Text to PRAXIS: Hermeneutics and Homiletics in Dialogue Contributor(s): Kuruvilla, Abraham (Author) |
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ISBN: 0567538540 ISBN-13: 9780567538543 Publisher: T&T Clark OUR PRICE: $217.80 Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats Published: May 2009 Annotation: Identifies "pericopal theology" as the bridge between ancient text and modern application and shows how it may be derived and how it functions in the exercise of preaching. |
Additional Information |
BISAC Categories: - Religion | Biblical Studies - General |
Dewey: 251 |
LCCN: 2009280161 |
Series: Library of New Testament Studies |
Physical Information: 0.9" H x 6.5" W x 9.3" (1.10 lbs) 240 pages |
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc. |
Publisher Description: A fundamental issue for preachers of the Bible has always been achieving an approach that is both faithful to the textual intention as well as fitting for the listening audience. What is historical and distant (the text) is, in preaching, made contemporary and near (praxis). Particularly pertinent is how this transaction may be conducted with respect to the self-contained and well-defined quantum of the scriptural text that is regularly employed in liturgical contexts-the pericope. This book answers the question: In a sermon intending to proclaim application from a pericope, what is the hermeneutical basis for moving validly from text to praxis, i.e., with authority and relevance? The concept of theology as a bridge between text and praxis has not been specifically researched or rigorously substantiated. Kuruvilla seeks to do both, utilizing as entrées language philosophy, literary criticism, and a thorough understanding of ordinary language. Drawing from a variety of hermeneutical resources, he establishes pericopal theology as the intermediary between text and praxis. How this theology is discerned from the text and how application may be determined therefrom form the crux of this book. This novel approach lends validity to the movement from text to praxis and promises to be useful for any approach to the biblical text intended to culminate in application. Kuruvilla's approach provides a substantial technical basis for such an operation. Thus the preacher must be a theologian-homiletician. It is the working out of this nomenclature, especially the theologian half of the appellation, that is the essence of this work, uniting as it does in one portfolio the responsibility of negotiating the demands of both hermeneutics and homiletics. |