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Receiving the Bible in faith : historical and theological exegesis / David M. Williams.
Table of contents Available online
View online- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Williams, David M., 1966-
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Bible--Criticism, interpretation, etc--History.
- Bible.
- History.
- Biblical scholars.
- Bible. New Testament--Relation to the Old Testament.
- Bible. New Testament.
- Physical Description:
- ix, 244 pages ; 23 cm
- Place of Publication:
- Washington, D.C. : Catholic University of America Press, [2004]
- Summary:
- There is a Tension between classic and modern approaches to the Bible that continues to drive discussion today. For traditional theology, the Bible was divine revelation and a Church Father could say "we listen to God when we read." For critical history, the Bible was a collection of writings from the past to be read no differently than any other book. The weight of the tension falls on those who wish to combine the two approaches without being false to either. This book comes to the issues through sustained examination of contemporary writers committed to the faithful practice of both theology and history: biblical scholars Raymond Brown and Brevard Childs, and theologians Juan Luis Segundo and Henri de Lubac. Drawing especially on Brown and de Lubac, David Williams concludes that faithful reception of the Bible as Scripture involves both full application of historical studies and open acceptance of a Christological focus. Separating the biblical witness from history threatens to break contact with the communities of biblical Israel and the apostolic Church, just as failing to see that "in these last days, God spoke to us through a Son" threatens to reduce the Bible to a merely historical artifact. To avoid the first difficulty, Williams argues for recognition of the Bible as a complex union of human and divine intentions where historical work is necessary to distinguish and maintain the integrity of each. To avoid the second, he sets the four traditional senses of Scripture within a Christocentric framework as a means of actualizing the textual witness in the present. The book should prove helpful to students as an overview of some of the issues involved, while more advanced readers will appreciate its analysis of recent scholars as well as the attempt to integrate and adapt their insights.
- Contents:
- 1. Classical and Modern Exegesis 9
- Origen 11
- Aquinas 24
- Spinoza 35
- Troeltsch 45
- 2. Raymond Brown 55
- Present circumstances 56
- Literal and historical 61
- Beyond the literal sense 69
- Evaluation and comment 76
- 3. Brevard Childs 79
- Critique of the present situation 81
- Fundamental distinctions 85
- Stages of interpretation 88
- Evaluation and comment 93
- 4. Juan Luis Segundo 107
- Assessment of the present situation 108
- Faith and ideology 112
- Biblical applications 118
- Evaluation and comment 125
- 5. Henri de Lubac 130
- Diagnostic reflections 133
- The Christian transposition 140
- 'Omnis Scriptura divina de Christo loquitur' 146
- Evaluation and comment 169
- 6. Utraque Unum 174
- Dual intentionality 179
- Guided application 198.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 221-240) and index.
- ISBN:
- 0813213754
- OCLC:
- 52765788
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