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Feasts In John Jewish Festivals And Jesus Hour In The Fourth Gospel Michael A Daise

  • SKU: BELL-50450354
Feasts In John Jewish Festivals And Jesus Hour In The Fourth Gospel Michael A Daise
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Feasts In John Jewish Festivals And Jesus Hour In The Fourth Gospel Michael A Daise instant download after payment.

Publisher: JCB Mohr (Paul Siebeck)
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.3 MB
Pages: 235
Author: Michael A. Daise
ISBN: 9783161490187, 3161490185
Language: English
Year: 2007

Product desciption

Feasts In John Jewish Festivals And Jesus Hour In The Fourth Gospel Michael A Daise by Michael A. Daise 9783161490187, 3161490185 instant download after payment.

In this work Michael A. Daise broaches the question of the rationale lying behind the six feasts mentioned in the Gospel of John. He argues that, in an earlier recension of the Fourth Gospel, those feasts were sequenced into a single, liturgical year and, as such, furnished temporal momentum for the concurrent motif of Jesus' 'hour'. After reviewing the feasts as they appear in the narrative, then critiquing the major theories proposed for their purpose, the author presents his key premise that the Passover at John 6:4 is to be read not as a regular Passover, observed on 14 Nisan (first month of the Jewish calendar), but as the 'Second Passover' of Numbers 9:9-14, observed on 14 Iyyar (second month of the Jewish calendar). The law of "hadash" for barley (6:9) requires a date for chapter 6 after the regular Passover; the Exodus manna episode (Exodus 16), on which John 6 largely turns, dates to 15 Iyyar; the contingent character of the Second Passover explains Jesus' absence from Jerusalem in John 6; and, with John 5 and 6 reversed, the chronology of John 2:13-6:71 coheres. On such a reading, the feasts of the entire Fourth Gospel unfold within a single, liturgical year: Passover (2:13), Second Passover (6:4), the unnamed feast/Pentecost? (5:1), Tabernacles (7:2), the Dedication (10:22-23) and Passover (11:55). Inasmuch as this scheme brings chronological design to chapters 2-12, and inasmuch as those same chapters also chronicle the imminent arrival of Jesus' "hour" (2:4; 12:23), an overarching purpose for the feasts emerges; namely, to serve the motif of Jesus' "hour" by marking the movement of time toward its arrival.

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