Volume 1: Romans 1:1-32
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Köp båda 2 för 3354 krCovering how these three kinds of commentary are related to the reception history of Romans, Patte further elucidates how interpretive choices are influenced by a readers social location and interpretive contexts, and underscores how we must become responsible for our interpretive choices that may literally have life-or-death implications. The book will make you thinkand think againabout what happens when we interpret and after we interpret as scholars and teachers of the Bible. * Tat-siong Benny Liew, College of the Holy Cross, USA * This is the magisterial work of an excellent biblical scholar. The respect for the diversity of interpretations, the multiplicity of interpretive choices and the appreciation of the wisdom of generations of interpreters renders this project an invaluable contribution not only to the guild of exegetes, but to the conversation of all who cherish biblical texts in diverse contexts. With avenues for further conversations over diverse interpretations being opened, this project marks the legacy of Daniel Patte to biblical studies. * Kathy Ehrensperger, University of Wales Trinity St David, UK *
Daniel Patte is Professor Emeritus of Religious Studies, New Testament and Christianity at Vanderbilt University, USA. Among his publications are Early Jewish Hermeneutic, Pauls Faith and the Power of the Gospel, editor of Global Bible Commentary and The Cambridge Dictionary of Christianity; and he is co-editor of Romans Through History and Cultures (10 volumes).
Preface and Acknowledgments Foreword: Critical Readings and Receptions of Romans in an Age of Fake News and Alternative Facts Introduction. Reading Romans After Studying its Receptions Part One: Critical Interpretation and the History of Reception of Romans 1. Receptions of Romans Through History and Cultures: A Challenge for Exegesis, Theology, and Ethics 2. Critical Exegeses of Romans and the Plurality of Legitimate and Plausible Interpretations Part Two: A Triple Commentary: Three Legitimate and Plausible Critical Exegeses of Romans 1:1-32 3. Reading Romans 1:1-32 For its Forensic Theological Argument 4. Reading Romans 1:1-32 for its Call to Mission of an Inclusive Covenantal Community 5. Reading Romans 1:1-32 for its Realized-Apocalyptic/Messianic Vision Part Three: Critical Exegesis and Receptions of Romans 1:1-32 6. The Contextual Character of the Three Legitimate and Plausible Interpretations of Romans 1:1-32 7. Receptions of Romans 1:1-32 as Guides for Choosing among Interpretations Conclusions Appendix: Threefold Interpretive Choices about 31 Key Theological and Ethical Themes in Rom 1:1-32 Bibliography Index