John 13-21. The article explores the place of the unity motif in Jn 17:6-19. After a brief survey of the scholarly consensus regarding the levels of composition and the cultural and religious milieu of the Fourth Gospel, the study analyses the structure of this uniquely Johannine prayer of Jesus. Interpreting Jn 17:6-19 as an exposition of 17:1-5 (recapitulated in 17:22-26), the author concludes: according to John, the unity of the church belongs to the category of divine glory (17:22f.). That unity is not conceived in organizational terms but as an eschatological reality. Irrespective of outward appearances, the church is one, because the Father and the Son are one
The article is an exposition of John 17 which provides the most detailed expression of Jesus’ desire...
Reflection on the formation of the NT canon often neglects the internal claims of the NT texts thems...
The dissertation 'The idea of Unity in John: A reception historical study of Johannine passages on u...
In ecumenical circles, John 17:11b, 21–23 has been understood as Jesus’ prayer for churc...
This thesis is an investigation into the literary features of the prayer in John 17. Often called t...
This essay is an exegesis of Jn 17:6-8 aimed at gaining an understanding of what the Fourth Evangeli...
The purpose of this article is to explore the identity of the recipients at the time of the completi...
This article examines the way the Gospel of John is written with respect to the other three Gospels....
The Gospel of John tells the story of Jesus of Nazareth in such a way as to engage the reader in it...
Over the last half century or more of Johannine scholarship, three issues have been of primary criti...
This article re-reads John 17:1–26 with a focus on the theme of oneness within the micronarrative. A...
Among the weighty treatments of the Gospel of John over the last half-century, one of the most incis...
This article challenges the historical existence of the ‘Johannine community’ – a hypothesized group...
This study applies discourse analysis methodology to the study of the seventeenth chapter of John. I...
Bibliography: pages 300-314.The series of questions which is often grouped under the heading "the Jo...
The article is an exposition of John 17 which provides the most detailed expression of Jesus’ desire...
Reflection on the formation of the NT canon often neglects the internal claims of the NT texts thems...
The dissertation 'The idea of Unity in John: A reception historical study of Johannine passages on u...
In ecumenical circles, John 17:11b, 21–23 has been understood as Jesus’ prayer for churc...
This thesis is an investigation into the literary features of the prayer in John 17. Often called t...
This essay is an exegesis of Jn 17:6-8 aimed at gaining an understanding of what the Fourth Evangeli...
The purpose of this article is to explore the identity of the recipients at the time of the completi...
This article examines the way the Gospel of John is written with respect to the other three Gospels....
The Gospel of John tells the story of Jesus of Nazareth in such a way as to engage the reader in it...
Over the last half century or more of Johannine scholarship, three issues have been of primary criti...
This article re-reads John 17:1–26 with a focus on the theme of oneness within the micronarrative. A...
Among the weighty treatments of the Gospel of John over the last half-century, one of the most incis...
This article challenges the historical existence of the ‘Johannine community’ – a hypothesized group...
This study applies discourse analysis methodology to the study of the seventeenth chapter of John. I...
Bibliography: pages 300-314.The series of questions which is often grouped under the heading "the Jo...
The article is an exposition of John 17 which provides the most detailed expression of Jesus’ desire...
Reflection on the formation of the NT canon often neglects the internal claims of the NT texts thems...
The dissertation 'The idea of Unity in John: A reception historical study of Johannine passages on u...