Log In
Or create an account -> 
Imperial Library
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Upload
  • Forum
  • Help
  • Login/SignUp

Index
Between History and Spirit
The Apostolic Witness of the Book of Acts Craig S. Keener Table of Contents
Preface and Acknowledgments Abbreviations
Gentile Greco-Roman sources Achilles Tatius Aelian (Claudius Aelianus) Aelius Aristides/Ael. Arist. Aeschines Aeschylus Alciphron Anacharsis Aphthonius Apollodorus Apollonius of Rhodes/Ap. Rhod. Appian Apuleius Aristophanes Aristotle Arius Didymus Arrian Athenaeus Aulus Gellius Babrius Caesar, Julius Callimachus Catullus Chariton Cicero Cornelius Nepos/Corn. Nep. Crates Demetrius Phalereus Demosthenes Dio Cassius Dio Chrysostom Diodorus Siculus Diogenes Diogenes Laertius Dionysius of Halicarnassus Epictetus Eunapius Euripides Fronto, Marcus Cornelius Gaius Galen Heliodorus Heraclitus Hermogenes Herodian Herodotus Hesiod Hippocrates (Hippocratic Corpus) Homer Horace Iamblichus Chalcidensis Iamblichus (novelist) Isaeus Isocrates Juvenal Libanius Livy Longinus Lucan Lucian Lucretius Lysias Macarius Magnes/Porphyry Macrobius Manetho Manilius Marcus Aurelius Martial Maximus of Tyre Menander Menander Rhetor (of Laodicea) Musonius Rufus (Lutz ed.) Ovid Parthenius Paulus, Julius Pausanias Petronius Phaedrus Philodemus Philostratus, Flavius (the Athenian) Philostratus the Elder Philostratus the Younger Pindar Plato Pliny the Elder Pliny the Younger Plutarch Polybius Porphyry Proclus Propertius Pseudo-Callisthenes Ptolemy Publilius Syrus Quintilian (and Ps.-Quintilian) Quintus Curtius Rufus Sallust Seneca the Elder Seneca the Younger Sextus Empiricus Silius Italicus Socrates Sophocles Soranus Statius Stobaeus Strabo Suetonius Symmachus Tacitus Terence Theon, Aelius Theophrastus Thucydides Ulpian Valerius Flaccus Valerius Maximus Varro Velleius Paterculus Virgil Vitruvius Xenophon Xenophon of Ephesus
Other Ancient and Medieval Sources
(Untitled) Papyri, Inscriptions, and Fragment Collections (Untitled) Old Testament Apocrypha (Untitled) Old Testament Pseudepigrapha Josephus Philo of Alexandria Targumic Texts
(Untitled) Mishnah, Talmud, and Related Literature
(Untitled) Babylonian Talmud Other Rabbinic Works Abbreviations: Early Christian Sources Ambrosiaster Arator Athenagoras Augustine Bede, the Venerable Cyril of Jerusalem Eusebius Irenaeus John Cassian John Chrysostom Justin Martyr Origen Photius Quadratus Rufinus Sulpicius Severus Tatian Tertullian Theophilus of Antioch
Modern Abbreviations
1
Luke-Acts and the Historical Jesus
Biography and History Ancient Historiography Evaluating Luke’s Historiographic Practice Sources Luke’s Acquaintance with the Information
2
First-Person Claims in Acts and in Ancient History
Questioning “We” as a Historical Claim Acts’ Anonymity? What Historians Meant By “We” Other Meanings of the First-Person Plural? Usage Varied Keeping the Focus on Paul
3 Paul and Sedition
Pauline Apologetic in Acts
Acts and Apologetic Apologetic Historiography Charges Against Paul Paul’s Cumulative History with Riots Reversing Charges in Ancient Rhetoric Reversal of Charges in a Pauline Forensic Speech History and Apologetic in Luke’s Reversal of Charges Josephus’s Appeal to Favorable Decrees Luke’s Appeal to Favorable Verdicts
4
The Church’s Disputed Growth Rate in Acts (Acts 2:41; 4:4; 21:20)
Luke’s Figures Enough Water for three thousand Baptisms in 2:41? Inflating numbers in Antiquity Jerusalem’s population estimates Are Rapid Growth Rates Feasible? Growth Spurts and People Movements The Real Historical Problem Conclusion
5 A Novel Official in Acts 8:27?
Comparing Acts and Ancient Novels Information and Myths Exotic Analogies A Meroitic Treasurer Queen Candace Mediterranean Perspectives on Candace The Official’s Communication with Philip
6
Were Troops Really Stationed in Caesarea During Agrippa’s Rule?
During Agrippa’s Rule? Soldiers in Caesarea Cornelius’s local connections A retired soldier? Conclusion
7
Dionysius or Stephanas
Did Paul Reach Athenians?
8
Interethnic Marriages in Acts 7:29 and 16:1–3
Timothy’s Situation Views of Intermarriage Timothy’s Status The Wider Setting of Lukan and Pauline Perspectives
9
Irony and Figurative Language
Inverted Guilt in Acts 7:55–60 and Paul’s Vote in Acts 26:10
10
Turning from Idols in Acts 14:15–17
Jewish Views Gentile Concerns About Traditional Polytheism Heaven, Earth, and Sea God Testified Through Nature (Acts 14:16–17)
11
Between Asia and Europe
Postcolonial Mission in Acts 16:8–10
12
How Were Asiarchs Paul’s Friends (Acts 19:31)?
Patrons as friends Honor for Sponsors of Religious Associations Paul’s Obligations to Avoid Dishonoring Patrons
13
One New Temple
Acts 21 as the Backdrop for Eph 2:11–22
14
Some Rhetorical Techniques in Acts 24:2–21
The Captatio (24:2–3) Promise of Brevity (24:4) Exaggeration (24:5) Altered Charges (24:5–6) The Charge of Seditio (24:5) Invitation to Investigate (24:8) Assertions by High-Status Accusers (24:9) Paul’s Praise of Felix (24:10) Worship Twelve Days Earlier (24:11) Not Stirring Unrest (24:12) Unable to Prove Their Charges (24:13) Arguments From Probability Admitting a Non-Crime (24:14) Paul’s Fidelity to His Jewish Heritage and Faith (24:14–18) Failure of Witnesses to Appear (24:19) His Opponents’ Inconsistency (24:20–21)
15 Insanity, Inspiration or Intellect
Paul’s Madness in Acts 26:24–25
The “Madness” of Inspiration Philosophic “Madness”
16
Fever and Dysentery in Acts 28:8 and Ancient Medicine
The Ailments in Modern Terms Fevers Dysentery Treatments For Fever Treatments For Dysentery Paranormal Healing
17
Miracles and History in Acts and the Jesus Tradition
Potential contributions of such analogies Ancient sources about Jesus Strauss and Bultmann Widespread miracle beliefs and claims Experiences that convince non-Christians Not only from the scientifically naïve Eyewitnesses’ accounts Cures of blindness Resuscitations Nature miracles Conclusion
18 Power of Pentecost
Luke’s Missiology in Acts 1–2
Incipient Eschatology Prophetic Empowerment
19
Tongues as Evidence of the Character of Spirit’s Empowerment in Acts 2:4
Prophetic Speech in 1:8; 2:4, 17–18 Cross-cultural Inspired Speech in 1:8; 2:4
20
Acts 16:16–18, 19:12–16, and Spirit Possession in Modern Anthropology
An Anthropological Approach The Pervasiveness of Possession Beliefs and Behavior Cultural Variations Spirits, Religion, Illness, and Prophecy Interpreting such Experiences Violent expressions of possession Some ancient accounts of possession Conclusion
21
A Spirit-Filled Teaching Ministry in Acts 19:9
Ministry in the Spirit The Nature of Paul’s Teaching Activity in Acts 19:9 Paul as a Christian thinker How Plausible is Luke’s Portrait? Paul’s Teaching and Support Paul’s Influence (19:10) Conclusion
22
Anticipating Ancient African Christianity
The Identity of the Nubian Official Christian Nubia Nubia and Egypt Nubia’s Collapse
23
Reviews of Some Acts-focused Works
Bibliography
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →

Chief Librarian: Las Zenow <zenow@riseup.net>
Fork the source code from gitlab
.

This is a mirror of the Tor onion service:
http://kx5thpx2olielkihfyo4jgjqfb7zx7wxr3sd4xzt26ochei4m6f7tayd.onion