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1 & 2 Samuel / David G. Firth

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Apollos Old Testament commentary ; 8Publication details: Nottingham, England : Apollos ; Downers Grove : InterVarsity, c2009Description: 614 pages ; 25 cmISBN:
  • 9780830825080
  • 0830825088
  • 9781844743681
  • 1844743683
Other title:
  • First and Second Samuel
  • 1 and 2 Samuel
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Online version:: 1 & 2 Samuel.Summary: The books of Samuel contain two of the Bible's best known stories--David's encounter with Goliath and his sin with Bathsheba and the murder of Uriah. However, the text does more than just tell stories, particularly of how first Saul and then David became king of Israel and the mistakes both made; it also offers a profoundly theological reflection on this formative part of Israel's history and an artistic telling of it. We are told how Israel's monarchy began: the way this is done points to the interpretation of these events. Thus, in this commentary, David G. Firth takes seriously the narrative techniques employed in and 2 Samuel. Arguing that the books are a carefully constructed, intentional unit for interpretation, he explores the central theme of how the reign of God is worked out in the interplay between king and prophet. --From publisher's description
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Reference Reference SAIACS Reference Section Reference REF 220.7 B167A (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not for loan 041096

Includes bibliographical reference (pages 551-577) and indexes

The books of Samuel contain two of the Bible's best known stories--David's encounter with Goliath and his sin with Bathsheba and the murder of Uriah. However, the text does more than just tell stories, particularly of how first Saul and then David became king of Israel and the mistakes both made; it also offers a profoundly theological reflection on this formative part of Israel's history and an artistic telling of it. We are told how Israel's monarchy began: the way this is done points to the interpretation of these events. Thus, in this commentary, David G. Firth takes seriously the narrative techniques employed in and 2 Samuel. Arguing that the books are a carefully constructed, intentional unit for interpretation, he explores the central theme of how the reign of God is worked out in the interplay between king and prophet. --From publisher's description

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