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Paul and the Hermeneutics of Faith: T&T Clark Cornerstones

Autor Francis Watson
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 18 noi 2015
In recent years, scholars from both Christian and Jewish backgrounds have tried to rethink the relationship between earliest Christianity and its Jewish milieu; and Paul has emerged as a central figure in this debate. Francis Watson contributes to this scholarly discussion by seeing Paul and his Jewish contemporaries as, above all, readers of scripture. However different the conclusions they draw, they all endeavour to make sense of the same normative scriptural texts - in the belief that, as they interpret the scriptural texts, the texts will themselves interpret and illuminate the world of contemporary experience. In that sense, Paul and his contemporaries are standing on common ground. Far from relativizing their differences, however, it is this common ground that makes such differences possible. In this new edition Watson provides a comprehensive new introduction entitled 'A Response to My Critics' in which he directly engages with the critics of the previous edition. There is a substantial new Preface and two new Appendices, and the text has been fully revised throughout.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780567657763
ISBN-10: 0567657760
Pagini: 624
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 48 mm
Greutate: 0.95 kg
Ediția:Revised
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Seria T&T Clark Cornerstones

Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

Work on intertextuality and use of the Old Testament in the New Testament has risen dramatically since the first edition. This new edition is extremely timely.

Notă biografică

Francis Watson is Professor of New Testament Exegesis at the University of Durham, UK.

Cuprins

From the Preface to the First EditionPreface to the Second EditionIntroduction to the Second Edition. The Apostle Who Reads: In Dialogue with My Critics1. Apocalypse (J. L. Martyn)2. Metanarrative (N.T. Wright)3. Faith (Richard Hays)4. Retrospection (Douglas Campbell)5. Unconditionality (Troels Engberg-Pedersen)6. Canon (Christopher Seitz)AbbreviationsIntroduction1. A Three-Way Conversation2. The Covenant and the Law of Life3. Christ and Scripture4. Intertextual Dynamics5. The Conflict of Interpretations Part I: AntithesisCh. 1: Justification and HermeneuticsCh. 2: Reading the TwelveCh. 3: The God of my SalvationPart II: PromiseCh. 4: Genesis (1)Ch. 5: Genesis (2)Part III: The WildernessCh. 6: ExodusCh. 7: LeviticusCh. 8: NumbersPart IV: Last WordsCh. 9: Deuteronomy (1)Ch. 10: Deuteronomy (2)ConclusionAppendix I - Scripture in Pauline Theology: How Far Down Does It Do? Appendix II - The Hermeneutics of Salvation: Paul, Isaiah, and the Servant BibliographyIndex of Primary TextsIndex of SubjectsIndex of Authors

Recenzii

This book is a splendid piece of theological scholarship. It is completely up to date on the most important critical scholarship in the many fields it covers, displaying a sure and wholly independent judgement and an amazing technical expertise in places. It is innovative and perspicacious, but also well-balanced and catholic in its way of adjudicating well-known scholarly conundra.
Francis Watson has produced a magisterial work that significantly challenges existing readings of Paul on all sides and will influence subsequent interpretations for decades to come. Henceforth, responsible readers of Paul will need to wrestle with Watson's provocative and nuanced arguments regarding Paul's own responsible interpretation of Scripture... The detail of his textual analysis is breathtaking, and the consequent discussion is fascinating and instructive on many levels. We are all in his debt.
One of the most creative and innovative books ever written about Paul and scripture... Reviewers are too ready with the phrase 'ground-breaking', but Watson's book richly deserves it.
To commend Watson as a careful and sensitive reader of these ancient texts is to name only one of the book's many excellences. In Paul and the Hermeneutics of Faith we encounter a rare combination of range and depth of analysis. Watson gives us detailed readings of an impressive range of Jewish interpreters of Torah, from Wisdom of Solomon to 4 Ezra, with loving attention to their literary shape and wholeness. Throughout, he keeps the focus firmly on primary texts, not secondary debates. Furthermore, Watson's way of handling the texts demonstrates in practice a union of historical, literary, and theological interpretation... In sum, Watson is teaching us all how we should do business as interpreters of Scripture. I will put this book into the hands of graduate students and tell them, "See, this is how Biblical scholarship should be done; you should aspire to write like this."
Francis Watson has written a stunning book, bringing to us a remarkable confluence of wissenschaftlich control and interpretive imagination, a combination vigorously to be applauded. There are stretches of genuine exegesis in which ancient texts are read patiently and faithfully, whether drawn from Genesis or Ben Sira or 2 Corinthians. These carefully crafted exegetical probes are accompanied by theological analysis in which Watson listens with an imaginative ear, exploring, for example, the relations between scriptural interpretation and issues of divine and human agency... I have learned an uncommon amount from this book.
A quick glance at Paul and the Hermeneutics of Faith tells anyone that Francis Watson is both learned and thorough. More reading goes on to reveal a witty stylist and masterful exegete. But I would suggest that a deeper engagement with the book's argument discloses an utterly brilliant conception in tactical terms. As such Paul is an absolute tour de force - one of those special books that makes works in a given academic field so rewarding and exciting...
Watson's interpretation is impressive; indeed he is one of the first New Testament scholars who deals seriously with the canonical shaping of the whole Scriptures as the context for Paul's reading rather than assuming the need for a prior historical critical reconstruction as its context...
Watson is clearly a superb reader of texts. and his thinking is always creative even when it fails to command assent. One has to admire a scholar who has both the imagination and the temerity to propose an entirely new approach to the long-standing problem of the origins and meaning of Paul's central theological concepts.