Loading Content... The link has been copied to your clipboard; paste it anywhere you would like to share it. The publication of Professor Avi Hurvitz’s A Concise Lexicon of Late Biblical Hebrew (Leiden, 2014) has brought fresh attention to the changing language environment in the land of Israel following the Babylonian Exile. The idiom of the earlier Hebrew prophets was not identical with that of the Chronicler and other post-exilic works at the close of the Hebrew Bible. These developments continued into the first century of the Common Era – as we read in the Hebrew documents from the Dead Sea Scrolls. Unfortunately, too little notice has been given to the contribution of the New Testament (as a first-century witness) to these changes in the Hebrew language, as well as the transition from Late Biblical Hebrew to the Hebrew of Israel’s Sages (i.e. Rabbinic/Mishnaic Hebrew). In this presentation we consider selected examples of Hebraisms found in our canonical Greek Gospels, which reflect the changing linguistic environment. Not only do these shed new light on the idioms Jesus chose to communicate his message, but they also contribute to the recently renewed debate about what language(s) Jesus spoke. From Series: LTL Lecture Series Academic Year 2014-2015 | More from Steven NotleyShare a Link to this Lecture
Steven Notley - October 25, 2014
"Between the Chairs" New Testament Evidence for the Hebrew Jesus Spoke
From Series: "LTL Lecture Series Academic Year 2014-2015"
More Associated With "New Testament"...
St. Catherine's Monastery: An Ark In The Wilderness
Father Justin - November 6, 2010
"Between the Chairs" New Testament Evidence for the Hebrew Jesus Spoke
Steven Notley - October 25, 2014
Does the Bible Support Slavery?
Peter Williams - October 30, 2015
An Invasive Story: Paul’s Theology Between Messianic Event and Salvation History
Michael Bird - February 6, 2016
Why and When Was Scripture Written? Looking at the New Testament Writings
Lee McDonald - March 4, 2017
The Theological Value of the ‘Rejected Texts’ and Dead Sea Scrolls for Understanding Jesus
James Charlesworth - March 4, 2017
God is a Warrior: Coming to Terms with Divine Violence in the Old Testament
Tremper Longman - September 16, 2017
The Search for Early Christian Egypt: Archaeology and the Treasures of the Desert
Darlene Hedstrom - May 16, 2018
Searching for the Historical King David: Khirbet Qeiyafa and Khirbet al-Ra'i
Yosef Garfinkel - September 15, 2018
The Triune God of the Bible: Seeing the Trinity in Scripture
Fred Sanders - October 20, 2018
Powered by Series Engine
Steven Notley - October 25, 2014
"Between the Chairs" New Testament Evidence for the Hebrew Jesus Spoke
From Series: "LTL Lecture Series Academic Year 2014-2015"
More Associated With "New Testament"...
Powered by Series Engine