Ulrich Schoenborn

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Ulrich Schoenborn (born April 26, 1942 in Dinslaken ) is a German Protestant theologian and New Testament scholar .

Act

Schoenborn received his doctorate in Protestant theology . He was a lecturer in the New Testament at the Theological College in São Leopoldo (1976–1980) and at the ISEDET (Evangelical College for Theological Studies) in Buenos Aires (1987–1990). In 1988 he completed his habilitation in Marburg with an investigation into the revelation of Peter from Nag Hammadi . In 1995 he was visiting professor in São Leopoldo and São Paulo. 1996–2000 he was visiting professor in Klaipėda , Lithuania.

He was an adjunct professor for the New Testament at the Marburg Department of Protestant Theology and (from 1997) lecturer for the New Testament at the Hermannsburg Missionary Seminar . His research areas are social historical and liberation theological biblical hermeneutics as well as Latin American spirituality. Most recently, Schoenborn worked on the Social History Dictionary for the Bible .

In addition, Ulrich Schoenborn has published a number of works on the Hessian and Baltic church history. He lives in Marburg.

Fonts (selection)

Exegetical and theological publications
  • with Stephan Pfürtner (Ed.): The compelling head start of the good. Exegetical and theological workshop reports. Lit-Verlag, Münster 1994, ISBN 3-8258-2060-2 (Festschrift for Wolfgang Harnisch ).
  • Diverbium salutis. Studies on the interdependence of the literary structure and theological intention of the Gnostic dialogue, carried out on the Coptic "Apocalypse of Peter" from Nag Hammadi. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 1995 ( Studies on the Environment of the New Testament , Volume 19).
  • Dialogue and revelation. On the strategy of literary reassurance in times of crisis. Lit-Verlag, Münster 1996.
  • Wolfgang Harnisch: The imposition of love. Collected Essays. Edited by Ulrich Schoenborn. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 1999 ( research on religion and literature of the Old and New Testaments , issue 187).
Church history publications
  • Evangelical Lutheran Church in Brazil. Following Jesus. Edited by Ulrich Schoenborn. BKV, Osnabrück 1989.
  • Broadening your horizons. Lithuanian scholarship holders in Marburg 1682–1822. In: Annaberger Annalen 13 (2005), pp. 253–262 ( online ; PDF; 181 kB).
  • "... I see the footsteps of God's Providence." On the work of the Hessian theologian Conrad Mel (1666–1733) in Mitau, Memel and Königsberg. Lit-Verlag, Münster 2006.
  • The most unnecessary is the most essential. Richard Pfeiffer and the frescoes in Heydekrug church. In: Annaberger Annalen 15 (2007), pp. 177–246 ( online ; PDF; 4.6 MB).
On the theology of liberation
  • Con irreverencia y gratitud. El Padrenuestro en America Latina. Buenos Aires 1990.
  • The people and their saints in Latin America. In: Una Sancta 3 (1994), pp. 211-223.
  • Revocation or Affirmation? The excluded as a new focus in the theology of liberation. In: epd documentation no. 1/1997, pp. 59–68.
  • From the pathos of the great to the ethos of the small. The excluded as a new focus in the theology of liberation. In: Evangelisches Missionswerk (ed.): World Mission Today No. 38 - Brazil. Hamburg 2000, pp. 178-183 ( online ).
  • with Erhard S. Gerstenberger (ed.): Hermeneutics - social history. Contextuality in biblical studies from the point of view of (Latin) American and European exegetes. Lit-Verlag, Münster 1999, ISBN 3-8258-3139-6 ( Exegesis in our time , Volume 1).
  • Lord's Prayer of the Poor. The reception of the Our Father in Latin America. In: imprimatur , October 2000 ( online ).
  • Não é somente coisa do passado. In: Estudos Teológicos Vol. 40 (2000), No. 1 ( online ).
  • On the trail of faith. Hermeneutic forays between Río de la Plata and Nemunas. Lit-Verlag, Münster 2003, ISBN 3-8258-6560-6 ( Exegesis in our time , volume 12).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ulrich Schoenborn: Diverbium salutis. Studies on the interdependence of the literary structure and theological intention of the Gnostic dialogue, carried out on the Coptic "Apocalypse of Peter" from Nag Hammadi. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 1995, p. 5.
  2. a b Evangelisches Missionswerk (ed.): World Mission Today No. 38 - Brazil. Hamburg 2000, p. 205.
  3. Honorary and non-scheduled professors ( Memento from September 12, 2011 in the Internet Archive ). Website of the Department of Protestant Theology at the Philipps University of Marburg. Retrieved December 15, 2010.
  4. Frank Crüsemann u. a. (Ed.): Social history dictionary for the Bible. Gütersloh publishing house, Gütersloh 2009.