This book offers a fresh cross-disciplinary approach to the current
discussion on the Christian canon formation process. By carefully
integrating historical, hermeneutical and theological aspects to
account for the emergence of the canon, it seeks to offer a more
comprehensive picture of the canon development than has previously
been achieved. The formation and continuous usage of the Christian
biblical canon is here viewed as an act of literary preservation and
actualization of the church's apostolic normative tradition - 'the
Scriptures and the Lord' - addressing, first of all, the church, but
also the wider society. In order to grasp the complex phenomenon of
the biblical canon, the study is divided into four parts, focusing
respectively on linguistic and effective-historical, textual and
material, performative, and ideational aspects of the canon. Attention
is given to the scribal nomina sacra convention, the codex format,
oral and written Gospel, early Christian liturgical praxis and the
Rule of Faith. Bokedal argues that the canon was formed in a process,
with its own particular intention, history, and direction. Throughout
the study, history and theology, past and present are considered
alongside each other. By using a Gadamerian hermeneutics of tradition,
the reader's attention is directed to historical dimensions of the
canon and its interpretative possibilities for our time. The notion of
effective history (Wirkungsgeschichte), as well as the interaction
between text, community and reader are crucial to the argument. The
canonical text as text, its interpretation and ritual
contextualization are highlighted as unifying elements for the
communities being addressed.
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A Study in Text, Ritual and Interpretation
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780567075468
Publisert
2015
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter