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Word of God?

The Bible After Modern Scholarship

  • Paperback
  • 160 pages
  • Publisher: SPCK Publishing
  • 14 x 21.6 x 0.9 cm

£11.74

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Keith Ward introduces this volume on the world's greatest ever bestseller by suggesting that the Bible is neither a book dictated by God, as some believe, nor just a set of out-dated taboos and politically slanted histories, as those at the opposite extreme would have it.
Word of God? and Love is His Meaning
Love is His MeaningWord of God?
  • Author

    Keith Ward

  • Book Format

    Paperback

  • Publisher

    SPCK Publishing

  • Published

    January 2010

  • Weight

    191g

  • Page Count

    160

  • Dimensions

    14 x 21.6 x 0.9 cm

  • ISBN

    9780281062119

  • ISBN-10

    0281062110

  • Eden Code

    2548391

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  • TGBS

    The Good Book Stall

    Average rating of0.0

    If you, like me, feel alienated from any kind of fundamentalism, Christian or other, you may find this book speaks to you. Keith Ward continues the broadside against Fundamentalism that he discharged in his earlier book What the Bible Really Teaches (2004). He argues that no interpretation of the Bible can claim to be the ‘correct’ one, neither the fundamentalist one nor even his own. ‘Metaphor’ is a key notion in this book, illustrated with reference to creation, the divine sonship of Jesus, atonement, salvation and the kingdom. Among Ward’s ‘rules’ for reading metaphors are that (i) the statements are not literally true, and (ii) they communicate in an indirect, sometimes cryptic way, open to various interpretations. This means there is great diversity in the Bible. There is also development in many of its ideas. Parts of it are “unduly vindictive and judgmental, when judged in the light of Jesus’ teaching.” Even parts of the New Testament get things wrong. Ward takes morality, the afterlife and justice as examples of this development, devoting one stirring chapter to a ‘Case Study on Retributive and Restorative Justice’. He also coins the memorable phrase, “The positive Gospel of unlimited divine love” adding, “Perhaps the Christian message should be: never adopt a judgmental or vindictive attitude”. Ward makes it clear that the Bible is not an inerrant book dictated by God, containing wholly accurate accounts of human history and sets of moral instructions. That doesn’t stop him concluding that God can use its very diverse documents, “difficult but rewarding to interpret” as they are, to “evoke a sense of divine presence and purpose, and lead its hearers into a closer conscious relationship with the divine mind and heart of Being”, and that it is, “in a carefully qualified sense”, the word of God. Read this book! No need to fear or denigrate the work of biblical scholars again!