Context describes the network of circumstances that surround and inform a statement, text, action, culture, or concept. This can include historical setting, literary structure, cultural assumptions, audience expectations, and immediate surroundings such as neighboring sentences or events. Attention to context helps clarify intended meaning, limits misunderstanding, and explains why the same words or actions may carry different implications in different settings. Rather than adding meaning, context frames how meaning is recognized and evaluated.
Intertexts
References
- Ronning, John, The "High and Lifted Up" Son of Man Christology of John’s Gospel
- Stefan Beyerle, "Heaven: Use, Function and Content of a Cosmic Concept" in Duggan, Michael W., et al. (eds.) Cosmos and Creation: Second Temple Perspectives
- Knoppers, Gary, "David's Relation to Moses: The Contexts, Contents, and Conditions of the Davidic Promises" in Day, John (ed.) King and Messiah in Israel and the Ancient Near East: Proceedings of the Oxford Old Testament Seminar
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