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Is Creation Theology Inherently Conservative? A Dialogue with Walter Brueggemann

Middleton, J. Richard

The Harvard theological review, 1994-07, Vol.87 (3), p.257-277 [Periódico revisado por pares]

New York, USA: Cambridge University Press

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  • Título:
    Is Creation Theology Inherently Conservative? A Dialogue with Walter Brueggemann
  • Autor: Middleton, J. Richard
  • Assuntos: Bible ; Brueggemann, Walter ; Cosmogony ; Creation ; Creationism ; Divinity ; Hebrew language ; Judaism ; Monarchy ; Old Testament ; Psalms ; Religious aspects ; Religious literature ; Sacred texts ; Social order ; Theology ; Trajectories
  • É parte de: The Harvard theological review, 1994-07, Vol.87 (3), p.257-277
  • Notas: ark:/67375/6GQ-01SPXKHN-T
    ArticleID:03073
    istex:7F0776DC11B5FD903A1829AE350E176EFA640C96
    PII:S001781600003073X
  • Descrição: Since his 1972 study of the wisdom literature of the Hebrew scriptures, provocatively entitled In Man We Trust, Walter Brueggemann has challenged the settled verities of Christian communities of faith and the orthodoxies of biblical scholarship. In over two dozen books and numerous popular and academic articles on the texts and themes of the Hebrew scriptures, Brueggemann has explored and articulated his growing thesis that the Bible is a powerful, critical, and energizing resource for human and social transformation in our times. Concentrating on the prophetic corpus since his programmatic 1978 book, The Prophetic Imagination, as well as giving significant attention to the historical books and the psalter, Brueggemann himself has become an important prophetic voice, calling the contemporary church to fidelity to Yahweh's uncompromising claims as these are articulated in the Mosaic, covenantal, and prophetic traditions of the Hebrew scriptures.
  • Editor: New York, USA: Cambridge University Press
  • Idioma: Inglês

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