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Renewing Biblical Interpretation is the first of eight volumes from the Scripture and Hermeneutics Seminar. This annual gathering of Christian scholars from various disciplines was established in 1998 and aims to re-assess the discipline of biblical studies from the foundation up and forge creative new ways for re-opening the Bible in our cultures. Including a retrospective on the consultation by Walter Brueggemann, the contributors to Renewing Biblical Interpretation consider three elements in approaching the Bible--the historical, the literary and the theological--and the underlying philosophical issues that shape the way we think about literature and history.… (meer)
The book as a whole is refreshing in its candour and willingness to look at the hermeneutical crisis. It is well worth reading with care.
toegevoegd door Christa_Josh | bewerkEvangel, John A. MacLeod(Jun 1, 2002)
But the matters aired here are important in themselves, and some of the contributors are very well informed and astute--best of all, perhaps, Karl Möller. A book that cannot be ignored.
toegevoegd door Christa_Josh | bewerkJournal for the Study of the Old Testament, John Barton(Jun 1, 2002)
Renewing Biblical Interpretation is the first of eight volumes from the Scripture and Hermeneutics Seminar. This annual gathering of Christian scholars from various disciplines was established in 1998 and aims to re-assess the discipline of biblical studies from the foundation up and forge creative new ways for re-opening the Bible in our cultures. Including a retrospective on the consultation by Walter Brueggemann, the contributors to Renewing Biblical Interpretation consider three elements in approaching the Bible--the historical, the literary and the theological--and the underlying philosophical issues that shape the way we think about literature and history.