The Future of Catholic Biblical Scholarship

The Future of Catholic Biblical Scholarship

Author: Luke Timothy Johnson

Publisher: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 316

ISBN-13: 9780802845450

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Luke Timothy Johnson and William Kurz are Roman Catholic New Testament scholars who think that the apparent good health of biblical scholarship in America is deceptive. Despite its huge production of learning, Catholic scholarship has lost some of its soul because of its distance from the life and concerns of living faith communities. In this volume the authors open a conversation with others in the church concerning a future Catholic biblical scholarship that maintains the freedom of critical inquiry but within a living loyalty to tradition. Looking not to criticize but to strengthen, the authors model the type of dialogue that is needed today. Johnson first reviews the current state of Catholic biblical scholarship and then points out important lessons from throughout the tradition of interpretation. He calls for imagining the world that Scripture imagines as the presupposition for the organic use of the Bible in theology. Kurz responds to Johnson's chapters and then offers his own approach to biblical interpretation, showing how literary analysis of the Gospel of John can be brought into conversation with the Nicene Creed, with recent debates in ethics, and with the practices of the church. After Johnson responds to Kurz, the authors jointly conclude by addressing a series of questions concerning hard issues now facing Catholic biblical scholarship.


The Future of Catholic Biblical Interpretation

The Future of Catholic Biblical Interpretation

Author: James B. Prothro

Publisher: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing

Published: 2024-09-10

Total Pages: 425

ISBN-13: 1467466204

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Notable Catholic interpreters of Scripture discern the guiding values of biblical interpretation at the brink of a new era for the church. Under the influence of Benedict XVI and Francis, Roman Catholics, whether lay or religious, have found renewed interest in studying sacred Scripture. Yet the church has also grown and faces new challenges in the new millennium. What does the future of Catholic biblical interpretation look like? And how ought the church’s rich heritage of biblical interpretation continue to influence it? This volume collects essays by some of the most influential voices in Catholic biblical scholarship today. Covering a variety of topics, from the Old Testament to the New Testament and biblical theology, the essays are united by a common goal: to hear the word of God and proclaim and apply it within the church. The authors pay special tribute to Marie-Joseph Lagrange. This nineteenth-century French Dominican led the way in blending critical methodology with respect for the Church’s authority in order to put scriptural study in service to the good of souls. Featuring diverse and authentically Catholic perspectives, The Future of Catholic Biblical Interpretation represents fresh purpose and direction for the church’s long and fruitful tradition of exegesis.


Catholic Theology Facing the Future

Catholic Theology Facing the Future

Author: Dermot A. Lane

Publisher: Paulist Press

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 164

ISBN-13: 9780809141142

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Here is a collection of vibrant essays, from a conference at St. Michael's College in Vermont, that reflects on the past, present, and future of Catholic theology. Contributors include the leading names in scripture and moral and systematic theology: -- Dermot Lane on the foundational roles of anthropology, imagination and memory in the performance of Christian theology. -- Alice Laffey on the past and present developments in biblical scholarship. -- Raymond Collins on the ecumenical progress over the last forty years in the study of the New Testament. -- Michael J. Fahey on trends in systematic theology since 1965. -- Philip S. Keane on the accomplishments and challenges facing moral theology. -- Kevin Irwin on the Christocentric character of liturgical and sacramental theology.


The Once and Future Bible

The Once and Future Bible

Author: Gregory C. Jenks

Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers

Published: 2011-01-10

Total Pages: 251

ISBN-13: 1621891208

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This book offers a way to engage with the Bible as a set of sacred texts that can serve as a song sheet for believers in exile-those people Bishop John Shelby Spong calls the "church alumni association." This includes those internally displaced persons of faith who have not yet become spiritual refugees but who feel the pressure to conform to traditional expressions of faith that no longer serve as springs of living water for the journey of life. These ancient texts come from another world and another time, but they can serve as maps for the journey of life. They can best do this when the sacred wisdom of the Bible is accepted as permission to voice the new questions we face today in the confidence that authentic faith has always required such boldness. Religious progressives are people who live the questions, not dodge them. Our task is not to guard a set of traditional answers, but to live life boldly, taking risks for God's sake and our own. One of the hallmarks of this book is that the problems posed by the Bible are acknowledged. In particular, the contributions of recent critical scholarship are embraced, rather than being ignored or neutralized by pious ambivalence. The intended reader of this book is not a traditional believer, secure in her assumptions about God and salvation, but someone struggling to live with integrity in a time when traditional religion seems increasingly irrelevant. The goal is not to persuade the reader that the Bible is credible but-more modestly-to offer an account of the Bible that may encourage religious progressives to reclaim the Bible as a valued part of our spiritual baggage.


How Catholics Encounter the Bible

How Catholics Encounter the Bible

Author: Michael Peppard

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2024-12-02

Total Pages: 329

ISBN-13: 0190948698

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In How Catholics Encounter the Bible, award-winning biblical scholar and historian Michael Peppard explores the paradoxical role of the Bible for Catholics--a book central to their tradition, but one which Catholics rarely read. Instead, as Peppard shows, biblical ideas influence Catholics through diverse modes of storytelling, artistic imagination, and ritual. Through examples of pilgrimage, visual arts, poetry, music, and even on Netflix, Peppard shows how the Bible thrives among Catholics, even if its printed text may be missing.


Scripture

Scripture

Author: Michael J. Gorman

Publisher: Baker Academic

Published: 2005-09-01

Total Pages: 264

ISBN-13: 1441241655

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Most Bible introductions are the product of a single person or present only one perspective. Written by and for people from a variety of faith traditions, this distinctive introduction represents the work of fifteen Protestant and Catholic scholars--all members of the same theological faculty, but representing a diversity of backgrounds and approaches. Part I introduces the Bible itself: its library-like character; its geography, history, and archaeology; the books of each Testament; important noncanonical books; the Bible's various Jewish and Christian forms; and its transmission and translation. Part II covers the interpretation of the Bible at various times, in various traditions, and for various reasons: in the premodern period and in the modern and postmodern eras, including recent critical, theological, and ideological approaches; in Protestant, Catholic, Orthodox, and African-American churches; and for spiritual growth, social justice, and Christian unity. Offering helpful insight into how Christians (and others) have agreed and disagreed in their approaches to the Bible, it provides students with a clear, succinct introduction to Scripture as divine and human word.


Scripture in the Church

Scripture in the Church

Author: James Chukwuma Okoye

Publisher: Liturgical Press

Published: 2011

Total Pages: 208

ISBN-13: 0814657613

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Who should read the Bible? What is the biblical word? How is Scripture to be interpreted? How is it to be prayed and lived? How does Scripture call forth the Church's entire life and mission? In October 2008 the Synod on the Word of God in the Life and Mission of the Church took place in Rome. During the synod the bishops addressed these questions on the significance of the Word in the life and mission of the church. Beginning with a helpful explanation of the synod process, James Chukwuma Okoye, CSSp, follows the synod in historical progression, highlighting important topics and issues along the way and concluding with an exposition of the post-synodal apostolic exhortation Verbum Domini, which Benedict XVI signed on September 30, 2010. Okoye emphasizes that the Synod on the Word of God was not just about Scripture's function in the pastoral life of the church but it was also about tradition and God's continuing self-disclosure in history and in the religions and cultures of humankind."


A Catholic Guide to the Bible

A Catholic Guide to the Bible

Author:

Publisher: Catholic Home Study Service

Published: 2015-10-10

Total Pages: 228

ISBN-13: 9780996870801

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As a Catholic, what do you think of the Bible? Do you feel drawn to it, yet somewhat intimidated by it? When you try to read the Bible, do you soon become discouraged by its many difficult passages, by page after page of strange names, by the stories that seem unrelated to your life today or by the frequent portrayal of unfamiliar customs and practices? This revised and expanded edition of A Catholic Guide to the Bible will help readers overcome such obstacles. For each of the seventy three books in the Bible, Father Lukefahr offers pertinent historical background, information about the author and the literary style of work and the theological interpretation of selected passages based on the latest Scripture scholarship and the Catechism of the Catholic Church.


God's Word and the Church's Council

God's Word and the Church's Council

Author: Christopher Monaghan

Publisher: ATF Press

Published: 2014-07-04

Total Pages: 242

ISBN-13: 1922239747

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The publication of the Vatican II document on Divine Revelation (Dei Verbum) was an exciting and challenging moment for the Church. While honouring the tradition, it also marked a quite dramatic development in the Church's attitude to modern critical analysis of the Bible and encouraged study and reflection on it by all members of the Church. The golden jubilee of its publication is a timely moment for a book such as this. It contains essays on various aspects of Dei Verbum by authors from around the world. They write from the perspective of their respective disciplines of biblical studies, patristics, theology, liturgy, philosophy, and communications media. They situate the document within the Jewish-Christian tradition, assess its reception since Vatican II, and its implications for the future.


Interpretation of Scripture, The

Interpretation of Scripture, The

Author: Fitzmyer, Joseph A., SJ

Publisher: Paulist Press

Published: 2008

Total Pages: 195

ISBN-13: 1616436352

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This book seeks to establish the properly oriented use of the historical-critical method as the mode of ascertaining the sense of the written Word of God.