Many Roads Lead Eastward: Overtures to Catholic Biblical TheologyWipf and Stock Publishers, 2016 M10 27 - 124 pages Is there a gap between the academic study of the Bible and the work of theologians? What lies behind this gap? And most important, how have biblical scholars tried to bridge the gap with hermeneutical methods? This book addresses the exegesis vs. theology impasse and categorizes the most important attempts to bridge it over the past century, especially those of the last decades. These attempts are assessed and evaluated so that readers can see the philosophies undergirding each and the potential each has for a true "theological interpretation" of the Bible. |
Contents
Inspiration | 19 |
Revelation as Expression | 43 |
Revelation as Event | 58 |
A Modest Proposal | 76 |
91 | |
111 | |
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Common terms and phrases
analogy Art of Emergence Balthasar Barr Barton Benedict XVI Bible Biblical Criticism Biblical Hermeneutics Biblical Inspiration Biblical Interpretation biblical scholars biblical text Biblical Theology Biblische book of Isaiah Bouyer Bronsink Brueggemann Childs Childs’s Christ Christian communication context Critical Meaning Daley Dei Verbum DiNoia and Mulcahy divine Divino afflante Spiritu Dulles Encounter Event exegetes experience faith Farkasfalvy focus Fowl and Jones God’s Word Hauerwas Helmer hermeneutical models Heskett higher criticism historical-critical method Ibid Ichabod toward Home Inspiration and Interpretation Isaiah Lindbeck literary locus of revelation Lohfink Models of Revelation Mowinckel narrative Narrative Theology Old Testament Old Testament Theology one’s patristic Patristic Exegesis Pontifical Biblical Commission prophetic Ratzinger reader Reception History Rendtorff revelatory road Sacramental Theology Sacred Scripture Salvation History Sanders says Scheffczyk Schillebeeckx Scripture and Sacramental Seitz Sheppard Sola Scriptura Spiritual Exegesis Story–Shaped Church Symbol Testament as Word text’s Theological Interpretation tion Topel Tradition truth Verbum Domini writes