Bibliothèque Don Bosco de Lubumbashi
Auteur Armin D. Baum
|
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur (1)
Affiner la recherche Interroger des sources externes
Paulinismen in den Missionsreden des lukanischen Paulus / Armin D. Baum in Ephemerides theologicae lovanienses, 82/4 (December 2006)
[article]
Titre : Paulinismen in den Missionsreden des lukanischen Paulus : Zur inhaltlichen Authentizität der oratio recta in der Apostelgeschichte Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Armin D. Baum, Auteur Année de publication : 2007 Article en page(s) : pp. 405 - 436. Langues : Allemand (ger) Résumé : In accordance with ancient literary standards Luke did not let the Paul of Acts speak in the style of the (uncontested) Pauline letters. To verify the historicity of the speeches attributed to Paul in the Book of Acts one must analyze not their style but their propositions. Pauline propositions can be found not only in Paul’s often analyzed farewell speech in Milet (Acts 20,18b-35), but also in his four missionary discourses (Acts 13,16b-41.46b-47; 14,15b-17; 17,22b-31; 28,25b-28). These discourses of Luke’s Paul contain an impressive number of Pauline ideas, many of which have been generally overlooked, for instance in the margins of the Nestle-Aland edition. The many conceptual parallels to Romans 1-3 are particularly striking. Adolf von Harnack rightly assumed that these four rather short missionary discourses in all probability preserve a generally trustworthy sketch of how the historical Paul would have merged other evangelistic topoi with key ideas that are also known from his letters.
in Ephemerides theologicae lovanienses > 82/4 (December 2006) . - pp. 405 - 436.[article] Paulinismen in den Missionsreden des lukanischen Paulus : Zur inhaltlichen Authentizität der oratio recta in der Apostelgeschichte [texte imprimé] / Armin D. Baum, Auteur . - 2007 . - pp. 405 - 436.
Langues : Allemand (ger)
in Ephemerides theologicae lovanienses > 82/4 (December 2006) . - pp. 405 - 436.
Résumé : In accordance with ancient literary standards Luke did not let the Paul of Acts speak in the style of the (uncontested) Pauline letters. To verify the historicity of the speeches attributed to Paul in the Book of Acts one must analyze not their style but their propositions. Pauline propositions can be found not only in Paul’s often analyzed farewell speech in Milet (Acts 20,18b-35), but also in his four missionary discourses (Acts 13,16b-41.46b-47; 14,15b-17; 17,22b-31; 28,25b-28). These discourses of Luke’s Paul contain an impressive number of Pauline ideas, many of which have been generally overlooked, for instance in the margins of the Nestle-Aland edition. The many conceptual parallels to Romans 1-3 are particularly striking. Adolf von Harnack rightly assumed that these four rather short missionary discourses in all probability preserve a generally trustworthy sketch of how the historical Paul would have merged other evangelistic topoi with key ideas that are also known from his letters.