimpaired. From a review of key contemporary medical writings and a critical and rational reading of the three Synoptic accounts of the incident, other NT narratives and two recent portrayals of the paralytic, this paper constructs a case for his having been envisioned originally as profoundly impaired mentally as well as physically. It shows how this reading can resolve several otherwise problematic issues within the accounts and concludes by suggesting that vicarious faith may prove efficacious for persons with profound intellectual disabilities today.

Rodney K. Duke, "The Idiom of 'Weeping and Gnashing of Teeth' in the Gospels: A Funerary Formula," 283–98
Τhis article examines the idiom of weeping and gnashing of teeth that occurs in Matthew and Luke. This idiom does not support a popular conclusion that the recipients of judgment existed in a continued state of anguish. After identifying some common presuppositions that readers often impose on the interpretation of this and other NT eschatological, judgment texts, the article turns to a fresh look at the idiom in context. I examine the two actions of weeping and gnashing of teeth as a single idiom, not separately. The idiom occurs in an independent clause with set formulaic wording. That formula does not express an action of those receiving judgment. They are dead. Drawing on Ugaritic parallels, the author concludes that idiom was likely a funerary expression in the mouth of mourners and functions in the Gospels as a literary motif for death.

Carey C. Newman, "Paul on God and Glory," 299–316

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Perspectives in Religious Studies 47/4 (2020)

Mark McEntire,  "Competing Visions of the Wilderness in Numbers 10–21," 367–83

Numbers 10–21 is a combination of three wilderness traditions that can be adequately separated by procedures common to the Neo-Documentary Hypothesis. The test of applying a source-critical evaluation is threefold here. First, do the three separate accounts each exhibit a high degree of narrative coherence? Second, can asking a question related to the larger biblical narrative yield a distinctive answer from each narrative? This question will be: How does the wilderness story understand the place to which the Israelites are travelling?  Finally, can the answers to this question shed light on how the accounts were used to create single narrative?


Nijay Gupta, "Reconstructing Junia’s Imprisonment: Examining a Neglected Pauline Comment in Romans 16:7," 385–97
The person called “Junia” in Romans 16:7 has been the subject of extensive research, discussion, and debate for several decades, but especially for the last twenty years. Most of that scholarship has focused on Junia’s sex and whether or not Paul was referring to Junia as an apostle. One of the unfortunate and unintended consequences of the narrow focus on Junia’s sex and apostleship is the academic neglect of Paul’s mention of Junia’s imprisonment 3 (συναιχμαλώτους μου). This article seeks to fill that lacuna by imagining or reconstructing the situation and circumstances of the incarceration of which Paul mentions. Very little Pauline scholarship has considered the circumstances of Paul’s prison companions. Even less has there been consideration of the challenges faced by women who were detained. In the hopes that such an imaginative exercise would contribute to a better understanding of the experience of women in early Christianity, we will consider several factors including: crimes leading to imprisonment, the conditions of imprisonment, the experience of women in particular in Roman confinement, and the (potential) survival and after effects of female prisoners.

Carey C. Newman, "Paul on Christ and Glory, " 399–413

Το τρέχον τεύχος του JSCS / The current issue of JSCS

Journal of Septuagint and Cognate Studies 53 (2020)

  • Natia Dundua / Natia Mirotadze, "History of Biblical Studies in Georgia," 5-18 
  • Bryan Beeckman, "Unitas Vegetabilium? The Greek Rendering of Hebrew Floral, Plant and Herb Names in LXX-Proverbs and LXX-Job," 19-41
  • Larry Perkins, "ἀκούειν/εἰσακούειν (שמע) in Greek Exodus," 43-65 
  • Tuukka Kauhanen - Leonardo Pessoa da Silva Pinto, "Recognizing Kaige-Readings in Samuel-Kings," 67-86
  • Jonathan Thambyrajah, "The Samuel Intertexts in the Versions of Esther," 87-100
  • Dionisio Candido, " The Pluses of the Vetus Latina of the Book of Esther," 101-114
  • Dimitrios Papanikolaou, "Learning Greek Grammar from the Psalms in the Middle Ages: The Case of Psalm Epimerisms," 115-132
  • Cameron Boyd-Taylor, "From Text to Discourse: Parrhesiastic Speech in Greek Job," 133-144



Δύο νέα άρθρα στο τρέχον τεύχος του Open Theology / Two new article in the current issue of Open Theology

 Open Theology 7/1 (2021)