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Topic: Christian Hermann Weisse


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  Christian Hermann Weisse - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Christian Hermann Weisse (August 10, 1801–September 19, 1866), was a German Protestant religious philosopher.
Weisse was the first theologian to propose the two-source hypothesis (1838), which is still held by a majority of biblical scholars today.
In the two-source hypothesis, the Gospel of Mark was the first gospel to be written and was one of two sources to the Gospel of Matthew and the Gospel of Luke, the other source being the Q document, a lost collection of Jesus's sayings.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Christian_Hermann_Weisse   (297 words)

  
 Christian Hermann Weisse   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-19)
Christian Hermann Weisse (August 10, 1801 - September 19, 1866), German Protestant religious philosopher, was born at Leipzig.
In course of time, however, his ideas approximating to those of Schelling in his later years, he elaborated with IHV Fichte a new speculative theism, and became an opponent of Hegel's pantheistic idealism.
In his addresses on the future of the Protestant Church (Reden über die Zukunft der evangeliscken Kirche, 1849), he finds the essence of Christianity in Jesus's conceptions of the heavenly Father, the Son of Man and the kingdom of Haaven.
www.theezine.net /c/christian-hermann-weisse.html   (270 words)

  
 The Quest of the Historical Jesus: Chapter 10
Weisse was born in 1801 at Leipzig, and became Professor Extraordinary of Philosophy in the university there in 1828.
[1] Christian Gottlob Wilke, formerly pastor of Hermannsdorf in the Erzgebirge.
Weisse is not blind to the fact that this hypothesis of a Johannine basis in the Gospel is beset with the gravest—one might almost say with insuperable—difficulties.
www.earlychristianwritings.com /schweitzer/chapter10.html   (4738 words)

  
 iqexpand.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-19)
Christian Hermann Weisse, 1801 - 1866 Christian Hermann Weisse, a brilliant German theologian, pioneered the two-source hypothesis that became the prevailing solution to the problem of the synoptic...
CHRISTIAN HERMANN WEISSE WEISSE, CHRISTIAN HERMANN (1801-1866), German Protestant religious philosopher, was born at Leipzig on the 10th of August i8oi.
He was remotely a disciple of Schelling, learnt much from Johann Friedrich Herbart and Christian Hermann Weisse, and decidedly rejected Georg Hegel and the monadism of Rudolf Hermann Lotze.
christian_hermann_weisse.iqexpand.com   (387 words)

  
 Christian Hermann Weisse -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-19)
Christian Hermann Weisse (August 10, 1801–September 19 1866), was a (A person of German nationality) German (An adherent of Protestantism) Protestant religious (A specialist in philosophy) philosopher.
He was born at (A city in southeastern Germany famous for fairs; formerly a music and publishing center) Leipzig, and studied at the (Click link for more info and facts about university there) university there, at first adhering to the (Click link for more info and facts about Hegelian) Hegelian school of philosophy.
Weisse was the first theologian to propose the (Click link for more info and facts about two-source hypothesis) two-source hypothesis (1838), which is still held by a majority of biblical scholars today.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/c/ch/christian_hermann_weisse.htm   (251 words)

  
 Markan priority - Wikpedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-19)
This traditional view of gospel origins, however, began to be challenged in the late 1700s, when Gottlob Christian Storr (1786) proposed that Mark was the first to be written.
In 1838, two theologians, Christian Gottlob Wilke and Christian Hermann Weisse, independently extended Lachmann's reasoning to conclude that Mark not only best represented Matthew and Luke's source but also that Mark was Matthew and Luke's source.
Their ideas were not immediately accepted, but Heinrich Julius Holtzmann's endorsement in 1863 of a qualified form of Markan priority won general favor and is still the dominant hypothesis today.
www.bostoncoop.net /~tpryor/wiki/index.php?title=Markan_priority   (345 words)

  
 Groping with the Language of Jesus: Aramaic/Hebrew
Bernard Weiss (1827-1918) was the first person to call the common source of sayings-material of Jesus-logia "Q." This he did in a great work entitled Die Quellen des Lukasevangeliums, which appeared in Berlin in 1907.
Weiss should be noted for having included several passages in Q from the Gospel of Mark, and was known as an exegetic conservative.
Certainly it is a bone-of-contention with Nestorian Christians, Jews, and Muslims, all of whom are cultured in language of worship which does not accomodated Incarnation in a human being.
learningaramaic.blogspot.com   (5944 words)

  
 Synoptic Problem
The FH, the leading contender to the 2SH in England, accepts Markan Priority but dispenses with Q. For the Double Tradition, the FH appeals to Luke's use of Matthew as the explanation.
Synoptic-L is an academic list devoted to the critical, scholarly study of the Synoptic Problem and related topics.
Xtalk, the successor to the former Crosstalk, is now a moderated list for academics and amateurs alike devoted to the Historical Jesus and the Origins of Christianity.
www.mindspring.com /~scarlson/synopt   (1134 words)

  
 Review of "The Quest of the Historical Jesus"
This is Dr. Schweitzer's opus on the history of the search for the historical Jesus.
The first 300 pages or so follow a pattern of a summarization of the work of a particular author followed by a critical examination of the work and its influence.
The work of well over 50 authors is discussed, with special attention paid to the work of Hermann Samuel Reimarus, David Friedrich Strauss, Christian Hermann Weisse, Bruno Bauer, and Ernest Renan.
home.pcisys.net /~jnf/schauth/rq15.html   (1180 words)

  
 Footnotes to Volume 1 of Marx Engels Collected Works
In answer to this evolution of the Left wing of the Hegelian school, the conservative German philosophers united under the banner of the so-called positive philosophy- a religious-mystical trend (Christian Hermann Weisse, Immanuel Hermann Fichte junior, Franz Xaver von Baader, Anton Gunther and others), which criticised Hegel’s philosophy from the right.
In 1851 Hermann Becker, a member of the Communist League, made an attempt to publish Marx’s collected works in Cologne.
However, the publication was ceased because of the government repressions.
www.marxists.org /archive/marx/works/cw/volume01/footnote.htm   (12758 words)

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