Reading the Hebrew Bible for a New Millennium, Volume 2: Form, Concept, and Theological PerspectiveWonil Kim, Deborah L. Ellens, Marvin A. Sweeney This is the second volume of a two-volume set of essays devoted to the interpretation of the Hebrew Bible. The essays take as their foundation the exegetical methodology developed by Rolf P. Knierim at the Institute for Antiquity and Christianity in Claremont, California. The exegetical foundations of Knierim's methodology pay special attention to the literary forms and conceptual underpinnings of biblical texts. The result is an interpretive method that combines a close reading of biblical texts with contextual criticism to understand the theological perspective from which the biblical texts were written. The sixteen essays in this volume apply the method outlined in volume one to several biblical texts ranging from Joshua 1-12 and its theology of extermination to Leviticus 15 and its contrasting conceptual associations about women. The contributors hope that their exegetical work and theoretical reflection will continue to guide the course of Hebrew Bible studies in the twenty-first century. Editors: Wonil Kim is Assistant Professor of Old Testament Studies at La Sierra University. Deborah Ellens is an independent scholar. Michael Floyd is Professor of Old Testament at the Episcopal Seminary of the Southwest. Marvin A. Sweeney is Professor of Hebrew Bible at Claremont School of Theology and Professor of Religion at Claremont Graduate University. |
Contents
Criticism of Literary Features Form Tradition and Redaction | 1 |
Old Testament Form Criticism Reconsidered | 42 |
The Growth of Joshua 112 and the Theology of Extermination | 72 |
3441 | 89 |
A Comparative Study | 103 |
Contrasting Conceptual Associations | 124 |
On the Task of a Text and Concept Analysis in Psalm 2 | 152 |
Structure and Coherence in Amos 4 | 170 |
1225 | 221 |
Psalm 82 | 243 |
13 | 253 |
Absence of Gd and Human Responsibility | 264 |
On the Theology of the Pentateuch | 276 |
Text Criticism Text Composition and Text Concept | 310 |
Contributors | 331 |
347 | |
The Organizational Concept of Leviticus 13 | 185 |
The Transition from the Old Generation to the | 201 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
according action analysis appears aspects associated become beginning Bible biblical blood command composition concept concerning conclusion constituted context covenant David death discussion divine essay Esther evidence example exegesis exegetical Exod exodus expression fact factors fear final flow form criticism formula function genre given God's Hebrew Hosea human identified important impurity includes indicate individual instruction interpretation Israel Israelites Joshua king Knierim land language Leviticus literary literature meaning method methodological Moses narrative noted notion Numbers offering Old Testament oral original Pentateuch possible present Press problem promise prophetic Psalm question reading reason redaction reference reflect regard relationship result Samuel setting shows signals Sinai situation specific statement story structure suggests task term Theology tion tradition typical understanding unit University Verse whole writer Yahweh YHWH York