Prophets and Proverbs: More Studies in Old Testament Poetry and Biblical Religion.By Anthony R. Ceresko. Quezon City Quezon City, city (1990 pop. 1,669,776), former capital of the Republic of the Philippines, central Luzon, a part of the Manila metropolitan area. A suburb of Manila, taken separately it would be the most populous city in the Philippines. , Philippines: Claretian Publications, 2002. Pp. xiv + 160. Paper, n.p. Ceresko's book, PROPHETS AND PROVERBS Proverbs, book of the Bible. It is a collection of sayings, many of them moral maxims, in no special order. The teaching is of a practical nature; it does not dwell on the salvation-historical traditions of Israel, but is individual and universal based on the : MORE STUDIES IN OLD TESTAMENT POETRY AND BIBLICAL RELIGION, is a collection of eleven articles previously published in various journals and is the second anthology of his writings (the first one is PSALMS Psalms (sämz) or Psalter (sôl`tər), book of the Bible, a collection of 150 hymnic pieces. Since the last centuries B.C., this book has been the chief hymnal of Jews, and subsequently, of Christians. AND SAGES: STUDIES IN OLD TESTAMENT POETRY AND RELIGION, published in 1994). Most of these articles are published in journals with a limited audience, in India and the Philippines, two countries where he taught as a seminary seminary Educational institution, usually for training in theology. In the U.S. the term was formerly also used to refer to institutions of higher learning for women, often teachers' colleges. professor. He states that his purpose for compiling the book is to share the work with a wider audience than is available in India or the Philippines (p. xi). The themes of the eleven articles, each one a chapter, are quite varied and are much broader than the prophets or poetry suggested by the book's title, such as covenant, ecology, and the Indian Church. Yet, most of the chapters tend to have a very specific focus (examining a specific passage, such as Genesis 1:26-28 in chapter 8) and are disjointed in relation to each other. The first two chapters focus on two prophetic passages, one from Isaiah (52:13-53:12) and another from Amos (1:3-2:16). Chapters 3, 5, 7, 9, and 11 incorporate biblical wisdom literature to some degree; yet most of the references come from the Wisdom of Ben Sirach. Chapters 4 and 7 claim to be about the Indian Church; however, chapter 7 actually has little to do with the Indian Church beyond the title ("The Identity of the Indian Church: A Biblical Perspective") and one sentence in the last paragraph (p. 96). Chapter 6 deals with Israel's origins, using Joseph Callaway's discovery of a jar handle at Raddana inscribed in·scribe tr.v. in·scribed, in·scrib·ing, in·scribes 1. a. To write, print, carve, or engrave (words or letters) on or in a surface. b. To mark or engrave (a surface) with words or letters. with the name "Ahilud" as a launching point. Chapter 10 discusses the Hebrew terms for blind and lame in 2 Samuel 5:8b (but the chapter actually focuses on the larger passage 5:6-10). The book has an author index and an index of scriptural scrip·tur·al adj. 1. Of or relating to writing; written. 2. often Scriptural Of, relating to, based on, or contained in the Scriptures. references, both of which will be helpful to the reader. I find PROPHETS AND PROVERBS to be exactly what Ceresko intended--a collection of articles he has written since 1994 and previously published in various journals. They are not connected by theme or by any discernable reason except perhaps that they contain an emphasis toward social concerns and Liberation Theology liberation theology, belief that the Christian Gospel demands "a preferential option for the poor," and that the church should be involved in the struggle for economic and political justice in the contemporary world—particularly in the Third World. . One chapter does not lead into the next; thus they can be read independently. The language is easy to read, so that it should not be a problem for a layperson lay·per·son n. A layman or a laywoman. Noun 1. layperson - someone who is not a clergyman or a professional person layman, secular to understand the message that Ceresko is trying to convey. Most of the articles, however, are too elementary for the scholar, since they include much general information when claiming, by chapter title, to look at a more specific topic. Assigning an audience to the book is difficult. The disjointedness dis·joint·ed adj. 1. Separated at the joints. 2. Out of joint; dislocated. 3. Lacking order or coherence: disjointed sentences. of the book does not lend it to classroom use, nor does its subject matter seem appropriate for someone looking to learn more about prophets, proverbs, or the Wisdom Literature. Perhaps an appropriate reader would be someone who wishes to examine a Liberation Theology/social justice approach to selected biblical passages or a person interested in the work of Anthony Ceresko. Terry W. Eddinger Houston Graduate School of Theology High Point, NC 27262 |
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