George Howard (Hebraist)

George Howard is an American Hebraist, noted for his theories of Hebrew-language origins to the New Testament - including the possible use of the Tetragrammaton in the New Testament, and possible Hebrew origins of Matthew. He was formerly Associate Professor of Religion and Hebrew at the University of Georgia.[1][2]

Works

References

  1. UGA Department of Religion Faculty List
  2. George Howard The Tetragram and the New Testament Journal of Biblical Literature Vol. 96, No. 1 (Mar., 1977), pp. 63-83
  3. BAR 4(1) Issue TOC
  4. Horbury Hebrew study from Ezra to Ben-Yehuda p128 "the Hebrew Matthew, mentioned above. 5 John Mill, in the Prolegomena to his 1707 edition of the New Testament, ... in the last few years, by George Howard.8 Both concentrated on the du Tillet-Mercier text, but Howard also urged,"
  5. Horbury W., Jews and Christians 2006 p40
  6. Horbury review Journal of Jewish Studies 47 (1996)
  7. Horbury Appendix in Matthew 19-28 ed. William David Davies, Dale C. Allison
  8. Maurice Casey Aramaic Sources of Mark's Gospel 1998 Page 61 "Hebrew found in the Evan Bohan, a fourteenth-century Jewish anti-Christian treatise by Shem-Tob ben-Isaac ben-Shaprut.208 Howard's only points of substance are that some of the translation is older than the treatise of Shem-Tob, and that"
  9. p xvi "Book twelve of the treatise contains the entire Gospel of Matthew in Hebrew along with polemical comments by Shem-Tob ... A comparison of this old substratum with the canonical Greek text suggests that the Hebrew reflects a Jewish ."
  10. JBL 96/1 pp.63-83 pdf
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