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Interpreting the Old Testament in Africa
Papers from the International Symposium on Africa and the Old Testament in Nairobi, October 1999©2001 Monographs -
Journeying with the Old Testament
©2011 Monographs -
Thinking Towards New Horizons
Collected Communications to the XIXth Congress of the International Organization for the Study of the Old Testament, Ljubljana 2007©2008 Conference proceedings -
Festschrift in Honor of Professor Paul Nadim Tarazi- Volume 1
Studies in the Old Testament©2013 Monographs -
The Earth and the Land
Studies about the Value of the Land of Israel in the Old Testament and Afterwards©2018 Edited Collection -
Stimulation from Leiden
Collected Communications to the XVIIIth Congress of the International Organization for the Study of the Old Testament, Leiden 2004©2006 Conference proceedings -
Eschatology of the Thessalonian Correspondence
A comparative study of 1 Thess 4, 13-5, 11 and 2 Thess 2, 1-12 to the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Old Testament Pseudepigrapha©2014 Thesis -
«In Christ All Will Be Made Alive» (1 Cor 15:12-58)
The Role of Old Testament Quotations in the Pauline Argumentation for the Resurrection©2013 Monographs -
Kony as Moses
Old Testament Texts and Motifs in the Early Years of the Lord’s Resistance Army, Uganda©2021 Monographs -
Studies in Biblical Hebrew
Studies in Biblical Hebrew is series of monographs designed to promote and publish topical research into the Hebrew of the Old Testament. The series does not assume that Biblical Hebrew is a form of the Aramaic languages (Canaanite) spoken from c. 1200 B.C. to c. 200 B.C., given standardized form only later and then perpetuated as a fixed literary medium. The focus of the series is specifically the corpus of the Old Testament, since the composition and compilation of these writings continue to generate major interest worldwide for reasons historical and academic, as well as religious. The series is devoted to fresh philological, syntactical, and linguistic study of the language of the Hebrew canon, with the subsidiary aim of displaying the contribution of such study to informed and accurate exegesis. Research into the broader evidence of the period, including inscriptional materials, is welcome, provided the results are cast in terms of their particular bearing upon Biblical (classical) Hebrew. Studies in Biblical Hebrew is series of monographs designed to promote and publish topical research into the Hebrew of the Old Testament. The series does not assume that Biblical Hebrew is a form of the Aramaic languages (Canaanite) spoken from c. 1200 B.C. to c. 200 B.C., given standardized form only later and then perpetuated as a fixed literary medium. The focus of the series is specifically the corpus of the Old Testament, since the composition and compilation of these writings continue to generate major interest worldwide for reasons historical and academic, as well as religious. The series is devoted to fresh philological, syntactical, and linguistic study of the language of the Hebrew canon, with the subsidiary aim of displaying the contribution of such study to informed and accurate exegesis. Research into the broader evidence of the period, including inscriptional materials, is welcome, provided the results are cast in terms of their particular bearing upon Biblical (classical) Hebrew. Studies in Biblical Hebrew is series of monographs designed to promote and publish topical research into the Hebrew of the Old Testament. The series does not assume that Biblical Hebrew is a form of the Aramaic languages (Canaanite) spoken from c. 1200 B.C. to c. 200 B.C., given standardized form only later and then perpetuated as a fixed literary medium. The focus of the series is specifically the corpus of the Old Testament, since the composition and compilation of these writings continue to generate major interest worldwide for reasons historical and academic, as well as religious. The series is devoted to fresh philological, syntactical, and linguistic study of the language of the Hebrew canon, with the subsidiary aim of displaying the contribution of such study to informed and accurate exegesis. Research into the broader evidence of the period, including inscriptional materials, is welcome, provided the results are cast in terms of their particular bearing upon Biblical (classical) Hebrew.
1 publications
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Vulgata-Studies Vol. I
Beiträge zum I. Vulgata-Kongress des Vulgata Vereins Chur in Bukarest (2013)©2015 Conference proceedings -
The Twelve Prophets in the New Testament
©2011 Monographs -
Die Zahl Sieben im Alten Orient- The Number Seven in the Ancient Near East
Studien zur Zahlensymbolik in der Bibel und ihrer altorientalischen Umwelt- Studies on the Numerical Symbolism in the Bible and Its Ancient Near Eastern Environment©2008 Edited Collection -
Literary Allusions in Esther
A Study on the Convergence of Intertexts and Narrative©2023 Monographs -
Bloodguilt, Atonement, and Mercy
An Exegetical and Theological Study of 2 Samuel 21:1-14©2007 Thesis -
The Church in the Salvific Plan of God and the Motherhood of the Church in the Writings of Mar Jacob of Sarug
A Study on the Ecclesiology of Mar Jacob of Sarug©2022 Thesis -
The Integral Salvation of the Human Person in «Ecclesia in Africa»
A case study of the theological implications among the Igbo in Nigeria©2008 Thesis -
Re-thinking the Day of YHWH and Restoration of Fortunes in the Prophet Zephaniah
An Exegetical and Theological Study of 1:14-18; 3:14-20©2011 Thesis -
The Covenant Motif in Jeremiah’s Book of Comfort
Textual and Intertextual Studies of Jeremiah 30-33©2007 Monographs -
Ecclesiological Trends in the Catholic and Protestant Churches and Their Significance for the Church in Africa
A Study of Selected Texts©2009 Thesis