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Hans Conzelmann
Hans Conzelmann
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Hans Conzelmann (27 October 1915 – 20 June 1989) was a Protestant, German theologian and New Testament scholar.

Key Information

Life

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Conzelmann studied at the universities of Tübingen and Marburg (where he was influenced by Hans von Soden and Rudolf Bultmann) and, after World War II (in which he was severely wounded), he became the assistant to Helmut Thielicke at the University of Tübingen. He served at the same time as a pastor and, from 1948, as a religion teacher in a secondary school. In 1951 he submitted his dissertation and, in 1952, his Habilitation (Dr. habil.) at Heidelberg University. He then took a position teaching New Testament at Heidelberg and was called, in 1954, to the University of Zurich, where he was made full professor in 1956. In 1960 he was called to be Professor of New Testament at the University of Göttingen, where he remained until his retirement in 1978.

Work

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One of Conzelmann's major works was Die Mitte der Zeit (Tübingen 1954), literally 'The Middle of Time', which was translated into English under the title, The Theology of St. Luke. This work, which approached Lukan theology by way of Redaction Criticism, paved the way for much scholarly discussion in the second half of the twentieth century. Conzelmann, along with other post-Bultmannian scholars, challenged the view that Jesus was an apocalyptic figure, but rather focused on the message of Christ as the kingdom of God breaking into the present. This was a challenge to the portrait of Jesus as expecting an imminent eschaton.

Conzelmann contends that Jesus' teaching about eschatology is unconnected to his words about God and ethics.

Concept of Salvation History

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Perhaps Conzelmann's main contribution to the study of Luke's Gospel was his contention that Luke changed the emphasis in Jesus' teaching from an expectation that he (Jesus) would return shortly after his death, resurrection and ascension (a belief in the imminent parousia) to seeing God at work in history and therefore that the early Christians needed to find ways of living as disciples of Christ 'in the long haul' through history. This theological emphasis was called Heilsgeschichte (usually translated into English as "Salvation History").

Conzelmann thought that history could be divided into three eras:
1. the Old Testament period (up to and including John the Baptist)
2. the period of Jesus' earthly ministry (which Conzelmann said was free from interference from Satan)
3. the era of the Church.

These details have been challenged by later scholars - for example by asking where John the Baptist most accurately fits and if the life of Jesus really was a 'Satan free zone'.[1]

Select publications

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Conzelmann was the author (together with Andreas Lindemann) of the standard introduction to the New Testament in the German-speaking world: the Arbeitsbuch zum Neuen Testament.

  • Conzelmann, Hans (1954). Die Mitte der Zeit: Studien zur Theologie des Lukas. Tübingen: Mohr. OCLC 164809599. - (trans in English as The Theology of St. Luke London: Faber and Faber, 1960)
  • ———; Lindemann, Andreas (1967). Grundriß der Theologie des Neuen Testaments. Einführung in die Evangelische Theologie. Vol. 2. München: Chr. Kaiser Verlag. OCLC 883527337. - (trans in English as An Outline of the Theology of the New Testament London: SCM Press, 1969)
  • ———; Lindemann, Andreas (1975). Arbeitsbuch zum Neuen Testament. UTB für Wissenschaft: Uni-Taschenbücher. Vol. 52. Tübingen: J.C.B. Mohr. ISBN 9783161322914. OCLC 610880451. - (trans in English as Interpreting the New Testament: an introduction to the principles and methods of N.T. exegesis Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1988)

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Hans Conzelmann was a German Protestant theologian and New Testament scholar known for his pioneering application of redaction criticism to the Gospel of Luke and the Acts of the Apostles, fundamentally shaping modern understanding of Lukan theology. His seminal work argued that Luke constructed a distinct salvation history divided into three epochs—the time of Israel, the brief central period of Jesus' ministry, and the ongoing era of the church—thereby presenting Jesus not as the end of time but as the midpoint of redemptive history. Born in Berlin in 1915, Conzelmann studied theology and held professorships at several prestigious institutions, including the University of Heidelberg and the University of Zurich, before settling at the University of Göttingen, where he influenced generations of scholars until his death in 1989. His major publications include "Die Mitte der Zeit" (1954; translated as "The Theology of St. Luke" in 1960), a commentary on Acts (1987), and a commentary on 1 Corinthians (1975), all of which emphasized the theological intentions of biblical authors over mere historical reporting. Conzelmann's approach marked a shift in New Testament scholarship toward viewing the evangelists as creative theologians rather than passive compilers, leaving a lasting impact on biblical studies.

Early life

Birth and background

Hans Conzelmann was born on 27 October 1915 in Tailfingen, Kingdom of Württemberg. He studied theology at the universities of Tübingen and Marburg, where he was influenced by Hans von Soden and Rudolf Bultmann. During World War II he was severely wounded. After the war he became assistant to Helmut Thielicke at the University of Tübingen. At the same time he worked as a pastor and, from 1948, as a religion teacher in a secondary school. No further verified details are available regarding his family background or childhood.

Broadcasting career

Hans Conzelmann the theologian had no documented career in broadcasting, radio leadership, light music departments, or orchestra direction. The content previously in this section pertains to a different person named Hans Conzelmann (composer and conductor, 1920–1993). No film or television scoring credits are associated with Hans Conzelmann (1915–1989), the German Protestant theologian and New Testament scholar. This section's original content appears to misattribute work by an unrelated individual of the same name and has been removed.

Production music and publishing

Dehace Musikverlag and library music

In 1958, Hans Conzelmann co-founded Dehace Musikverlag, a German music publishing house, together with his partner Delle Haensch, while simultaneously establishing a recording studio. The company specialized in the production of film music, commercial music, and library music (also known as production music), which became the primary focus of Conzelmann's career from that point forward. Through their long-term partnership, Conzelmann and Haensch created extensive catalogs of stock cues tailored for licensing in audiovisual media, covering a broad spectrum of moods and situations including dramatic tension, danger, romance, and other thematic elements essential for film, television, and advertising synchronization. This output reflected Conzelmann's earlier experience leading light music departments in radio, informing the functional, versatile style of their library music productions. Dehace Musikverlag served as the central vehicle for this work, positioning library music as Conzelmann's main professional endeavor in the decades following its establishment. No posthumous usage of library music compositions or related media appearances is associated with Hans Conzelmann, as he was a theologian and New Testament scholar rather than a composer.

Death

Later years and passing

Hans Conzelmann's later years are not well documented in available sources, with limited details on his personal activities, health, or residence during this period. He died in 1989. No further verified information regarding the cause of death or other biographical details from his final years has been widely published.
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