Quotations in John: Studies on Jewish Scripture in the Fourth Gospel
By (Author) Professor Michael A. Daise
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
T.& T.Clark Ltd
26th August 2021
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Criticism and exegesis of sacred texts
226.506
Paperback
264
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
376g
Michael A. Daise identifies literary features found in six quotations in the Fourth Gospel, suggesting they should be revisited as clusters rather than as discrete units. Three quotations are the only ones whose introductory formulae explicitly ascribe them to Isaiah; three are the only ones cast as being remembered by Jesus disciples; and each of these groupings forms an inclusio within the Book of Signs which, when combined with the other, produces a chiasmus to Jesus public ministry. Daise examines these clusters in three studies, addressing their exegetical issues and theological implications. After an introductory apologia for an historical-critical and theological approach, the first two studies distil narrative themes embedded in the Isaianic and remembrance inclusios. The third study then reconstructs the synthesis of these themes created by the chiasmus, and translates its key elements into theological categories. Daise concludes that, while the Isaianic inclusio brings closure to the Book of Signs by disclosing the angelic cause of the Jews unbelief the remembrance inclusio creates an anticipation of the Book of Glory by casting Jesus as poised to establish a new dynasty with the casting out that angelic cause. Daise further argues that this broader storyline carries ramifications for an array of motifs in the Fourth Gospels theological taxonomy: in particular its christology, soteriology, eschatology, ecclesiology and pneumatology.
A detailed study, necessary for anyone who wishes to delve deeper into the use made of the fourth gospel of the six scripture quotes it addresses. * Biblica (Bloomsbury Translation) *
Michael A. Daise is the Judaic Studies Professor in the Department of Religious Studies and Program for Judaic Studies at the College of William & Mary, USA.