The Incomparable God: Readings in Biblical Theology

The Incomparable God: Readings in Biblical Theology

The Incomparable God: Readings in Biblical Theology

The Incomparable God: Readings in Biblical Theology

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Overview

“My Lord! There is no one like you among the gods!” 
   
Attempting to describe the nature of God often prompts the exclamation of the psalmist—that God is unlike anyone or anything else. And yet the claim is not simply the overflow of an adoring heart: God’s incomparability is a truth lodged deep within Christian Scripture. In The Incomparable God, Old Testament scholar Brent Strawn offers thoughtful insight into this theological mystery.    
  
This volume collects eighteen of Strawn’s most provocative essays on the nature of God, several of which are published for the first time here. Strawn covers the following topics:   
  
     • the complex portrayal of God in Genesis   
     • God’s mercy in Exodus   
     • poetic description of God in the Psalms   
     • the Trinity in both testaments   
     • pedagogy of the Old Testament   
     • integration of faith and scholarship   
   
Encompassing close readings of Scripture, biblical-theological argument, and considerations of praxis, The Incomparable God is essential reading for Old Testament scholars and students. 


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780802879493
Publisher: Eerdmans, William B. Publishing Company
Publication date: 05/30/2023
Pages: 508
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Brent A. Strawn is D. Moody Smith Distinguished Professor of Old Testament and professor of law at Duke University. He is also a senior fellow in the Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University and an ordained elder in the North Georgia Conference of the United Methodist Church.


 
 
Collin Cornell is assistant professor of Bible and mission at Fuller Theological Seminary.


 
M. Justin Walker is assistant professor of Old Testament and Christian ministry at Lee University.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Author’s Preface
Introduction
List of Abbreviations
Part 1: Readings  
          1. From Imago to Imagines: The Image(s) of God in Genesis  
          2. Yhwh’s Poesie: The Gnadenformel, the Book of Exodus, and Beyond  
          3. Keep/Observe/Do—Carefully—Today! The Rhetoric of Repetition in Deuteronomy  
          4. Slaves and Rebels: Inscription, Identity, and Time in the Rhetoric of Deuteronomy  
          5. The Art of Poetry in Psalm 137: Movement, Reticence, Cursing  
          6. Revisiting Elisha and the Bears: Can Modern Christians Read—That Is, Pray—the “Worst Texts” of the Old Testament?  
Part 2: Biblical Theology  
          7. And These Three Are One: A Trinitarian Critique of Christological Approaches to the Old Testament  
          8. “Israel, My Child”: The Ethics of a Biblical Metaphor  
          9. What Would (or Should) Old Testament Theology Look Like If Recent Reconstructions of Israelite Religion Were True?  
          10. The Old Testament and Participation with God (and/in Christ?): (Re)reading the Life of Moses with Some Help from Gregory of Nyssa  
          11. Tolkien’s Orcs Meet the Bible’s Canaanites: The Dynamics of Reading Well. . . or Not (Or, How to Critique Scripture and Still Call It Scripture)
          12. Docetism, Käsemann, and Christology: Can Historical Criticism Help Christological Orthodoxy (and Other Theology) After All?  
Part 3: Practice  
          13. Is God Always Anything?  
          14. On Pharaohs: Egyptian and Otherwise  
          15. Designated Readers: Deuteronomy’s Portrait of the Ideal King—or Is It Preacher?  
          16. On Priesting  
          17. Four Thoughts on Preaching and Teaching the Bible—Mostly the Old Testament  
          18. On Not Bifurcating: Faith and Scholarship in the Life of a Bible Professor  
Acknowledgments
Bibliography  
Indexes

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