Citation: J. Schroter, The reception process of the Jesus tradition: Considerations on the historical character of New Testament scholarship on the so-called "woeful discourses", NEW TEST ST, 47(4), 2001, pp. 442-468
Citation: Dj. Verseput, Plutarch of Chaeronea and the 'Epistle of James' on communal behaviour (Between the Greek cultural elite and the early Christian community), NEW TEST ST, 47(4), 2001, pp. 502-518
Citation: C. Bottrich, "The gold that rusts" (James-V,3): Interpretational images from the early Christian community, NEW TEST ST, 47(4), 2001, pp. 519-536
Citation: Cm. Tuckett, "P52" ('PRyl.457') and nomina sacra (A short study on the dating of the Rylands fragment of the 'Gospel of John'), NEW TEST ST, 47(4), 2001, pp. 544-548
Citation: M. Chancey, The cultural milieu of ancient Sepphoris (Examining the interplay of Greco-Roman and local Hellenized culture in 2nd-century Israel), NEW TEST ST, 47(2), 2001, pp. 127-145
Citation: T. Soding, Promise and fulfilment in the light of Pauline theology - The Apostle Paul's maturing theology of justification from 'Galatians' through 'Romans', NEW TEST ST, 47(2), 2001, pp. 146-170
Citation: K. Backhaus, The Promised Land and the land of promise: A sanctuary for the faithful inthe 'Letter to the Hebrews' - A theocentric transformation and christological interpretation of Israel as fatherland, NEW TEST ST, 47(2), 2001, pp. 171-188
Citation: Cb. Carpenter, James-IV,5 reconsidered (Considerations on a paraenetic context within common Jewish exegetical practice), NEW TEST ST, 47(2), 2001, pp. 189-205
Citation: B. Chilton, Jesus, the mamzer (bastard) in Matthew-I,18 - A short study regarding illegitimacy and the virginity of Mary in rabbinic literary tradition, NEW TEST ST, 47(2), 2001, pp. 222-227
Citation: Jm. Robinson et C. Heil, The "lilies of the field": Saying-36 of the 'Gospel of Thomas' and secondary accretions in 'Q-XII.22b-31', NEW TEST ST, 47(1), 2001, pp. 1-25
Citation: P. Foster, A tale of two sons: But which one did the far, far better thing? A study of Matthew-XXI,28-32 (Examining a newly resurfaced manuscript tradition from'Codex Sinaiticus' in support of a pre-Matthean variant reading), NEW TEST ST, 47(1), 2001, pp. 26-37
Citation: Ka. Kuhn, The point of the step-parallelism in Luke-I-II (Exploring a christologicalmotivation as a narrative device in the comparative portrayals of Jesus and John the Baptist), NEW TEST ST, 47(1), 2001, pp. 38-49
Citation: Mc. Parsons, "Short in stature": Luke's physical description of Zacchaeus (Physiognomicconsciousness as rhetorical practice from classical literary tradition andits influence within the 'Gospel of Luke'), NEW TEST ST, 47(1), 2001, pp. 50-57
Citation: U. Schnelle, Transformation and participation as categories within the logic of Paulinetheology - On the formation of forensic declarations of justification and righteousness in the epistolary writings of Paul, NEW TEST ST, 47(1), 2001, pp. 58-75
Citation: Mh. Burer et Db. Wallace, Was Junia really an apostle? A re-examination of Romans-XVI,7 (Addressing gendered apostleship and noteworthy prominence through exegetical syntax inthe 'Epistle to the Romans'), NEW TEST ST, 47(1), 2001, pp. 76-91
Citation: M. Tsuji, Between ideal and reality: Concerning widows in 1-Timothy-V,3-16 - Wealth and beneficence in the Pastoral Epistles: On the social role of the early Christian Churches, NEW TEST ST, 47(1), 2001, pp. 92-104
Citation: Bw. Longenecker, "Linked like a chain": Revelation-XXII,6-9 in light of an ancient transition technique (Highlighting a fundamental structural feature for presentational clarity and the arrangement of ideas utilized in classical rhetoric), NEW TEST ST, 47(1), 2001, pp. 105-117