Volume
1
Renewing Biblical Interpretation
Edited by Craig Bartholomew, Colin Greene and Karl Möller Published by Paternoster
Press and Zondervan
ISBN: 0-85364-034-3
'Church history is in large measure the history
of biblical interpretation. And almost all contemporary cultural
and intellectual movements eventually show up in biblical interpretation
as well. Both modernity and modern biblical studies are showing
signs of ageing, and it is agreed that the critical approach that has
dominated
the discussion for the last two hundred or so years has obscured
the
Bible's role as the Church's authoritative Scripture. All
the more reason to be grateful, then, that there is now an academic
seminar devoted to the project of recovering a theological dimension
to the interpretation
of Scripture. This first volume holds out the hope that certain
hermeneutical developments will lead not only to the renewal of biblical
interpretation,
but to the renewal of the Church itself.'
Kevin J. Vanhoozer, Research Professor of Systematic
Theology,Trinity Evangelical Divinity School
'There are few things more urgent
for Christian thought in the churches and in universities and seminaries
than to produce lively, intelligent and imaginative biblical interpretation.
The Scripture and Hermeneutics Seminar is facing the deepest issues involved
in doing this. It does not run away from complexity or controversy. But
above all it is concerned to do justice to the extraordinary, generative
richness of the Bible and to let it be genuinely "habitable"
today. This book will illuminate, inspire and provoke anyone who wants
to learn from some of the best in the field how to respond to the Bible
in the aftermath of modern critiques and crises.'
David F. Ford, Regius Professor of Divinity, University
of Cambridge
'This book brings together
some of the key players in the present discussions
of how to use the Bible, not simply to talk about how difficult it all
is but to point new and creative ways forward. A refreshing and wide-ranging
discussion that will help us all both to think clearly and to read –
and teach! – more responsibly.'
Tom Wright, Canon Theologian, Westminster Abbey
TABLE OF CONTENTS
• Foreword
Brevard S. Childs
• Introduction
Craig G. Bartholomew
• Uncharted Waters: Philosophy, Theology and the Crisis in Biblical Interpretation
Craig G. Bartholomew
• Scripture Becomes Religion(s): The Theological Crisis of Serious Biblical
Interpretation in the Twentieth Century
Christopher R. Seitz
• The Social Effect of Biblical Criticism
Walter Sundberg
• A Response to Walter Sundberg
John Riches
• Confessional Criticism and the Night Visions of Zechariah
Al Wolters
• A Response to Al Wolters
Rex Mason
• The Philosophy of Language and the Renewal of Biblical Hermeneutics
Neil B. MacDonald
• A Response to Neil B. MacDonald
Mary B. Hesse
• Renewing Historical Criticism
Karl Möller
•
Critical but Real: Reflecting on N.T. Wright’s Tools for the
Task
Thorsten Moritz
• “In the Arms of the Angels”:
Biblical Interpretation, Christology and the Philosophy of History
Colin J.D. Greene
• An Experiment in Biblical Criticism: Aesthetic Encounter in Reading and
Preaching Scripture
Stephen I. Wright
• A Missional Approach to Renewed Interpretation
Harry Daniel Beeby
• Deconstructing the Tower of Babel: Ontotheology and the Postmodern Bible
Brian D. Ingraffia
• Imagination and Responsible Reading
Trevor Hart
• A Response to Trevor Hart
Nicholas Wolterstorff
• A First Retrospect on the Consultation
Walter Brueggemann

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