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A Beginner's guide to New Testament exegesis : taking the fear out of critical method / Richard J. Erickson.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Downers Grove, Illinois : InterVarsity Press, c2005.Description: 239 p.: ill.; 23 cmISBN:
  • 0830827714
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • BS 2361.3  .E75 2005
Contents:
Framing your mind, or how to pronounce zmrzlina Text and tools : mowing the New Testament lawn Texts and their structure : walls of stone Syntactical and discourse analysis : some dis-assembly required History and culture in exegesis : you can't eat a denarius Letters : reading someone else's mail Narratives I : telling the old, old story Narratives II : thickening the plot Apocalypse : alternative education Moving on : what do we do now?
Summary: Let's face it. Just the word exegesis puts some of us on edge. We are excited about learning to interpret the Bible, but the thought of exegetical method evokes a chill. Some textbooks on exegesis do nothing to overcome these apprehensions. The language is dense. The concepts are hard. And the expectations are way too high. However, the skills that we need to learn are ones that a minister of the gospel will use every week. Exegesis provides the process for listening, for hearing the biblical text as if you were an ordinary intelligent person listening to a letter from Paul or a Gospel of Mark in first-century Corinth or Ephesus or Antioch. This book by Richard Erickson will help you learn this skill. Thoroughly accessible to students, it clearly introduces the essential methods of interpreting the New Testament, giving students a solid grasp of basic skills while encouraging practice and holding out manageable goals and expectations. Numerous helps and illustrations clarify, summarize and illuminate the principles. And a wealth of exercises tied to each chapter are available on the web. This is a book distinguished not so much by what it covers as by how: it removes the "fear factor" of exegesis. There are many guides to New Testament exegesis, but this one is the most accessible--and fun! - Publisher
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Item type Current library Call number Status Barcode
BOOKS Saint Andrew's Theological Seminary Mosher Library BS 2361.3 .E75 2005 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 39470

Includes bibliographical references and index

Framing your mind, or how to pronounce zmrzlina
Text and tools : mowing the New Testament lawn
Texts and their structure : walls of stone
Syntactical and discourse analysis : some dis-assembly required
History and culture in exegesis : you can't eat a denarius
Letters : reading someone else's mail
Narratives I : telling the old, old story
Narratives II : thickening the plot
Apocalypse : alternative education
Moving on : what do we do now?

Let's face it. Just the word exegesis puts some of us on edge. We are excited about learning to interpret the Bible, but the thought of exegetical method evokes a chill. Some textbooks on exegesis do nothing to overcome these apprehensions. The language is dense. The concepts are hard. And the expectations are way too high. However, the skills that we need to learn are ones that a minister of the gospel will use every week. Exegesis provides the process for listening, for hearing the biblical text as if you were an ordinary intelligent person listening to a letter from Paul or a Gospel of Mark in first-century Corinth or Ephesus or Antioch. This book by Richard Erickson will help you learn this skill. Thoroughly accessible to students, it clearly introduces the essential methods of interpreting the New Testament, giving students a solid grasp of basic skills while encouraging practice and holding out manageable goals and expectations. Numerous helps and illustrations clarify, summarize and illuminate the principles. And a wealth of exercises tied to each chapter are available on the web. This is a book distinguished not so much by what it covers as by how: it removes the "fear factor" of exegesis. There are many guides to New Testament exegesis, but this one is the most accessible--and fun! - Publisher

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Saint Andrew's Theological Seminary is an ecumenical center of theological education, training, and formation serving the Episcopal Church in the Philippines (ECP), the Iglesia Filipina Independiente (IFI), and beyond.