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From his long and intimately personal love for the Psalms, he touches upon his early church tradition of "simple, irenic piety from the past..." One of those few pages in Bruegge's writings that he piles up both adjectives and adverbs like, "seemingly, utterly beyond me in its richness, concretely in my hands and unprecedented generativity!" When he comes out with creative linguistics and adds the emotion of his spoken words, it is enough to take you back into time and forward into what will surely follow...In his rapidly moving train of thought!
He touches Biblical Authority through the avenures of Inherency, Interpretation, Imagination, Ideology and Inspiration. In one of his first classes at Columbia Seminary when I was present he used these five huge words beginning with I's. That immediately hooked me into signing on for his Survey of Old Testament and next his Theology of the Old Testament.
Brueggemann's first Chapter lives up to the Preface comments by William Sloan Coffin...where he introduces Prof Blount and then Prof Placher and finally in more detail Prof Bruegge. I cannot say enough good things about this little gem of three chapters and delightful preface of Bill Coffin's. When you have heard these two similarly dramatic speakers then you surely will want to digest their magically miraculous, wondrous descriptive words. Gratefully, Retired Chaplain Fred W Hood
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Prof. Brueggemann engages one's creative imagination to describe the "generative power of biblical texts to summon and evoke new life." He considers "preaching as a poetic construal of an alternative world...whose purpose is to cherish and open the truth."
My review is a contrast, even unnecessary alongside the comments of Fred B. Craddock on the book jacket. "Here we have what we have come to expect from Walter Brueggemann; a fired imagination, harnessed and disciplined...offering what the gospel offers, that is an alternative world."
Brueggemann creates four possibilities for healing within the biblical texts in his chapter entitled, Numbness and Ache or The Strangeness of Healing: 1) We cannot alone work our own healing. It requires a priest. 2)Healing requires the submission of some thing of value. 3) Healing is the enactment of atonement... 4) The act of putting away the poison of guilt is done not by ourselves but on our behalf by the priest...
My prayer is for these poetic thouhts to move you to be challenged by our inspired Old Testament prophet-poet-preacher, who is totally at home in the New Testament...I Dare You!
Chaplain Fred W. Hood
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From Chap 4: Bodied Faith and Body Politic: "In older, seemingly better days the Bible spoke with a single voice concerning faith and morals... For over a century the dominance of historical-critical work has relativized the absolute voice of the Bible. His footnote, also uttered in Class: "The critique of historical-critism by religious conservatives, in my judgment is correct." Next is a surprise: "Historical criticism was not especially interested in theological interpretation!" (This is news to me.)
Before getting to Chap 4, I was struck by Bruegge's emphasis on, "The issue that Israel and Israel's God (and those who continue this line of reflection) must always face concerns pain..." He pursues this theme in the next two essays: The Embrace of Pain; The Rhetoric of Hurt & Hope: "What is it about the Old Testament that is so odd and disruptive and restless that refuses to behave itself...?" Soon after those utterances he explains this question, "that rhetorical world is odd and crucial because it mediates ethical reflection through 'disclosures of hurt and articulations of hope.' "
My favorite essays, also longest are 7, Old Testament Theology as a Particular Conversation; No 8, The Crisis and Promise of Presence in Israel. A favorite picture of his growing theology is an "on-going conversation" with the OT or other scholars... Eichrodt and von Rad. Plus, "the aniconic character of Israel's God implies more than an absence of images." He refers to the value of metaphors from such scholars as Sallie McFague. His favorite nouns besides conversation are speech, utterance, words of rhetorical questions. His opening prayers for each Class are filled with verbs like brood, command, confess, plead, praise, thank, yearn...also, often coupled in faith, generosity, love, pleasure, purity, silence, trust...evidence of his grouping in fives and sevens.
Since most of these essays have come from his years at Columbia, those who have studied there have watched his authentic, steady, consistent growth and mellowing into an ever-ready approachable Gentle-man! I would not have gotten so much out of this year's Old Testament Theology without his incredible, clearly-stated, expositions in related, on-going conversations... favoring an older student!
Retired Chaplain Fred W Hood
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The last five chapters of the book ("God in Human Form"; "God Suffers Because"; "God Suffers With"; "God Suffers For"; "Prophet, Theophany, and the Suffering of God") are especially insightful, beautifully complementing Abraham Joshua Heschel's thoughts on Divine pathos in _The Prophets_.
The concluding chapter--"Prophet, Theophany, and the Suffering of God"--is especially powerful. Today, the Prophets are mined primarily for eschatalogical and/or apologetic insight-- oftentimes, sadly, to the detriment of other, no less vital matters, such as the pathos of God. So very much may be learned from these remarkable souls, in whose words one cannot help but hear (i.e., apart from any prior philosophical convictions!) God weeping and raging, and not only for His chosen people, the Jews, but for all mankind and even the earth itself, its very flora and fauna (see, for instance, "God as Mourner" [pp. 130-36]).
The very idea of such intense Divine vulnerability is staggering, not to say liberating: No longer is one faced with an impassive God Who sits on high, micromanaging every last detail of history to His chosen ends; one sees how very _gracious_ God is, how He has entered into dynamic relations with the world in such a fashion the He, too, may suffer pain, rejection, abuse. As Fretheim makes abundantly clear, though, the ways of God are not the ways of man: Where a human would become bitter or callous or simply remove himself/herself from such suffering, God remains ever faithful, ever merciful. Even when judgement ultimately falls, one cannot divorce God's wrath from His pathos. Truly, His compassion fails not!
I cannot recommend this book too highly. It is essential reading for any who wish to enter into genuine intimacy with God.
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Lately, in his OT Survey, I wrote a few snatches of his opening addresses to: "You, You, You giver of Life; You who are the One Sovereign Judge, King, Lawyer, Counselor...O God as we watch powers rise and fall, We watch ourselves, we watch and see the World. You who comes late and sometimes soon... Come quickly Lord Jesus!"
My thoughts often return to his opening prayers in every class. My wish for all of last year: "Why does not someone publish them?" So now we have many of them. From 1976: "You are the voice we can scarely hear..." From 1992, "Healing sovereign God, overmatch our resistant ears..." How many sparkling ways that he creatively addresses the Living Personal God! In these few weeks I have used this Jewel of Prayers, I have been particularly struck by the first group: "And then you; You...and therefore us; For how you hope; The other side of the street; Our true home." The second section that I have re-read is "A people with many secrets," and the 11th one, "The God we would rather have."
Dedicated to "a long stream of treasured colleagues of 25 years at Eden Theological Seminary and 17 years at Columbia...with thanks and appreciation." When I purchased this treasure in the School's Book Store, I first saw it in the hands of one of his friends from the Seminary Offices. Now the one who prays to the "Liberator, Redeemer, Emancipator..." will continue to be the one I know who includes his students in his caring compassion!
Retired Chaplain Fred W Hood
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In fact, this book is probbaly the most quotable Brueggemann to date (I've read about a dozen of his books).
Among the discussions: *The "dialectic" between PRAISE and COMPLAINT in the Christian life; *The concept of "othering" as the risky, demanding, dynamic process of relating to one who is not us; *Approaching God as EROS
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