Winner of the AAR's 2016 Award for Excellence in the Study of
Religion: Textual Studies How Repentance Became Biblical tells the
story of repentance as a concept. Many today, in both secular and
religious contexts, assume it to be a natural and inevitable component
of our lives. But, where did it originate? How did it become so
prominent within Western religious traditions and, by extension,
contemporary culture? What purposes does it serve? The book identifies
repentance as a product of the Hellenistic period, where it was taken
up within emerging forms of Judaism and Christianity as a mode of
subjective control. It argues that, along with the rise of repentance,
a series of interpretive practices, many of which remain in effect to
this day, was put into place whereby repentance is read into the Bible
and the Bible, especially the Hebrew Bible, or Old Testament, comes to
be seen as repentance's source. Ancient Israelite rituals, such as
fasting, prayer, and confession, all of which are incorporated later
on within various religious communities as forms of penitential
discipline, are understood as external signs of internal remorse.
Hebrew terms and phrases, such as the prophetic injunction to "return
to YHWH," are read as ancient representations of the concept,
repentance. Prophetic literature as a whole is seen as serving a
pedagogical purpose, as aiming at the reformation of Israel as a
nation. Furthermore, it is assumed that, on the basis of the Bible,
sectarians living in the late Second Temple period, from the Dead Sea
sect to the early Jesus movement, believed that their redemption
depended upon their repentance. In fact, the penitential framework
within which the Bible is interpreted tells us the most about our own
interpretive tendencies, about how we privilege notions of
interiority, autonomy, and virtue. The book develops other frameworks
for explaining the biblical phenomena in their ancient contexts, based
on alternative views of the body, power, speech, and the divine, and,
thereby, offers a new account of repentance's origins.
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Judaism, Christianity, and the Interpretation of Scripture
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780190493332
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic US
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter