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Every life, and every land and people, has reasons for lament and
complaint. This collection of essays explores the biblical
foundations and the contemporary resonances of lament literature.
This new work presents a variety of responses to tragedy and a
world out of joint are explored. These responses arise from
Scripture, from within the liturgy of the church, and from beyond
the church; in contemporary life (the racially conflicted land of
Aotearoa- New Zealand, secular music concerts and cyber-space). The
book thus reflects upon theological and pastoral handling of such
experience, as it bridges these different worlds. It brings
together in conversation specialists from different fields of
academy and church to provide a resource for integrating faith and
scholarship in dark places.
Interpreting Isaiah requires attention to empire. The matrix of the
book of Isaiah was the imperial contexts of Assyria, Babylon, and
Persia. The community of faith in these eras needed a prophetic
vision for life. Not only is the book of Isaiah crafted in light of
empire, but current readers cannot help but approach Isaiah in
light of imperial realities today. As a neglected area of research,
Isaiah and Imperial Context probes how empire can illumine Isaiah
through essays that utilize archaeology, history, literary
approaches, post-colonialism, and feminism within the various
sections of Isaiah. The contributors are Andrew T. Abernethy, Mark
G. Brett, Tim Bulkeley, John Goldingay, Christopher B. Hays, Joy
Hooker, Malcolm Mac MacDonald, Judith E. McKinlay, Tim Meadowcroft,
Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer, and David Ussishkin. "Various parts of the
book of Isaiah were written when Israel and Judah lived under
imperial domination. It is therefore surprising that this
multi-faceted topic has not been the subject of extended analysis
before. In the kaleidoscope of essays collected here new patterns
within the book are exposed and a colorful light is shed on many of
its separate parts and themes. I am sure this will prove
invigorating for future research and exegesis." --Hugh Williamson,
University of Oxford "An excellent and innovative discussion by a
group of scholars engaged in a reading of Isaiah centered on
imperial empire. The diversity of approaches extends from a focus
on historical background, language, and social custom to the
present reception of the text, particularly from the perspective of
post-colonial theory." --Ed Conrad, University of Queensland "The
editors have produced a collection of essays that are sharply
focused on . . . reading the texts of Isaiah in the context of the
imperial realities of Assyrian and Babylonian military and economic
power. The essays are consistently well-written, and the collection
is both helpful and even quite provocative. I suggest this book be
required reading for any modern studies of Prophetic literature."
--Daniel Smith-Christopher, Loyola Marymount University Andrew T.
Abernethy is Lecturer in Old Testament at Ridley Melbourne Mission
and Ministry College. Mark G. Brett is Professor of Hebrew Bible at
Whitley College, MCD University of Divinity. Tim Bulkeley recently
retired as Lecturer at Carey Baptist College, Auckland, and is now
a freelance scholar. Tim Meadowcroft is Senior Lecturer in Biblical
Studies at Laidlaw College, Auckland.
About the Contributor(s): Miriam Bier teaches Old Testament at the
London School of Theology. Tim Bulkeley has taught Old Testament at
the Universite protestante du Congo, the University of Auckland,
and at Carey Baptist College.
The God of the Bible is not a member of any class of comparable
beings. Beyond and other than all gods and every creature, God is
not gendered. However, Christian language for God and the pictures
we use to help us talk about God are predominantly male. Among the
pictures one of the most often used and appreciated is 'father'.
Yet God (unlike many of the gods of the ancient world) is not only
a father. The Bible and the early Christian theologians used
motherly as well as fatherly language and pictures to speak of God.
In this way at least their image of God was richer and deeper than
ours This book encourages readers to appropriate this wider range
of pictures of what God is like, and to learn again to relate to a
God who is beyond all imagining and closer than life itself. This
God is not only a father
Synopsis: Today the "land of promise" is a spark in the tinder dry
atmosphere of Middle Eastern affairs. Events there continue to
wield influence among peoples and in places well beyond the region
itself. This raises for Christians the acute theological problem of
how to relate to the "land of promise" today and in light of the
land of the Bible. Our hope is that this volume of essays will
contribute to a more informed and theologically coherent response
to the "Land of Promise." It is offered here in the name of peace
for all peoples in that place and among those who continue to look
to her as a place of promise. Endorsements: "This volume is as
important as its topic is serious. We must think clearly and
Christianly about what the scriptures tell us concerning land, holy
land, the modern Middle East, and biblical promise in a world that
entertains enormous theological confusion. These able and
provocative essays will offer us skilled guidance in territory few
scholars are willing to enter." -Gary M. Burge Wheaton College "I
salute the brilliant scholarship, biblical integrity, and keen
commitment to justice that emanates from every chapter of The
Gospel and the Land of Promise. This book will be a valuable tool
in the hands of laypersons, teachers, pastors, and scholars who
seek to understand the political and theological realities in
Israel/Palestine in the light of God's word. From New Zealand, the
farthest country from the land of promise, comes this dynamic voice
of reason and compassion." -Alex Awad Bethlehem Bible College "In
these excellent essays, Christian scholars in New Zealand--where
indigenous land rights have long been at the center of public
discourse--reflect on 'land' in the Bible, and particularly the
notion of a 'holy land' or 'promised land' in the Middle East. In
the main, the book is a rejoinder to Christian Zionism. At the same
time, it invites further reflection on the irreducible significance
of place or landedness to human existence and Christian identity."
-Chris Marshall Victoria University of Wellington "The Christian
world remains split down the middle on the issue of how to relate
biblical teaching on the land to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Here is a serious attempt by scholars of several different
disciplines to wrestle with the question of how to read the Old
Testament through the eyes of the New and in the light of the
painful realities on the ground today. They have effectively thrown
down to gauntlet to Dispensationalists and Christian Zionists of
every kind: can they come up with equally detailed, heavy-weight
scholarship to support their case?" -Colin Chapman author of Whose
Promised Land? "This is an immensely important work of biblical
scholarship on the theology of the holy land . . . While Christian
Zionists invariably see the coming of Jesus as the postponement of
the land promises God made to Abraham, the authors demonstrate
conclusively from the Scriptures that these promises were fulfilled
in and through Jesus Christ." -Stephen Sizer Christ Church Vicarage
Editor Biographies: Philip Church teaches biblical studies in the
School of Theology, Laidlaw College, Auckland, NZ. Tim Bulkeley
teaches Old Testament at Carey Baptist College, Auckland, NZ. He is
the author of Amos: Hypertext Bible Commentary (2005). Tim
Meadowcroft teaches Old Testament and is Head of the School of
Theology, Mission, and Ministry, Laidlaw College, Auckland, NZ.and
is the Dean of the Laidlaw-Carey Graduate School, Auckland, NZ. He
is the author of Haggai (Readings: A New Biblical Commentary,
2006). Peter Walker is Associate Vice-Principal & Director of
Development at Wycliffe Hall, University of Oxford, UK. He is the
author of Jesus and the Holy City: New Testament Perspectives on
Jerusalem (1996).
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