Gorgias Press
Gorgias Biblical Studies
Romans 3 contains exegetically stormy waters, where even the most capable interpreters may feel at sea. In this book, an international group of scholars put their oars into these choppy waters, shedding new light on this wonderful and complex passage of Scripture. The focused and methodologically varied approach allows for greater depth of research than is generally possible in commentaries. Specialists on Romans, especially Romans 3, will find in this book a wealth of information. Likewise, it will be of value to students in advanced exegetical classes and those doing postgraduate research on Romans 3 and related topics. This book is dedicated to Prof. Dr. Martin Webber on his 70th birthday.
The essays collected in Revelation and Leadership in the Kingdom of God intend to honor Professor Ian Arthur Fair, a distinguished biblical scholar and leader in Christian education, known for his groundbreaking research on the Book of Revelation and church leadership. Scholarly contributions included in the Festschrift mirror Fair’s own scholarly interests, including biblical studies, with particular attention to the New Testament apocalyptic traditions, philosophy of missions, theology of worship, history of the Restoration movement, and modern theology. The content of the Festschrift thus closely follows Fair's own spiritual and scholarly journey and also reflects the breadth and scope of his influence on the church and the academy.
Word order is a major component in interpreting Targum Aramaic syntax. With the use of Harald Weinrich’s text-linguistic method, Vasile Condrea answers key questions surrounding this topic. In the indirect speech of Targum 1 Samuel, the text examined here, the reader is exposed to the flow of narrative, which represents the events as they happened. This flow is sometimes substituted with comment. Weinrich defined these two linguistic realities—the narrative and comment registers—and associated them with morphological tenses in modern languages. English narrates with tenses like past simple, but comments with the present and present perfect. In Targum Aramaic, the narrative register is conveyed by VSO sentences. SVO sentences are closely linked with the comment register. In the comment passages, the presence of the biblical author is revealed through reports, notes, or clarifications of the story.