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Parables After Jesus

Their Imaginative Receptions Across Two Millennia

Parables After Jesus

Their Imaginative Receptions Across Two Millennia

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Hardback

£36.00

Publisher: Baylor University Press
ISBN: 9781481314107
Number of Pages: 320
Published: 30/12/2020
Width: 15.2 cm
Height: 22.8 cm
Over the centuries, some interpreters have attempted to explain what parables mean. Other interpreters have endeavored to articulate what parables do-how they "work" rhetorically or poetically. With the parables of Jesus, however, more is required, because Jesus' parables have always demanded a response from readers or hearers. Interpreters, therefore, should also seek to ascertain what parables want, because the parables of Jesus not only stake claims and demand responses; they also challenge their hearers to act. This challenge reverberates across the centuries, calling us continually back to the texts to discover anew what these distinctive and wonderful stories show us about what it means to be human and the ways in which Jesus urges us to follow God in word and deed.

The Parables after Jesus is the first book to explore in a comprehensive way the "afterlives" of the parable tradition-how people have interpreted, been influenced by, and applied Jesus' enigmatic and compelling parables in a multitude of ways, perspectives, eras, contexts, and media. Interpretation is never a solitary endeavor, for each interpreter stands on the shoulders of previous interpreters, continually in dialogue with other interpretations, past and present. Gowler's reception history discusses more than fifty imaginative receptions of Jesus' parables, selected from two millennia of parable interpretation-from those who have dominated discussions to often ignored or suppressed voices. From this we see how the use of Jesus' parables affects society and culture and how powerfully parables have challenged-and continue to challenge-people's hearts, minds, and imaginations.

  • List of Illustrations
  • Preface
  • Abbreviations
  • Introduction
  • 1. The Afterlives of Jesus's Parables in Antiquity (to ca. 550 CE)
  • Irenaeus
  • The Gospel of Philip
  • Clement of Alexandria
  • Tertullian
  • Origen
  • John Chrysostom
  • Augustine
  • Macrina the Younger
  • Ephrem the Syrian
  • The Good Shepherd in Early Christian Art
  • Oil Lamp
  • Roman Catacombs
  • Dura-Europos House Church
  • Illuminations from the Rossano Gospels
  • Byzantine Mosaics, Christ Separating Sheep from Goats, Sant'Apollinare Nuovo (Ravenna, Italy)
  • Romanos the Melodist
  • 2. The Afterlives of Jesus's Parables in the Middle Ages (ca. 550–1500 CE)
  • Gregory the Great
  • Sahih al-Bukhari
  • Wazo of Liège
  • The Golden Gospels of Echternach
  • The Laborers in the Vineyard
  • The Wicked Tenants
  • The Great Dinner
  • The Rich Man and Lazarus
  • Theophylact
  • Hildegard of Bingen
  • Chartres Cathedral
  • Bonaventure
  • Thomas Aquinas
  • John Gower
  • Antonia Pulci
  • Albrecht Dürer
  • 3. The Afterlives of Jesus's Parables in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries
  • Martin Luther
  • Anna Jansz of Rotterdam
  • John Calvin
  • John Maldonatus
  • William Shakespeare
  • Domenico Fetti
  • George Herbert
  • Roger Williams
  • Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn
  • John Bunyan
  • 4. The Afterlives of Jesus's Parables in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
  • William Blake
  • Søren Kierkegaard
  • Frederick Douglass
  • Fanny Crosby
  • Leo Tolstoy
  • John Everett Millais
  • Emily Dickinson
  • Charles Haddon Spurgeon
  • Adolf Jülicher
  • 5. The Afterlives of Jesus's Parables in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries
  • Thomas Hart Benton
  • Parables and the Blues: Rev. Robert Wilkins
  • Flannery O'Connor
  • Martin Luther King Jr.
  • Godspell
  • Two Latin American Receptions
  • The Peasants of Solentiname
  • Elsa Tamez
  • David Flusser
  • Octavia Butler
  • Thich Nhat Hanh
  • Conclusion: What Do Parables Want?
  • Appendix: Descriptions of the Parables Cited in the Interpretations
  • Works Cited
  • Scripture Index
  • Subject Index

David B. Gowler

David B. Gowler is Pierce Professor of Religion at Oxford College of Emory University, Senior Faculty Fellow at the Center for Ethics at Emory University, and Co-Editor of Emory Studies in Early Christianity. He is the author of  Host, Guest, Enemy, and Friend: Portraits of the Pharisees in Luke and ActsWhat Are They Saying about the Parables?What Are They Saying about the Historical Jesus?James through the Centuries; and  The Parables after Jesus: Their Imaginative Receptions across Two Millennia. His books have been translated into French, Korean, Indonesian, and Japanese. He has also published dozens of articles, book chapters, and book reviews, and is the editor or coeditor of over thirty books.