The book is certainly worth recommending to every theological library.Zdzislaw J. Kapera in: The Polish Journal of Biblical Research 16, 2017, pp. 102-103 We have here, in this important collection, the fruits of a life-time of informed reflection on Luke and Acts in their original literary...
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The book is certainly worth recommending to every theological library.Zdzislaw J. Kapera in: The Polish Journal of Biblical Research 16, 2017, pp. 102-103 We have here, in this important collection, the fruits of a life-time of informed reflection on Luke and Acts in their original literary setting. The exegetical proposals are argued with exceptional care, the comparisons with Hellenistic literature are uniformly insightful, and the attempt to read Luke-Acts through Greco-Roman historiography is convincing.Dale C. Allison, Jr., Princeton Theological Seminary David Moessner's collection of learned essays impressively synthesizes his sustained scholarly exploration of Luke-Acts as a coherent narrative. Moessner portrays Luke as simultaneously a Hellenistic historian embodying Greco-Roman literary theory and practice and a biblical theologian deeply engaged with interpretation of Israel's Scripture. No other scholar has so carefully delineated the implications of reading Luke's work as a fusion of these streams of tradition. This book is essential reading for interpreters of Luke's Gospel and the Acts of the Apostles.Richard B. Hays, George Washington Ivey Professor of New Testament, The Divinity School, Duke University Professor Moessner has for many years made significant contributions to our understanding of Luke-Acts, contributions based in part on his deep learning in ancient literary theory, in part on his close exegesis of Luke's language, and in part on his firm grasp of the theological framework within which Luke works. The present volume of studies enables scholars - who may have been aware only of scattered essays - to appreciate the full range and depth of his scholarship.Luke Timothy Johnson, Robert W. Woodruff Professor of New Testament and Christian Origins, Emory University David Moessner has devoted decades to puzzling out the narrative poetics and biblical theology of the double-work, Luke-Acts. These rich and insightful essays are filled with the important results of his research, both in Hellenistic historiography and in patient reading of the Lukan work itself, in conversation with scholarship on ancient historiography, rhetoric, and narrative poetics, contemporary narrative theory, and biblical theology. The present volume offers a fresh and comprehensive picture of the compositional praxis and results of the work of the first biblical theologian with which all New Testament scholars will want to contend.Margaret M. Mitchell, Shailer Mathews Professor of New Testament and Early Christian Literature, The University of Chicago David Moessner setzt bei den Aporien des Zueinanders von Lukasevangelium und Apostelgeschichte an. Da er die Einheit der beiden als antiken Vorgaben folgende Erzählung ernst nimmt, gelingt es ihm, viele Aporien bisheriger Forschung einer Lösung zuzuführen. Moessner beschreibt Lukas konsequent als rhetorisch begabten Theologen, dessen Werk nicht als antike Biographie, sondern als historia zu deuten ist: Das lukanische Doppelwerk versteht Moessner als Erzählung über das Ziel der Schriften Israels, welches durch den Gesalbten Israels, Jesus von Nazaret, in Szene gesetzt wird. Der Text ist Schrift über den Plan Gottes mit Israel und der Welt. Moessner hat hier weit mehr als eine Sammlung von Aufsätzen vorgelegt, nämlich das gewichtige, hoch spannend zu lesende Resultat der Forschung vieler Jahre. Wer sich mit dem lukanischen Doppelwerk beschäftigt, sollte an diesem Buch nicht vorüber gehen.Tobias Nicklas, Universität Regensburg This volume brings together previously published essays by David Moessner, a leading and distinctive voice in Lukan studies for over three decades. But this is more than a collection of disparate and occasional essays; by providing contextualizing introductions to each of the five parts and re-configuring each of the essays, Moessner offers an internally coherent and brilliantly compelling thesis: Luke the Hellenistic historian and biblica
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