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The book known as the Old Testament is actually a collection of
stories, songs, prophetic addresses, wise sayings, and other bits
of literature composed over centuries and compiled for the use of
worshiping communities. These texts appeared in ancient Israel,
reflecting its traumas and less frequent triumphs. Far from being
comfortable texts that sedate over-stimulated readers, they offer
critique of the powerful for the sake of those for whom the only
tool of overcoming oppression is language itself. Because of the
distance in time and cultural experience, the Old Testament is
often inaccessible to modern readers. This introduction bridges
that distance and makes the connections across time and culture
come alive. The Bible assembles a wide range of literary types
because of the needs of the communities first using it as they
preserved the legacy of their past, good and bad, for the sake of a
viable future. Their legacy continues as relevant as ever. This
introduction, then, seeks to help readers make sense of the variety
and hear within it points of commonality as well. The Old Testament
is a book readers look to for meaning. Christian readers,
especially, have difficulty connecting with the theological
meanings of the texts. Mark Hamilton offers an introduction that
addresses theological issues directly and sensitively. Considering
the massive sweep of literary types and ways of expressing ideas
about God, A Theological Introduction to the Old Testament offers
an alternative to introductions based solely on historical or
literary themes.
The present volume seeks to identify the underlying code of
meanings about the Israelite king operating in various ways in
texts and other artifacts surviving from the culture. The focus is
upon the (living) body of the king, its anatomical characteristics,
its constitution through ritual, and the conventions concerning its
proper self-display by the king. This study combines careful
linguistic and historical-critical analysis of the texts considered
(both biblical and ancient Near Eastern, the latter used
comparatively where appropriate) with a critical use of
contemporary approaches to the study of signs in language, objects,
and movements (semiotics), in general, and the study of the body,
in particular. This book argues that the royal psalms contain a set
of officially sanctioned notions about the royal body and its use.
The king was thought to have an outsized, superhuman body owing to
his being the son of the deity, a status he attained upon his
coronation. Other texts, often from circles outside the royal
court, significantly altered these notions. The king's body was
thus for ancient Israelites the locus of reflection on power,
gender, religion, and even international relations. Through careful
historical analysis, it is possible to reconstruct the terms of an
Iron Age intellectual inquiry that still influences our
contemporary world.
Description: ""We offer this collection as a token of our affection
and admiration of our friend and colleague James Weldon Thompson. .
. . His studies of the letter to the Hebrews and of Paul in their
intellectual contexts (especially Middle Platonism) have
contributed significantly to the ongoing quest for placing the New
Testament in its socio-intellectual setting. Although his
publications in this area date back more than thirty years, his
best work is occurring now, and we may anticipate path-breaking
contributions ahead. His more recent work on preaching and pastoral
care in Paul both situate the Apostle in his own world and, just as
importantly, offer correctives of some contemporary ministerial
practices and invitations for improvements. Since 1993 Thompson has
served as the editor of Restoration Quarterly, a significant venue
for research in biblical studies, church history (especially of the
Stone-Campbell Restoration Movement), and contemporary theology.
His more popular works make available to a lay audience thoughtful,
well-informed, and spiritually rewarding interpretations of much of
the New Testament. ""His achievements, however, do not end at the
printing press. For more than thirty years, he has taught ministers
and others at the Institute for Christian Studies (now Austin
Graduate School of Theology) and Abilene Christian University.
Students of the past and the present speak of him as a prepared,
stimulating, and creative teacher unafraid of experimentation for a
new generation of learners. At both institutions he also served as
an administrator, first as President of ICS and then as Associate
Dean of ACU's Graduate School of Theology. His colleagues respect
his ability to enlist them for work as needed and otherwise to get
out of their way, certainly a too rare set of skills in university
administrators "" --from the Preface About the Contributor(s): Mark
W. Hamilton is Associate Professor of Hebrew Bible at Abilene
Christian University and author, most recently, of The Body Royal:
The Social Poetics of Kingship in Ancient Israel. Thomas H.
Olbricht is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Religion at
Pepperdine University. He is the author and editor of numerous
works including, most recently, Lifted Up: Crucifixion,
Resurrection, and Community in John. Jeffrey Peterson is Wright
Professor of New Testament at Austin Graduate School of Theology.
He is the author of many essays on early Christianity and its
applicability to contemporary life.
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