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How Repentance Became Biblical

Judaism, Christianity, and the Interpretation of Scripture

  • Hardback
  • 336 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
  • 15.5 x 23.9 x 2.3 cm

£80.14

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For scholars and believers seeking deeper understanding

It clarifies the roots of repentance in scripture

You will gain a fresh perspective on faith and tradition

This book explores the origins and significance of repentance in biblical contexts.

How Repentance Became Biblical tells the story of repentance as a concept. Many today, in both secular and religious contexts, assume it to be a natural and inevitable component of our lives. But where did it originate? How did it become so prominent within Western religious traditions and, by extension, contemporary culture? What purposes does it serve? This book identifies repentance as a product of the Hellenistic period, where it was taken up within emerging forms of Judaism and Christianity as a mode of subjective control. Lambert argues that, along with the rise of repentance, a series of interpretive practices, many of which remain in effect to this day, was put into place whereby repentance is read into the Bible and the Bible, especially the Hebrew Bible, or Old Testament, comes to be seen as repentance's source. Ancient Israelite rituals, such as fasting, prayer, and confession, all of which are incorporated later on within various religious communities as forms of penitential discipline, are understood as external signs of internal remorse.
Hebrew terms and phrases, such as the prophetic injunction to "return to YHWH," are read as ancient representations of the concept, repentance. Prophetic literature as a whole is seen as serving a pedagogical purpose, as aiming at the reformation of Israel as a nation. Furthermore, it is assumed that, on the basis of the Bible, sectarians living in the late Second Temple period, from the Dead Sea sect to the early Jesus movement, believed that their redemption depended upon their repentance. In fact, the penitential framework within which the Bible is interpreted tells us the most about our own interpretive tendencies, about how we privilege notions of interiority, autonomy, and virtue. The book develops other frameworks for explaining the biblical phenomena in their ancient contexts, based on alternative views of the body, power, speech, and the divine, and, thereby, offers a new account of repentance's origins.

How Repentance Became Biblical and How Repentance Became Biblical: Judaism, Christianity, and the Interpretation of Scripture
How Repentance Became Biblical: Judaism, Christianity, and the Interpretation of ScriptureHow Repentance Became Biblical

  • Title

    How Repentance Became Biblical

  • Author

    David A. Lambert (assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, University Of North Carolina At Chapel Hill)

  • Book Format

    Hardback

  • Publisher

    Oxford University Press

  • Published

    January 2016

  • Weight

    523g

  • Page Count

    336

  • Dimensions

    15.5 x 23.9 x 2.3 cm

  • ISBN

    9780190212247

  • ISBN-10

    0190212241

  • Eden Code

    4347057

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