探索主祷文接受史的隐喻

D. Clark
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摘要

布伦南·布里德在其著作《游牧文本:圣经接受史理论》中认为,文本是游牧民族,没有原始形式,没有原始语境,没有家园。它们的整个历史都以不可预测的运动和变化为特征。因此,他提出,接受史的研究应该首先是对文本意义潜力的探索。然而,认为意义的进步与解释学的前提没有关系的建议,与伽达默尔的断言相反,即文本的当代效果(Wirkung)总是与其历史效果统一存在。继伽达默尔之后,接受历史学家可能仍在探索解释学的潜力——但是以一种历史意识的方式进行的。从这个角度来看,圣经文本的本质可能更适合用移民的隐喻来描述,而不是游牧民族的隐喻。本文的目的是评估这些不同的隐喻在我们试图定义圣经文本的性质和接受历史学家的任务时的有用性。我们的测试案例将是主祷文的早期解释历史。鉴于这种祈祷的原始形式和背景是无法挽回的,布里德的理论在许多方面都是适用的。然而,我们也可以看到,在主祷文的早期接受历史中,也有共时连续性的模式。在神学和实践的不同议程中,我们发现对主祷文的解释始终植根于对耶稣基督的继承概念化-我们将其称为对他的生活和宣言的规范纪念。
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Exploring Metaphors for the Reception History of the Lord’s Prayer
Abstract In his work Nomadic Text: A Theory of Biblical Reception History, Brennan Breed argues that texts are nomads which – existing without original form and without original context – have no homeland to claim as their own. Their entire history has been marked by unpredictable movement and variation. He therefore proposes that the study of reception history should primarily be an exploration of the potentiality of textual meanings. The suggestion that meaning progresses without relationship to hermeneutical antecedents, however, runs contrary to Gadamer’s assertion that the contemporary effect (Wirkung) of a text always exists in unity with its historical effects. Following Gadamer, the reception historian may still explore hermeneutical potentiality – but does so with a sense of historical consciousness. In this light, the nature of a biblical text may be more suitably characterized by the metaphor of an emigrant rather than that of a nomad. The purpose of this paper is to evaluate the usefulness of these divergent metaphors in our attempt to define both the nature of biblical texts and the task of the reception historian. Our test case will be the early interpretation history of the Lord’s Prayer. Given that the original form and context of this prayer are irretrievable, Breed’s theory is applicable in many respects. Yet it will also be seen that in the early reception history of the Lord’s Prayer there are also patterns of synchronic continuity. Amidst diverse agendas of theology and praxis, we find that interpretations of the Lord’s Prayer were consistently rooted in an inherited conceptualization of Jesus Christ – what we will call a canonical remembrance of his life and proclamation.
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