Synoptikon: Streams of Tradition in Mark, Matthew, and Luke

Bruce D. Chilton
Edited by Alan Avery-peck , Craig A. Evans
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Synoptikon: Streams of Tradition in Mark, Matthew, and Luke

Bruce D. Chilton
Edited by Alan Avery-peck , Craig A. Evans
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Overview

520 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: Oct 27, 2022
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 520
  • Publisher: Brill
  • ISBN: 9789004521544
  • Dimensions: 6.102362204" W x 1.53543307" L x 9.251968503" H
Alan J. Avery-Peck, PhD. (1981), is Professor of Religious Studies and Kraft-Hiatt Professor of Judaic Studies at the College of the Holy Cross, Worcester, MA, USA. A specialist in early Rabbinic Judaism, he wrote the introduction and commentary to 2 Corinthians, in A.J. Levine and Marc Brettler, eds., The Jewish Annotated New Testament (2nd edition, Oxford, 2017).
Bruce Chilton, Ph.D. (1976), Cambridge University, is Bernard Iddings Bell Professor of Philosophy and Religion at Bard College. He wrote the first critical translation of the Aramaic version of Isaiah with commentary (The Isaiah Targum, 1987), as well as analyses of Jesus in his Judaic context (A Galilean Rabbi and His Bible, 1984; The Temple of Jesus, 1992; Pure Kingdom, 1996; Rabbi Jesus, 2000). Recent work includes Resurrection Logic: How Jesus’ First Followers Believed God Raised Him from the Dead (2019), and The Herods. Murder, politics, and the art of succession (2021).
Darrell Bock (Phd, Aberdeen, 1983) is Senior Research Professor of New Testament Studies and Executive Director of Cultural Engagement at Dallas Theological Seminary. He is the author and editor of several books, including technical studies on blasphemy and exaltation in Judaism and on the historical Jesus.
Craig A. Evans, Ph.D. (1983), Claremont, D.Habil. (2009), Budapest, is John Bisagno Distinguished Professor of Christian Origins at Houston Baptist University in Texas. He has published several books and articles on the historical Jesus and the use of Israel’s scriptures in the New Testament and early Christianity. These include Jesus and His Contemporaries (Brill, 2005), Jesus and the Remains of His Day (Hendrickson, 2015), and Jesus and the Manuscripts (Hendrickson, 2020).
Daniel M. Gurtner, PhD (2005), is Professor of New Testament, Gateway Seminary of the Southern Baptist Convention (USA). He has published broadly in the New Testament and Second Temple Judaism, notably the award-winning T&T Clark Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism edited with Loren T. Stuckenbruck (2 vols., 2020). His primary research interests lie in the gospels and their interface with the Hebrew Bible and Second Temple Judaism, as in his published dissertation, The Torn Veil: Matthew’s Exposition of the Death of Jesus (2007). He is currently writing the Word Biblical Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew.

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