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Books > Christianity > The Bible > Biblical concordances & commentaries
Susan Niditch's commentary on the book of Judges pays careful
attention to the literary and narrative techniques of the text and
yields fresh readings of the book's difficult passages: stories of
violence, ethnic conflict, and gender issues. Niditch aptly and
richly conveys the theological impact and enduring significance of
these stories.
The Old Testament Library provides fresh and authoritative
treatments of important aspects of Old Testament study through
commentaries and general surveys. The contributors are scholars of
international standing.
Quickly find over 5,000 of your favorite biblical phrases. Find it Fast
in the Bible is a trusted, time-saving resource for personal and group
study. This A to Z Resource is the perfect companion for any topical
concordance or Bible dictionary.
Features:
- Quick access to meaningful biblical phrases
- Exact chapter-and-verse locations
This critically acclaimed series provides fresh and authoritative
treatments of important aspects of Old Testament study through
commentaries and general surveys. The authors are scholars of
international standing.
"The Bible in the Latin West" is the first volume in a series that
addresses the codicology of texts. In considering how and why the
appearance of a manuscript changes over the centuries, Margaret T.
Gibson introduces students to the study of manuscripts and to the
wider range of information and expertise that can be brought to
bear on the study of manuscripts as historical objects as well as
texts. Here Gibson surveys the changes in the most important book
in the western world, the Latin Bible. She begins the survey in
late antiquity, discussing the volumes of the great senatorial
houses of the 4th century and how they influenced the early great
Bibles of northern Europe. The discussion then moves through the
Carolingian period, with its increased interest in commentary to
early vernacular versions, and goes on to reveal how in the 11th
and 12th centuries the growing numbers of monastic and university
readers made new demands on the texts which led to the inclusion of
glosses and other scholarly apparatus. Later, the combined
influences of increased literacy and growing wealth among the
population called for vernacular translations and devotional aids
such as Books of Hours. Gibson completes the survey with a look at
early printed Bibles. A useful volume for anyone being introduced
to the firsthand study of texts and their transmission, as well as
for graduate students in history, English, modern languages,
classics, and religious studies. "The Bible in the Latin West"
contains an introductory survey.
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Exodus
(Hardcover)
Brevard S. Childs
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R1,856
R1,518
Discovery Miles 15 180
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This critically acclaimed series provides fresh and authoritative
treatments of important aspects of Old Testament study through
commentaries and general surveys. The authors are scholars of
international standing.
The Old Testament Library provides an authoritative treatment of
every major and important aspect of the Old Testament. This
commentary on Lamentations furnishes a fresh translation and
discusses questions of historical background and literary
architecture before providing a theologically sensitive exposition
of the text.
In this first volume of a trilogy, Daniel J. Elazar addresses
political uses of the idea of covenant, the tradition that has
adhered to that idea, and the political arrangements that flow from
it,
Among the topics covered are covenant as a political concept,
the Bible as a political commentary, the post-biblical tradition,
medieval covenant theory, and Jewish political culture.
Job depicts faith under trial. Psalms teach us how to express our
faith. Godly wisdom is found in Proverbs, Ecclesiastes. Love is the
theme found within the Song of Solomon.
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Lamentations
(Hardcover)
Allsopp F.W. Dobbs
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R880
R759
Discovery Miles 7 590
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The destruction of Jerusalem in 586 BC, which led to the exile of
the people of Israel, drastically changed the community's life. In
the midst of this darkness, the five poems collected to form the
biblical Book of Lamentations emerged as a life-embracing work.
This commentary aims to make the message of Lamentations come alive
to Christians today. The distinctiveness of the Palestinian voice
found in these poems is maintained as they bear witness to the
horror of pain and human suffering. Yet, beneath the words, a
determined will to live emerges to confront human suffering, probe
God's actions and anticipate a new kind of human community.
Many approaches for interpreting the Bible have been put forth in
recent years. All have their strengths--and their weaknesses. The
Act of Bible Reading combines the strengths of several of these
approaches into one volume which will enrich our reading of the
Bible. Gordon Fee and Elmer Dyck discuss history and canon,
respectively, as contexts for interpretation, highlighting the
importance of historical-grammatical interpretation within a
canonical setting for understanding biblical texts. J. I. Packer
explores the importance of theology, both as it informs and as it
safeguards Bible reading. Craig M. Gay proffers key insights from
sociology, especially the sociology of knowledge, as it cautions us
to ask not only what the text says, but who says it says that and
why should we believe what they are telling us it says. Facing the
challenges of modern secular hermeneutics from Heidigger and
Nietzsche to Derrida and Foucault, Loren Wilkinson counters the
postmodern reaction against truth. James Houston argues that the
aim of Bible reading must be godliness and not mere scholarship.
And Eugene Peterson then responds to the collection of insights as
a whole. For readers who want to take the next steps in
understanding the Bible for themselves, here is here is a
not-to-be-missed opportunity to benefit from the combined insight
of a distinguished group of teachers.
The Bible, undoubtedly the most widely read book of the Western
world, has outsold every other book in the history of publishing.
Despite its popularity and cultural importance as the foundation of
Christianity and Judaism, few people have more than superficial
knowledge of the actual contents of the Scriptures. In What is the
Bible? Carl Lofmark clearly and succinctly synopsizes the basics of
biblical scholarship and criticism. Designed for the reader with
little or no prior knowledge of the subject, Lofmark's
approachable, well-organized presentation cuts through the
complexities of biblical exegesis and rationalist critiques, and
outlines the basic structure, history, and inherent theological
controversies of the Bible. The first half of Lofmark's discussion
summarizes the essential facts of biblical scholarship: how and
when the various books of the Bible were compiled, a brief history
of scriptural translations, the evolving understanding of the
Bible's original languages, and how the various editions we know
today were developed and codified across two millennia. The second
half delves into major critiques of the Bible as an authoritative
guide for living: its self-contradictions, its mixture of fact and
fiction, the questionable and even deplorable morality of many
biblical passages, the intellectual difficulties of literal or
symbolic interpretation, and its inadequacy as a foundation for
modern ethics. As an introduction to an important and often
controversial subject, What is the Bible? will be useful to
believers and skeptics alike.
More than eighty years ago Albert Schweitzer posed a question of
enduring debate for New Testament scholarship. Did Jesus--and later
Paul--believe that the apocalyptic kingdom of God was about to
appear, bringing an end to this world? Indeed, what were the
eschatological teachings of Jesus and Paul? Is there any
appreciable continuity between the two? Ben Witherington takes a
hard look at the Gospel texts and makes a thorough and critical
assessment of Paul's eschatology. For each topic examined--the
language of imminence, the dominion of God, the community of
Christ, the Israel of God, the day of the Lord and the resurrection
of the dead--he compares and contrasts Jesus and Paul. The result
is an important contribution to our understanding of New Testament
eschatology. With the second millennium drawing to a close and
world events sparking the speculations of popular religious
imaginations, Witherington provides a timely and sober
re-examination of a topic too long neglected by serious
scholarship.
Satan worship. Witches. New Age channelers. The last two decades
have witnessed a vast upsurge in occult activity. Scores of popular
books have warned Christians of the dangers and urged them to do
battle against these spiritual forces. Few books, however, have
developed a careful biblical theology on demons, principalities and
powers. Clinton Arnold seeks to fill this gap, providing an
in-depth look at Paul's letters and what they teach on the subject.
For perspective, he examines first-century Greek, Roman and Jewish
beliefs as well as Jesus' teaching about magic, sorcery and
divination. Arguing against many recent interpretations that have
seen principalities and powers as impersonal social, economic and
political structures, Arnold contends that the New Testament view
is that such forces are organized, personal beings which Jesus
defeated at the cross and will bring into full subjection at his
return. In his concluding section Arnold suggests practical ways in
which Christians today can contend with the forces of evil. A
thoughtful, biblical look at an urgent challenge facing the church.
Gerald A. Larue examines the scriptural underpinnings of occult and
supernaturalistic notions that survive in contemporary society. The
book is based on the author's thorough knowledge of the history of
ancient Near-Eastern cultures and their mythology.
"Steve Allen on the Bible, Religion, and Morality" took form when
Allen began his own exploration of the Bible, marking passages that
struck him as extraordinarily beautiful, or those that were
profoundly confusing. Spellbound by the very mystery of it, he
perceived that much of the text leads directly to controversy. And,
he urges, it is of greater importance now than ever before that all
Americans be conversant with the Bible, partly because of those who
would use Scriptures as a weapon to force their views on others.
Allen presents his ideas as a series of alphabetically arranged
essays on characters, events, and books of the Scriptures, as well
as on such controversial topics as abortion, anti-Semitism, capital
punishment, death, evolution, and original sin. He draws on the
expertise of biblical scholars, theologians, and philosophers to
demonstrate that fundamentalist assumptions about the reliability
and authenticity of the Bible as the inviolable Word of God simply
have no rational or factual basis.
Even though it was written some two millennia ago, Ephesians still
speaks to Christians today in themes quite familiar to the modern
reader. In a context where the church had become overwhelmingly, if
not exclusively, Gentile, the Christian community needed to be
reminded of the priority of Israel and the astonishing work of
reconciliation that God willed to accomplish in the life, death,
and resurrection of Jesus Christ. This new volume in the highly
acclaimed New Testament Library series reveals the great
theological promises of Ephesians while discussing issues of
context, authorship, and style.
After the Civil War, Ingersoll embarked upon a career as a
lecturer, touring the United States to make his thoughts on
religion, women's rights, and humanism known to all. Some Mistakes
of Moses, one of the most popular of these lectures, is a critical
examination of the "Pentateuch" (the first five books of the
Bible). Ingersoll passionately believed that the alleged divine
origins of the Bible were not sufficient reason for a suspension of
critical judgement. His diatribe against Old Testament religion is
a call for rationality, a quality sorely missing in this time of
political upheaval in the world in the name of religion.Ingersoll
greatly feared that when the Bible was read as truth rather than as
a collection of fables, mankind would destroy itself in its attempt
to follow the teachings of Moses to the letter. Ingersoll fervently
believed that the most important belief one can have is belief in
man. "Theology is a superstition - Humanity is a religion" - this
was the credo of Robert G. Ingersoll. Now, a new generation of
readers can thrill to Ingersoll's brilliant and witty rhetoric,
just as great thinkers Mark Twain, Thomas Edison, Eugene V Debs,
and others did almost one hundred years ago.
The original edition of this concordance, published in 1897, was
primarily based on the Greek text of Westcott and Hort but gave all
the variants in the edition of Tischendorf and in the Greek text
underlying the Revised Version of the English Bible. This sixth
edition retains all the features of earlier ones, but it is
primarily based on the Greek text in the Greek New Testament
(fourth edition), which is identical with that in "Novum
Testamentum Graece" (27th edition). It incorporates the main
marginal readings in the former of these texts, and references to
the variants in the older editions are preserved, so that the
student has to hand every reading which by even a remote
probability might be regarded as forming part of the true text of
the New Testament. The supplement incorporating the prepositions
has been included in the main text of the concordance. Where the
same word occurs twice in the same verse, these occurrences are now
printed on separate lines and individually verse-numbered so that
it is easier to count the number of occurrences of any given word.
Special new Greek fonts have been created to enable greater clarity
in the printing.
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