1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910815704003321

Autore

Brodie Thomas L

Titolo

The quest for the origin of John's Gospel : a source-oriented approach / / Thomas L. Brodie

Pubbl/distr/stampa

New York, : Oxford University Press, 1993

ISBN

0-19-774061-8

1-280-52624-6

0-19-536047-8

1-4294-0750-6

Descrizione fisica

x, 194 p

Collana

Oxford scholarship online

Disciplina

226.5/066

Soggetti

Christianity

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Previously issued in print: New York: Oxford University Press, 1993.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references (p. 177-185) and indexes.

Nota di contenuto

Intro -- Contents -- General Introduction: The Uncertain Quest and the Need for a Firmer Foundation -- I: THE UNCERTAIN QUEST -- The Move from Specifics to a Broad Three-Part Inquiry -- 1. The Quest for the Religious Background -- 2. The Quest for the Purpose/Life-Situation -- 3. The Quest for the History of a Johannine Community -- II: TOWARDS ESTABLISHING A PARTIAL GUIDE TO HISTORY: JOHN'S COMPOSITION (Use of Sources) -- Composition as a Basis for History -- 4. The Quest for Sources: The Central Problem -- 5. The Thesis -- 6. The Ancient Context: A World of Literary Transformation -- 7. A Test Case: John 9 as a Dramatization of the Vision Theme in Mark 8:11-9:8 -- 8. John's Systematic Use of All of Mark -- 9. John's Systematic Use of Matthew -- 10. John's Systematic Use of Part of Luke-Acts -- 11. John's Systematic Use of the Pentateuch -- 12. John's Systematic Use of Ephesians -- III: THE QUEST RESUMED: INITIAL CONCLUSION -- 13. The Religious Background -- 14. The Purpose/Life-Situation -- 15. Questions About the Reality of the Johannine Community: Towards Seeing the Evangelist as Primarily an Integrated Member of the Larger World-Oriented Christian Community or Church -- General Conclusion: From History to Spirit -- APPENDIX A: The Story of the Adulteress and the Accusers (John 7:53-8:11) -- APPENDIX B: John's Use of Names -- APPENDIX C: John's Use of the Pentateuch: A Tentative Outline of One Dimension --



APPENDIX D: John's Use of Part of Luke-Acts: A Tentative Outline of One Dimension -- APPENDIX E: John's Main Sources: An Approximate Summary -- Bibliography -- Index to Modern Authors

Sommario/riassunto

This text presents a controversial thesis concerning the composition of the Gospel According to John. Most New Testament scholars believe that John was independent of the other three (Synoptic) Gospels, although some hold that he may have been familiar with Mark. This has led many to attempt to reconstruct the history of the community within which and for which John must have written. Brodie argues, however, that until the source question is settled, the historical question remains fruitless. What has been missing from Johannine scholarship, he says, is an accurate sense of the way in which writers of the ancient world set about composing their works. Given this literary context, it can be argued that John knew and used not only all of the Synoptic Gospels, but Acts, Ephesians, and the Pentateuch as well.