Theory remains a dirty word in Biblical Studies; deconstruction often is received with glazed glances of irrelevance or outright rejection. I propose to offer a philosophically relevant and theologically potent reading of Genesis 1:1 based on the trivium disciplines of grammar, logic, and rhetoric. This reading will echo the Transfiguration of Jesus in the synoptic Gospels. The weight of interpretation will focus on the use of the Hebrew direct object marker (אֵת) as a visual symbol of langue (roughly, language); אֵת is composed of the first (aleph) and last (tav) consonants, allowing for it to be a merism for the alphabet and a symbol of language. The rhetorical disarticulation of grammar allows for a transformative reading of a biblical d...
I . This dissertation is a comprehensive and critical study of the other in and of language that the...
AbstractGrammatical metaphor is the transference in the expression of meanings from a congruent rep...
An inquiry into the nature of metaphor, as it has evolved since Aristotle and particularly in the la...
The study is a linguistically-based analysis of the biblical account of creation. It examines the tr...
The article argues from an empirical study of the alliterative and metrical characteristics of the s...
The author explores defining aspects of the Bible from the perspective of the principles of mythical...
The Old English Genesis is a poetic paraphrase, in Anglo-Saxon oral-formulaic verse, of the first tw...
In the present article the author argues for the usefulness and importance of rhetoric and socio-rhe...
ABSTRACT Many disagreements over what to make of Genesis 1–11 stem from different ways of reading th...
The aim of this project is to investigate how to do homiletics as a theological-aesthetic task that ...
Abstract: This article presents a very strict (common) language ren-dering of Genesis 1:1- 2.1. It e...
Gunkel's innovations in form criticism continue to have a remarkably productive life. The concern of...
Linguistic and stylistic properties of various literatures can only be assessed when evaluated on th...
Dr. Kiyoshi Sakon proposes an interpretation of the Bible which is based on its literary structure. ...
In recent decades, numerous theologians have risen to defend new approaches to the Doctrine of God t...
I . This dissertation is a comprehensive and critical study of the other in and of language that the...
AbstractGrammatical metaphor is the transference in the expression of meanings from a congruent rep...
An inquiry into the nature of metaphor, as it has evolved since Aristotle and particularly in the la...
The study is a linguistically-based analysis of the biblical account of creation. It examines the tr...
The article argues from an empirical study of the alliterative and metrical characteristics of the s...
The author explores defining aspects of the Bible from the perspective of the principles of mythical...
The Old English Genesis is a poetic paraphrase, in Anglo-Saxon oral-formulaic verse, of the first tw...
In the present article the author argues for the usefulness and importance of rhetoric and socio-rhe...
ABSTRACT Many disagreements over what to make of Genesis 1–11 stem from different ways of reading th...
The aim of this project is to investigate how to do homiletics as a theological-aesthetic task that ...
Abstract: This article presents a very strict (common) language ren-dering of Genesis 1:1- 2.1. It e...
Gunkel's innovations in form criticism continue to have a remarkably productive life. The concern of...
Linguistic and stylistic properties of various literatures can only be assessed when evaluated on th...
Dr. Kiyoshi Sakon proposes an interpretation of the Bible which is based on its literary structure. ...
In recent decades, numerous theologians have risen to defend new approaches to the Doctrine of God t...
I . This dissertation is a comprehensive and critical study of the other in and of language that the...
AbstractGrammatical metaphor is the transference in the expression of meanings from a congruent rep...
An inquiry into the nature of metaphor, as it has evolved since Aristotle and particularly in the la...