Scholarly study of Samuel continues to wrestle with how we interpret
this pivotal text. Even such basic matters as the question of what
kind of literature it is remain unresolved while older questions such
as the nature of its text and sources are debated anew in the light of
material from Qumran and of current approaches to Hebrew narrative.
Recognizing the importance of questions such as these, David Firth
explores and introduces fresh ways of reading Samuel as a unified and
yet complex text, which displays high levels both of literary artistry
and of theological commitment. Although some stories in the books of
Samuel are well known, and in the case of David and Goliath even
proverbial, much of the content of these books is strange to modern
readers. It is a story about a woman wanting a child, for example,
that relates the beginnings of monarchy within Israel. Even the
question of the monarchy is problematic, for we are introduced to not
one royal family but two-those of Saul and David. David is ultimately
shown to be the king chosen by God, yet by the end of the book he is
only just managing to hold on to the kingdom as it is nearly torn from
him by rivalries within his family. These arresting stories are
perplexing, for Samuel's writers seldom tell us how to read and
interpret them. Firth presents these complex and fascinating stories
as part of a bigger picture, enabling students to chart their way
through the literary and historical issues of the Samuel narrative.
Firth addresses issues of historicity, sources, date and authorship,
as well as -- crucially -- appreciating the text as a literary whole.
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A Kingdom Comes
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781350008960
Publisert
2016
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter