NTT Journal for Theology and the Study of Religion - Current Issue
Volume 79, Issue 3, 2025
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The Significance of Ezekiel as God’s Agent in Ezekiel 40-48
More LessAbstractIn this study the different roles of Ezekiel are examined. God acts, speaks and even feels through Ezekiel. As a priest he is a representative of God and the people. In the final vision, Ezekiel’s role is extended and intensified. As God’s representative, he assists in securing and regulating a promising future and offers others a glimpse into it. In that manner, he serves as an identification model for others, particularly in his commitment to God. There are good reasons for assuming a historical prophet Ezekiel, but the historical picture is of less importance than the styled picture in the book. This shows that the emphasis lays on God Himself.
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What the Devil Speaks About: Rereading Michael Taussig’s The Devil and Commodity Fetishism in South America
More LessAuthor: Johanneke Kroesbergen-KampsAbstractMichael Taussig’s The Devil and Commodity Fetishism in South America (1980) has had a continuing impact as an inspiration for ethnographies of resistance and the material turn in anthropology. Perhaps the most enduring influence is its analysis of quasi-religious narratives as a critique of Western, hegemonic systems. The article traces Taussig’s text’s lasting impact on the ethnography of the devil and concludes, however, that one crucial problem in Taussig’s analysis remains to be solved.
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Solomon Schechter’s Higher Criticism-Higher Antisemitism and Wellhausen’s Prolegomena: A Historical Examination
More LessAuthor: Lieve M. TeugelsAbstractIn 1903, the famous Jewish scholar Solomon Schechter articulated his belief that Higher Bible Criticism was not merely a scholarly endeavor but a tool that could fuel antisemitism. Higher Criticism as a scientific method for the study of the Hebrew Bible had originated in Germany in the nineteenth century and was mostly practiced by Protestant scholars. The name most associated with Higher Criticism is Julius Wellhausen whose work Prolegomena to the History of Israel (1883) is indeed laced with supersessionist and openly anti-Jewish remarks. Jewish scholars of the so-called Wissenschaft des Judentums objected to Higher Criticism as they felt that the Christians had “stolen the Bible” from the Jews. Yet there were also Jewish scholars of that day who were attracted to some of Wellhausen’s ideas, such as his predilection for the prophetic voice in the Bible.
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- Reviews
Volumes & issues
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Volume 79 (2025)
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Volume 78 (2024)
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Volume 77 (2023)
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Volume 76 (2022)
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Volume 75 (2021)
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Volume 74 (2020)
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Volume 73 (2019)
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Volume 72 (2018)
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Volume 71 (2017)
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Volume 70 (2016)
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Volume 69 (2015)
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Volume 68 (2014)
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Volume 67 (2013)
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Volume 66 (2012)
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Volume 65 (2011)
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Volume 64 (2010)
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Volume 63 (2009)
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Volume 62 (2008)
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Volume 61 (2007)
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Volume 60 (2006)
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Volume 59 (2005)
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Volume 58 (2004)
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Volume 57 (2003)
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Volume 56 (2002)
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Volume 55 (2001)
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Volume 54 (2000)
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Volume 53 (1999)
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Volume 52 (1998)
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Volume 51 (1997)
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Volume 50 (1996)
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Volume 49 (1995)
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Volume 48 (1994)
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Volume 47 (1993)
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Volume 46 (1992)
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Volume 45 (1991)
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Volume 44 (1990)
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Volume 43 (1989)
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Volume 42 (1988)
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Volume 41 (1987)
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Volume 40 (1986)
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Volume 39 (1985)
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Volume 38 (1984)
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Volume 37 (1983)
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Volume 36 (1982)
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Volume 35 (1981)
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Volume 34 (1980)
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How to read Philo
Author: D. T. Runia
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