Evangelical Faith and the Challenge of Historical Criticism

Evangelical Faith and the Challenge of Historical Criticism

Author: Christopher M. Hays

Publisher: Baker Academic

Published: 2013-11-19

Total Pages: 331

ISBN-13: 1441245758

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Many introductions to biblical studies describe critical approaches, but they do not discuss the theological implications. This timely resource discusses the relationship between historical criticism and Christian theology to encourage evangelical engagement with historical-critical scholarship. Charting a middle course between wholesale rejection and unreflective embrace, the book introduces evangelicals to a way of understanding and using historical-critical scholarship that doesn't compromise Christian orthodoxy. The book covers eight of the most hotly contested areas of debate in biblical studies, helping readers work out how to square historical criticism with their beliefs.


Cutting Jesus Down to Size

Cutting Jesus Down to Size

Author: George Albert Wells

Publisher: Open Court

Published: 2013-12-01

Total Pages: 406

ISBN-13: 0812698673

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In this provocative book, noted scholar G. A. Wells tells the story of Higher Criticism: the close study of the scriptures that reveals difficulties and discrepancies. Wells traces the discipline’s German beginnings, exploring the problems in the New Testament that prompted scholars to revise traditional theories of the scriptures’ origins. Wells then traces the development and reception of these views from the 18th century to today. Drawing on current biblical scholarship, Wells explains how the Jesus of Paul’s epistles differs radically from later versions and addresses conservative Christians’ attempts to reconcile them. He carefully analyzes what the New Testament says about miracles, the Virgin Birth, the Nativity, Jesus’ conflicting genealogies, the Resurrection, the post-Resurrection appearances, and the failed prophecies of imminent apocalypse. Wells persuasively profiles the New Testament as a fascinating but flawed collection of incompatible viewpoints, revealing Jesus as a shifting, ambiguous, legendary figure who reflected the evolving teachings of a fragmented, emotion-based cultic movement.


Authoring the Old Testament

Authoring the Old Testament

Author: David Bokovoy

Publisher:

Published: 2014-03

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781589586758

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David Bokovoy dives into the Pentateuch, showing how and why textual criticism has led biblical scholars today to understand the first five books of the Bible as an amalgamation of multiple texts into a single, though often complicated narrative; and he discusses what implications those have for Latter-day Saint understandings of the Bible and modern scripture.


Historical Criticism of the Bible: Methodology Or Ideology

Historical Criticism of the Bible: Methodology Or Ideology

Author: Eta Linnemann

Publisher: Kregel Academic & Professional

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 169

ISBN-13: 9780825430954

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A former liberal scholar and student of Rudolph Bultmann and Ernst Fuchs tells how modern biblical scholarship has drifted far from the truth, and why its assumptions are nonetheless so influential and thereby dangerous.


Transcendentalist Hermeneutics

Transcendentalist Hermeneutics

Author: Richard A. Grusin

Publisher: Duke University Press

Published: 1991

Total Pages: 220

ISBN-13: 9780822310594

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American literary historians have viewed Ralph Waldo Emerson’s resignation from the Unitarian ministry in 1832 in favor of a literary career as emblematic of a main current in American literature. That current is directed toward the possession of a self that is independent and fundamentally opposed to the “accoutrements of society and civilization” and expresses a Transcendentalist antipathy toward all institutionalized forms of religious observance. In the ongoing revision of American literary history, this traditional reading of the supposed anti-institutionalism of the Transcendentalists has been duly detailed and continually supported. Richard A. Grusin challenges both traditional and revisionist interpretations with detailed contextual studies of the hermeneutics of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and Theodore Parker. Informed by the past two decades of critical theory, Grusin examines the influence of the higher criticism of the Bible—which focuses on authorship, date, place of origin, circumstances of composition, and the historical credibility of biblical writings—on these writers. The author argues that the Transcendentalist appeal to the authority of the “self” is not an appeal to a source of authority independent of institutions, but to an authority fundamentally innate.


Spinoza and the Rise of Historical Criticism of the Bible

Spinoza and the Rise of Historical Criticism of the Bible

Author: Travis L. Frampton

Publisher: A&C Black

Published: 2006-01-01

Total Pages: 278

ISBN-13: 9780567025937

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Frampton reassesses Spinoza's relationship to higher criticism by drawing attention to the emergence of historical-critical investigations of the Bible from among heterodox Protestants during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.


The Hebrew Bible, the Old Testament, and Historical Criticism

The Hebrew Bible, the Old Testament, and Historical Criticism

Author: Jon Douglas Levenson

Publisher: Westminster John Knox Press

Published: 1993-01-01

Total Pages: 216

ISBN-13: 9780664254070

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Writing from a Jewish perspective, Jon Levenson reviews many often neglected theoretical questions. He focuses on the relationship between two interpretive communities--the community of scholars who are committed to the historical-critical method of biblical interpretation and the community responsible for the canonization and preservation of the Bible.