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The theology of the book of Jeremiah / Walter Brueggemann.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Old Testament theologyPublication details: New York : Cambridge University Press, �2007.Description: 1 online resource (xviii, 213 pages)ISBN:
  • 0511257449 (ebook)
  • 113916726X (ebook)
  • 9780511257445 (ebook)
  • 9781139167260 (ebook)
  • 0511255853
  • 9780511255854
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Theology of the book of Jeremiah.DDC classification:
  • 224.206 23
Online resources:
Contents:
Critical access to the Book of Jeremiah -- The theology of the Book of Jeremiah -- The place and function of the Book of Jeremiah within the Old Testament -- The continuing influence of the Book of Jeremiah.
Summary: The Book of Jeremiah, second of the three major prophets, is immensely complex. Its different interpretive voices stretch across several generations and do not cohere into an easily identifiable and uniform theology. Instead, in both poetry and prose, the Book of Jeremiah witnesses an ongoing conversation among different advocates concerning the crisis of Babylon's expansion and Jerusalem's demise. In this volume, Walter Brueggemann elucidates these various voices in the context of Judah's commitment to the rule of the one God, Yhwh. This messy interface of the theological and political constitutes the primal challenge of the Book of Jeremiah, and Brueggemann shows how the book asserts that God continues to be similarly and disturbingly operative in the affairs of the world. In this way, contemporary crises such as American imperialism and religiously inspired terrorism are shown to be dislocations with ancient antecedents, but dislocations that continue to invite readers to new futures that combine divine agency and human inventiveness rooted in faithfulness. --From publisher's description.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
E-Book E-Book Reformational Study Centre General library 224.206 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available

Includes bibliographical references and indexes.

Critical access to the Book of Jeremiah -- The theology of the Book of Jeremiah -- The place and function of the Book of Jeremiah within the Old Testament -- The continuing influence of the Book of Jeremiah.

The Book of Jeremiah, second of the three major prophets, is immensely complex. Its different interpretive voices stretch across several generations and do not cohere into an easily identifiable and uniform theology. Instead, in both poetry and prose, the Book of Jeremiah witnesses an ongoing conversation among different advocates concerning the crisis of Babylon's expansion and Jerusalem's demise. In this volume, Walter Brueggemann elucidates these various voices in the context of Judah's commitment to the rule of the one God, Yhwh. This messy interface of the theological and political constitutes the primal challenge of the Book of Jeremiah, and Brueggemann shows how the book asserts that God continues to be similarly and disturbingly operative in the affairs of the world. In this way, contemporary crises such as American imperialism and religiously inspired terrorism are shown to be dislocations with ancient antecedents, but dislocations that continue to invite readers to new futures that combine divine agency and human inventiveness rooted in faithfulness. --From publisher's description.