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Veteran Old Testament teacher Mark Gignilliat explores the theological and hermeneutical instincts that are necessary for reading, understanding, and communicating Scripture faithfully. He takes seriously the gains of historical criticism while insisting that the Bible must be interpreted as Christian Scripture, offering students a "third way" that assigns proper proportion to both historical and theological concerns. Reading and engaging Scripture requires not only historical tools, Gignilliat says, but also recognition of the living God's promised presence through the Bible.
Mark S. Gignilliat (PhD, University of St. Andrews) is professor of divinity at Beeson Divinity School, Samford University, and serves as canon theologian at the Cathedral Church of the Advent in Birmingham, Alabama. He is the author of several books, including A Brief History of Old Testament Criticism.
ContentsIntroductionPart 1: Scripture's Material Form1. Scripture and Canon2. Sanding with the Grain: Final Form and Canonical Shape3. Canonical Intentionality4. Canon and Textual Criticism: The Search for the Christian BiblePart 2: Scripture's Subject Matter5. God as Triune and Exegetical Metaphysics6. The Trinity and the Old TestamentEpilogueIndexes
Andrew T. Abernethy, William R. Osborne, Paul D. Wegner, Nicholas G. Piotrowski, Mark S. Gignilliat, Andrew T. Abernethy, William R. Osborne, Paul D. Wegner
Andrew T. Abernethy, William R. Osborne, Paul D. Wegner, Nicholas G. Piotrowski, Mark S. Gignilliat, Andrew T. Abernethy, William R. Osborne, Paul D. Wegner