<strong>The Bible: Text and subversion</strong><p>This article explores both the subversive dimension of the biblical text, in particular the Old Testament, as the ramifications thereof for the concept of a religious text. It argues that interpretation has been historically and fundamentally part and parcel of the genesis and reception history of the biblical text. The texts of Job and Jonah have been chosen for their explicit subversive strategies. The article shows that if the biblical text exploits strategies of subversion, it also contravenes the traditional opinion subscribing to a referential meaning of texts. A subversive text cannot simultaneously deny and confirm a constant (fixed) and an immutable reality. The ar...
Bible reading and recalcitrance - reader reaction on God and Esther This article pleads for an open...
<strong>Is the Massoretic text the Old Testament?</strong><br /> The equation of �...
This article is an attempt to engage in a onversation between biblical� scholars and� their dogmatic...
The use of biblical texts by politicians in recent years has led to a proliferation of critical publ...
<strong>The Bible at stake: Text versus dogma</strong><p>This article concentrates...
Rhetorical criticism and the interpretation of the Old Testament Modern history of Biblical interp...
<strong>Perspective on Scripture in light of postmodernity</strong><p>The aim of t...
This article concentrates on one of the great achievements of postmodernism regarding theology: the ...
The purpose of the paper is to investigate the text-critical positions of two contemporary Old Testa...
<strong>Deconstruction and biblical hermeneutics</strong><br /> The purpose of thi...
<strong>DitTerent messages for ditTerent contexts: the literature of the exile (597-539 BC)<...
<p><strong>The meeting of worlds and the principle of <em>sola Scriptura</em>...
In this article the concept of ‘church’ in the Old Testament is investigated, the way this concept s...
The origin of this study lies in discussions with Professors Philip R. Davies and Thomas L. Thompson...
Traditionally textual analysis of the Old Testament is done within a modernist framework. However, a...
Bible reading and recalcitrance - reader reaction on God and Esther This article pleads for an open...
<strong>Is the Massoretic text the Old Testament?</strong><br /> The equation of �...
This article is an attempt to engage in a onversation between biblical� scholars and� their dogmatic...
The use of biblical texts by politicians in recent years has led to a proliferation of critical publ...
<strong>The Bible at stake: Text versus dogma</strong><p>This article concentrates...
Rhetorical criticism and the interpretation of the Old Testament Modern history of Biblical interp...
<strong>Perspective on Scripture in light of postmodernity</strong><p>The aim of t...
This article concentrates on one of the great achievements of postmodernism regarding theology: the ...
The purpose of the paper is to investigate the text-critical positions of two contemporary Old Testa...
<strong>Deconstruction and biblical hermeneutics</strong><br /> The purpose of thi...
<strong>DitTerent messages for ditTerent contexts: the literature of the exile (597-539 BC)<...
<p><strong>The meeting of worlds and the principle of <em>sola Scriptura</em>...
In this article the concept of ‘church’ in the Old Testament is investigated, the way this concept s...
The origin of this study lies in discussions with Professors Philip R. Davies and Thomas L. Thompson...
Traditionally textual analysis of the Old Testament is done within a modernist framework. However, a...
Bible reading and recalcitrance - reader reaction on God and Esther This article pleads for an open...
<strong>Is the Massoretic text the Old Testament?</strong><br /> The equation of �...
This article is an attempt to engage in a onversation between biblical� scholars and� their dogmatic...