The Scripture and Hermeneutics Seminar, 25th Anniversary
4 contributors - Hardback
£26.00
Craig Bartholomew (MA, Potchefstroom University, PhD, Bristol University) is professor of philosophy and biblical studies at Redeemer University College in Ancaster, Ontario, Canada. He is the author of Reading Ecclesiastes: Old Testament Exegesis and Hermeneutical Theory. He has also edited In the Fields of the Lord: A Calvin Served Reader and co-edited Christ and Consumerism: A Critical Analysis of the Spirit of the Age. He is the series editor for the Scripture and Hermeneutics Series. David J. H. Beldman (PhD, University of Bristol) is Associate Professor of Religion and Theology at Redeemer University. He is an Old Testament scholar with an interest in historical narrative, wisdom, and the Pentateuch. He has published a number of essays, three books on Judges, including?a commentary (Eerdmans, 2020) and a popular?introduction (Lexham, 2017), and co-edited Hearing the Old Testament: Listening for God's Address (Eerdmans, 2012) and A Classified Bibliography on Ecclesiastes?(T&T Clark, 2019). Amber Bowen (PhD, University of Aberdeen) is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Redeemer University in Ancaster, Ontario. Co-editor of the forthcoming volume, Theology and Black Mirror, Bowen has also published essays on Søren Kierkegaard, Michel Henry, Jean-Yves Lacoste, and other topics in phenomenological approaches to philosophy of religion in The International Journal of Philosophy and Theology, Religions, and The Journal of Religious Ethics. She is currently working on a book dealing with postcritical hermeneutics that is being funded by a grant from the Templeton Foundation as part of the Widening Horizons in Philosophical Theology project at the University of Saint Andrews. William Olhausen studied theology at Wycliffe Hall in Oxford and has been ordained in the Anglican Church since 1998.? Since 2011, he has served as a parish minister in the Diocese of Dublin, Ireland.? Since 2014 he has been theological adviser to the Archbishop of Dublin.? He holds a PhD in hermeneutics from Liverpool University and is a part-time member of faculty at the Church of Ireland Theological Institute.? He is also a committee member of the Scripture and Hermeneutics Seminar and a trustee of the Kirby Laing Centre for Public Theology in Cambridge.