In this study, Ji?í Dvo?á?ek focuses on the usage of the 'Son of David' title in Matthew's Gospel. He assumes that Matthew's image of the healing Son of David can be explained from the existing Jewish concepts - in particular in the light of the Solomon as exorcist tradition. In the first part, he examines important texts concerning the Son of David. The author argues that in the first century C.E. the designation 'Son of David' could have referred not only to the triumphant royal Davidic Messiah - but within an exorcistic and healing context, it could have referred also to Solomon, himself a great exorcist and healer. In the second part, Ji?í Dvo?á?ek demonstrates in his exegesis of Matthean texts how Matthew used the royal messianic and the Solomon as exorcist tradition in order to create the image of the Son of David as a merciful, messianic, healing king, who in his wisdom, healings and exorcisms even surpasses David's son Solomon.

Born 1980; 2004 MA, 2008 PhD at the Protestant Theological Faculty, Charles University of Prague and at the Faculty of Theology of the University of Bern; 2008-10 Vicariate in the Evangelical Reformed Churches of the Canton Bern-Jura-Solothurn; 2010-11 Pastor in the Reformed Church of the Canton Fribourg, 2011-13 Bern and since 2014 Zurich.

Klappentext

In this study, Ji?í Dvo?á?ek focuses on the usage of the 'Son of David' title in Matthew's Gospel. He assumes that Matthew's image of the healing Son of David can be explained from the existing Jewish concepts - in particular in the light of the Solomon as exorcist tradition. In the first part, he examines important texts concerning the Son of David. The author argues that in the first century C.E. the designation 'Son of David' could have referred not only to the triumphant royal Davidic Messiah - but within an exorcistic and healing context, it could have referred also to Solomon, himself a great exorcist and healer. In the second part, Ji?í Dvo?á?ek demonstrates in his exegesis of Matthean texts how Matthew used the royal messianic and the Solomon as exorcist tradition in order to create the image of the Son of David as a merciful, messianic, healing king, who in his wisdom, healings and exorcisms even surpasses David's son Solomon.



Zusammenfassung
Jií Dvoáek untersucht in dieser Studie den Titel "Davidsohn" im Matthäusevangelium. Das matthäische Bild des heilenden Davidsohnes muss seiner Meinung nach auf dem Hintergrund der zeitgenössischen jüdischen Traditionen verstanden werden, insbesondere im Kontext der Salomo-als-Exorzist-Tradition. Zunächst analysiert der Autor die wichtigsten Davidsohn-Texte, um zu zeigen, dass im 1. Jh. n. Chr. mit dem Titel "Davidsohn" nicht nur der königliche davidische Messias gemeint war, sondern auch Davids Sohn Salomo, dem exorzistische Kräfte und magisches Wissen zugeschrieben wurden. Danach zeigt Jií Dvoáek an der Exegese der matthäischen Perikopen, wie Matthäus die königliche messianische Tradition mit der Salomo-als-Exorzist-Tradition kombinierte, um ein Bild des barmherzigen, messianischen, heilenden Königs, des Sohnes Davids, zu schaffen, der in seiner Weisheit, seinen Heilungen und Exorzismen sogar den Davidsohn Salomo übertrifft.
Titel
The Son of David in Matthew's Gospel in the Light of the Solomon as Exorcist Tradition
EAN
9783161540950
ISBN
978-3-16-154095-0
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Hersteller
Herausgeber
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
4.2 MB
Anzahl Seiten
270
Jahr
2016
Untertitel
Englisch