The article presents and discusses Troels Engberg-Pedersen’s new book on the Fourth Gospel. Engberg-Pedersen argues that the gospel is a philosophical narrative in the way that it in its narrative about Jesus poses and answers philosophical questions about theology, epistomology, cosmology and ethics. One major argument in the book is that John adheres to a Stoic understanding of pneuma. The Stoic pneuma has both an ontological and a cognitive side. In the Fourth Gospel it is exclusively given to Jesus in his baptism and is present in his words. In his resurrection he is transformed into pure pneuma and returns to his disciples in order to convey the pneuma to them. This is what gives them eternal life. The article raises exegetical questio...
Among the weighty treatments of the Gospel of John over the last half-century, one of the most incis...
This article examines the way the Gospel of John is written with respect to the other three Gospels....
Over the last half century or more of Johannine scholarship, three issues have been of primary criti...
On the basis of Martin Hengel’s work the article discusses the “Johannine question”. I survey the ar...
The article explores how an analysis of how desire in human life may prove a fruitful approach to de...
Inspired by recent developments in Johannine research in Denmark, this article investigates the cohe...
Resurrection narratives and the doctrine of resurrectionThe article examined the closing narratives ...
This article reviews Per Bilde’s Den historiske Jesus. Three theses of Bilde are discussed: (1) The ...
The article gives an outline of New Testament hermeneutics based on a hermeneutic of religion. Relig...
This review-article presents and discusses a new Danish commentary on the Gospel of John written by ...
In discussion with a recent article by Jesper Tang Nielsen on “Åndsforestillinger og deres enhed i J...
My thesis is an analysis of exclusive and inclusive features i the Gospel of John, focusing on the i...
This article presents a literary exegetical analysis of the prologue (John 1:1-18) of the Johannine ...
This article attempts to compile a soteriology in the Johannine Epistles. Circumstances and false te...
This article is an attempt to explore the theme of ‘humanhood’ in the Fourth Gospel. The most import...
Among the weighty treatments of the Gospel of John over the last half-century, one of the most incis...
This article examines the way the Gospel of John is written with respect to the other three Gospels....
Over the last half century or more of Johannine scholarship, three issues have been of primary criti...
On the basis of Martin Hengel’s work the article discusses the “Johannine question”. I survey the ar...
The article explores how an analysis of how desire in human life may prove a fruitful approach to de...
Inspired by recent developments in Johannine research in Denmark, this article investigates the cohe...
Resurrection narratives and the doctrine of resurrectionThe article examined the closing narratives ...
This article reviews Per Bilde’s Den historiske Jesus. Three theses of Bilde are discussed: (1) The ...
The article gives an outline of New Testament hermeneutics based on a hermeneutic of religion. Relig...
This review-article presents and discusses a new Danish commentary on the Gospel of John written by ...
In discussion with a recent article by Jesper Tang Nielsen on “Åndsforestillinger og deres enhed i J...
My thesis is an analysis of exclusive and inclusive features i the Gospel of John, focusing on the i...
This article presents a literary exegetical analysis of the prologue (John 1:1-18) of the Johannine ...
This article attempts to compile a soteriology in the Johannine Epistles. Circumstances and false te...
This article is an attempt to explore the theme of ‘humanhood’ in the Fourth Gospel. The most import...
Among the weighty treatments of the Gospel of John over the last half-century, one of the most incis...
This article examines the way the Gospel of John is written with respect to the other three Gospels....
Over the last half century or more of Johannine scholarship, three issues have been of primary criti...