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Holy imagination : a literary and theological introduction to the whole Bible / Judy Fentress-Williams

By: Material type: TextPublisher: Nashiville : Abingdon Press, 2021Description: xii, 388 pages ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781426775314
  • 1426775318
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 220.61 23
LOC classification:
  • BS535 .F45 2021
Contents:
Introduction -- The Origin of Identity -- The Wilderness and Legal Traditions -- The Promised Land: Joshua and Judges -- Ruth -- Birth of a Nation: Samuel and Kings -- Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah, and Esther -- Hebrew Poetry: Psalms, Lamentations, and Song of Songs (Solomon) -- Wisdom Literature -- Prophets -- The Gospels -- The Acts of the Apostles -- The Letters -- Revelation.
Summary: The many voices in scripture form a dialogue with readers, which produce theological truths that are larger than the individual parts. This introduction is informed by both literary theory and theology. It groups sections of the whole Bible together by genre. Each section identifies and describes the genre (such as historiography, poetry, prophecy, gospel, letter, apocalypse), and then moves into a discussion about the literary characteristics and theological insights. The words of scripture not only come a long way to find us but like a poem must be read with attention. Poetry doesn't yield meaning easily, and it doesn't promise to make sense. We know to look past the words on the page and find the images, tropes, sounds, and metaphors that are meaning-full. This type of writing invites, rather demands, the imagination. We must accept that we will only get so close, but that this is close enough. Our imagination spans the gaps left by sparse language and incomplete narratives. We return again and again, with more information and perhaps more experiences. The words are the same, but we are not; and for that reason there are always new discoveries.
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Books Institut Protestant de Théologie General stacks 220.61 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available LOC-IPT-00011

Includes bibliographical references (pages 384-388).

Introduction -- The Origin of Identity -- The Wilderness and Legal Traditions -- The Promised Land: Joshua and Judges -- Ruth -- Birth of a Nation: Samuel and Kings -- Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah, and Esther -- Hebrew Poetry: Psalms, Lamentations, and Song of Songs (Solomon) -- Wisdom Literature -- Prophets -- The Gospels -- The Acts of the Apostles -- The Letters -- Revelation.

The many voices in scripture form a dialogue with readers, which produce theological truths that are larger than the individual parts. This introduction is informed by both literary theory and theology. It groups sections of the whole Bible together by genre. Each section identifies and describes the genre (such as historiography, poetry, prophecy, gospel, letter, apocalypse), and then moves into a discussion about the literary characteristics and theological insights. The words of scripture not only come a long way to find us but like a poem must be read with attention. Poetry doesn't yield meaning easily, and it doesn't promise to make sense. We know to look past the words on the page and find the images, tropes, sounds, and metaphors that are meaning-full. This type of writing invites, rather demands, the imagination. We must accept that we will only get so close, but that this is close enough. Our imagination spans the gaps left by sparse language and incomplete narratives. We return again and again, with more information and perhaps more experiences. The words are the same, but we are not; and for that reason there are always new discoveries.

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