Monday, September 11, 2017
Epistemology and Biblical Theology
In 2017, Routledge published Epistemology and Biblical Theology: From the Pentateuch to Mark's Gospel (Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Biblical Criticism) by Dru Johnson. Dru Johnson is an Associate Professor of Biblical and Theological Studies at The King's College in New York City. He is currently a Templeton Research Fellow at the University of St Andrews (Logos Institute); Associate Director for the Templeton Jewish Philosophical Theology Project (Herzl Institute, Jerusalem); Series Editor for Routledge's Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Biblical Criticism monograph series; and co-chair for the Hebrew Bible and Philosophy program unit in the Society of Biblical Literature.
From the publisher's description of Epistemology and Biblical Theology:
Join Dru Johnson, Oliver Crisp, Joshua Blander, and Kevin Vanhoozer for an EPS session, "Engagement with Scripture in Philosophy and Analytic Theology" at the 2017 SBL/AAR annual conference in Boston, November 19th.
From the publisher's description of Epistemology and Biblical Theology:
Dru Johnson's other "Bible and Philosophy" books include Scripture's Knowing and Knowledge by Ritual. See also Johnson's paper here at the EPS website, "A Biblical Nota Bene on Philosophical Inquiry."Epistemology and Biblical Theology pursues a coherent theory of knowledge as described across the Pentateuch and Mark's Gospel. As a work from the emerging field of philosophical criticism, this volume explores in each biblical text both narrative and paraenesis to assess what theory of knowledge might be presumed or advocated and the coherence of that structure across texts. In the Pentateuch and Mark, primacy is placed on heeding an authenticated and authoritative prophet, and then enacting the guidance given in order to see what is being shown in order to know. Erroneous knowing follows the same boundaries: failure to attend to the proper authoritative voice or failure to enact guidance creates mistaken understanding. With a working construct of proper knowing in hand, points of contact with and difficulties for contemporary philosophical epistemologies are suggested. In the end, Michael Polanyi's scientific epistemology emerges as the most commensurable view with knowing as it appears in these foundational biblical texts. Therefore, this book will be of interest to scholars working across the fields of Biblical studies and philosophy. Dru Johnson's other "Bible and Philosophy" books include Scripture's Knowing and Knowledge by Ritual. See also Dru's paper here at the EPS website, "A Biblical Nota Bene on Philosophical Inquiry."
Join Dru Johnson, Oliver Crisp, Joshua Blander, and Kevin Vanhoozer for an EPS session, "Engagement with Scripture in Philosophy and Analytic Theology" at the 2017 SBL/AAR annual conference in Boston, November 19th.
Labels: dru johnson, epistemology, Epistemology and Biblical Theology (book), featured books, gospels, michael polanyi, pentateuch, religious epistemology, scripture, Scripture's Knowing (book)