Skip to content
You are not logged in |Login  
     
Limit search to available items
Record:   Prev Next
Resources
More Information
Bestseller
BestsellerE-book
Author Seitz, Christopher R., author.

Title Convergences : canon and catholicity / Christopher R. Seitz.

Publication Info. Waco, Texas : Baylor University Press, [2020]
©2020

Item Status

Description 1 online resource (200 pages)
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Contents Diachronic legacy and complementary reading -- Intent and inspiration -- Typology and figuration -- Biblical theology -- Wisdom, creation, ontology -- Roman Catholic hermeneutics and canon -- Common text convergence.
Summary In an essay on Biblical Theology published in 1982, Paul Beauchamp points out a "striking convergence" between a prominent Roman Catholic scholar of the period, Roland de Vaux, and the leading Protestant Old Testament theologian of the day, Gerhard von Rad. Both saw looming on the horizon the need for a Biblical Theology in which both Testaments were taken seriously as part of a single, comprehensive theological reflection. There was genuine excitement at the prospect of the methods of tradition-historical reading, already harnessed by von Rad toward a specifically theological goal, turning now to a Biblical Theology proper. Where did that project and the excitement go? With Convergences, Christopher Seitz returns to the period in question. In the later work of von Rad and Martin Noth, Seitz identifies the clear foreshadowing of what would become "canonical interpretation" reflected especially in the work of Brevard Childs. Seitz further reveals that the work of Beauchamp, largely unknown in the Anglophone world, would ultimately line up with Childs in a great many areas (typology, concern with the final form, appreciation for the history of biblical interpretation before the modern era). These scholars reached common shores by distinctive routes and via different interlocutors. Convergences displays such lines of connection and how they spill over from the academy into the interests of the church, including Roman Catholic understandings of the place of Scripture since the mid-twentieth century. Seitz studies the emergence of the lectionary conception, the ressourcement movement, and non-Catholic interest in the prior history of interpretation and figural reading. Convergences maintains that much of what was accomplished in a hopeful coalescence around the canonical form of Scripture remains relevant for biblical interpretation in our present period. Here, we find a form of "catholicity" that offers hope and promise for our day in spite of cultural, ecclesial, and academic distinctives -- Provided by publisher.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Bible -- Hermeneutics.
Bible -- Canonical criticism.
Childs, Brevard S.
Beauchamp, Paul.
Bible -- Herméneutique.
Bible -- Critique canonique.
Childs, Brevard S. https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJxcTG8C8CywHRHqxVPJDq
Beauchamp, Paul https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJhrYCmgGgdrBrfCbDGPwC
Bible
Canonical criticism
Hermeneutics
Other Form: Print version: Seitz, Christopher R. Convergences : Canon and Catholicity. Waco : Baylor University Press, ©2020 9781481312790 (OCoLC) 1157618844
ISBN 9781481313087 (electronic book)
1481313088 (electronic book)
9781481312813 (electronic bk.)
1481312812 (electronic bk.)
9781481313070 (electronic bk.)
148131307X (electronic bk.)
1481312790
9781481312790