Showing posts with label scripture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scripture. Show all posts

The Story of the New Testament Text: Movers, Materials, Motives, Methods, and Models (Resources for Biblical Study) Review

The Story of the New Testament Text: Movers, Materials, Motives, Methods, and Models (Resources for Biblical Study)
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Most of us who contemplate the text and apparatus of a Greek NT probably feel much like the person Robert Hull quotes at the beginning of his book: "I look upon the textual critic as I look upon the man who comes to clean the drains. I should not like to do it myself, but I am very glad that someone likes to do it"! With that honest beginning, Hull proceeds to lead us on a highly user-friendly and engaging overview and introduction to this rather daunting and necessarily technical field.
He takes us through the different eras in the history of the field, from premodern, through modern, to postmodern, organizing his discussion under the alliterative heads in his subtitle: Movers, Materials, Motives, Methods, and Models. Professionals and laypersons will recognize in this alliteration the touch of an experienced teacher. Hull indeed strikes the right balance between doing justice to the complexity of the field and explaining it for novices.
Reserving his own judgments, Hull guides us with a deft hand through the perspectives of key players in the field and their approaches to the manuscript evidence, letting us sense complexity and need for careful research, while offering concise explanations and also communicating enthusiasm for the endeavor and appreciation for its fruits.
As someone who deals with postmodern approaches in biblical studies, I found particularly helpful his honest and non-prejudicial discussion of how the very modernist search for "the original text" is tending to give way in the postmodern era to a greater acceptance of variety in the textual witnesses.
I thoroughly recommend this book for those who are looking for a scholarly yet accessible introduction to the field.

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The Gospel According to Matthew (New Collegeville Bible Commentary: Old Testament) (Pt. 1) Review

The Gospel According to Matthew (New Collegeville Bible Commentary: Old Testament) (Pt. 1)
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Sr. Barabara Ried has written a fresh commentary on St. Matthew's Gospel. She give a concise summary of several common viewpoints: Jesus as the New Moses, The Five Discourses, Jesus, Messiah as fulfillment of the Prohpets.
She proposes the structure of Matthew's Gospel as a story. I found the story structure very refresing. Yes, I do recommend this volume. That I find the commentary refreshing has suggested my choice of the work fresh.
Her work as the high quality of scholarhship and writing that charactgerizes the Collegeville Series.
I also find her commentary helpful for homily preparation.


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Gospel of Matthew, The (Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture) Review

Gospel of Matthew, The (Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture)
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Like Mary Healy's treatment of the Gospel of Mark in this series, Mitch and Sri's commentary on the Gospel of Matthew is exactly what the faithful need. The scholarship presented is first rate without being overly technical or arcane, and the prose is refreshingly lacking in the "hermeneutic of suspicion" that sometimes accompanies Catholic commentaries. In other words, the authors are appreciative of the work that's been done by exegetes and historians, but they wear their learning lightly and don't try to poke holes in the Scriptures. The text is faithful to the Magisterium and includes useful side bars on background topics. Many have asked how it compares to two other popular orthodox commentaries: the Navarre Bible and the Ignatius Catholic Study Bible. The volumes in the Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture present more of a narrative than Ignatius, and are less contemplative and more "technical" than Navarre. All three are wonderful in their approaches and complement one another. Highly recommended.

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This engaging commentary on the Gospel of Matthew is the fifth of seventeen volumes in the Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture (CCSS), which will cover the entire New Testament. This volume, like each in the series, relates Scripture to life, is faithfully Catholic, and is supplemented by features designed to help readers understand the Bible more deeply and use it more effectively.Praise for the CCSS:"These commentaries are both exegetically sound and spiritually nourishing. They are indispensable tools for preaching, catechesis, evangelization, and other forms of pastoral ministry."--Thomas G. Weinandy, OFM Cap, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops

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