In this his Inaugural Lecture as Professor of Hebrew and Old Testament at New College, Hans Barstad looks at how we can approach the Hebrew Bible without disregarding its difficult passages, and explores how we can use these to gain a deeper Christian understanding of contemporary issues such as war and violence.Publisher PD
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph. In the Old Testament, there are a ...
Christian spirituality draws strongly on the Bible. Yet, it is the New Testament that almost without...
Violence as theological problem is a relative newcomer to the scene of Old Testament studies. It was...
In this his Inaugural Lecture as Professor of Hebrew and Old Testament at New College, Hans Barstad...
A summary of this book published 1989 and still in press (print on order). This material is created;...
Some issues in life are not capable of final resolution. Questions such as ‘What is the good life?’ ...
How can a good God command genocide? In this short, accessible offering, Charlie Trimm provides the ...
Leading Old Testament theologian Walter Moberly probes what is necessary to understand and appropria...
Israel and the surrounding nations, by H. R. Hall.--The religious environment of Israel, by S. A. Co...
The overwhelming number of violent texts within the Old Testament raises serious theological and eth...
This study examines the warfare commanded by God during the invasion of Canaan by Joshua. These batt...
The answer depends on the question. The question depends on underlying assumptions. The first part o...
No one can read far in the Old Testament without encountering numerous acts of violence that are san...
The author argues that the historical-critical approach to the Scripture leads to unedifying results...
Presents a lecture that analyzes the old testament. In this lecture, two final books of the Bible ar...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph. In the Old Testament, there are a ...
Christian spirituality draws strongly on the Bible. Yet, it is the New Testament that almost without...
Violence as theological problem is a relative newcomer to the scene of Old Testament studies. It was...
In this his Inaugural Lecture as Professor of Hebrew and Old Testament at New College, Hans Barstad...
A summary of this book published 1989 and still in press (print on order). This material is created;...
Some issues in life are not capable of final resolution. Questions such as ‘What is the good life?’ ...
How can a good God command genocide? In this short, accessible offering, Charlie Trimm provides the ...
Leading Old Testament theologian Walter Moberly probes what is necessary to understand and appropria...
Israel and the surrounding nations, by H. R. Hall.--The religious environment of Israel, by S. A. Co...
The overwhelming number of violent texts within the Old Testament raises serious theological and eth...
This study examines the warfare commanded by God during the invasion of Canaan by Joshua. These batt...
The answer depends on the question. The question depends on underlying assumptions. The first part o...
No one can read far in the Old Testament without encountering numerous acts of violence that are san...
The author argues that the historical-critical approach to the Scripture leads to unedifying results...
Presents a lecture that analyzes the old testament. In this lecture, two final books of the Bible ar...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph. In the Old Testament, there are a ...
Christian spirituality draws strongly on the Bible. Yet, it is the New Testament that almost without...
Violence as theological problem is a relative newcomer to the scene of Old Testament studies. It was...