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2013 | 7 | 267-295

Article title

„Rzekł mu Piłat: Co to jest prawda?” ’Emet i alētheia w tradycji żydowskiej i grecko-rzymskiej. Kulturowo-teologiczne odczytanie J 8,31-32 i J 18,37-38a Cz.1

Content

Title variants

EN
„Pilate saith unto him: What is truth?” Emet and alētheia in Jewish and Greco-Roman tradition. Cultural-theological reading of J 8,31-32 and J 18,37-38a. Part 1

Languages of publication

PL

Abstracts

EN
During the interrogation of Jesus before the tribunal of Pilate a question is posed: “What is truth?” (Gospel of John). The author makes it a canvas of the article and on this basis in the first part he wants to present similarities and differences in perception of truth in Jewish and Greco-Roman tradition. He starts from the meaning of the Hebrew term ’emet and analyses its use in the Old Testamental environment as well as in the intertestamental period (Qumran, Philo of Alexandria). The term ’emet is much more capacious than its Polish equivalent and it means the truth as well as faithfulness, reliability, stability. In the OT writings it plays an important role in relation to God and His word as well as God’s deeds (eg. the Law, the Covenant), and together with the word hesed it constitutes a characteristic hendiadys. The Jews, however, knew also use of the term ’emet similar to the contemporary (compliance of a spoken judgment with reality; in this way it was used in everyday speech and the judiciary). In later texts it appears in the sense of knowledge hidden from the profanes, having its source in heaven and passed by messengers-angels to sages and prophets. Those in turn were to instruct worthy people, who in this way are acquainted with God’s plans. In the Greek culture, at least from the times of Parmenides, the truth (alētheia) was identified with being. Some philosophers identified pre-being with Deity (Xenophanes) or the Rule/Rules of the world (archē/archai). This concept was professed, among others, by Socrates, Plato and Aristotle, although each one of them within specifically conceived metaphysics. The objective nature of truth was negated by sophists, followed by agnostics. In other philosophical schools alētheia was conceived in close relation to ethics. However, depending on the schools and even on the period of their development, certain changes occurred, as in the case of intermediate and younger Academy (moderate skepticism and probabilism). In Rome, where the stoic mainstream and eclecticism (Cicero) dominated, awareness of the variety of definitions of truth led to the attitude of keeping distance to any certainties. Philosophising Romans, especially the skeptics and eclectics, referred to the principle of probability and common sense.

Keywords

Year

Volume

7

Pages

267-295

Physical description

Contributors

  • ur. 1963, duchowny Kościoła Zielonoświątkowego, pastor Zboru we Fromborku; dr hab. (historia, starożytność; specjalność - historia Kościoła), pracownik Instytutu Historii Uniwersytetu Gdańskiego (Zakład Historii Starożytnej), kierownik Pracowni Religioznawstwa UG. Autor, współautor i redaktor naukowy książek i artykułów z zakresu historii wczesnego chrześcijaństwa "Kapłaństwo i urząd" (2009); "Charyzmat, urząd, hierarchia" (2010); Ekklesia a oikos w epoce Nowego Testamentu. Kościół w świetle antycznego domostwa na podstawie 1 i 2 Kor oraz przypowieści Mt 7:24-27, Mt 24:45-51, Łk 15:11-32 (2013) oraz historii i duchowości ruchu pentekostalnego: Progresywny charakter duchowości pentekostalnej (2012), autor haseł w Encyklopedii Gdańska: Zielonoświątkowcy w Gdańsku i Gdański Instytut Biblijny (2012). Miłośnik jazzu i bluesa.

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-8f93efad-8c5b-438c-b176-5b9bb36a4d11
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