How to Read the Bible - James L. Kugel

How to Read the Bible

By James L. Kugel

  • Release Date: 2012-05-01
  • Genre: Bible Studies

Description

James Kugel’s essential introduction and companion to the Bible combines modern scholarship with the wisdom of ancient interpreters for the entire Hebrew Bible.

As soon as it appeared, How to Read the Bible was recognized as a masterwork, “awesome, thrilling” (The New York Times), “wonderfully interesting, extremely well presented” (The Washington Post), and “a tour de force...a stunning narrative” (Publishers Weekly). Now, this classic remains the clearest, most inviting and readable guide to the Hebrew Bible around—and a profound meditation on the effect that modern biblical scholarship has had on traditional belief.

Moving chapter by chapter, Harvard professor James Kugel covers the Bible’s most significant stories—the Creation of the world, Adam and Eve, Cain and Abel, Noah and the flood, Abraham and Sarah, Jacob and his wives, Moses and the exodus, David’s mighty kingdom, plus the writings of Isaiah, Jeremiah, and the other prophets, and on to the Babylonian conquest and the eventual return to Zion.

Throughout, Kugel contrasts the way modern scholars understand these events with the way Christians and Jews have traditionally understood them. The latter is not, Kugel shows, a naïve reading; rather, it is the product of a school of sophisticated interpreters who flourished toward the end of the biblical period. These highly ideological readers sought to put their own spin on texts that had been around for centuries, utterly transforming them in the process. Their interpretations became what the Bible meant for centuries and centuries—until modern scholarship came along. The question that this book ultimately asks is: What now? As one reviewer wrote, Kugel’s answer provides “a contemporary model of how to read Sacred Scripture amidst the oppositional pulls of modern scholarship and tradition.”

Reviews

  • A Guide to the Perplexed

    5
    By deejaynymets
    James Kugel’s “How to Read the Bible” is an excellent guide for the lay reader (and here I include myself) to both the classical and modern approaches to reading and understanding the Hebrew Bible. It compares and contrasts the assumptions underlying the traditional method with that of contemporary scholarship, and concludes that while these approaches are in some ways irreconcilable, they also inform each other. Kugel provides a basis for criticism of the classical understanding without finding in that criticism grounds for disposing of a way of an interpretation that has served for millennia as the basis of two great religions. Most importantly it highlights the futility of the search for the true, “original“ meaning of the Bible, noting that ancient interpreters, beginning in the last few centuries before the Common Era, had already moved beyond this limited view. It’s a long read, but a worthwhile one.
  • Extraordinary Research

    5
    By GigaPan
    Update: I grabbed a copy off of iBooks at 7AM (overslept) and have noticed that the errata has been fixed, so the eBook is better ... I am very happy having this version now on my new iPad ... Actually, a ten-star reading experience. ================== I have a hard copy, which is a treasure since it is signed by Professor Kugel. I assure you that I will be buying this eBook come 12:01AM, May 1, so that I can immerse myself deeper into his excellent study of the Hebrew Bible.

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