Introduction to the Old Testament: A Liberation Perspective
An inspiring exploration of how happiness and holiness can exist in the midst of poverty and illness.
1122979766
Introduction to the Old Testament: A Liberation Perspective
An inspiring exploration of how happiness and holiness can exist in the midst of poverty and illness.
18.5
In Stock
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Introduction to the Old Testament: A Liberation Perspective
by Anthony R. Ceresko
Anthony R. Ceresko

Introduction to the Old Testament: A Liberation Perspective
by Anthony R. Ceresko
Anthony R. Ceresko
eBookRevised and expanded edition (Revised and expanded edition)
$18.50
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Overview
An inspiring exploration of how happiness and holiness can exist in the midst of poverty and illness.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781608332014 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Orbis |
Publication date: | 03/22/2013 |
Sold by: | Barnes & Noble |
Format: | eBook |
File size: | 6 MB |
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations and Maps | xiii | |
Preface | xv | |
Preface to the Revised and Expanded Edition | xvii | |
Part I | Introduction | |
1. | The Bible in the Modern World | 3 |
The Bible and Today's World | 3 | |
The Bible and Politics | 3 | |
The Bible and the Church | 4 | |
The Bible and the University | 5 | |
The Bible and Popular Culture | 6 | |
Sociology and the Bible | 7 | |
Liberation Theology and the Bible | 9 | |
The Hermeneutical Privilege of the Poor | 11 | |
The Hermeneutic of Suspicion | 14 | |
A Liberation Perspective | 14 | |
New Lands and New Eyes for Reading the Bible | 15 | |
2. | A Modern Look at Biblical Times | 17 |
Modern Discoveries and the Historical Critical Approach to the Bible | 17 | |
Introduction | 17 | |
The Bible and the Ancient World | 17 | |
The Geography of Palestine | 22 | |
Part II | The Pentateuch | |
3. | The Historical Background of the Ancient Near East | 29 |
The Fertile Crescent and the Birth of Civilization | 29 | |
The History of the Ancient Near East Prior to the Appearance of Israel | 35 | |
Introduction | 35 | |
Egypt | 36 | |
Mesopotamia | 37 | |
Syria-Palestine | 38 | |
4. | The Ancestors of Israel | 40 |
Introduction | 40 | |
The Formation of the Traditions in Genesis 12-50 and the Origins of Early Israel | 41 | |
Reading between the Lines of Genesis 12-50 | 46 | |
5. | The Documentary Hypothesis | 57 |
Introduction | 57 | |
The Documentary Hypothesis or Four-Source Theory | 58 | |
An Example of Source Criticism | 62 | |
The Context for the Pentateuch's Foundational Story | 64 | |
6. | The Four Sources | 67 |
Creation of the Pentateuch | 67 | |
Israel's Scriptures: A Liberating Word | 74 | |
A Practical Application of Source Criticism: A Story from the Yahwist | 74 | |
7. | The Exodus | 79 |
Historical Background | 79 | |
The Moses Group | 79 | |
Egypt under Pharaoh Ramses II (1290-1224 B.C.E.) | 80 | |
The Exodus Itself | 81 | |
The Paradigmatic Nature of the Exodus Traditions | 84 | |
8. | Covenant | 87 |
Part III | The Rise of Israel in Canaan | |
9. | The "Conquest" of Canaan | 97 |
Introduction | 97 | |
Conquest or Gradual Settlement? | 98 | |
A Third Way: The Social Revolution Model | 99 | |
Introduction | 99 | |
The Context of the Social Revolution | 100 | |
The "El-Federation" and the Entry of the Moses Group | 104 | |
10. | Israel in the Period of the Judges | 108 |
Life in the Central Highlands | 108 | |
Yahwism: The Religion of the Social Revolution | 112 | |
Revelation | 112 | |
The Uniqueness of Israel's Religion | 113 | |
Unanswered Questions | 116 | |
Other Aspects of Early Israel's Faith | 117 | |
Part IV | The Period of the Monarchy | |
11. | The Book of Deuteronomy and the Deuteronomistic History | 123 |
The Book of Deuteronomy | 123 | |
The Origins of the Book of Deuteronomy and the Deuteronomic Reform | 123 | |
The Socio-economic Elements in the Deuteronomic Reform | 127 | |
The Deuteronomistic History (DH) | 128 | |
The Origins of the Deuteronomistic History | 128 | |
Key Themes of the Deuteronomistic History | 129 | |
The Sources for the Deuteronomistic History | 131 | |
The Two Editions of the Deuteronomistic History | 133 | |
12. | The Philistines and Saul | 137 |
The Origins of the Philistines | 137 | |
The Philistines and the External Threat to Early Israel | 142 | |
Saul and the Initial Attempt to Meet the Philistine Crisis | 144 | |
13. | From Chieftain to King | 148 |
Internal Factors in the Rise of the Monarchy | 148 | |
The Rise of David | 150 | |
Factors That Facilitated Centralization and Monarchy | 150 | |
Kingship and Zion | 153 | |
Solomon: The Triumph of the Counter-Revolution | 155 | |
Changes in Israel's Way of Life | 159 | |
Political Changes | 159 | |
Military Changes | 160 | |
Socio-economic Changes | 160 | |
Religious Changes | 161 | |
14. | The Divided Monarchy | 164 |
The Shift from Tribal League to Monarchy | 164 | |
A Brief History of the Divided Monarchy | 166 | |
Introduction | 166 | |
The Northern Kingdom (Israel), 922-722 B.C.E. | 168 | |
The Southern Kingdom (Judah), 922-587 B.C.E. | 173 | |
Reflections on the Monarchy | 177 | |
Part V | Prophecy in the Pre-Exilic Period | |
15. | The Origins and Definition of Prophecy | 181 |
Background | 181 | |
The Word Prophet | 181 | |
The More Remote Background of Israelite Prophecy | 182 | |
The More Immediate Background of Israelite Prophecy | 183 | |
The Prophet in Israel: Messenger of the Divine Assembly | 185 | |
The Dispute between Prophets and Kings | 187 | |
From Preaching Prophets to Writing Prophets | 188 | |
The Preaching Prophets | 189 | |
16. | The Eighth-Century B.C.E. Prophets: Amos and Hosea | 194 |
Introduction | 194 | |
Amos | 198 | |
Hosea | 203 | |
Repentance and Return | 206 | |
17. | Isaiah | 209 |
Isaiah and His Successors | 209 | |
The Power and Subtlety of Isaiah's Poetry | 210 | |
The Unrelenting Doom in His Message | 212 | |
Isaiah and the Royal/Davidic and Jerusalem/Zion Traditions | 212 | |
Isaiah's First Period of Ministry: The Syro-Ephraimite Crisis of 735 B.C.E. | 215 | |
The Sennacherib Invasion and Crisis, 705-701 B.C.E. | 218 | |
Isaiah and the "Holy One" of Israel | 220 | |
The Isaiah Tradition and the Book of Isaiah | 221 | |
18. | Jeremiah | 224 |
Introduction | 224 | |
The Historical Background to Jeremiah's Prophetic Career | 226 | |
Jeremiah's Message | 228 | |
The Question of True and False Prophecy | 231 | |
The Jeremian Tradition | 233 | |
Jeremiah's "Confessions" | 234 | |
The Basis for Hope in Jeremiah | 235 | |
Part VI | The Exile and the Restoration | |
19. | The Destruction of Jerusalem, the Exile, and the Prophet Ezekiel | 241 |
Introduction | 241 | |
The Destruction of Jerusalem and the Devastation of Judah | 242 | |
Israel in Exile | 244 | |
The Situation in the Major Centers of Judaism, 587-539 B.C.E. | 245 | |
Judah and Jerusalem | 245 | |
Babylon | 246 | |
Egypt | 246 | |
The Prophet Ezekiel | 247 | |
Ezekiel's Character and Accomplishments | 247 | |
Ezekiel's Doctrine and Work | 249 | |
20. | Second Isaiah (Is 40-55) | 257 |
The Historical Context and Its Relationship to the Rest of the Book | 257 | |
The Shape and Style of Second Isaiah | 258 | |
The Purpose of Second Isaiah | 260 | |
The Message of Second Isaiah | 261 | |
Comfort and Reassurance | 261 | |
Strategy for Reconciliation | 263 | |
Creative Redemption | 265 | |
The Servant of Yahweh | 265 | |
The Servant Language in the New Testament | 267 | |
Two Important Lessons from Second Isaiah | 268 | |
New Testament Use of Old Testament Texts | 268 | |
Vicarious Suffering | 269 | |
21. | The Reestablishment of a Jewish Community in Jerusalem and Judah | 271 |
Introduction | 271 | |
The Four Stages of the Return and Reestablishment | 273 | |
The Priestly Writer and the Completion of the Pentateuch | 276 | |
The Pentateuch and the Deuteronomistic History | 279 | |
Conclusion | 280 | |
Part VII | The Writings | |
22. | The Psalms | 285 |
Introduction | 285 | |
Hebrew Poetry | 286 | |
The Liturgical Origin of the Psalms | 289 | |
The Psalm Forms | 291 | |
The Hymn or Song of Praise | 291 | |
The Individual Lament or Song of Supplication | 292 | |
The Individual Thanksgiving Song | 294 | |
The Communal Lament | 296 | |
Royal Psalms | 296 | |
Minor Categories | 297 | |
The Shape of the Psalter | 298 | |
The Socio-historic Setting of the Psalms | 299 | |
23. | Wisdom in Israel | 304 |
The Development and Background of Israelite Wisdom | 304 | |
Introduction | 304 | |
The Origins of the Scribal School | 305 | |
The Royal Scribal School in Israel | 309 | |
Scribal Circles after the Exile | 310 | |
The Forms of Hebrew Wisdom | 312 | |
The Proverb | 312 | |
The Liberating Potential of Proverb and Parable | 313 | |
Other Forms or Genres | 314 | |
24. | The Wisdom Writings: Proverbs, Job, Ecclesiastes, Sirach, and the Book of Wisdom | 316 |
The Book of Proverbs | 316 | |
The Book of Job | 320 | |
The Book of Ecclesiastes (Qoheleth) | 322 | |
The Book of Sirach (Ecclesiasticus or Ben Sira) | 325 | |
The Book of Wisdom (Wisdom of Solomon) | 327 | |
25. | Daniel and the Apocalyptic Literature | 331 |
Historical Background | 331 | |
The Nature of Apocalyptic Literature | 333 | |
The Book of Daniel | 335 | |
Historical Background | 335 | |
The Book of Daniel | 336 | |
Apocalyptic as a Background to the New Testament | 338 | |
26. | Some Conclusions | 341 |
The Old Testament: A Liberation Perspective | 341 | |
The Bible and Today's World | 341 | |
The Hermeneutic of Suspicion | 341 | |
The Hermeneutical Privilege of the Poor | 343 | |
Liberation and Israel's God | 344 | |
Liberation and Covenant | 344 | |
Liberation and Life | 345 | |
The Bible and Contemporary Socio-economic Issues | 347 | |
The Bible and Decision-making | 348 | |
The Bible and Human Liberation | 349 | |
Bibliography | 351 | |
General Index | 374 | |
Scripture Index | 380 |
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