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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > The Bible > Old Testament > General
Previous scholarship hints at the connection between Judges 19-21
and Ruth (as set in dialogue), but there has yet to be a study to
articulate this relationship. Through a Bakhtinian-canonical
perspective, a comparative analysis of these texts unveils
intertextual correlations. Lexical and thematic connections include
shared idioms, contrasting themes of ("ban") and
("loving-kindness," "covenant-faithfulness"), silence and speech,
abuse and potential for abuse, gendered violence and feminine
agency. This case-study reveals that Ruth, as a text and as a
woman, embodies a voice of answerability to the silenced and abused
women in Judges 19-21
Drawing insights from gender studies and the environmental
humanities, Demonic Bodies and the Dark Ecologies of Early
Christian Culture analyzes how ancient Christians constructed the
Christian body through its relations to demonic adversaries.
Through case studies of New Testament texts, Gnostic treatises, and
early Christian church fathers (e.g., Ignatius of Antioch, Clement
of Alexandria, and Tertullian of Carthage), Travis W. Proctor notes
that early followers of Jesus construed the demonic body in diverse
and sometimes contradictory ways, as both embodied and bodiless,
"fattened" and ethereal, heavenly and earthbound. Across this
diversity of portrayals, however, demons consistently functioned as
personifications of "deviant" bodily practices such as "magical"
rituals, immoral sexual acts, gluttony, and pagan religious
practices. This demonization served an exclusionary function
whereby Christian writers marginalized fringe Christian groups by
linking their ritual activities to demonic modes of
(dis)embodiment. The tandem construction of demonic and human
corporeality demonstrates how Christian authors constructed the
bodies that inhabited their cosmos-human, demon, and otherwise-as
part of overlapping networks or "ecosystems" of humanity and
nonhumanity. Through this approach, Proctor provides not only a
more accurate representation of the bodies of ancient Christians,
but also new resources for reimagining the enlivened ecosystems
that surround and intersect with our modern ideas of "self."
An Invitation to Biblical Poetry is an accessibly written
introduction to biblical poetry that emphasizes the aesthetic
dimensions of poems and their openness to varieties of context. It
demonstrates the irreducible complexity of poetry as a verbal art
and considers the intellectual work poems accomplish as they offer
aesthetic experiences to people who read or hear them. Chapters
walk the reader through some of the diverse ways biblical poems are
organized through techniques of voicing, lineation, and form, and
describe how the poems' figures are both culturally and
historically bound and always dependent on later reception. The
discussions consider examples from different texts of the Bible,
including poems inset in prose narratives, prophecies, psalms, and
wisdom literature. Each chapter ends with a reading of a psalm that
offers an acute example of the dimension under discussion. Students
and general readers are invited to richer and deeper readings of
ancient poems and the subjects, problems, and convictions that
occupy their imagination.
For years, Douglas Stuart's Old Testament Exegesis has been one of
the most popular ways to learn how to perform exegesis-the science
and art of interpreting biblical texts properly for understanding
as well as proclamation. This new edition includes a major revision
and expansion of online and other resources for doing biblical
research and updates past editions by including a helpful
configuration of the format for the exegesis process. Stuart
provides guidance for full exegesis as well as for a quicker
approach specifically tailored to the task of preaching. A glossary
of terms explains the sometimes-bewildering language of biblical
scholarship, and a list of frequent errors guides the student in
avoiding common mistakes. No exegetical guide for the Old Testament
has been more widely used in training ministers and students to be
faithful, careful interpreters of Scripture.
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