El mesianismo de Jesús investigado por el rabino Lucas a partir de sus fuentes judías y cristianas: un escrito a modo de "demostración" (epideixis) dirigido al sumo sacerdote Teófilo

In the current lecture, the author summarizes throughout 20 headings the successive steps that marked out his 25 years of research about Luke's work, upto the point in which he got convinced that Luke was a Jewish rabbi, Pharisee, brought up in Jerusalem, perhaps at the feet of Gamaliel, as Pau...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rius-Camps, Josep 1933- (Author)
Format: Print Article
Language:Spanish
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Published: 2005
In: Estudios bíblicos
Year: 2005, Volume: 63, Issue: 4, Pages: 527-557
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Lucan writings / Jewish Christianity
B New Testament / Introduction
RelBib Classification:BH Judaism
CC Christianity and Non-Christian religion; Inter-religious relations
HC New Testament
Further subjects:B Jewish Christianity
B Messianism
B Christology
B Luke
B Lukas Evangelist, Heiliger
B Acts of the Apostles
Description
Summary:In the current lecture, the author summarizes throughout 20 headings the successive steps that marked out his 25 years of research about Luke's work, upto the point in which he got convinced that Luke was a Jewish rabbi, Pharisee, brought up in Jerusalem, perhaps at the feet of Gamaliel, as Paul himself was, to whom he accompanied during some stages of his mission towards paganism. His work, an effort of strict research, was devoted to the former high priest Theophilus, son of Anas, in order to give an answer to the question he was worried about, i.e., Jesus, whom they had handed over the Roman authorities, was really the Messiah of Israel? In his ordered answer, Luke points critically to certain key-characters, in order to make Theophilus see that Jesus' very disciples had found great difficulties in understanding the significance of his mesianism, both during Jesus' life and after his death and resurrection. Once each character reaches the top of his conversion, then Luke gives up talking about him. This is the reason why Luke ends his work with Paul's arrival to Rome, and his definite conversion to devote mainly to pagans.
ISSN:0014-1437
Contains:In: Estudios bíblicos