Difference between revisions of "The Open Heaven: A Study of Apocalyptic in Judaism and Early Christianity (1982 Rowland), book"
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==Abstract== | ==Abstract== | ||
"The Open Heaven offers a comprehensive discussion of Jewish apocalyptic literature and themes in the Second Temple period and in early Christianity. In it there is a sustained challenge to the widespread view that apocalypticism is a form of eschatology, and, it has been widely recognised as a significant contribution to the discussion of apcocalypticism in religion since it was first published twenty years ago. By concentrating on the revelatory character of apocalyptic texts rather than their diverse contents the author suggests that it is this aspect of the literature which best enables us to understand their distinctive religion. The book offers a sustained argument for the iew that apocalyptic literature is primarily about the disclosure of heavenly wisdom which offers recipients an understanding of life in the present. He also suggests that there ma be some evidence to support the view that apocalypses include reports of visionary experience. The approach to apocalypticism in early Christianity stresses the importance of the visionary element as a decisive element in the history of Christa origins."-- | |||
==Editions== | ==Editions== |
Revision as of 09:10, 29 July 2023
The Open Heaven: A Study of Apocalyptic in Judaism and Early Christianity (1982) is a book by Christopher Rowland.
Abstract
"The Open Heaven offers a comprehensive discussion of Jewish apocalyptic literature and themes in the Second Temple period and in early Christianity. In it there is a sustained challenge to the widespread view that apocalypticism is a form of eschatology, and, it has been widely recognised as a significant contribution to the discussion of apcocalypticism in religion since it was first published twenty years ago. By concentrating on the revelatory character of apocalyptic texts rather than their diverse contents the author suggests that it is this aspect of the literature which best enables us to understand their distinctive religion. The book offers a sustained argument for the iew that apocalyptic literature is primarily about the disclosure of heavenly wisdom which offers recipients an understanding of life in the present. He also suggests that there ma be some evidence to support the view that apocalypses include reports of visionary experience. The approach to apocalypticism in early Christianity stresses the importance of the visionary element as a decisive element in the history of Christa origins."--
Editions
Published in London, England: SPCK, and New York, NY: Crossroad, 1982. Reprinted in Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, 2002.
Table of contents
External links
- Pages with broken file links
- 1982
- English language--1980s
- Second Temple Studies--1980s
- Second Temple Studies--English
- Apocalyptic Studies--1980s
- Apocalyptic Studies--English
- Christian Origins Studies--1980s
- Christian Origins Studies--English
- Apocalypticism (subject)
- Top 1980s
- Second Temple Studies--Top 1980s
- Apocalyptic Studies--Top 1980s
- Christian Origins Studies--Top 1980s