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She testified that Kittel had strongly objected against the actions being taken against Jews. Kittel's work on the Jewish Question was not based on the racial theories of Nazism but upon theology. [15] [page needed] In 1946, Kittel was released pending his trial, but was forbidden to enter Tübingen until 1948.
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Gravestone of Rudolf Kittel, Südfriedhof (Leipzig). He produced commentaries and histories of the Israelites and the Near East, but his most enduring work was his critical edition of the Hebrew scriptures, Biblia Hebraica, which has remained a standard text. Kittel's son was the theologian and Nazi apologist Gerhard Kittel. [2]
Buist Martin Fanning III (born May 26, 1949) is an American scholar of biblical Greek and a professor of New Testament studies at Dallas Theological Seminary.He was one of the translators who worked on the 1995 update of the New American Standard Bible. [1]
McKim, Donald K. Westminster dictionary of theological terms. Westminster John Knox Press, 1996. ISBN 0-664-25511-6. [5] Muller, Richard A. Dictionary of Latin and Greek theological terms: Drawn principally from Protestant scholastic theology. Baker Book House, 1985. ISBN 0-8010-6185-7. [5] Musser, Donald W., Joseph L. Price.
Ferdinand Kittel (7 April 1832 – 18 December 1903) was a Lutheran priest and indologist with the Basel Mission in south India and worked in Mangalore, Madikeri and Dharwad in Karnataka. He is most famous for his studies of the Kannada language and for producing a Kannada-English dictionary of about 70,000 words in 1894. [ 1 ]
CARM offers several online dictionaries, including a theological dictionary compiled by Matt Slick and others, in addition to discussion forums. [3] The organization's stated motivation is "to equip Christians with good information on doctrine". [6] In 2004, CARM made available a free resource called the Dictionary of Theology for the Palm OS ...
He wrote the article on the meaning of the Greek word ekklesia (church) for the Theological Dictionary of the New Testament. [6] In 1959, Karl Barth wrote this about him after his death: "K. L. Schmidt, far superior to me in both learning and pugnacity, but always so stimulating."