TextPublisher: Minneapolis : Fortress Press, [2015]Copyright date: ♭2015Description: 350 pages ; 23 cmContent type: | Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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Ethiopian Graduate School of Theology Library Available at Circulation Section | 226.6 Sha 2015 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 16839 |
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| 226.6 Pao 2002 Acts and the Isaianic new exodus / | 226.6 Por 2001 Paul in Acts / [manuscript] / | 226.6 Por 2001 c.2 Paul in Acts / [manuscript] / | 226.6 Sha 2015 The divine in Acts and in ancient historiography / | 226.6 Tho 2006 Keeping the church in its place : the church as narrative character in the book of Acts / | 226.6 Tho 2006 c.2 Keeping the church in its place : the church as narrative character in the book of Acts / | 226.6 Wit 1998 Witness to the Gospel : the theology of Acts / |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 301-317) and indexes.
Introduction -- The divine in Greco-Roman historiography -- The divine in biblical and Jewish historiography -- The divine in Hellenistic Jewish historiography -- The divine in Acts -- Historiography and the divine.
"Scott Shauf compares the portrayal of the divine in Acts with portrayals of the divine in other ancient historiographical writings, the latter including Jewish and wider Greco-Roman historiographical traditions. The divine may be represented as a single deity (in Judaism) or many (in Greek and Roman traditions) and also includes representations of angels, God's spirit, Jesus as a divine figure, or forces with divine status such as fate, chance, and providence. Shauf's particular interest is in how the divine is represented as involved in history, through themes including the nature of divine retribution, the partiality or impartiality of the divine toward different sets of people, and the portrayal of divine control over seemingly purely natural and human events. Acts is shown to be engaging historiographical traditions of the author's own day but also contributing unique historiographical perspectives. The way history is written in Acts and in the other writings is shown to be intimately tied to the understanding of the role of the divine in history"-- Publisher.
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