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Kniha Izaiáš v Prvním listu Korinťanům

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EN
The Book of Isaiah is one of the most quoted or alluded to Old Testament books by the apostle Paul. The contribution studies these quotations or allusions in First Corinthians. The analysed passages are those on the outer margin of the critical edition of the New Testament Nestle­‑Aland. The analysis confirms that Paul knew and used the Septuagint. His use of the Hebrew text cannot be confirmed with certainty. He may have also depended on a preexisting Greek translation of the Old Testament that was different from the Septuagint. Those of Paul’s citations which are at times relatively free are such because he quoted by heart and it is apparent that Paul was focused on the spiritual message of the Bible.
The Biblical Annals
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2013
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vol. 3
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issue 1
93-107
PL
On the basis of the Greek text of Num 12:12 and of the use which Philo makes of it in the fi rst book of his Allegories of the Laws (176) the present article proposes a new understanding of the metaphor of miscarriage (ἔκτρωμα): a being not only born dead and/or incapable of living, but also deadly. In this double meaning the term utilized by Paul in 1 Cor 15:8 describes the pre-Christian past of the Apostle as both lacking life (as being without Christ) and lethal (as a persecutor of the church of God). The metaphor at the same time, constitutes the starting point of the transformation which occurred in Paul thanks to the apparition of the Risen One: from being dead to alive, and from deadly to being a bearer of life (vv. 9-10). Such a metamorphosis is tangible proof of the power of the Risen One, who even now transforms the lives of his own, and eo ipso also the guarantee of fi nal resurrection, when the good work already begun will be brought to its completion (cf. Phil 1:6).
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EN
This article is a critical discussion of Andrzej Sionek’s book “Charyzmaty. Aktywna obecność Boga w Kościele” (Charisms: God’s Active Presence in the Church). Because millions of Christians of various denominations in today’s world experience the charismatic gifts of the Holy Spirit, the topic of the charisms, especially the gifts of speaking in tongues and of prophesying, has become very vibrant in the theological discourse. Andrzej Sionek, who himself is engaged in today’s charismatic movement, reveals to us the theological complexities of St. Paul’s texts in 1 Corinthians 12–14. Charisms did not belong solely to the early Church; Pentecost still goes on today, because Jesus is alive and active in His Church.
PL
Artykuł jest krytycznym omówieniem książki Andrzeja Sionka „Charyzmaty. Aktywna obecność Boga w Kościele”. Doświadczenie charyzmatyczne darów Ducha Świętego przez miliony chrześcijan różnych denominacji we współczesnym świecie sprawia, że zagadnienie charyzmatów, w szczególności daru języków czy daru proroctwa, stało się bardzo żywe w dyskursie teologicznym. Andrzej Sionek, sam zaangażowany we współczesny ruch charyzmatyczny, odsłania przed nami teologiczne zawiłości tekstów św. Pawła 1 Kor 12–14. Charyzmaty nie należą tylko do Kościoła pierwotnego. Zielone Święta wciąż trwają, ponieważ Jezus żyje i działa w swoim Kościele.
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