The Expanded Text of Ecclesiasticus von Conleth Kearns | Its Teaching on the Future Life as a Clue to its Origin | ISBN 9783110252590

The Expanded Text of Ecclesiasticus

Its Teaching on the Future Life as a Clue to its Origin

von Conleth Kearns, herausgegeben von Pancratius C. Beentjes
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinConleth Kearns
Herausgegeben vonPancratius C. Beentjes
Beiträge vonGerard Norton
Beiträge vonMaurice Gilbert
Beiträge vonNúria Calduch-Benages
Buchcover The Expanded Text of Ecclesiasticus | Conleth Kearns | EAN 9783110252590 | ISBN 3-11-025259-7 | ISBN 978-3-11-025259-0

The Expanded Text of Ecclesiasticus

Its Teaching on the Future Life as a Clue to its Origin

von Conleth Kearns, herausgegeben von Pancratius C. Beentjes
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinConleth Kearns
Herausgegeben vonPancratius C. Beentjes
Beiträge vonGerard Norton
Beiträge vonMaurice Gilbert
Beiträge vonNúria Calduch-Benages

Nowadays many scholars are intensively studying the Book of Ben Sira in its different versions. One of the most intriguing aspects relates to the great quantity of passages on the afterlife in the various stages of the text of the Book of Ben Sira. Although Conleth Kearns already in 1951 wrote an important doctoral thesis on this subject, this study has never been published and circulates only in photocopied form. Since Ben Sira scholars more and more are convinced that this investigation is of great importance, even after sixty years a proper publication is welcomed.
In his study Kearns distinguishes, on the one hand, the witnesses to the second Greek and to the Latin version and, on the other hand, those to the Hebrew text, and those to the Syriac version as well. He concludes that there is unity of doctrine between the changes and additions of all the textual witnesses. Therefore he can refer to ‛the expanded text’.
The teachings on afterlife as found in the various stages of the text of Ben Sira are compared with the teachings found in Jewish literature from about 200 B. C. until 100 A. D., both canonical – especially Daniel and the Wisdom of Solomon –, and apocryphal or pseudepigraphical, such as 1–2 Enoch, 4 Ezra, Jubilees, Psalms of Solomon, and Testaments of the XII Patriarchs.