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  1. Werke mit deutscher Übersetzung, Band 11, Die Homilien zum Buch Jeremia
    Author: Origenes
    Published: [2018]; © 2018
    Publisher:  De Gruyter, Berlin ; Boston

    Die Jeremiahomilien des Origenes bilden einen besonders wertvollen Teil seiner Werke. Neben der Homilie über 1 Sam. 28 sind sie seine einzigen auf Griechisch überlieferten Predigten und vermitteln damit einen Eindruck vom Originalton des Predigers... more

    Brandenburgische Technische Universität Cottbus - Senftenberg, Universitätsbibliothek
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    Die Jeremiahomilien des Origenes bilden einen besonders wertvollen Teil seiner Werke. Neben der Homilie über 1 Sam. 28 sind sie seine einzigen auf Griechisch überlieferten Predigten und vermitteln damit einen Eindruck vom Originalton des Predigers Origenes. Zudem ist das Buch Jeremia in der Alten Kirche nicht oft kommentiert worden, und nirgendwo wurden je wieder der Elan und die Intensität erreicht, mit denen Origenes diesen Propheten auslegte. Origenes identifizierte seine Erfahrungen als Prediger mit dem Schicksal des von seinen Adressaten abgelehnten Propheten Jeremia und fand so einen sehr persönlichen Zugang zu diesem biblischen Text. Auffällig sind ferner die zahlreichen antijüdischen Bemerkungen und Exegesen, in denen die kritische Haltung des Origenes gegenüber dem Judentum seiner Zeit deutlich wird.Der Band bietet eine neue deutsche Übersetzung samt ausführlichen Erläuterungen in den Fußnoten. Auch die erhaltenen Fragmente sind, ungeachtet ihrer nicht immer zweifelsfreien Echtheit, aufgenommen. In der Einleitung werden die wichtigsten Daten zur Überlieferung und zum Inhalt dieser Predigten erläutert

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: Fürst, Alfons (Publisher); Lona, Horacio E. (Publisher)
    Language: Greek, Ancient (to 1453)
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9783110286144
    Other identifier:
    Series: Werke mit deutscher Übersetzung ; Band 11
    Subjects: Bibelexegese; Biblical exegesis; Edition; Homilie; Homilies; Jeremia; Jeremiah; Origen; Origenes
    Scope: 1 online resource (734 pages)
    Notes:

    Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 23. Nov 2018)

  2. Werke mit deutscher Übersetzung, Band 11, Die Homilien zum Buch Jeremia
    Author: Origenes
    Published: [2018]; © 2018
    Publisher:  De Gruyter, Berlin ; Boston

    Die Jeremiahomilien des Origenes bilden einen besonders wertvollen Teil seiner Werke. Neben der Homilie über 1 Sam. 28 sind sie seine einzigen auf Griechisch überlieferten Predigten und vermitteln damit einen Eindruck vom Originalton des Predigers... more

    Ostbayerische Technische Hochschule Amberg-Weiden / Hochschulbibliothek Amberg
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    TH-AB - Technische Hochschule Aschaffenburg, Hochschulbibliothek
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    Technische Hochschule Augsburg
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    Universitätsbibliothek Bamberg
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    Hochschule Coburg, Zentralbibliothek
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    Hochschule Kempten, Hochschulbibliothek
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    Hochschule Landshut, Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaften, Bibliothek
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    Universitätsbibliothek Passau
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    Die Jeremiahomilien des Origenes bilden einen besonders wertvollen Teil seiner Werke. Neben der Homilie über 1 Sam. 28 sind sie seine einzigen auf Griechisch überlieferten Predigten und vermitteln damit einen Eindruck vom Originalton des Predigers Origenes. Zudem ist das Buch Jeremia in der Alten Kirche nicht oft kommentiert worden, und nirgendwo wurden je wieder der Elan und die Intensität erreicht, mit denen Origenes diesen Propheten auslegte. Origenes identifizierte seine Erfahrungen als Prediger mit dem Schicksal des von seinen Adressaten abgelehnten Propheten Jeremia und fand so einen sehr persönlichen Zugang zu diesem biblischen Text. Auffällig sind ferner die zahlreichen antijüdischen Bemerkungen und Exegesen, in denen die kritische Haltung des Origenes gegenüber dem Judentum seiner Zeit deutlich wird.Der Band bietet eine neue deutsche Übersetzung samt ausführlichen Erläuterungen in den Fußnoten. Auch die erhaltenen Fragmente sind, ungeachtet ihrer nicht immer zweifelsfreien Echtheit, aufgenommen. In der Einleitung werden die wichtigsten Daten zur Überlieferung und zum Inhalt dieser Predigten erläutert

     

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    Volltext (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: Fürst, Alfons (Publisher); Lona, Horacio E. (Publisher)
    Language: Greek, Ancient (to 1453)
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9783110286144
    Other identifier:
    RVK Categories: BO 2890
    Series: Werke mit deutscher Übersetzung ; Band 11
    Subjects: Bibelexegese; Biblical exegesis; Edition; Homilie; Homilies; Jeremia; Jeremiah; Origen; Origenes; Vätertheologie
    Other subjects: Origenes (185-254): Homiliae in Jeremiam
    Scope: 1 online resource (734 pages)
    Notes:

    Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 23. Nov 2018)

  3. Typology and iconography in Donne, Herbert, and Milton
    fashioning the self after Jeremiah
    Published: 2014
    Publisher:  Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke

    Universitätsbibliothek Erlangen-Nürnberg, Hauptbibliothek
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  4. Typology and Iconography in Donne, Herbert, and Milton
    Fashioning the Self after Jeremiah
    Published: 2014
    Publisher:  Palgrave Macmillan, New York

    This book analyzes the iconographic traditions of Jeremiah and of melancholy to show how Donne, Herbert, and Milton each fashions himself after the icons presented in Rembrandt's Jeremiah Lamenting the Destruction of Jerusalem , Sluter's sculpture of... more

    Hochschulbibliothek Friedensau
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    This book analyzes the iconographic traditions of Jeremiah and of melancholy to show how Donne, Herbert, and Milton each fashions himself after the icons presented in Rembrandt's Jeremiah Lamenting the Destruction of Jerusalem , Sluter's sculpture of Jeremiah in the Well of Moses, and Michelangelo's fresco of Jeremiah in the Sistine Chapel. Reuben Sánchez is Lecturer at Sam Houston State University, USA. Seventeenth-century authors so thoroughly imbued the language and imagery of the Bible in vernacular translation that their texts are to be read as attempts to inscribe themselves within the realm of the sacred. I analyze how three seventeenth-century English authors fashion themselves as a specific biblical figure, and how they fashion themselves in their works in order to bring their spiritual lives in line with the narrative arch of a biblical type. In this biblical guise Donne, Herbert, and Milton each hopes to move God to his circumstances as He responded in biblical times to the original type; each author also hopes to move the reader to act to reform himself and thereby avoid the fate of the biblical Israelites. By engaging the art of the period I isolate and describe Donne's, Herbert's, and Milton's self-fashioning as the melancholic Jeremiah. Through a consideration of certain paintings, sculptures, and emblems, I present literature in a broader cultural context, thereby employing an interdisciplinary approach. There are several different Renaissance images of Jeremiah I discuss to give the reader an idea of the iconographic tradition which develops around this biblical figure, but I focus on three images in particular: Claus Sluter's sculpture, the Well of Moses (1404), Rembrandt's painting, 'The Prophet Jeremiah Mourning over the Destruction of Jerusalem' (1630), and Michelangelo's fresco of Jeremiah on the Sistine Chapel (1508-1512). I present detailed analyses of these three works in order to show how and why each of the three English authors fashions himself after one of these three images, or types, of Jeremiah: Donne after Rembrandt's Jeremiah, Herbert after Sluter's Jeremiah, and Milton after Michelangelo's Jeremiah

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Online
    Subjects: Typology (Theology) in art; Jeremiah; Idols and images in literature; Idols and images in art; Prophets in literature; Prophets in art; Art and literature; English literature; Typology (Theology) in literature; English literature
    Scope: Online-Ressource (x, 275 pages)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references and index

    1. 'The Sad Prophet Jeremiah' as an Image of Renaissance MelancholyPART I: REMBRANDT'S JEREMIAH: DONNE AND LEARNING HOW TO BE A PREACHER -- 2. 'I turn my back to thee, but to receive corrections': Donne and the Art of Convetere in "The Lamentations of Jeremy, for the most part according to Tremelius", and 'Good Friday, 1613 Riding Westward' -- 3. 'First the "Burden", and then the "Ease"': Donne and the Art of Convetere in the Sermon on Lamentations 3:1 and in the Letter to His Mother -- PART II: SLUTER'S JEREMIAH: HERBERT AND LEARNING HOW TO VISUALIZE THE HEART -- 4. 'My heart hath store, write there': Writing on the Heart in Herbert's "The Temple" -- 5. 'Then was my heart broken, as was my verse': Visualizing the Heart in "The Temple" -- PART III: MICHELANGELO'S JEREMIAH: MILTON AND LEARNING HOW TO BE A PROPHET -- 6. 'With new acquist / Of true experience': The Failed Revolutionary in the Letter to Heimbach and "Samson Agonistes" -- 7. 'And had none to cry to, but with the Prophet," O earth, earth, earth!"': Style, Witnessing, and Mythmaking in "The Readie and Easie Way" -- 8. 'As a burning fire shut up in my bones': From Polemic to Prophecy in The Reason of Church Government and "The Readie and Easie Way" -- 9. 'Unapocryphall vision': Jeremiah as Exemplary Model for Donne, Herbert, and Milton -- Appendix A: Renaissance Angels and Other Melancholy Figures -- Appendix B: Renaissance Images of Jeremiah -- Appendix C: Renaissance Melancholy and Modern Theory.

  5. Studien zum Jeremiabuch und andere Beiträge zum Alten Testament
    Published: 2010
    Publisher:  Lang, Frankfurt am Main

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: German
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 9783631601716
    RVK Categories: BC 6785 ; BC 7500
    DDC Categories: 220
    Series: Österreichische Biblische Studien ; 37
    Subjects: Array; Array; Array; Array; Array
    Scope: 352 S., 240 mm x 170 mm
    Notes:

    Literaturangaben

  6. Typology and iconography in Donne, Herbert, and Milton
    fashioning the self after Jeremiah
    Published: 2014
    Publisher:  Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 9781137397799
    DDC Categories: PR428.C48; 820.93823
    Edition: 1. publ.
    Subjects: English literature; Typology (Theology) in literature; Typology (Theology) in art; Jeremiah; Idols and images in literature; Idols and images in art; Prophets in literature; Prophets in art; Art and literature; English literature
    Scope: X, 275 S., Ill., 23 cm
    Notes:

    Literaturverz. S. [255] - 262

  7. Diathēkē kainē
    New Covenant as Jewish Apocalypticism in Hebrews 8
    Published: [2017]

    The Epistle to the Hebrews has been viewed predominantly through a Middle Platonic lens. The new covenant in Hebrews 8 has been viewed as a Platonic polemic against Judaism and a supersessionist text for Christianity. When viewed through a Jewish... more

    Index theologicus der Universitätsbibliothek Tübingen
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    The Epistle to the Hebrews has been viewed predominantly through a Middle Platonic lens. The new covenant in Hebrews 8 has been viewed as a Platonic polemic against Judaism and a supersessionist text for Christianity. When viewed through a Jewish apocalyptic lens, however, Hebrews 8 stands less as a polemic against Judaism or a supersessionist text for Christianity than as a hope for people going through suffering and oppression. Moreover, an apocalyptic reading of Jeremiah 31 in its original context provides part of the background through which an apocalyptic reading of Hebrews 8 is made possible. To that end, I argue for a reading of Hebrews 8 through a Jewish apocalyptic lens and an understanding of the new covenant that coheres with such a reading.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Article (journal)
    Format: Print
    Parent title: Enthalten in: The catholic biblical quarterly; Washington, DC : Catholic University of America Press, 1939; 79(2017), 1, Seite 97-110

    Subjects: Neuer Bund; Apokalyptik; Jüdische Literatur; Frühchristentum; diathēkē; APOCALYPTIC literature (Jewish literature); apocalypticism; BIBLE. Hebrews; BIBLE. Jeremiah; CHRISTIANITY; Hebrews; Jeremiah; JEWS; JUDAISM; Middle Platonism; new covenant
    Other subjects: Jeremia Prophet
  8. Typology and Iconography in Donne, Herbert, and Milton
    Fashioning the Self after Jeremiah
    Published: 2014
    Publisher:  Palgrave Macmillan, New York

    This book analyzes the iconographic traditions of Jeremiah and of melancholy to show how Donne, Herbert, and Milton each fashions himself after the icons presented in Rembrandt's Jeremiah Lamenting the Destruction of Jerusalem , Sluter's sculpture of... more

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    Hochschulbibliothek Friedensau
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    Hochschule für Wirtschaft und Umwelt Nürtingen-Geislingen, Bibliothek Nürtingen
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    Saarländische Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek
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    This book analyzes the iconographic traditions of Jeremiah and of melancholy to show how Donne, Herbert, and Milton each fashions himself after the icons presented in Rembrandt's Jeremiah Lamenting the Destruction of Jerusalem , Sluter's sculpture of Jeremiah in the Well of Moses, and Michelangelo's fresco of Jeremiah in the Sistine Chapel. Reuben Sánchez is Lecturer at Sam Houston State University, USA. Seventeenth-century authors so thoroughly imbued the language and imagery of the Bible in vernacular translation that their texts are to be read as attempts to inscribe themselves within the realm of the sacred. I analyze how three seventeenth-century English authors fashion themselves as a specific biblical figure, and how they fashion themselves in their works in order to bring their spiritual lives in line with the narrative arch of a biblical type. In this biblical guise Donne, Herbert, and Milton each hopes to move God to his circumstances as He responded in biblical times to the original type; each author also hopes to move the reader to act to reform himself and thereby avoid the fate of the biblical Israelites. By engaging the art of the period I isolate and describe Donne's, Herbert's, and Milton's self-fashioning as the melancholic Jeremiah. Through a consideration of certain paintings, sculptures, and emblems, I present literature in a broader cultural context, thereby employing an interdisciplinary approach. There are several different Renaissance images of Jeremiah I discuss to give the reader an idea of the iconographic tradition which develops around this biblical figure, but I focus on three images in particular: Claus Sluter's sculpture, the Well of Moses (1404), Rembrandt's painting, 'The Prophet Jeremiah Mourning over the Destruction of Jerusalem' (1630), and Michelangelo's fresco of Jeremiah on the Sistine Chapel (1508-1512). I present detailed analyses of these three works in order to show how and why each of the three English authors fashions himself after one of these three images, or types, of Jeremiah: Donne after Rembrandt's Jeremiah, Herbert after Sluter's Jeremiah, and Milton after Michelangelo's Jeremiah

     

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    Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781137397805
    RVK Categories: HI 1915
    Subjects: Typology (Theology) in art; Jeremiah; Idols and images in literature; Idols and images in art; Prophets in literature; Prophets in art; Art and literature; English literature; Typology (Theology) in literature; English literature; British literature; British literature; Electronic books
    Scope: Online-Ressource (x, 275 pages)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references and index

    1. 'The Sad Prophet Jeremiah' as an Image of Renaissance MelancholyPART I: REMBRANDT'S JEREMIAH: DONNE AND LEARNING HOW TO BE A PREACHER -- 2. 'I turn my back to thee, but to receive corrections': Donne and the Art of Convetere in "The Lamentations of Jeremy, for the most part according to Tremelius", and 'Good Friday, 1613 Riding Westward' -- 3. 'First the "Burden", and then the "Ease"': Donne and the Art of Convetere in the Sermon on Lamentations 3:1 and in the Letter to His Mother -- PART II: SLUTER'S JEREMIAH: HERBERT AND LEARNING HOW TO VISUALIZE THE HEART -- 4. 'My heart hath store, write there': Writing on the Heart in Herbert's "The Temple" -- 5. 'Then was my heart broken, as was my verse': Visualizing the Heart in "The Temple" -- PART III: MICHELANGELO'S JEREMIAH: MILTON AND LEARNING HOW TO BE A PROPHET -- 6. 'With new acquist / Of true experience': The Failed Revolutionary in the Letter to Heimbach and "Samson Agonistes" -- 7. 'And had none to cry to, but with the Prophet," O earth, earth, earth!"': Style, Witnessing, and Mythmaking in "The Readie and Easie Way" -- 8. 'As a burning fire shut up in my bones': From Polemic to Prophecy in The Reason of Church Government and "The Readie and Easie Way" -- 9. 'Unapocryphall vision': Jeremiah as Exemplary Model for Donne, Herbert, and Milton -- Appendix A: Renaissance Angels and Other Melancholy Figures -- Appendix B: Renaissance Images of Jeremiah -- Appendix C: Renaissance Melancholy and Modern Theory.

  9. Nómos/nómoi in the Septuagint and the Letter to the Hebrews
    Published: 2023

    This article explores the usage of plural νόμοι versus singular νόμος throughout the whole corpus of the Greek Bible. Obviously, the singular is predominant. If we put aside later variants and textual traditions, the rare passages where the plural... more

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    This article explores the usage of plural νόμοι versus singular νόμος throughout the whole corpus of the Greek Bible. Obviously, the singular is predominant. If we put aside later variants and textual traditions, the rare passages where the plural νόμοι is used (in Proverbs, Jeremiah, Esther, and 2 Maccabees) mutually elucidate each other: the plural occurs where the translators wanted to stress that the law(s) in question should be distinguished from the Torah. With respect to Jer 31:31–34 (LXX 38:31–34) and the quotations from it in Hebrews, the article demonstrates that the plural νόμοι in the LXX cannot be explained by the Vorlage, as many modern researchers suggest, but was a conscious device used by the LXX translator. The aim of the translator, followed by the author of Hebrews, was to stress the distinction between the Law of Moses and the Laws of the New Covenant.

     

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    Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Article (journal)
    Format: Online
    Other identifier:
    Parent title: Enthalten in: Novum Testamentum; Leiden [u.a.] : Brill, 1956; 65(2023), 4, Seite 498-516; Online-Ressource

    Subjects: Epistle to the Hebrews; Jeremiah; Septuagint; nomos; Torah
  10. "See and read all these words"
    the concept of the written in the Book of Jeremiah
    Published: [2016]; © 2016
    Publisher:  Eisenbrauns, Winona Lake, Indiana

    "Unusually for the Hebrew Bible, the book of Jeremiah contains a high number of references to writers, writing, and the written word. The book (which was primarily written during the exilic period) demonstrates a key moment in the ongoing integration... more

    Universität Potsdam, Universitätsbibliothek
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    "Unusually for the Hebrew Bible, the book of Jeremiah contains a high number of references to writers, writing, and the written word. The book (which was primarily written during the exilic period) demonstrates a key moment in the ongoing integration of writing and the written word into ancient Israelite society. Yet the book does not describe writing in the abstract. Instead, it provides an account of its own textualization, thereby blurring the lines between the texts in the narrative and the texts that constitute the book. Scrolls in Jeremiah become inextricably intertwined with the scroll of Jeremiah. To authenticate the book of Jeremiah as the word of YHWH, its tradents present a theological account of the chain of transmission from the divine to the prophet and then to the scribe and the written page. Indeed, the book of Jeremiah extends the chain of transmission beyond the written word to include the book of Jeremiah itself and, finally, a receiving audience. To make the case for this chain of transmission, See and Read's three exegetical chapters attend to writers (YHWH, prophets, and scribes), the written word, and the receiving audience. The written word, as Jeremiah imagines it, is to be received by a worshiping audience through public reading but delivered via textual intermediaries"--

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English; Hebrew
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 9781575064024; 1575064022
    RVK Categories: BC 6785
    Series: Array ; 18
    Subjects: Writing in the Bible; Transmission of texts; Writing in the Bible; Transmission of texts; Bible; Writing in the Bible; Jeremiah; Transmission of texts; Criticism, interpretation, etc
    Scope: xiii, 194 Seiten, 24 cm
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references and indexes

  11. Typology and Iconography in Donne, Herbert, and Milton
    fashioning the self after Jeremiah
    Published: 2014
    Publisher:  Palgrave Macmillan, New York, NY [u.a.]

    Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Haus Unter den Linden
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    Verlag (Inhaltsverzeichnis)
    Source: Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 9781137397799
    RVK Categories: HI 1915
    Edition: 1. ed.
    Subjects: Typology (Theology) in art; Jeremiah; Idols and images in literature; Idols and images in art; Prophets in literature; Prophets in art; English literature; Typology (Theology) in literature; Art and literature
    Scope: X, 275 S., Ill.
    Notes:

    Literaturverzeichnis S. [255] - 262

  12. Jeremiah as Collection
    Scrolls, Sheets, and the Problem of Textual Arrangement
    Published: [2018]

    The variations in the textual history of Jeremiah's Oracles against the Nations have presented scholarship with a perennial puzzle. In addressing these variants, modern scholarship has consistently assumed that one of the versions must be original... more

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    The variations in the textual history of Jeremiah's Oracles against the Nations have presented scholarship with a perennial puzzle. In addressing these variants, modern scholarship has consistently assumed that one of the versions must be original and the other a revision. In this study, I propose an alternate explanation. Drawing on considerations of material culture, comparative evidence, and insights from the field of book history, I suggest that the Jeremiah traditions existed in the early Persian period as an only partially ordered collection rather than a linear book. Rather than one version being original and the other an editorial rearrangement, both the LXX and the MT represent independent organizations of this collection.

     

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    Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Article (journal)
    Format: Online
    Other identifier:
    Parent title: Enthalten in: The catholic biblical quarterly; Washington, DC : Catholic Biblical Association of America, 1939; 80(2018), 1, Seite 25-44; Online-Ressource

    Subjects: BIBLE; book history; colophon; COLOPHONS; FISCHER, Georg; Jeremiah; JEREMIAH (Biblical prophet); Oracles against the Nations; papyrus; scroll; sheet; textual criticism; TEXTUAL criticism
  13. Trauma Theory and Biblical Studies
    Published: [2015]

    Since the early 2000s, several scholars have explored the use of trauma theory as an interpretive lens to understand some of the most difficult and painful texts in the Bible. The use of trauma theory does not constitute a method of interpretation... more

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    Since the early 2000s, several scholars have explored the use of trauma theory as an interpretive lens to understand some of the most difficult and painful texts in the Bible. The use of trauma theory does not constitute a method of interpretation but a frame of reference that, when coupled with other methodologies (e.g., psychology, post-structuralism, post-colonialism, refugee studies, etc.), can yield innovative results. While trauma theory has proven useful in the study of exilic texts in particular, scholars have ventured beyond the narrower concern of exilic literature, investigating the use of trauma theory for other portions of the Hebrew Bible and New Testament. The impact of trauma is a significant component of the human condition that lies beneath the production of a wide variety of biblical texts.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Article (journal)
    Format: Online
    Other identifier:
    Parent title: Enthalten in: Currents in biblical research; London [u.a.] : Sage, 2002; 14(2015), 1, Seite 24-44; Online-Ressource

    Subjects: BIBLE. New Testament; BIBLE; Cultural trauma; exile; Ezekiel; Holocaust; Jeremiah; Job; Lamentations; psychological biblical criticism; refugee studies; STRUCTURALISM; survival guilt; survival literature; testimony; trauma theory
  14. Drunkenness, Tattoos, and Dirty Underwear
    Jeremiah as a Modern Masculine Metaphor
    Published: [2018]

    Jeremiah's body functions as a canvas in the book on which loss of patriarchal privilege due to colonization plays out. This article looks at three tropes of masculinity in the book: drunkenness, bodily markings, and gendered prophetic performance to... more

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    Jeremiah's body functions as a canvas in the book on which loss of patriarchal privilege due to colonization plays out. This article looks at three tropes of masculinity in the book: drunkenness, bodily markings, and gendered prophetic performance to explore how the text uses metaphoric images to represent this rhetorical strategy. The article relates these tropes to gender performances by contemporary white males who also negotiate loss of patriarchal privilege.

     

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    Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
    Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Article (journal)
    Format: Online
    Other identifier:
    Parent title: Enthalten in: The catholic biblical quarterly; Washington, DC : Catholic Biblical Association of America, 1939; 80(2018), 4, Seite 597-618; Online-Ressource

    Subjects: ALCOHOLISM; BIBLE. Jeremiah; GENDER identity in the Bible; Jeremiah; MASCULINITY in the Bible; PROPHECY; TATTOOING; UNDERWEAR; colonization; gender; masculinity; prophecy
  15. Werke mit deutscher Übersetzung
    Band 11, Die Homilien zum Buch Jeremia
    Author: Origenes
    Published: [2018]; ©2018
    Publisher:  De Gruyter, Berlin ; Boston

    Die Jeremiahomilien des Origenes bilden einen besonders wertvollen Teil seiner Werke. Neben der Homilie über 1 Sam. 28 sind sie seine einzigen auf Griechisch überlieferten Predigten und vermitteln damit einen Eindruck vom Originalton des Predigers... more

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    Die Jeremiahomilien des Origenes bilden einen besonders wertvollen Teil seiner Werke. Neben der Homilie über 1 Sam. 28 sind sie seine einzigen auf Griechisch überlieferten Predigten und vermitteln damit einen Eindruck vom Originalton des Predigers Origenes. Zudem ist das Buch Jeremia in der Alten Kirche nicht oft kommentiert worden, und nirgendwo wurden je wieder der Elan und die Intensität erreicht, mit denen Origenes diesen Propheten auslegte. Origenes identifizierte seine Erfahrungen als Prediger mit dem Schicksal des von seinen Adressaten abgelehnten Propheten Jeremia und fand so einen sehr persönlichen Zugang zu diesem biblischen Text. Auffällig sind ferner die zahlreichen antijüdischen Bemerkungen und Exegesen, in denen die kritische Haltung des Origenes gegenüber dem Judentum seiner Zeit deutlich wird.Der Band bietet eine neue deutsche Übersetzung samt ausführlichen Erläuterungen in den Fußnoten. Auch die erhaltenen Fragmente sind, ungeachtet ihrer nicht immer zweifelsfreien Echtheit, aufgenommen. In der Einleitung werden die wichtigsten Daten zur Überlieferung und zum Inhalt dieser Predigten erläutert

     

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    Content information
    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: Greek, Ancient (to 1453)
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9783110286144
    Other identifier:
    Series: Werke mit deutscher Übersetzung ; 11
    Subjects: Bibelexegese; Biblical exegesis; Edition; Homilie; Homilies; Jeremia; Jeremiah; Origen; Origenes
    Scope: 1 online resource (734 p.)
  16. Typology and Iconography in Donne, Herbert, and Milton
    fashioning the self after Jeremiah
    Published: 2014
    Publisher:  Palgrave Macmillan, New York, NY [u.a.]

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    Verlag (Inhaltsverzeichnis)
    Source: Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 9781137397799
    RVK Categories: HI 1915
    Edition: 1. ed.
    Subjects: Typology (Theology) in art; Jeremiah; Idols and images in literature; Idols and images in art; Prophets in literature; Prophets in art; English literature; Typology (Theology) in literature; Art and literature
    Scope: X, 275 S., Ill.
    Notes:

    Literaturverzeichnis S. [255] - 262

  17. "See and read all these words"
    the concept of the written in the Book of Jeremiah
    Published: [2016]; © 2016
    Publisher:  Eisenbrauns, Winona Lake, Indiana

    "Unusually for the Hebrew Bible, the book of Jeremiah contains a high number of references to writers, writing, and the written word. The book (which was primarily written during the exilic period) demonstrates a key moment in the ongoing integration... more

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    "Unusually for the Hebrew Bible, the book of Jeremiah contains a high number of references to writers, writing, and the written word. The book (which was primarily written during the exilic period) demonstrates a key moment in the ongoing integration of writing and the written word into ancient Israelite society. Yet the book does not describe writing in the abstract. Instead, it provides an account of its own textualization, thereby blurring the lines between the texts in the narrative and the texts that constitute the book. Scrolls in Jeremiah become inextricably intertwined with the scroll of Jeremiah. To authenticate the book of Jeremiah as the word of YHWH, its tradents present a theological account of the chain of transmission from the divine to the prophet and then to the scribe and the written page. Indeed, the book of Jeremiah extends the chain of transmission beyond the written word to include the book of Jeremiah itself and, finally, a receiving audience. To make the case for this chain of transmission, See and Read's three exegetical chapters attend to writers (YHWH, prophets, and scribes), the written word, and the receiving audience. The written word, as Jeremiah imagines it, is to be received by a worshiping audience through public reading but delivered via textual intermediaries"--

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English; Hebrew
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 9781575064024; 1575064022
    RVK Categories: BC 6785
    Series: Array ; 18
    Subjects: Writing in the Bible; Transmission of texts; Writing in the Bible; Transmission of texts; Bible; Writing in the Bible; Jeremiah; Transmission of texts; Criticism, interpretation, etc
    Scope: xiii, 194 Seiten, 24 cm
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references and indexes

  18. The Tree and the Temple
    Echoes of a New Ingathering and Renewed Exile (Mark 11.12–21)
    Published: 2022

    This article considers Mark's account of the cursing of the fig tree, read in conjunction with Jesus’ temple action. Having reviewed recent proposals on the literary shape of Mark 11.1-12.12, the article proposes a fresh reading of the section's... more

     

    This article considers Mark's account of the cursing of the fig tree, read in conjunction with Jesus’ temple action. Having reviewed recent proposals on the literary shape of Mark 11.1-12.12, the article proposes a fresh reading of the section's structure. Triple introductions at 11.11, 11.15 and 11.27 are shown to match triple conclusions at 11.11, 11.19 and 12.12, these constituents framing interwoven units running from 11.11 to 12.12. The pattern of triple intercalation suggests that the cursing of the fig tree and Jesus’ temple action should be interpreted one in light of the other. The article then considers the intertextual relationship between Mark's narrative and the scriptural texts it evokes. The study uncovers previously neglected echoes vital for understanding the significance of Jesus’ cursing of the fig tree and temple action. The ‘casting out’ motif in Jeremiah 7-8, as dramatically portrayed in Jesus’ temple action, is set forth as heralding a ‘renewed exile’ for those who reject Jesus’ message, while the mirror motif of ‘ingathering’ in Isa 56.1-8, accentuated by the ‘withered tree’ imagery of 56.3, heralds new opportunity, with those who were previously outsiders to the temple made insiders in the eschatological house of prayer.

     

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    Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
    Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Article (journal)
    Format: Online
    Other identifier:
    Parent title: Enthalten in: New Testament studies; Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press, 1954; 68(2022), 1, Seite 26-37; Online-Ressource

    Subjects: Isaiah; Jeremiah; casting out; cleansing; destruction; echoes; eschatological; exile; fig tree; gentiles; ingathering; intercalation; intertextual; temple action
  19. Jeremias
    höret die Stimme ; Roman
    Published: 1956
    Publisher:  Fischer, Berlin [u.a.]

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: German
    Media type: Book
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    Series: Gesammelte Werke / Franz Werfel
    Subjects: Prosatext; Jeremia; prose; Jeremiah
    Scope: 552 S