Table of Contents
Author’s Preface
Introduction
List of Abbreviations
Part 1: Readings
1. From Imago to Imagines: The Image(s) of God in Genesis
2. Yhwh’s Poesie: The Gnadenformel, the Book of Exodus, and Beyond
3. Keep/Observe/Do—Carefully—Today! The Rhetoric of Repetition in Deuteronomy
4. Slaves and Rebels: Inscription, Identity, and Time in the Rhetoric of Deuteronomy
5. The Art of Poetry in Psalm 137: Movement, Reticence, Cursing
6. Revisiting Elisha and the Bears: Can Modern Christians Read—That Is, Pray—the “Worst Texts” of the Old Testament?
Part 2: Biblical Theology
7. And These Three Are One: A Trinitarian Critique of Christological Approaches to the Old Testament
8. “Israel, My Child”: The Ethics of a Biblical Metaphor
9. What Would (or Should) Old Testament Theology Look Like If Recent Reconstructions of Israelite Religion Were True?
10. The Old Testament and Participation with God (and/in Christ?): (Re)reading the Life of Moses with Some Help from Gregory of Nyssa
11. Tolkien’s Orcs Meet the Bible’s Canaanites: The Dynamics of Reading Well. . . or Not (Or, How to Critique Scripture and Still Call It Scripture)
12. Docetism, Käsemann, and Christology: Can Historical Criticism Help Christological Orthodoxy (and Other Theology) After All?
Part 3: Practice
13. Is God Always Anything?
14. On Pharaohs: Egyptian and Otherwise
15. Designated Readers: Deuteronomy’s Portrait of the Ideal King—or Is It Preacher?
16. On Priesting
17. Four Thoughts on Preaching and Teaching the Bible—Mostly the Old Testament
18. On Not Bifurcating: Faith and Scholarship in the Life of a Bible Professor
Acknowledgments
Bibliography
Indexes