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Matches in Harvard for { ?s ?p Chapter I. The cursing of the Fig-Tree periscope: a history of the investigation of it's problems -- The variety of hermeneutical approaches -- The nineteenth century -- The turn of the century to the First World War -- Between wars -- The immediate post-war period -- Some recent trends -- Chapter II. Source and redaction in Mark Chapter 11 -- "And he entered Jerusalem": The three-day scheme -- "And passing by in the morning": The sequel -- Chapter III. The fig-tree periscope in Matthew's Gospel -- "And Jesus entered the Temple": The two-day scheme -- The nature of Matthew's redaction -- The significance of Matthew's redaction -- Chapter IV. "Whoever says to this mountain": The mountain-moving saying -- Introduction -- The saying's most primitive form -- The earliest discenible context -- Origin, meaning and sitz im leben -- Summation: The saying in markan redaction -- Chapter V. The Old Testament background -- Introduction -- The influence of the Old Testament -- The fig-tree in the Old Testament -- other related Motifs -- Certain primary Old Testament passages considered -- Some supplementary passages considered -- summation -- Chapter VI. The late Jewish background -- Introduction -- The estimation of the fig-tree in the rabbinical literature -- The fig-tree in the Halakah -- The fig/fig-tree in Rabbinic imagery and symbolism -- The fig-tree story and the Haggadah -- summation -- Chapter VII. The New Testament Background -- Introduction -- End-time expectation in the early Church -- Trees and fig-trees in the New Testament -- The Markan parable of the fig-tree (Mk. 13.28-32) -- Nathanael 'under the fig-tree' (Jn.1.48,50) -- The Lukan parable of the fig-tree (Lk.13.6-9) -- The question of origin -- Final summation -- Chapter VIII. Christology and the Messianic secret in Mark Chapter 11: A postscript.. }

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