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Rendering the word in theological hermeneutics : mapping divine and human agency /

Annotation

Bibliographic Details
Call Number:Libro Electrónico
Main Author: Bowald, Mark Alan
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:Inglés
Published: Bellingham, WA : Lexham Press, ©2015.
Series:Studies in historical & systematic theology.
Subjects:
Online Access:Texto completo
Table of Contents:
  • Intro
  • Title Page
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • List of Figures
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • Chapter 1: The Eclipsing and Usurping of Divine Agency in Enlightenment Epistemology and Their Influence on Scriptural Hermeneutics
  • Kant's Proscriptions to Reason's Activity: Defining the Ideal Knowing Act
  • Further Defining Kant's Critique of Antecedent Judgments with Special Attention to the Relationship of Human and Divine Agency
  • Clearing the Modern Ground: The Eclipse of God's Agency
  • The Hermeneutic Reversal: The Usurping of God's Agency
  • Summary
  • Chapter 2: A Triangle Typology: Mapping Divine and Human Agency in Contemporary Theological Hermeneutics
  • The Triangle: Coordinating Divine and Human Action
  • Type One: Human Agency in/through the Text of Scripture
  • Type Two: Human Agency in the Reading and Reception of Scripture
  • Type Three: Divine Agency in the Hermeneutics of Scripture
  • A Clarifying Conversation with Four Other Typologies
  • Summary: Looking Back and Looking Ahead
  • Chapter 3: Type One: Human Agency in the Text
  • The Evangelical Tradition
  • The Early Hans Frei: The Eclipse of Modern Biblicism
  • Kevin Vanhoozer: From General Hermeneutics to General Christian Hermeneutics to Divine Canonical-Linguistics
  • Francis Watson: Negotiating Text, Church, and World
  • The Implications of Type 1: Benefits and Detriments
  • Chapter 4: Type Two: Human Agency in the Reading
  • David Kelsey: Using Scripture
  • The Later Hans Frei: The Emergence of Meaning in the Tradition
  • Werner Jeanrond: Reviving the Critical Interpreter
  • Stephen Fowl: The Community's Underdetermined Engagement with Scripture
  • The Implications of Type Two: Benefits and Detriments
  • Chapter 5: Type Three: Prioritizing Divine Agency: God's Agency in, with, and under Scripture and Its Reading
  • Karl Barth: God's Word as God's Act.
  • Nicholas Wolterstorff: Reading for Divine Discourse
  • James K.A. Smith: Post-Phenomenological Language of God
  • The Implications of Type Three: Benefits and Detriments
  • Chapter 6: Implications of the Triangle Typology: A Modest Proposal for a Divine-Rhetorical Hermeneutics
  • Before, beside, or beyond the Bible: The Role of "Principles" in Theological Interpretation of Scripture
  • Interrogating Three Modern Myths of Reading and Interpreting the Bible
  • 1. Myth of Independence
  • 2. Myth of Priority
  • 3. Myth of the Ideal Method
  • The Heart of the Problem: Interrogating Hans Frei
  • Reading the Bible as Divine-Rhetorical Hermeneutics
  • Ethos
  • Logos
  • Pathos
  • Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • Subject and Author Index.