The text of Genesis 45:1–15 belongs to the composition of Joseph’s narrative. This literary unit has an affinity with Genesis 37 that records the filial crime of Joseph’s brothers against him (Joseph) as they intend to solve their conflict through a heinous act. The literary composition of Genesis 45 has been studied by commentators and scholars of the Old Testament from diverse perspectives. However, none of the scholars have studied the text from the standpoint of a retrospective narrative. A retrospective narrative is a literary technique expressed in a literary construct when a narrator flashes back to a past event, recreates the discourse and brings the episode into the present. CONTRIBUTION : This article contributes to schola...
The narrative blocks which comprise Genesis are prefaced by statements which suggest ways in which t...
These Studies in the interpretation of Genesis 26.1-33 are concerned with a relatively brief and wel...
Memory in a Time of Prose investigates a deceptively straightforward question: what did the biblical...
The present thesis argues that the story of Judah and Tamar in Genesis 38 is to be read as the type ...
The Joseph story (Gen 37-50) is often recognized for its remarkable literary unity and depth. At the...
The Joseph narrative (Gn 37-50) has fascinated scholars since the discovery of sources in the Pentat...
The purpose of this dissertation is to investigate the possibility of a parallel structure between t...
The placing of Genesis 38 within the Joseph narrative: A literary sociological perspective A review ...
The Joseph story in Genesis 37-50 is a homogeneous literary narrative, although it consists of vario...
The first section of chapter one shows that critical scholarship has come to recognize the shortcomi...
Twice on Resurrection Sunday, Jesus stated a foundational hermeneutical principle: “ ‘... believe in...
Aspects of reconciliation in the book of Genesis. This contribution investigates the notion of recon...
Many Christians assume that Old Testament documents were „Christianised. during the New Testament e...
The article examines forgiveness as a private and public act in the context of the biblical Joseph n...
Exegetical research on Gen 1 has been characterized since the 18th century essentially by a diachron...
The narrative blocks which comprise Genesis are prefaced by statements which suggest ways in which t...
These Studies in the interpretation of Genesis 26.1-33 are concerned with a relatively brief and wel...
Memory in a Time of Prose investigates a deceptively straightforward question: what did the biblical...
The present thesis argues that the story of Judah and Tamar in Genesis 38 is to be read as the type ...
The Joseph story (Gen 37-50) is often recognized for its remarkable literary unity and depth. At the...
The Joseph narrative (Gn 37-50) has fascinated scholars since the discovery of sources in the Pentat...
The purpose of this dissertation is to investigate the possibility of a parallel structure between t...
The placing of Genesis 38 within the Joseph narrative: A literary sociological perspective A review ...
The Joseph story in Genesis 37-50 is a homogeneous literary narrative, although it consists of vario...
The first section of chapter one shows that critical scholarship has come to recognize the shortcomi...
Twice on Resurrection Sunday, Jesus stated a foundational hermeneutical principle: “ ‘... believe in...
Aspects of reconciliation in the book of Genesis. This contribution investigates the notion of recon...
Many Christians assume that Old Testament documents were „Christianised. during the New Testament e...
The article examines forgiveness as a private and public act in the context of the biblical Joseph n...
Exegetical research on Gen 1 has been characterized since the 18th century essentially by a diachron...
The narrative blocks which comprise Genesis are prefaced by statements which suggest ways in which t...
These Studies in the interpretation of Genesis 26.1-33 are concerned with a relatively brief and wel...
Memory in a Time of Prose investigates a deceptively straightforward question: what did the biblical...