The Authority of Scripture's Form and Content for Faith's Understanding and Theological Judgment
First Statement of Responsibility
Kevin J. Vanhoozer
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Place of Publication, Distribution, etc.
Leiden
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
Brill
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
This essay asks whether the Bible's authority is a matter of (propositional) content as well as (poetic) form. It extends Martha Nussbaum's work on the importance of literature for ethics by examining the effect of the "ancient quarrel" between philosophers and poets on the relationship of biblical literature to theology. Biblical authority involves not only revealed information but also large-scale patterns of information processing, like narrative, a cognitive strategy for grasping meaningful wholes. Scripture's literary forms perform a pedagogical function, helping disciples to make right judgments about the theodrama, and hence serve as a means of sapiential formation. This essay asks whether the Bible's authority is a matter of (propositional) content as well as (poetic) form. It extends Martha Nussbaum's work on the importance of literature for ethics by examining the effect of the "ancient quarrel" between philosophers and poets on the relationship of biblical literature to theology. Biblical authority involves not only revealed information but also large-scale patterns of information processing, like narrative, a cognitive strategy for grasping meaningful wholes. Scripture's literary forms perform a pedagogical function, helping disciples to make right judgments about the theodrama, and hence serve as a means of sapiential formation.