Inventing Hebrews
Design and Purpose in Ancient Rhetoric
Jason A Whitlark author Michael Wade Martin author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:7th Jun '18
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Inventing Hebrews uncovers a template of arrangement ubiquitous in antiquity as the key to the conundrum of Hebrews' structure and purpose.
Designed for scholars and other advanced students of the Bible and classical rhetorical theory, Inventing Hebrews proposes that the 'disjointed' form of arrangement, a template ubiquitous in antiquity but little discussed in modern biblical studies, holds the key to the longstanding question of Hebrews' structure and purpose.Inventing Hebrews examines a perennial topic in the study of the Letter to the Hebrews, its structure and purpose. Michael Wade Martin and Jason A. Whitlark undertake at thorough synthesis of the ancient theory of invention and arrangement, providing a new account of Hebrews' design. The key to the speech's outline, the authors argue, is in its use of 'disjointed' arrangement, a template ubiquitous in antiquity but little discussed in modern biblical studies. This method of arrangement accounts for the long-observed pattern of alternating epideictic and deliberative units in Hebrews as blocks of narratio and argumentatiorespectively. Thus the 'letter' may be seen as a conventional speech arranged according to the expectations of ancient rhetoric (exordium, narratio, argumentatio, peroratio), with epideictic comparisons of old and new covenant representatives (narratio) repeatedly enlisted in amplification of what may be viewed as the central argument of the speech (argumentatio), the recurring deliberative summons for perseverance. Resolving a long-standing conundrum, this volume offers a hermeneutical tool necessary for interpreting Hebrews, as well as countless other speeches from Greco-Roman antiquity.
'This well-written book is carefully and cogently argued. This book will be most valuable to scholars and advanced students interested in the structure of Hebrews or in the application of classical rhetoric to NT studies in general.' Brian C. Small, Religious Studies Review
ISBN: 9781108429467
Dimensions: 223mm x 146mm x 22mm
Weight: 510g
318 pages