Record Detail
Advanced Search
Text
Character In Crisis
At a time when the chasm between academic scholarship and theological reflection seems to be widening, both the academic guild and the church share in common an uncertainty over how to study and appropriate the wisdom literature of the Old Testament. On the one hand, mainline denominations have for the most part avoided the books of Proverbs, Job, and Ecclesiastes in their preaching and educational curriculum. Biblical scholars, on the other hand, have labored hard to identify the theological significance and thematic center of the wisdom literature, but without much consensus. In Character in Crisis, William P. Brown helps to break the impasse by demonstrating that the aim of the Bible's wisdom literature is the formation of moral character - both for individuals and for the community. Brown traces the theme of moral identity and conduct throughout the wisdom literature of the Old Testament, with a concluding reflection on the Epistle of James in the New Testament, and explores a range of issues that includes literary characterization, moral discourse, worldview, and the theology of the ancient sages. He examines the ways in which central characters such as God, wisdom, and human beings are profiled in the wisdom books and shows how their characterizations impart ethical meaning to the reading community, both ancient and modern.
Availability
Detail Information
Series Title |
-
|
---|---|
Call Number |
248 Bro c
|
Publisher | Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. : Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA., 1996 |
Collation |
x, 179p.: ill.; 23 x 15 cm
|
Language |
English
|
ISBN/ISSN |
9780802841353
|
Classification |
248
|
Content Type |
-
|
Media Type |
-
|
---|---|
Carrier Type |
-
|
Edition |
1st ed
|
Subject(s) | |
Specific Detail Info |
-
|
Statement of Responsibility |
Brown, William P.
|
Other version/related
No other version available
Information
Web Online Public Access Catalog - Use the search options to find documents quickly