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A History of the Bible - The Book and Its Faiths (Paperback)
Loot Price: R374
Discovery Miles 3 740
You Save: R82
(18%)
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A History of the Bible - The Book and Its Faiths (Paperback)
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List price R456
Loot Price R374
Discovery Miles 3 740
You Save R82 (18%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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WINNER OF THE 2019 DUFF COOPER PRIZE A SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLER
'With emotional and psychological insight, Barton unlocks this
sleeping giant of our culture. In the process, he has produced a
masterpiece.' Sunday Times The Bible is the central book of Western
culture. For the two faiths which hold it sacred, it is the bedrock
of their religion, a singular authority on what to believe and how
to live. For non-believers too, it has a commanding status: it is
one of the great works of world literature, woven to an
unparalleled degree into our language and thought. This book tells
the story of the Bible, explaining how it came to be constructed
and how it has been understood, from its remote beginnings down to
the present. John Barton describes how the narratives, laws,
proverbs, prophecies, poems and letters which comprise the Bible
were written and when, what we know - and what we cannot know -
about their authors and what they might have meant, as well as how
these extraordinarily disparate writings relate to each other. His
incisive readings shed new light on even the most familiar
passages, exposing not only the sources and traditions behind them,
but also the busy hands of the scribes and editors who assembled
and reshaped them. Untangling the process by which some texts which
were regarded as holy, became canonical and were included, and
others didn't, Barton demonstrates that the Bible is not the fixed
text it is often perceived to be, but the result of a long and
intriguing evolution. Tracing its dissemination, translation and
interpretation in Judaism and Christianity from Antiquity to the
rise of modern biblical scholarship, Barton elucidates how meaning
has both been drawn from the Bible and imposed upon it. Part of the
book's originality is to illuminate the gap between religion and
scripture, the ways in which neither maps exactly onto the other,
and how religious thinkers from Augustine to Luther and Spinoza
have reckoned with this. Barton shows that if we are to regard the
Bible as 'authoritative', it cannot be as believers have so often
done in the past.
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