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In this book, Stephen Smith shows how parents and educators can
become aware of the positive value of risk in children's lives and
how they can be challenged to take risks that are worth their
while. This text is a "how so" much more than a "how to" book. It
shows by evocative example and provocative questions how adults can
help children mature with confidence and a strong sense of physical
competence. The analysis shows the place, silence, atmosphere,
challenge, encounter, practice, and possibility of risk taking. It
consistently and conscientiously draws the reader's attention to a
careful, solicitous manner of being with children.
Stephen J. Smith enters the lively field of editorial-criticism of
the Hebrew Psalter or Psalterexegese with this detailed
investigation into the final form of Psalms 73-83. In the book, he
engages scholarly disagreements over this collection's structure,
the degree and nature of its literary unity, and the primary
theological message(s) it communicates. Smith argues that the
sequence of Psalms 73-82 - and possibly 83 - has a deliberate
design that reflects a sustained focus on addressing, and
resolving, a multidimensional collision between "faith" (i.e., core
Israelite beliefs about God) and "experience" (i.e., the
individual/community's lived experience of God) that was
precipitated by God's prolonged absence in the Temple's destruction
(c. 586/587 BCE). Parting ways with previous scholarship, Smith
contends that a recursive organizing principle rooted in biblical
parallelism structures the collection. Over the book's nine
chapters, he makes the case that the editor(s) grouped its psalms
into two major blocks (74-78; 79-82) of two sub-groupings each
(74-76, 77-78; 79/82, 80-81) in order to develop a single topic in
multiple dimensions: the severe threat that God's prolonged absence
in the temple's destruction posed to the ongoing viability of
various core Israelite beliefs about God, most fundamentally God's
goodness. Smith makes the case that the collection is shaped to
resolve this crisis by bolstering the reader's confidence in, and
commitment to, these beliefs in the face of their apparent failure.
Stephen J. Smith enters the lively field of editorial-criticism of
the Hebrew Psalter or Psalterexegese with this detailed
investigation into the final form of Psalms 73-83. In the book, he
engages scholarly disagreements over this collection's structure,
the degree and nature of its literary unity, and the primary
theological message(s) it communicates. Smith argues that the
sequence of Psalms 73–82 - and possibly 83 – has a deliberate
design that reflects a sustained focus on addressing, and
resolving, a multidimensional collision between “faith” (i.e.,
core Israelite beliefs about God) and “experience” (i.e., the
individual/community’s lived experience of God) that was
precipitated by God’s prolonged absence in the Temple’s
destruction (c. 586/587 BCE). Parting ways with previous
scholarship, Smith contends that a recursive organizing principle
rooted in biblical parallelism structures the collection. Over the
book's nine chapters, he makes the case that the editor(s) grouped
its psalms into two major blocks (74-78; 79-82) of two
sub-groupings each (74-76, 77-78; 79/82, 80-81) in order to develop
a single topic in multiple dimensions: the severe threat that God's
prolonged absence in the temple's destruction posed to the ongoing
viability of various core Israelite beliefs about God, most
fundamentally God's goodness. Smith makes the case that the
collection is shaped to resolve this crisis by bolstering the
reader’s confidence in, and commitment to, these beliefs in the
face of their apparent failure.
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