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Proverbs (Hardcover)
Alice Ogden Bellis; Edited by Barbara E Reid; Volume editing by Sarah Tanzer; Contributions by Charles Redden Butler, Sindile Dlamini Dlamini, …
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2019 Association of Catholic Publishers Book of the Year In this
volume, Alice Ogden Bellis considers the book of Proverbs as a
structural whole, the sages having designed it in such a way as to
make positive statements about women and to undercut the negative
ones. By grouping Proverbs together around common issues, the
reader is called to consider the perennial moral questions of
wealth and poverty, diligence and laziness, and integrity and
corruption, as well as the relationship among these values. The
result is much more complex and has greater depth than the random
list of bromides that most of Proverbs is often thought to be. This
volume opens up a multi-dimensional spiritual puzzle.
Oscar Wilde got it wrong. The famous dancer of seven veils did not
die in the fall of Jerusalem, but of old age in a villa in Greece.
Salome, daughter of Herodias, and princess of Galilee, survived her
infamous dance to become the toast of Rome.
We often embroider our characters in history with all sorts of
by-play, innuendo, and presumption. Salome has come down to us as a
strumpet - a girl without a motive, a toy. However, what was she
really like? We can piece together from history a person who wove
her own story, stood up for herself when no one else would, and
knew everyone. She lived with three kings, was presented at the
court of four emperors, and was made a Basilia, (client queen), of
the Roman Empire. Coins survive with her portrait, twinned with her
husband Aristobolus, a signal honor for a woman of her time.
Her unique dishing out of justice at her stepfather's famous
birthday banquet has made her a legend, but know the facts. Her
just desserts were a kingdom and a crown, a villa, and a peaceable
old age.
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