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Religious Responses to Political Crises in Jewish and Christian Tradition

Religious Responses to Political Crises in Jewish and Christian Tradition

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Hardback

£170.00

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN: 9780567028129
Number of Pages: 188
Published: 06/08/2008
This book continues a series of volumes containing the papers read at an annual conference held in turn by Tel Aviv and Bochum in the course of a co-operation between the Lester and Sally Entin Faculty of Humanities, Chaim Rosenberg School of Jewish Studies, the Department of Bible of Tel Aviv University and the Faculty of Protestant Theology in the University of the Ruhr, Bochum, since 1985. As a collection the book focuses on the important role religious views have played in critical moments during Jewish and Christian history. It argues for the significance that the role religious beliefs play in political and economic decision-making and the formation of worldviews; as well as demonstrating common convictions held by both Jewish and Christians that can be used as a foundation to find similar answers to actual problems. Focusing on the conference held in March 2005 at Tel Aviv, the book contains a collected biography of the literature quoted as well as a list of standard abbreviations.
Part I. The Bible and the Biblical Period; 1. Frank Polak, "Samuel and the Memory of the Religious Opposition to the Instauration of the Monarchy"; 2. Henning Graf Reventlow, "A Religious Alternative to a Political Response to a Severe Political Crisis. King Ahas and the Prophet Isaiah"; 3. Yair Hoffman, "Patterns of Religious Response to National Crisis In the Hebrew Bible and Some Methodological Reflections"; 4. Dr. Edward Greenstein, "The Book of Lamentations: Response to Destruction or Ritual of Rebuilding?"; 5. Oded Lipschits, "Nehemiah's Wall: Religious and Sociological Aspects"; Part II. The Postbiblical Period; 1. Bilha Nitzan, "The Reality and Hopes of the Qumran Community as Response to Crises in Second Temple Judaism"; 2. Elke Toenges, "The Image of God as Father as a Response to Political Crises in the First Century B.C.E."; 3. Vered Noam, "The Disappearance of the Divine Spirit or a Miraculous Victory? Opposing Religious Interpretations of the Same Event"; 4. Aharon Oppenheimer, "Ethical and Halakhic Responses to the Persecutions following the Bar Kokhba Revolt"; Part III. The Medieval Period; 1. Meira Polliack, "Exegetical Dimensions of Religious Crisis in Mediaval Judaism: The Cases of Karaite and Andalusian Biblical Exegesis; Part IV. The Modern Period; 1. Christian Link, "How Theology Coped with the Crisis of the First World War"; 2. Christofer Frey, "Political Religion, Political Theology, and the Doctrine of the Two Kingdoms"; 3. Franz Heinrich Beyer, "'Silence' and 'Sensiibility for Transcendence' - Observations on the Language of Architecture and Art in Outstanding Rooms of Present Times".

Henning Graf Reventlow, Professor Yair Hoffman

Henning Graf Reventlow is Professor Emeritus of Old Testament Exegesis and Theology, Faculty of Protestant Theology, University of the Ruhr, Bochum, Germany. Yair Hoffman is Professor of Bible in the Department of Bible at Tel Aviv University, Israel.

Mention New Testament Abstracts, Vol. 53 No. 1, 2009

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