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Colossians I 18, 15 and Sirach XXIV

Colossians I 18, 15 and Sirach XXIV COLOSSIANS I 18, 15 AND SIRACH XXIV BY T. FRANCIS GLASSON London J. RENDEL HARRIS in his book The Oyigiia of the Prologue to St John's Gospel (1917) naturally deals in the main with John i 1-18; but in the course of his discussion he refers to other parts of the New Testament, and some of his observations and suggestions have not all received the attention they deserve. Few will question the fact that St John's Prologue and parts of the epistles derive their doctrine and language from the Sapiential literature. The parallels which HARRIS has drawn up in regard to the Prologue amount almost to a demonstration. Those shown in C. H. DODD'S The Interpretation of the Fourth Gospel (p. 274 L) are equally con- vincing. One of the Sapiential passages of prime importance is Sirach xxiv. HARRIS draws attention to the Latin rendering of verse io: et in omni populo et in omni gente primatum habui. "In every people and in every race I had the primacy". The enumeration is xxiv 6 in the Greek, xxiv 10 in the Vulgate. The LXX has but a corrector to the Codex Sinaiticus has and this agrees with the http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Novum Testamentum Brill

Colossians I 18, 15 and Sirach XXIV

Novum Testamentum , Volume 11 (1-2): 154 – Jan 1, 1969

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Publisher
Brill
Copyright
© 1969 Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
0048-1009
eISSN
1568-5365
DOI
10.1163/156853669X00092
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

COLOSSIANS I 18, 15 AND SIRACH XXIV BY T. FRANCIS GLASSON London J. RENDEL HARRIS in his book The Oyigiia of the Prologue to St John's Gospel (1917) naturally deals in the main with John i 1-18; but in the course of his discussion he refers to other parts of the New Testament, and some of his observations and suggestions have not all received the attention they deserve. Few will question the fact that St John's Prologue and parts of the epistles derive their doctrine and language from the Sapiential literature. The parallels which HARRIS has drawn up in regard to the Prologue amount almost to a demonstration. Those shown in C. H. DODD'S The Interpretation of the Fourth Gospel (p. 274 L) are equally con- vincing. One of the Sapiential passages of prime importance is Sirach xxiv. HARRIS draws attention to the Latin rendering of verse io: et in omni populo et in omni gente primatum habui. "In every people and in every race I had the primacy". The enumeration is xxiv 6 in the Greek, xxiv 10 in the Vulgate. The LXX has but a corrector to the Codex Sinaiticus has and this agrees with the

Journal

Novum TestamentumBrill

Published: Jan 1, 1969

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