W. H. Jr. Bellinger - Introducing Old Testament Theology: Creation, Covenant, and Prophecy in the Divine-Human Relationship
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For a generation, Bill Bellinger has been at the forefront of our shared scholarship on the book of Psalms. Now, near the end of his teaching-scholarly career, he has moved out to a most ambitious undertaking in this book. The hard work of Old Testament theology is elementally to find a model or paradigm that can account for most of the textual material. Bellinger proposes a model that is not unlike a three-legged stool, offered in the parts of creation, covenant, and prophetic proclamation. It is of special interest that Bellinger finds his three accents in the book of Psalms, the text he knows best. In articulating this three-pronged model, Bellinger brings the wisdom of his many years of study. It is clear from this work that the enterprise of Old Testament theology is well, healthy, and demanding. Bellingers discussion is sure to evoke new explorations and focus attention on canonical matters and the mystery of divine-human interaction that is definitional for the scriptural tradition.
Walter Brueggemann , Columbia Theological Seminary (emeritus)
Bellinger (who knows his way around the Bible) here presents a shape for Old Testament theology that is founded on, if not centered in, the book of Psalms. The key, Bellinger suggests, is to stay as close as is humanly possible to the perspective the Hebrew text articulates about God and divine-human engagement. He then proceeds to do exactly that by working through the main units and books of the Old Testament, assessing the parts in light of the whole and its larger structure. In the end, Bellinger identifies a kind of three-legged stool, with creation theology, covenant theology, and prophetic theology all supporting a seat that is nothing less than salvation itself. I am confident that this book will prove eminently useful in a wide range of courses on the Old Testament and its theology.
Brent A. Strawn , Duke University
Bellinger offers an innovative approach to an Old Testament theology. First, the three-legged stool analogy of creation, covenant theology, and prophetic tradition provides readers with tangible hooks on which to hang the seemingly myriad theological ideas present in the Older Testament. And second, using the Psalter as a starting point for exploring this stool provides a superb contextual focus for beginning the study. This volume will be a valuable resource for professors, students, and pastors.
Nancy L. deClaiss-Walford , McAfee School of Theology, Mercer University
Just as writing an Old Testament theology has been deemed a futile exercise, Bellinger offers an engaging and elegant introduction that deftly navigates the Older Testaments diversity and interconnections. Bellingers judicious exegetical insights are matched by his keen conceptual thinkinga perfect combination for a theological introduction. Bellinger has turned a lost cause into a just cause.
William P. Brown , Columbia Theological Seminary
Reading with the grain and using text-centered approaches, Bellinger invites readers to ponder select theological ideas that he draws out from his reading of Older Testament texts. The volume reinforces the point that readers, grounded in their social locations, create meanings for biblical texts and that all theological content needs to be assessed critically and hermeneutically. The volume elicits questions: What constitutes Old Testament theology? Whose theology is being presented? How is such theology to be understood in the context of the twenty-first-century globalized world?
Carol J. Dempsey , University of Portland
Finding a shape for Old Testament theology without allowing that theology to shape the Old Testament is the present challenge of the discipline. We need ways of doing Old Testament theology that have a sense of their own shape and can enter a dialogue with other aspects of Old Testament study without trying to encompass all of them, and this is what Bellingers work offers. His elegant presentation of creation, covenant, and prophecy keeps the movement of the Old Testaments narrative in view while attending to the complexity and diversity of its literary components. His definition of salvation as integrity of life provides an expansive horizon for viewing the ways texts in the Old Testament engage contemporary questions.
Mark McEntire , Belmont University
This offering on Old Testament theology is a gift of tradition, of scholarly history, and of current creativity. Bellinger mines the historic conversation on what the words Old Testament and theology mean when they are connected by reminding us of the field of study and the way Scripture leads us into a view of God that illuminates faith. His definitions and examples make the book worth the read, even if one believes they already know Old Testament theology. Let this book, then, be a reintroduction from different vantage points. I hope professors will take it up, offer it to their students, and lean into his creative thinking and expansive grace as he leads us through the text with a paradigm for how to engage the First Testaments words about its God. The book is a gift worth exploring.
Valerie Bridgeman , Methodist Theological School in Ohio
2022 by William H. Bellinger Jr.
Published by Baker Academic
a division of Baker Publishing Group
PO Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287
www.bakeracademic.com
Ebook edition created 2022
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any meansfor example, electronic, photocopy, recordingwithout the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
ISBN 978-1-4934-2055-1
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible, copyright 1989 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Baker Publishing Group publications use paper produced from sustainable forestry practices and post-consumer waste whenever possible.
I dedicate this volume, with gratitude, to my colleagues in the Department of Religion at Baylor University and to Dr. Stephen Breck Reid, professor of Christian Scriptures at George W. Truett Theological Seminary, Baylor University, for his friendship and ongoing dialogue with my scholarly work.
Endorsements
Half Title Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Preface
Introduction
1. Beginnings
2. A Shape for Old Testament Theology
3. Pentateuch
4. Historical Books
5. Psalms
6. Wisdom
7. Prophecy
Conclusion
Bibliography
Subject Index
Scripture Index
Back Cover
R eaders of this volume are likely those with an interest in the Bible and in particular what the Bible says about God and about faith. The volume will likely find a place in college and seminary classrooms and so as part of the academic study of the Bible. Biblical studies include a variety of perspectives on the Bible, such as historical background or connections and literary questions about the text and how it came to be. Readers may have some background in such academic endeavors with the Bible and now be prepared to take on another area of inquiryOld Testament theology. The term theology literally means a word about God. This area of study typically embraces that in a broad way to talk about faith and the divine-human relationship and implications thereof. In traditional biblical study, attention to the theological dimensions of biblical texts has often been seen as the crowning task of the discipline. This volume will summon the readers experience with the Old Testament and with theology to explore their relationships. The emphasis will be on the Protestant canon.
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