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Books > Christianity > The Bible > Old Testament
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Reflections on the Psalms
(Paperback)
Ian Adams, Christopher Cocksworth, Joanna Collicutt, Gillian Cooper, Steven Croft, …
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R521
R480
Discovery Miles 4 800
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Reflections on the Psalms provides insightful commentary on each of
the Psalms from the same experienced team of writers that have made
Reflections for Daily Prayer so popular. It offers inspiring and
undated reflections on all 150 psalms, with longer psalms split
into parts in accordance with the Lectionary. Each reflection is
accompanied by its corresponding Psalm refrain and prayer from the
Common Worship Psalter, making this a valuable resource for
personal or devotional use. Specially written introductions by
Paula Gooder and Steven Croft explore the Psalms and the Bible and
the Psalms in the life of the Church.
It would be difficult to overestimate the importance of the
Bible in the medieval world. For the Anglo-Saxons, literary culture
emerged from sustained and intensive biblical study. Further, at
least to judge from the Old English texts which survive, the Old
Testament was the primary influence, both in terms of content and
modes of interpretation. Though the Old Testament was only
partially translated into Old English, recent studies have shown
how completely interconnected Anglo-Latin and Old English literary
traditions are.Old English Literature and the Old Testament
considers the importance of the Old Testament from a variety of
disciplinary perspectives, from comparative to intertextual and
historical. Though the essays focus on individual works, authors,
or trends, including the Interrogationes Sigewulfi, Genesis A, and
Daniel, each ultimately speaks to the vernacular corpus as a whole,
suggesting approaches and methodologies for further study.
This major work explores the message and meaning of Ezekiel, one of
the longest and most difficult of the prophetic books. An
introduction explains what is involved in reading a prophetic book,
and how the book of Ezekiel was put together and structured. It
looks at the form of speech used and discusses Ezekiel's author and
those who transmitted, edited, and enlarged upon what he had to
say. The destruction of Jerusalem is a primary concern, and
attention is focused on the political and social situation of the
time in order to provide a clear understanding of the political and
religious crisis facing the prophet's contemporaries.
For almost 3000 years the story of Jonah has intrigued, amused,
inspired, encouraged, a,d challenged people of faith. This timeless
story about one imperfect, complex man and his difficult
relationship with God continues to engage contemporary audiences.
Jonah enjoys a unique place in salvation history. His life reprises
the actions of key Old Testament figures and also points forward to
the New Testament and the coming Messiah. Jonah's story is a
beautiful, complex, artfully crafted, work of minimalist literature
which speaks a profound and resounding message of grace that still
captures the human heart. This book is designed to facilitate a 40
day, shared journey through the book of Jonah. The radical
revelation of the book of Jonah is that God's grace is wild. It
refuses all human attempts to tame, domesticate, or restrain it.
This grace continually bursts forth, in the most unexpected of
places, and reaches out to the most unlikely of people.
A concise introduction to a central topic in biblical studies,
designed with the needs of students, preachers and teachers in mind
The prophetic books are some of the most captivating and
fascinating texts of the Old Testament, but they are also some of
the most misunderstood. Interpreting the Prophets equips the reader
with the knowledge and skills they need to interpret the Prophets
in a faithful and accurate fashion. Beginning with the nature of
the prophetic role and prophetic books in Israel, Old Testament
scholar Aaron Chalmers leads the reader through the various
"worlds" of Israel's prophets--historical, social, theological and
rhetorical-- providing the basic contextual and background
information needed both for sound and sensible exegesis, and for
sensitive interpretation and application for today. He concludes
with a helpful chapter giving guidelines for preaching from the
Prophets--including advice on choosing the texts, making
appropriate analogies, and the potential problems and common
pitfalls to avoid.
Kristin De Troyer -- University of St. Andrews -This finely revised
and nicely updated version of one of the classics in our field can
truly be called a grand introduction to the history of the biblical
text.-Leonard Greenspoon -- Creighton University -Readers familiar
with Wurthwein's earlier work will discover all of the strengths of
his approach to Biblical Hebrew. Old and new readers will enjoy the
thoroughly up-to-date discussion of the aims and methods of textual
criticism as well as the unbiased analysis of ancient versions and
their modern scholarly editions. Beautifully reproduced plates are
easy to read, and the updated bibliography is satisfyingly full. .
. . This successful project can be easily digested by newcomers and
savored by specialists.-Robert L. Hubbard -- North Park Theological
Seminary -A very welcome, thorough revision of the long-honored
standard introduction to the Masoretic text. Its integration of
recent scholarship is first-rate, and the rewritten text retains
the clear, accessible style that won its predecessors decades of
popularity as a textbook. Yet another generation of students will
find in this book a friendly, reliable guide through the complex
terrain of ancient Hebrew texts and their relationships. Highly
commended.-The Bible Today -Every scholar and serious Bible student
should have a passing knowledge of the work of the text critic.
This book will provide such knowledge.-Books at a Glance -An
important, up-to-date resource that will benefit everyone
interested in Old Testament Textual criticism. The excellent
bibliography, diagrams, and plates are unique contributions among
introductory works in the field. Highly recommended.-
Building on the foundation of the popular volumes The Bible from
Scratch: The Old Testament for Beginners and The New Testament for
Beginners, Donald Griggs and Paul Walaskay offer a new study on the
book of Acts.
In seven chapters, Griggs and Walaskay tell the story of this
popular New Testament book, with its stories of the works of Jesus'
disciples after his death, resurrection, and ascension. A leader's
guide and participant section are included, making this volume an
excellent resource for group or individual study.
"Ancient World Studies the Book of Isaiah" is an inductive Bible
study of Isaiah, chapter by chapter, verse by verse, suitable for
any serious student of the Bible. It includes thirty five-day
lessons, with numerous notes, definitions, and introductions, as
well as maps, charts, timelines and historical summaries for the
nations mentioned in Isaiah.
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Prophets III
- Hosea, Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi
(Paperback)
William Anderson
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R299
R280
Discovery Miles 2 800
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In this careful reconstruction of the prophet Jeremiah's life and
work, Professor Holladay attempts to sort out Jeremiah's utterances
chronologically and to hear them as closely as possible within the
context of the events of their time.Jeremiah is a model for us to
understand the prophets of the Old Testament. But more than that,
he alone of the prophets saw his relationship with God as a problem
to be grappled with rather than an obligation to be taken for
granted. His willingness to question and to doubt was unique and,
Holladay suggests, may put him more in step with our time than his
own. For while many of us are willing to undertake a life of faith
lived under God's guidance, few of us do not at some point question
God's ways.
For each Sunday in Cycle A, the writers and editors of "Charting
the Course," an integral part of Emphasis: A Lectionary Preaching
Journal from CSS Publishing Company, delve into the heart of the
lectionary readings, providing you, the pastor with in-depth
lectionary-based commentary; relating several fresh, solid ideas
based squarely on the lectionary texts -- for creating sermons that
speak powerfully to your audience. The team of Navigating the
Sermon looks for overall topics for the entire Cycle A church year
that hold the readings together. Then, they zero in on the theme
and the specific scripture links, suggesting directions for the
sermon and worship service. Since a single application for each
week may not provide what you are looking for at that particular
time, "Navigating the Sermon" in most cases suggests several ideas,
giving you the opportunity to select the one that matches your
specific needs.
This book is like having a dedicated, thoroughly versed sermon
research and sermon resource team right in your own study to help
you create riveting sermons that are truly yours and that speak
powerfully to your audience.
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