home page
About Us | e-Gorgias Newsletter | At ConferencesBecome an Affiliate | Authors | Digitization Services | Publishing Services | Book Grants | Career Opportunities | Staff  



MyGorgias Account | My Wish List | Recommendations for me | My Cart  
   Home | Best Sellers | Just Published | Journals | Series | Gorgias Dissertations | Advanced Search | Contact Us | Join Mailing List    Login

To be eligible for Gorgias BiblioPerks™ and to receive a 5% discount on all online orders login or create an account (no strings attached)!
Classics - DO_NOT_USE3, DO_NOT_USE3. Terms for Eternity: Aiônios and Aïdios in Classical and Christian Texts  

Search:

 American Christianity
 Ancient Heritage of Iraq
 Ancient Near East
 Arabic & Islamic Studies
 Armenian Studies
 Biblical Studies
 Bookends & Paraphernalia
 Byzantium
 Children's Books
 Church History
 Classics
 Coptic & Egyptian Studies
 Dead Sea Scrolls
 Devotional
 Eastern Christianity
 Egyptology
 Euphrates Imprint
 European Studies
 Genocide Studies
 Gift Certificates
 Gift Suggestions
 Hebrew & Judaica
 Historical Fiction
 Journals
 Linguistics
 Literature
 Liturgy
 Mandaic
 Manuscripts
 Middle East
 Music
 Neo-Aramaic
 Patristics
 Philosophy & Theology
 Reference
 Religion
 Series
 Subscriptions
 Syriac
 Tigris Imprint
 Travel & Missionary
 Ugaritic
 Women's Studies

Download Catalog (PDF)
Contact Us
Site Map
Return Policy
Shipping Info
Gorgias Projects


      

Buy this book together with Exegesis in the Targum of Psalms: The Old, the New, and the Rewritten by Timothy Edwards
This book explores two ancient Greek terms for eternity, aiônios and aïdios, from their earliest occurrence in Pre-Socratic philosophy and Plato down through the patristic fathers, where they play a crucial role in debates over eternal punishment vs. universal salvation.+The Old, the New and the Rewritten illustrates how Targum Psalms creatively interprets selected psalms and how those interpretations relate to other Jewish and Christian traditions, including early translations of the psalms, rabbinic Midrashim, the New Testament and early Church Fathers.  The study of these Psalms suggests viewing Targum Psalms as a creative partner in the world of biblical interpretation, as opposed to a compilation of already existing midrashic material. Edwards portrays the Targum as a link between the written and oral Torah that leads its readers on a path to tradition. Save $30.75
Total List Price: $205.00
Buy both books for only $174.25

Quantity:  
 

Customers who bought this book also bought:

Exegesis in the Targum of Psalms: The Old, the New, and the Rewritten by Timothy Edwards
The Old, the New and the Rewritten illustrates how Targum Psalms creatively interprets selected psalms and how those interpretations relate to other Jewish and Christian traditions, including early translations of the psalms, rabbinic Midrashim, the New Testament and early Church Fathers. The study of these Psalms suggests viewing Targum Psalms as a creative partner in the world of biblical interpretation, as opposed to a compilation of already existing midrashic material. Edwards portrays the Targum as a link between the written and oral Torah that leads its readers on a path to tradition.

Quantity:   

St. Cyril of Alexandria, A New Testament Exegete by Lois M. Farag
This study portrays Cyril of Alexandria as exegete and theologian through an examination of his Commentary on the Gospel John. It begins with an attempt to place Cyril and his commentary within their context. This work argues that Cyril wrote his Commentary on the Gospel of John early in his writing career, almost a decade before becoming bishop. Cyril’s commentary on the Johannine Gospel reveals his exegetical method and his strong Trinitarian theology. The commentary also focuses the nature and work of the Holy Spirit: the indwelling of the Spirit is the beginning of the newness of life.

Quantity:   

A Reassessment of Asherah by Steve Wiggins
Asherah is one of the most popular goddesses known from the ancient world. In this second edition of the author’s 1993 monograph on the goddess, further articles and bibliography have been added to bring this ever-expanding field of study more up-to-date.

Quantity:   

An Introduction to Syriac Studies by Sebastian Brock
This Introduction aims to provide basic guidance to important areas of Syriac studies. The relevance of Syriac studies to a variety of other fields is explored. A brief orientation to the history of Syriac literature is offered, and Syriac is set within the context of the other Aramaic dialects. A thorough discussion on important tools (Instrumenta Studiorum) is presented; topics include grammars, dictionaries, the Bible in Syriac, histories of Syriac literature, bibliographical aids and relevant series, periodicals, and encyclopedias. This Introduction should prove useful both for the student beginning Syriac studies and for scholars working in adjacent fields.

Quantity:   

Syriac and Antiochian Exegesis and Biblical Theology for the 3rd Millennium by Robert Miller
This volume of collected essays explores the exegesis of the patristic School of Antioch, the Syriac Church Fathers, and the churches of the Antiochian-Syriac traditions. This exegetical tradition can be of use in today's historical-critical biblical scholarship with relation to theology.

Quantity:   
previous | up | next
 
DO_NOT_USE3, DO_NOT_USE3. Terms for Eternity: Aiônios and Aïdios in Classical and Christian Texts  

 E-mail this product to a friend

Title:Terms for Eternity: Aiônios and Aïdios in Classical and Christian Texts
Availability:In Print
Publisher:Gorgias Press

By Ilaria Ramelli
By David Konstan
ISBN:978-1-59333-694-3
Language:English
Format:Hardback, Black, 6 x 9 in
 

What is truly timeless? This book explores the language of eternity, and in particular two ancient Greek terms that may bear the sense of "eternal": aiônios and aïdios. This fascinating linguistic chronicle is marked by several milestones that correspond to the emergence of new perspectives on the nature of eternity. These milestones include the advent of Pre-Socratic physical speculation and the notion of limitless time in ancient philosophy, the major shift in orientation marked by Plato's idea of a timeless eternity, and the further development of Pre-Socratic insights by Epicurean and Stoic thinkers. From the biblical perspective, the intersection of Greek and Hebrew conceptions is reflected in Septuagint, as well as new inflections in popular terminology in the Hellenistic and Roman periods, and in the role of eternity in the theology of the New Testament. The profound cross-fertilization of Christian and classical philosophical conceptions in the works of the Church fathers and their contemporaries is explored, bringing the topic into the Patristic period. Christian theology in the first five centuries of the Common Era and its choice of vocabulary prove to be most revealing of larger doctrinal commitments. Above all debate raged on the question of eternal damnation versus the idea (deemed heretical in the Christian church after the formal condemnation of Origenism) of apocastastis or universal salvation -- that is, the belief that the wicked are not condemned to eternal punishment but will eventually be included among the saved. Terminology for "eternity" is often at the core of how these issues were debated, and helps to identify which writers inclined to one or the other view of the matter.

Ilaria Ramelli is Assistant Professor of Ancient Philosophy at the Catholic University of Milan. She has many publications and her favorite area of investigation is the relationship between Patristic philosophy and classical thought. In ancient philosophy she chiefly studies the Stoic and Platonic traditions.

David Konstan is the John Rowe Workman Distinguished Professor of Classics and the Humanistic Tradition, and Professor of Comparative Literature, at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island (USA). His books include Roman Comedy; Sexual Symmetry: Love in the Ancient Novel and Related Genres; Greek Comedy and Ideology; Friendship in the Classical World; Pity Transformed; and The Emotions of the Ancient Greeks.




DO_NOT_USE3, DO_NOT_USE3. Terms for Eternity: Aiônios and Aïdios in Classical and Christian Texts
ISBN:978-1-59333-694-3
Weight:1 LBS.
Price:$103.00
To get the 5% Gorgias BiblioPerks™ discount, simply login.

Quantity:   



Product Rating: (0.00)   # of Ratings: 0   (Only registered customers can rate)

There are no comments for this product.
Home | Affiliates | Privacy Policy | Copyright © 2003-2005. All Rights Reserved.
Powered by Gorgias FolioFlow, a comprehensive e-commerce solution.