Joseph's Bones: Understanding the Struggle Between God and Mankind in the BiblePenguin, 15 de mar. de 2007 - 320 páginas “A work of stunning originality . . . Nothing quite like it has appeared in years.”—Jack Miles, author of God: A Biography In this groundbreaking book, Jerome Segal offers a fresh and vigorous reexamination of the oldest part of the Bible. What if we knew nothing about Judaism or Christianity and one day picked up the first six books of the Bible? How could we possibly understand them? Who is God? Who are the Israelites? What is the relationship between God and humanity? Segal maintains that to approach the Bible from this perspective—one framed by the story of the Israelites’ fidelity to Joseph—is to find something unexpected: an account of the human condition that reads like an existential novel about the struggle of mankind against the unpredictable and often unwarranted wrath of God. A radically new way of understanding the Bible and a brilliant exploration of it, Joseph’s Bones is a rarity in Biblical interpretation: brilliant, rigorously argued, and thoroughly original. “Joseph’s Bones makes [an] audacious argument. . . . Reading the Bible as a novel about the struggle between God and humankind, Segal produces a work of interpretation that is itself novelistic in its humanistic vision and emotional force.”—Naomi Seidman, author of Faithful Renderings “Perceptive and intelligent.”—Booklist “Arrestingly original.”—Tikkun “Compelling . . . transforming.”—Forward |
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Página 27
... killed in the final plague, “every firstborn in the land ofEgypt who shall die, from the firstborn of Pharaoh to the firstborn of the slave girl is behind the millstones” (Exodus 11:5). 2. That is, in the Bible, there is nothing to.
... killed in the final plague, “every firstborn in the land ofEgypt who shall die, from the firstborn of Pharaoh to the firstborn of the slave girl is behind the millstones” (Exodus 11:5). 2. That is, in the Bible, there is nothing to.
Página 251
Understanding the Struggle Between God and Mankind in the Bible Jerome M. Segal. 1. Richard Elliott Friedman argues this in Who Wrote the Bible? (New York: Harper & Row, 1987). 4. Judah suggests that the brothers not kill Joseph, but.
Understanding the Struggle Between God and Mankind in the Bible Jerome M. Segal. 1. Richard Elliott Friedman argues this in Who Wrote the Bible? (New York: Harper & Row, 1987). 4. Judah suggests that the brothers not kill Joseph, but.
Página 252
... the Struggle Between God and Mankind in the Bible Jerome M. Segal. 4. Judah suggests that the brothers not kill Joseph, but comes up with the idea of selling him to the Ishmaelites. 5. I return to this question of what God learns.
... the Struggle Between God and Mankind in the Bible Jerome M. Segal. 4. Judah suggests that the brothers not kill Joseph, but comes up with the idea of selling him to the Ishmaelites. 5. I return to this question of what God learns.
Página 308
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Conteúdo
READING WITH FRESH EYES | 273 |
THE MORAL ORDER | 301 |
THE STRUGGLE IN THE DESERT | 372 |
LEVITICUS WITHIN THE NARRATIVE | 411 |
THE LIFE AND TRAGEDY OF MOSES | 433 |
IMPLICATIONS OF THIS READING FOR THE JESUS STORY | 500 |
Reflections on Who Wrote the Bible | 515 |
Outras edições - Ver todos
Joseph's Bones: Understanding the Struggle Between God and Mankind in the Bible Jerome M. Segal Visualização parcial - 2007 |
Joseph's Bones: Understanding the Struggle Between God and Mankind in the Bible Jerome M. Segal Prévia não disponível - 2008 |
Termos e frases comuns
Aaron Abraham anger appears aware become believe Bible Biblical bones Book bring brothers brought Cain calls Canaan carried central chapter clear comes commandments commitment concern covenant created death Deuteronomy direct earlier earth Egypt Egyptians episode evil existence Exodus experience explain fact faith father fear follows forgiveness further Genesis give given God’s gods hand heart holy human important individual innocent instruction intention interpretation Isaac Israel Israelites Jacob Jesus Joseph Joshua kill kind knowledge land laws Leviticus live Lord mankind meaning moral Moses never Numbers offering opens Pharaoh plague possible presented promise protect punishment question reader reference relation remains response says seeks seems seen serve speaks specific story suggests teaching tells things told Torah transformation turn understand wants whole wilderness Yahweh