I immediately also noticed Herr Meiser's use of the expression "pladoyee for reconciliation" at the end of his RBL review of your book. I recognized it as essentially transliterated German, das Plädoyer = plea. I do not think that the term has been domesticated into English. I found only one English-language use of it on the Web: "This page is primarily a pladoyee for modesty and self-criticism."
Best,
Dan Bailey
(I noticed this because I'm a German translator, especially of books by Peter Stuhlmacher, who has used the word "Plädoyer" more than once in works I have translated. So far I have published Stuhlmacher, Revisiting Paul's Doctrine of Justification; Janowski and Stuhlmacher, The Suffering Servant: Isaiah 53 in Jewish and Christian Sources. Also Klauck, Ancient Letters and the New Testment, etc.)
Thanks for the note. It was actually me (Joel Willitts) who wrote this comment as a pun on Mike having playdoughee arguments. Thanks for the surely correct explanation. I would not have recognized that word as a German transliteration.
Dr. David M. Scholer, professor of New Testament at Fuller Theological Seminary, passed away on Friday, August 22, 2008, after a long struggle with cancer. Scholer, who was 70, served on Fuller’s faculty for the past 14 years.
Hi Michael,
ReplyDeleteI immediately also noticed Herr Meiser's use of the expression "pladoyee for reconciliation" at the end of his RBL review of your book. I recognized it as essentially transliterated German, das Plädoyer = plea. I do not think that the term has been domesticated into English. I found only one English-language use of it on the Web: "This page is primarily a pladoyee for modesty and self-criticism."
Best,
Dan Bailey
(I noticed this because I'm a German translator, especially of books by Peter Stuhlmacher, who has used the word "Plädoyer" more than once in works I have translated. So far I have published Stuhlmacher, Revisiting Paul's Doctrine of Justification; Janowski and Stuhlmacher, The Suffering Servant: Isaiah 53 in Jewish and Christian Sources. Also Klauck, Ancient Letters and the New Testment, etc.)
Dan:
ReplyDeleteThanks for the note. It was actually me (Joel Willitts) who wrote this comment as a pun on Mike having playdoughee arguments. Thanks for the surely correct explanation. I would not have recognized that word as a German transliteration.
Dr. David M. Scholer, professor of New Testament at Fuller Theological Seminary, passed away on Friday, August 22, 2008, after a long struggle with cancer. Scholer, who was 70, served on Fuller’s faculty for the past 14 years.
ReplyDeleteFuller Seminary Remembers the Life of David M. Scholer
Blog tributes: Prof. David M. Scholer (1938-2008)