Ebook: Old Testament Conceptual Metaphors and The Christology of Luke’s Gospel
Author: Gregory R. Lanier
- Series: The Library of New Testament Studies 591
- Year: 2018
- Publisher: T&T Clark
- Language: English
- pdf
This volume sits at the intersection of three sub-fields of New Testament scholarship: early Christology, the use of Israel’s Scriptures in the New Testament, and contemporary metaphor theory. Lanier argues that the gospel of Luke employs certain conceptual metaphors reflected in Israel’s traditions – “horn of salvation,” “dawn from on high,” “mother bird gathering Jerusalem’s children,” and “crushing stone” – to portray the identity of Jesus as both an agent of salvation and, more provocatively, the one God of Israel.
Putting aside issues of “low” or “high” Christology, Lanier applies insights from conceptual metaphor theory to analyse the various ways in which God and deliverer figures are conceptualized and how, in the gospel of Luke, such conceptualizations are re-mapped to Jesus. In doing so, Lanier suggests ways to overcome the “low”-“high” binary and perceive the gospel’s Christology as multi-faceted. Additionally, in applying metaphor theory to the influence of the Old Testament on Luke’s Christology, Lanier adds methodological rigor to the tracing of Old Testament influences on the New Testament in cases where standard criteria for quotations and allusions/echoes are stretched thin.
Putting aside issues of “low” or “high” Christology, Lanier applies insights from conceptual metaphor theory to analyse the various ways in which God and deliverer figures are conceptualized and how, in the gospel of Luke, such conceptualizations are re-mapped to Jesus. In doing so, Lanier suggests ways to overcome the “low”-“high” binary and perceive the gospel’s Christology as multi-faceted. Additionally, in applying metaphor theory to the influence of the Old Testament on Luke’s Christology, Lanier adds methodological rigor to the tracing of Old Testament influences on the New Testament in cases where standard criteria for quotations and allusions/echoes are stretched thin.
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