The meaning of the Bible What the Jewish scriptures and Christian Old Testament can teach us
Book - 2011
"The Hebrew Scriptures, or "Old Testament" as Christians call it, has given the world some of the greatest literature known. With this fresh introduction, cutting-edge biblical scholars bring ancient Israel to brilliant Technicolor life. Readers will learn of unlikely heroes and courageous women, royal intrigues and slave rebellions, doubtful prophets and lovesick poets, bloody battles and miraculous triumphs. These retellings will delight observant Jews, faithful Christians, world historians and readers of great literature. Passed down for centuries as spoken stories, compiled around 450 BCE, and finalized probably around the time of Jesus, the various books of the Hebrew Bible took shape under a variety of cultures and time... periods, influencing the formation of Judaism, Christianity and Islam. The authors open our eyes to this diverse history shedding new meaning on well-worn texts. They point out how the Hebrew Bible has continually shaped society, and how our own cultural circumstances influence how we interpret it today. The authors highlight the Biblical themes with which readers continue to wrestle: human evil and God's response; war and peace; law and society; politics and economics; belief and practice; women and sexuality; Israel and the Nations; practical wisdom and apocalyptic vision. As relevant today as it was 2,500 years ago, Knight and Levine will open the reader's eyes to the riches of one of the greatest collections of literature known to humankind"--
- Subjects
- Published
-
New York :
HarperOne
[2011]
- Language
- English
- Main Author
- Other Authors
- Edition
- First edition
- Physical Description
- xxii, 473 pages : maps ; 24 cm
- Bibliography
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- ISBN
- 9780061121753
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part 1.
- 1. The History of Ancient Israel
- Reconstructing History
- Historical Synopsis
- The Ancestors
- The Exodus
- Settlement of the Land
- The Founding of the Monarchy
- From the Divided Kingdom to the Fall of Jerusalem
- Exile and Return
- The Persian and Hellenistic Periods
- The Historical Time Frame
- 2. The Literary Heritage of Ancient Israel
- Tanakh or Old Testament or Hebrew Bible?
- Every Translator, a Traitor
- Literary Conventions
- Characterization
- Different Stories, Different Authors
- Canonization
- 3. Land and Settlement
- Israel's Environs
- Topography
- Climate and Water Resources
- Settlement of the Land
- A Land of Milk and Honey
- Part 2.
- 4. Law and Justice
- The Written and the Unwritten
- Ancient Southwest Asia
- Rhetorical Forms
- Administering Justice
- 5. The Divine
- Four Stumbling Blocks to Talking About the Biblical God
- The Names of God
- Religious Competition and Co-optation
- The Divine Feminine
- Father God, Children of God, Angels
- Polytheism, Henotheism, and Monotheism
- Seeing the Portraits Again
- 6. The Cultus
- The "Domestic Cult"
- Tabernacles and Temples
- Priests
- Purity
- Dietary Concerns
- Sacrifice
- Child Sacrifice
- 7. Chaos and Creation
- Creation Today
- Cosmic Architecture
- Hands-on Artisanship
- Disorder and Estrangement
- From Cain and Abel to Noah and Babel
- Other Biblical Creations
- 8. Continuation and Completion
- Abraham's Search for a Home
- From Slavery to Liberation
- New Exodus: From Prophecy to Apocalyptic
- Part 3.
- 9. Self and Other
- Hebrews
- Circumcision
- Endogamy
- The Tribes of Israel
- The Samaritans
- Judeans and Jews
- From Affiliation to Conversion
- Resident Aliens and Foreigners
- Chosen People
- 10. Sexuality
- Revisiting Eden
- Sexual Seduction, Response, and Potency
- Legislating Sexuality
- Marriage, Divorce, and Adultery
- Abortion
- Sexual Abuse
- Innuendo
- 11. Politics and the Economy
- The Nation-State
- The Cities
- The Empire and the Colony
- The Household
- The Clan
- The Tribe
- 12. Diaspora
- Initial Scattering and Return
- The Ten Lost Tribes
- The Babylonian Diaspora
- Postexilic Diaspora Communities
- Esther
- Daniel
- Tobit
- Part 4.
- 13. Critique and Reform
- Historians as Critics
- Moses, Flawed but Unassailable
- As His Father David Did
- Prophets as Critics
- Politics
- Economy
- Religion
- 14. Wisdom and Theodicy
- Who Is Wise?
- Sages and Their Literature
- Sirach and the Wisdom of Solomon
- Woman Wisdom
- Job and Theodicy
- Qohelet (Eccksiastes) and Realism
- Conclusion
- Acknowledgments
- Bibliography
- Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Review by Library Journal Review