Antonio Piñero, «New Testament Philology Bulletin no 31-32», Vol. 16 (2003) 157-184
This section of the Journal covers articles or books related to the following fields: General Grammar. Tools. Characterisation of Biblical Greek / Textual Criticism / Stylistics / Structures / Literary Studies and Criticism / Phonetics and Accentuation / Morphology / Rhetoric / Semantics / Semiotics / Semitisms / Syntax / Translation / Vocabulary / Mixed phi-lological methods.
186 Antonio Piñero
VOCABULARY
See in general the entry Voces Biblicae of the
Elenchus Bibliographicus Biblicus.
83. BOSCOLO, G., Gesù di Nazareth: il Dio con noi. Il significato cristolo-
gico del uso di Ï€ÏοσÎÏχομαι nel Vangelo di Matteo. Diss., Rome,
Univ. Gregoriana. Prom. K. Stock, 1999, 304 pp. See DissAbst,
Ceurop.
84. BRANDT, P.Y. - A. LUKINOVICH, “L’adresse à Jésus dans les évangiles
synoptiquesâ€, Biblica 82 (2001) 17-50. The a. study the use of
κÏÏιε, Ïαββί, διδάσκαλε, á¼Ï€Î¹ÏƒÏ„άτα in the Synoptic gospels:
“A number of persons in the Gospels address Jesus by a title,
e.g., ‘teacher’, ‘sir’, master’, when they speak to him. In parallel
episodes in the synoptic gospels these titles undergo variations.
This article presents a complete, comparative study of the titles
addressed to Jesus in Mt, Mk and Lk, and finishes with a descrip-
tion of the titles proper to each gospelâ€.
85. CARTLEDGE, M.J., “The Nature and Function of New Testament Glos-
solaliaâ€, EvQ 72 (2000) 135-150. This investigation of the meaning
and signification of this term in the NT and of the scholars’ view
on it arrives at the conclusion that Luke considered glossolalia as
xenolalia, that is to speak unlearned human languages and as a
sign of the end-time, while Paul viewed it either as xenolalia or
“language of angels†(intelligible), and a sing of God’s blessing or
cursing.
86. DAWSON, A., Freedom as Liberating Power. A Socio-political Read-
ing of the á¼Î¾Î¿Ï…σία Texts in the Gospel of Mark (NT and Orbis
Antiquus 44). Freiburg (Universitätsverlag) 2000, XIII + 245 pp.
This study deals with texts which treat the á¼Î¾Î¿Ï…σία of Jesus and
his disciples and the challenges to this á¼Î¾Î¿Ï…σία. The main thesis
is that Mark’s Gospel proclaims a concept of freedom radically
different from that which was maintained by the general culture
of the Mediterranean world. For Mark it was not August who
inaugurated a golden age of liberty, but Jesus.
87. GANE, R.E., “Re-opening καταπÎτασμα (‘veil’) in Hebrews 6:19â€,
AndrUnS 38 (2000) 5-8. The a. contends that this term includes
the idea of Christ entering the inner part of the heavenly sanctu-
ary, because of the significance of the expression á¼ÏƒÏŽÏ„εÏον τοῦ
καταπετάσματος in Ex 26:33 and Lv 16:2 LXX.
88. HAHN, F., “Der Begriff ‘mysterion’ im Neuen Testamentâ€, in K.
Krämer (ed.), Die Weite des Mysteriums. Christliche Identität im
Dialog. FS H. Bürkle. Freiburg (Herder) 2000, 65-77.