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SrMaryLea | 4 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 23, 2023 |
 
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SrMaryLea | 5 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 22, 2023 |
 
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revbill1961 | 4 weitere Rezensionen | May 4, 2023 |
 
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revbill1961 | 5 weitere Rezensionen | May 4, 2023 |
This book is No. 9 in a series of monographs designed to provide clergy and laity the best works in Biblical scholarship both in this country and abroad. The volumes in this series are planned to further the study of Biblical theology within the Church. Based on historical and literary research, the primary aim of the series is to set out more clearly the nature of Biblical faith as a living phenomenon of vital significance for the contemporary Christian.We
 
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ArkandDovePCLibrary | Jul 23, 2022 |
Certamente a Teologia do AT de GERHARD VON RAD tornou-se um clássico. Desde a sua primeira edição em língua alemã, ela alcançou 10 edições, marcando, de forma decisiva, toda a discussão futura sobre a teologia do Antigo Testamento. Em sua obra, VON RAD abdica da busca por um centro do Antigo Testamento por entender que este representa os testemunhos de várias experiências da revelação divina e que recontá-las é a maneira mais adequada de elaborar uma teologia do Antigo Testamento. Por este motivo, a sua obra apresenta, em ambos os volumes, uma teologia das tradições (por exemplo, as tradições do Hexateuco, no 1º volume, e as tradições proféticas, no 2° volume). Assim, VON RAD consegue superar a tradicional dicotomia existente entre uma história da religião de Israel, de um lado, e uma doutrina bíblica a partir de conceitos teológicos centrais, de outro. Para o afazer teológico em nosso continente é de suma importância que o autor tenha sido capaz de vincular a contextualidade histórica do testemunho de fé do Antigo Testamento com a relevância atual deste testemunho; ele soube ouvir o andar da história, reconhecendo nela o agir de Deus e, a partir daí, tirar conclusões para a própria fé e vida.
 
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Jonatas.Bakas | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 24, 2022 |
 
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Murtra | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 2, 2021 |
 
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Murtra | Jan 2, 2021 |
Von Rad argues that the proper way to do Old Testament theology is to describe the faith of ancient Israel as a history of the Saving Acts of God. In other words, to participate (as possible) in Israel retelling of and reflecting on her own Saving History with YHWH
 
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Hany.Abdelmalek | 5 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 16, 2020 |
Von Rad argues that the proper way to do Old Testament theology is to describe the faith of ancient Israel as a history of the Saving Acts of God. In other words, to participate (as possible) in Israel retelling of and reflecting on her own Saving History with YHWH
 
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Hany.Abdelmalek | 5 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 16, 2020 |
El libro es parte de la bibliografía oficial del curso Libros históricos y sapienciales
 
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OHMConv | 4 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 12, 2020 |
In The Message of the Prophets, author J. Daniel Hays offers a scholarly, yet readable and student-friendly survey of the Old Testament prophetic literature that presents the message of each prophet in its historical and its biblical context and then tracks that message through the New Testament to challenge readers with what it means for them today.
 
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StFrancisofAssisi | Apr 30, 2019 |
A very important and still useful commentary; research and analysis have qualified both the historical background as von Rad understood it and the theories of composition and redaction which he favoured, but his overall approach and many of his conclusions, and especially his overall way of reading the texts in the light of their sitz im leben remain valuable.
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jsburbidge | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 31, 2018 |
Van Rad does a masterful job at relating the basic story of Genesis, amply annotated with textual analysis, as well as poignant interpretation of the material.

This is an older commentary, and does not reflect some current scholarship, but is still one of the best ones you can find on Genesis.
 
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Arctic-Stranger | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Oct 8, 2008 |
Old Testament Theology represents a vast and thorough work that attempts to make sense of the Old Testament and its perspectives as a whole, and also considers the New Testament and how it perceived the works that came before it.

von Rad comes from the more liberal school of thought, and provides his analyses based on a form-critical and a traditio-historical perspective. In his estimation, Israel really represented a coalition of tribes that had always been in Canaan who were bound together in their belief in Yahwism (the "amphictyonic clan league") who developed a "saving history" which involved memories and concepts of the patriarchs and an Exodus narrative. These traditions were eventually wrapped up in monarchical perspectives that came after the accession of the kings. von Rad accepts the documentary hypothesis, three Isaianic authors hypothesis, and the strong hand of the Deuteronomist (or its school) on the works of history, with the Chronicler coming later.

While these operating assumptions make it hard to agree with a lot of what von Rad presents, he provides much food for thought in terms of his understanding of the texts and their relationships. He ends up being an outspoken critic of the methodology of his age and the presupposition that an analysis of the OT really is the analysis of what can be historically ascertained as viable and what must be discarded. von Rad demonstrates well that this is not a study of Old Testament theology-- one must actually approach the texts and try to give Israel the benefit of the doubt.

While I do not agree with all of his conclusions regarding the main element of his argument, I can appreciate some of the lessons one can gain from the approach: the belief that what we have revealed in the Bible is a series of traditions involving YHWH's saving actions in Israel's history. We have traditions regarding Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; the Exodus; Joshua and the Conquest; Judges; David and the future King; the return from the exile; and so on. von Rad points out how the Old Testament is entirely written with a view to the future: YHWH has acted, and His deliverance awaits. After all, God makes promises to Abraham that are only partially fulfilled in Moses and Joshua. When establishing David as king, God points further to a line of kings, and of course the ultimate King. von Rad then takes this line of thought to its "Christian" conclusion, and provides a nice continuity between the Testaments: the belief that YHWH has enacted a major and groundbreaking saving event through Jesus Christ, representing the fulfillment of prophecy and OT expectations, provides the crescendo for what the OT was always seeking after. We find the ultimate fulfillment of the promises to Abraham; the promise of Moses regarding a prophet; the ultimate conquest; the King of Kings; the true return from exile.

While it is challenging to work with some of the presuppositions in the work, one can mine von Rad's magnum opus and find much that is worthwhile.
 
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deusvitae | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 14, 2008 |
 
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ODBCchili | 5 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 31, 2019 |
 
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ODBCchili | 4 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 31, 2019 |
 
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CPI | Jun 30, 2016 |
 
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CPI | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 30, 2016 |
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