Theologie
The Nag Hammadi Codices as Monastic Books
Edited by Hugo Lundhaug and Christian H. Bull
[Die Nag Hammadi Kodizes als monastische Bücher.]
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Veröffentlicht auf Englisch.
Auf der Grundlage neuerer Forschungen, die darauf hindeuten, dass die Nag-Hammadi-Kodizes von frühen ägyptischen Mönchen erstellt und verwendet wurden, fragen die Aufsätze dieses Bandes, wie und warum Mönche die in diesen Kodizes enthaltenen Texte gelesen haben würden.Inhaltsübersicht
Christian H. Bull/Hugo Lundhaug: Monastic Readings of the Nag Hammadi Codices – Lance Jenott: Peter's Letter to Philip: Textual Fluidity in a New Testament Apocryphon – Ingvild Sælid Gilhus: Ascetic Readings in Codex II from Nag Hammadi – René Falkenberg: The 'Single Ones' in the Gospel of Thomas: A Monastic Perspective – André Gagné: The Gospel of Thomas in a Monastic Context: Reading the Text as a Spiritual Exercise – Hugo Lundhaug: »This is the Teaching of the Perfect Ones«: The Book of Thomas and Early Egyptian Monasticism – Kristine Toft Rosland: »Not as Moses Said« Revisited: Christ as Interpreter of Scripture in the Apocryphon of John – Kimberley A. Fowler: Eschatology in Nag Hammadi Codex II: A Monastic Reading of the Hypostasis of the Archons (NHC II,4) and On the Origin of the World (NHC II,5) – Paul Linjamaa: Why Monks Would Have Read the Tripartite Tractate: A New Look at the Codicology of Nag Hammadi Codex I – Tilde Bak Halvgaard: The Thunder: Perfect Mind and the Notion of Epinoia in Early Christianity – Dylan M. Burns: The Nag Hammadi Codices and Graeco-Egyptian Magical and Occult Literature – Christian Askeland: Translation Technique in the Coptic Version of Plato's Republic – Christian H. Bull: Plato in Upper Egypt: Greek Philosophy and Monastic Origenism in the Coptic Excerpt from Plato's Republic (NHC VI,5)