This article examines George Lindbeck’s position on premodern biblical interpretation within the cultural-linguistic framework. While highlighting the narrative may be a crucial step to understand the meaning of Scripture, he overlooks the multiplicity of voices in the story. While his claim that “the biblical world absorbs other worlds” may contribute to Christian unity, it can conflict with people of other religious traditions. Engaging the voice of the other opens new avenues to understanding. The voice of the other is a voice that matters equally.
Reading the Bible through a postcolonial lens has become today’s trend in biblical hermeneutics. It ...
This article questions whether a further gift of the Holy Spirit in Acts is the reversal of the curs...
Scholars from biblical studies and theology have recently been engaged in various ways in the projec...
In this article the author illustrates that the relationship between the Bible and the Church could ...
<p><strong>The meeting of worlds and the principle of <em>sola Scriptura</em>...
Advancing from his criticism against two principal theological theories of religion, namely (1) cogn...
Note:George Lindbeck’s The Nature of Doctrine: Religion and Theology in a Postliberal Age (1984) has...
George Lindbeck laments that The Nature of Doctrine has often been read apart from his ecumenical fo...
Does the Bible present a unified message from God to humanity? This paper is an attempt to undertake...
This paper shows how discourse analysis of local Bible-study groups re-contextualises understandings...
In a recent article in The Christian Century, Gary Domen revisited the question that has often been ...
The aim of this thesis was to examine the understanding of community in George Lindbeck s The Nature...
Does the Bible present a unified message from God to humanity? This paper is an attempt to undertake...
In his classic study, The Nature of Doctrine, George Lindbeck articulates an account of Christian do...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Brill Academic Publisher...
Reading the Bible through a postcolonial lens has become today’s trend in biblical hermeneutics. It ...
This article questions whether a further gift of the Holy Spirit in Acts is the reversal of the curs...
Scholars from biblical studies and theology have recently been engaged in various ways in the projec...
In this article the author illustrates that the relationship between the Bible and the Church could ...
<p><strong>The meeting of worlds and the principle of <em>sola Scriptura</em>...
Advancing from his criticism against two principal theological theories of religion, namely (1) cogn...
Note:George Lindbeck’s The Nature of Doctrine: Religion and Theology in a Postliberal Age (1984) has...
George Lindbeck laments that The Nature of Doctrine has often been read apart from his ecumenical fo...
Does the Bible present a unified message from God to humanity? This paper is an attempt to undertake...
This paper shows how discourse analysis of local Bible-study groups re-contextualises understandings...
In a recent article in The Christian Century, Gary Domen revisited the question that has often been ...
The aim of this thesis was to examine the understanding of community in George Lindbeck s The Nature...
Does the Bible present a unified message from God to humanity? This paper is an attempt to undertake...
In his classic study, The Nature of Doctrine, George Lindbeck articulates an account of Christian do...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Brill Academic Publisher...
Reading the Bible through a postcolonial lens has become today’s trend in biblical hermeneutics. It ...
This article questions whether a further gift of the Holy Spirit in Acts is the reversal of the curs...
Scholars from biblical studies and theology have recently been engaged in various ways in the projec...