Hebrews and divine speech - Info and Reading Options
By Jonathan Griffiths (Preaching instructor)
"Hebrews and divine speech" was published by Bloomsbury in 2014 - London, it has 200 pages and the language of the book is English.
“Hebrews and divine speech” Metadata:
- Title: Hebrews and divine speech
- Author: ➤ Jonathan Griffiths (Preaching instructor)
- Language: English
- Number of Pages: 200
- Publisher: Bloomsbury
- Publish Date: 2014
- Publish Location: London
“Hebrews and divine speech” Subjects and Themes:
- Subjects: ➤ Hebräerbrief - Word of God (Christian theology) - Bible - Speech acts (Linguistics) - Criticism, interpretation - Exegese - Gottesrede - Christianity - Salvation - Religious aspects - Hebrews
Edition Specifications:
- Pagination: xiv, 200 pages
Edition Identifiers:
- The Open Library ID: OL30846435M - OL22939191W
- Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) ID: 883461163 - 944224457
- Library of Congress Control Number (LCCN): 2015430334
- ISBN-13: 9780567655523
- ISBN-10: 0567655520
- All ISBNs: 0567655520 - 9780567655523
AI-generated Review of “Hebrews and divine speech”:
"Hebrews and divine speech" Description:
The Open Library:
"The theme of divine speech appears at the opening of the Hebrews (1.1-2) and recurs throughout the book, often in contexts suggesting connections to other areas of scholarly interest (christology, soteriology, cosmology, and the writer's understanding of the nature of his discourse). This study begins with a consideration of the genre and structure of Hebrews (offering a new structural outline), concluding that Hebrews constitutes the earliest extant complete Christian sermon and consists of a series of Scriptural expositions. The investigation then turns to consider Hebrews' theology of divine speech through an exegetical analysis of eight key passages. Throughout it examines the widely held (but largely untested) assumption that logos and rhema function as key terms in the author's presentation of divine speech. Analysis of the exegetical data shows that Hebrews presents God's word, which finds full expression in the incarnate Christ, as the central means by which salvation is made available and the place of divine rest is accessed. The study finds that the terms logos and rhema are used with a high degree of consistency to signify forms of divine speech, logos usually signifying verbal revelation (and three times specifically identifying the author's own discourse) and rhema typically signifying non-verbal revelation in the cosmos. The investigation leads to the ultimate conclusion that the author believes that, through his discourse, he himself communicates that divine word and effects an encounter between his hearers and the God who speaks."--Bloomsbury Publishing The theme of divine speech appears at the opening of the Hebrews (1.1-2) and recurs throughout the book, often in contexts suggesting connections to other areas of scholarly interest (christology, soteriology, cosmology, and the writer's understanding of the nature of his discourse). Griffiths begins with a consideration of the genre and structure of Hebrews (offering a new structural outline), concluding that Hebrews constitutes the earliest extant complete Christian sermon and consists of a series of Scriptural expositions. Griffiths then turns to consider Hebrews' theology of divine speech through an exegetical analysis of eight key passages (with particular attention to the writer's use of the terms logos and rhema), and finds that, for the writer, God's speech is the means by which the place of divine rest is accessed, and is supremely expressed in the person of his Son. Griffiths concludes that the writer presents his sermon as communicating the divine word and effecting an encounter between his hearers and the God who speaks. Analysis of the exegetical data shows that Hebrews presents God's word, which finds full expression in the incarnate Christ, as the central means by which salvation is made available and the place of divine rest is accessed. The study finds that the terms logos and rhema are used with a high degree of consistency to signify forms of divine speech, logos usually signifying verbal revelation (and three times specifically identifying the author's own discourse) and rhema typically signifying non-verbal revelation in the cosmos. The investigation leads to the ultimate conclusion that the author believes that, through his discourse, he himself communicates that divine word and effects an encounter between his hearers and the God who speaks
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