Th e long-held critical judgment that the I-am sayings of Jesus in the Fourth Gospel have no connection at all with the teachings of Jesus of Nazareth is based primarily on the inference that they are entirely missing from the Synoptics. As a result, John has been expunged from Jesus research, assuming its patent ahistoricity; yet critical analyses have largely overlooked Johannine- Synoptic similarities. While the Johannine presentation of Jesus’ I-am sayings is indeed distinctive and highly theological, it cannot be claimed that either the I-am convention of speech or its predicate metaphors and themes are absent from the Synoptics. Indeed, some absolute I-am sayings are present in Mark, and each of the nine terms used with the predicate ...
This thesis aims to address two principal questions: What is the relative chronology of the Johannin...
This article presents a literary exegetical analysis of the prologue (John 1:1-18) of the Johannine ...
The thesis of this study is that because the Johannine Bread of Life Discourse reflects an exhortati...
Traditionally, reconstructions of the historical Jesus have focused on the Synoptic gospels. The Gos...
The Gospel of John tells the story of Jesus of Nazareth in such a way as to engage the reader in it...
The constellation of the Johannine riddles—theological, historical, literary—and their implications ...
Theological and biblical studies have historically developed hand in hand, and John’s distinctive Ch...
Central to the presentation of Jesus in the Fourth Gospel is his association with the Eschatological...
While John\u27s tradition is pervasively autonomous and independent of the Synoptics, the Johannine ...
Among the weighty treatments of the Gospel of John over the last half-century, one of the most incis...
This essay argues that the Johannine “colophons” of John 20:30–31 and 21:24–25 support the argument ...
Excerpt: As the essays in this volume demonstrate, the evidentiary basis for excluding the Gospel o...
Over the last half century or more of Johannine scholarship, three issues have been of primary criti...
This thesis aims to address two principal questions: What is the relative chronology of the Johannin...
This article presents a literary exegetical analysis of the prologue (John 1:1-18) of the Johannine ...
The thesis of this study is that because the Johannine Bread of Life Discourse reflects an exhortati...
Traditionally, reconstructions of the historical Jesus have focused on the Synoptic gospels. The Gos...
The Gospel of John tells the story of Jesus of Nazareth in such a way as to engage the reader in it...
The constellation of the Johannine riddles—theological, historical, literary—and their implications ...
Theological and biblical studies have historically developed hand in hand, and John’s distinctive Ch...
Central to the presentation of Jesus in the Fourth Gospel is his association with the Eschatological...
While John\u27s tradition is pervasively autonomous and independent of the Synoptics, the Johannine ...
Among the weighty treatments of the Gospel of John over the last half-century, one of the most incis...
This essay argues that the Johannine “colophons” of John 20:30–31 and 21:24–25 support the argument ...
Excerpt: As the essays in this volume demonstrate, the evidentiary basis for excluding the Gospel o...
Over the last half century or more of Johannine scholarship, three issues have been of primary criti...
This thesis aims to address two principal questions: What is the relative chronology of the Johannin...
This article presents a literary exegetical analysis of the prologue (John 1:1-18) of the Johannine ...
The thesis of this study is that because the Johannine Bread of Life Discourse reflects an exhortati...