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Can Christianity and evolution coexist? Traditional Christian
teaching presents Jesus as reversing the effects of the fall of
Adam. But an evolutionary view of human origins doesn't allow for a
literal Adam, making evolution seemingly incompatible with what
Genesis and the apostle Paul say about him. For Christians who both
accept evolution and want to take the Bible seriously, this can
present a faith-shaking tension. Popular Old Testament scholar
Peter Enns offers a way forward by explaining how this tension is
caused not by the discoveries of science but by false expectations
about the biblical texts. In this 10th anniversary edition, Enns
updates readers on developments in the historical Adam debate,
helping them reconcile Genesis and Paul with current views on
evolution and human origins. This edition includes an afterword
that explains Enns's own theological evolution since the first
edition released.
The second in a series designed to introduce young students to the
Bible, Telling God's Story, Year Two shows children the Kingdom of
Heaven as seen in the parables, miracles, and mission of Jesus.
Bundled together to provide an entire year of religious
instruction: The Instructor Text and Teaching Guide provides
content-filled background information for the teacher, a biblical
passage to read aloud, and a scripted explanation of the passage
designed especially for children to grasp with ease. The Student
Guide and Activity Pages provides historically accurate coloring
pages, learning projects, and group activities to fill out an
entire week of home, school, or Sunday School study.
The first in a series designed to guide young students through the
Bible, Telling God's Story: Year One provides weekly lessons for
young elementary-grade students, based on the parables and the
Gospels. This bundle includes everything you need for a full year
of religious instruction: The Instructor Text and Teaching Guide
contains pithy, content-filled background information for the
teacher, a biblical passage to read aloud, and a scripted
explanation of the passage designed especially for young children
to grasp with ease. The accompanying Student Guide and Activity
Book provides historically accurate coloring pages, learning
projects, and group activities to fill out an entire week of home,
school, or Sunday School study.
'Seldom will you encounter such a fine combination of historical
scholarship, interesting reading, and clever humour in one Biblical
study. And then filled with faith and hope besides! Peter Enns does
it again!' Richard Rohr, author of Falling Upward For many
Christians, the Bible is a how-to manual filled with literal truths
about belief that must be strictly followed. But the Bible is not
an instruction manual or rule book but a powerful learning tool
that nurtures our spiritual growth, argues Bible scholar Peter
Enns. It does not hold easy answers to the perplexing questions and
issues that confront us in our daily lives. Rather, the Bible is a
dynamic instrument for study that not only offers an abundance of
insights but provokes us to find our own answers to spiritual
questions, cultivating God's wisdom within us. 'The Bible becomes a
confusing mess when we expect it to function as a rulebook for
faith. But when we allow the Bible to determine our expectations,
we see that Wisdom, not answers, is the Bible's true subject
matter', writes Enns. This distinction, he points out, is important
because when we come to the Bible expecting it to be a textbook
intended by God to give us unwavering certainty about our faith, we
are actually creating problems for ourselves. The Bible, in other
words, really isn't the problem; having the wrong expectation is
what interferes with our reading. Rather than considering the Bible
as an ancient book weighed down with problems, flaws, and
contradictions that must be defended by modern readers, Enns offers
a vision of the holy scriptures as an inspired and empowering
resource to help us better understand how to live as a person of
faith today. How the Bible Actually Works makes clear that there is
no one right way to read the Bible. Moving us beyond the damaging
idea that 'being right' is the most important measure of faith,
Enns's freeing approach to Bible study helps us to instead focus on
pursuing enlightenment and building our relationship with God -
which is exactly what the Bible was designed to do.
How can an evangelical view of Scripture be reconciled with modern
biblical scholarship? In this book Peter Enns, an expert in
biblical interpretation, addresses Old Testament phenomena that
challenge traditional evangelical perspectives on Scripture. He
then suggests a way forward, proposing an incarnational model of
biblical inspiration that takes seriously both the divine and the
human aspects of Scripture. This tenth anniversary edition has an
updated bibliography and includes a substantive postscript that
reflects on the reception of the first edition.
Can the Bible be approached both as sacred scripture and as a
historical and literary text? For many people, it must be one or
the other. How can we read the Bible both ways? The Bible and the
Believer brings together three distinguished biblical scholars-one
Jewish, one Catholic, and one Protestant-to illustrate how to read
the Hebrew Bible/ Old Testament critically and religiously. Marc
Zvi Brettler, Peter Enns, and Daniel J. Harrington tackle a dilemma
that not only haunts biblical scholarship today, but also disturbs
students and others exposed to biblical criticism for the first
time, either in university courses or through their own reading.
Failure to resolve these conflicting interpretive strategies often
results in rejection of either the critical approach or the
religious approach-or both. But the authors demonstrate how
biblical criticism-the process of establishing the original
contextual meaning of biblical texts with the tools of literary and
historical analysis-need not undermine religious interpretations of
the Bible, but can in fact enhance them. They show how awareness of
new archeological evidence, cultural context, literary form, and
other tools of historical criticism can provide the necessary
preparation for a sound religious reading. And they argue that the
challenges such study raises for religious belief should be brought
into conversation with religious tradition rather than deemed
grounds for dismissing either that tradition or biblical criticism.
Guiding readers through the history of biblical exegesis within the
Jewish, Catholic, and Protestant faith traditions, The Bible and
the Believer bridges an age-old gap between critical and religious
approaches to the Old Testament.
Peter Enns recounts his transformative spiritual journey in which
he discovered a new, more honest way to love and appreciate God's
Word. Trained as an evangelical Bible scholar, Peter Enns loved the
Scriptures and shared his devotion, teaching at Westminster
Theological Seminary. But the further he studied the Bible, the
more he found himself confronted by questions that could neither be
answered within the rigid framework of his religious instruction or
accepted among the conservative evangelical community. Rejecting
the increasingly complicated intellectual games used by
conservative Christians to 'protect' the Bible, Enns was
conflicted. Is this what God really requires? How could God's plan
for divine inspiration mean ignoring what is really written in the
Bible? These questions eventually cost Enns his job - but they also
opened a new spiritual path for him to follow. The Bible Tells Me
So chronicles Enns' spiritual odyssey, how he came to see beyond
restrictive doctrine and learned to embrace God's Word as it is
actually written. As he explores questions progressive evangelical
readers of Scripture commonly face yet fear voicing, Enns reveals
that they are the very questions that God wants us to consider -
the essence of our spiritual study.
Bible scholar and author of The Bible Tells Me So Peter Enns
explains how Christians mistake 'certainty' and 'correct belief'
for faith when what God really desires is trust and intimacy. With
compelling and often humorous stories from his own life, Bible
scholar Peter Enns offers a fresh look at how Christian life truly
works, answering questions that cannot be addressed by the
idealized traditional doctrine of "once for all delivered to the
saints." Enns offers a model of vibrant faith that views skepticism
not as a loss of belief, but as an opportunity to deepen religious
conviction with courage and confidence. This is not just an
intellectual conviction, he contends, but a more profound kind of
knowing that only true faith can provide. Combining Enns'
reflections of his own spiritual journey with an examination of
Scripture, The Sin of Certainty models an acceptance of mystery and
paradox that all believers can follow and why God prefers this path
because it is only this way by which we can become mature disciples
who truly trust God. It gives Christians who have known only the
demand for certainty permission to view faith on their own flawed,
uncertain, yet heartfelt, terms.
2009 Christianity Today Merit Award winner 2009 Evangelical
Christian Publishers Association (ECPA) Christian Book Award winner
The Old Testament books of wisdom and poetry carry themselves
differently from those of the Pentateuch, the histories or the
prophets. The divine voice does not peal from Sinai, there are no
narratives carried along by prophetic interpretation nor are
oracles declaimed by a prophet. Here Scripture often speaks in the
words of human response to God and God's world. The hymns, laments
and thanksgivings of Israel, the dirge of Lamentations, the
questionings of Qohelet, the love poetry of the Song of Songs, the
bold drama of Job and the proverbial wisdom of Israel all offer
their textures to this great body of biblical literature. Then too
there are the finely crafted stories of Ruth and Esther that
narrate the silent providence of God in the course of Israelite and
Jewish lives. This third Old Testament volume in InterVarsity
Press's celebrated "Black Dictionary" series offers nearly 150
articles covering all the important aspects of Job, Proverbs,
Ecclesiastes, Psalms, Song of Songs, Lamentations, Ruth and Esther.
Over ninety contributors, many of them experts in this literature,
have contributed to the Dictionary of the Old Testament: Wisdom,
Poetry & Writings. This volume maintains the quality of
scholarship that students, scholars and pastors have come to expect
from this series. Coverage of each biblical book includes an
introduction to the book itself as well as separate articles on its
ancient Near Eastern background and its history of interpretation.
Additional articles amply explore the literary dimensions of Hebrew
poetry and prose, including acrostic, ellipsis, inclusio,
intertextuality, parallelism and rhyme. And there are well-rounded
treatments of Israelite wisdom and wisdom literature, including
wisdom poems, sources and theology. In addition, a wide range of
interpretive approaches is canvassed in articles on hermeneutics,
feminist interpretation, form criticism, historical criticism,
rhetorical criticism and social-scientific approaches. The
Dictionary of the Old Testament: Wisdom, Poetry & Writings is
sure to command shelf space within arm's reach of any student,
teacher or preacher working in this portion of biblical literature.
Tremper Longman III and Peter E. Enns edit this collection of 148
articles by 90 contributors on Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes,
Song of Songs, Lamentations, Ruth and Esther.
Synopsis: The notion that the Bible is inerrant in everything it
teaches is something those with conservative upbringings are
conditioned to take for granted. However, after being exposed to
scholarship in biblical studies and other disciplines, some draw
the unexpected conclusion that inerrancy as a doctrine is in dire
need of serious revamping. Unfortunately, inerrantist politics and
culture are making the constructive, restorative process impossible
to intitiate. In Rehabilitating Inerrancy in a Culture of Fear,
Carlos Bovell offers a synoptic overview of the issues to be
addressed if inerrancy is to survive as a viable bibliological
option. Endorsements: "Bovell unveils his positive agenda:
rehabilitating a robust doctrine of Scripture in a context marked
by suspicion and fear. By exposing hidden assumptions, unclear
concepts, and sloppy reasoning, Bovell sketches out some of the
necessary conditions for this rebuilding task. You need not agree
with all of his prescriptions to benefit immensely from his
perceptive diagnoses. The last chapter on Old Princeton alone is
worth the price of the book " --Stephen Taylor Associate Professor
of New Testament Biblical Seminary (Pennsylvania) "Bovell argues
compellingly that commitment to the authority of Scripture does not
require that one affirm the doctrine of biblical inerrancy . . . I
was particularly impressed with his argument that the employment of
speech act theory, to understand the relation between what the
human writers of Scripture say and what God says by way of those
writers, undermines rather than supports inerrancy as a way of
understanding the Bible as God's word." --Nicholas Wolterstorff
Noah Porter Professor Emeritus of Philosophical Theology, Yale
University Senior Fellow, Institute for Advanced Studies in
Culture, University of Virginia "In order to rehabilitate
inerrancy, Bovell makes a bold and thoughtful plea for evangelicals
to realize the important hermeneutical issues of culture, history,
and tradition within the biblical texts themselves. Books like this
one tend to engender a reactionary response within evangelicalism.
My hope is that a consideration of the themes herein will occur so
that a responsible dialogue can occur for the good of the Church."
--Craig D. Allert Chair of Religious Studies Trinity Western
University "Inerrancy has been at the center of a long-standing
controversy within evangelical Christianity that shows no signs of
settling down. In this volume Carlos Bovell continues to raise
important questions about the concept that cannot be ignored as the
debate over inerrancy heats up again. In so doing, Bovell has made
a significant contribution that must be reckoned with by those who
are concerned about the nature and authority of the Bible in
evangelicalism." --John R. Franke Theologian in Residence, First
Presbyterian Church, Allentown, Pennsylvania General Coordinator,
The Gospel and Our Culture Network "In more cases than not, it is
fear--not a pursuit of the truth--that stands behind evangelical
debates about the Bible and inerrancy. Bovell elucidates this
problem and, by laboring to address it, helps us move forward in
our quest to carry on a civil, informed theological discussion
about God's written word." --Kenton L. Sparks Professor of Biblical
Studies Eastern University Author Biography: Carlos R. Bovell is a
graduate of Westminster Theological Seminary and the Institute for
Christian Studies, Toronto. His other books include Inerrancy and
the Spiritual Formation of Younger Evangelicals, By Good and
Necessary Consequence: A Preliminary Genealogy of Biblicist
Foundationalism, and (editor) Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the
Authority of Scripture.
Theological answers to a biblical book riddled with questions
Ecclesiastes is an Old Testament book with a long history of
diverse and contradictory interpretations. Even basic questions who
wrote the book, when, and for what purpose perennially plague
scholars. The book?'s theological message is likewise elusive,
hidden in riddles and convoluted trains of thought that twist and
turn back upon themselves.
In this expert commentary on Ecclesiastes, Peter Enns neither
disregards nor attempts to resolve the book?'s many theological
tensions and ambiguities. Rather, he shows how these form the
backdrop against which the author struggles to show readers the
proper path forward in their journeys of faith remaining true to
the tradition to fear God and keep the commands despite the
apparent futility of human existence.
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