The End of the Scroll. Herold Weiss

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Название The End of the Scroll
Автор произведения Herold Weiss
Жанр Религия: прочее
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Издательство Религия: прочее
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781631994951



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      Praise for The End of the Scroll

      Herold Weiss’ The End of the Scroll offers non-specialists a highly readable and impeccably researched study of biblical apocalyptic literature. Drawing on a lifetime of scholarly immersion in biblical literature, Weiss traces the history of apocalyptic thought, its rise in ancient Israel and its endurance over centuries among Jews and Christians of antiquity. Biblical writers recycled the counsel of their predecessors by refashioning the old to meet the new in response to tragic human conditions in their own time. Weiss’s account of these ancient reinterpretations moves through the biblical books from Israelite prophets to the Book of Revelation, rewarding the reader again and again with illuminating insights. He also provides a very helpful analysis of the use of biblical apocalyptic texts by subsequent generations, from scholars in Renaissance Rome to twenty-first century evangelical interpretations of the signs of the times. In almost every case, these later interpreters have misunderstood the intent of biblical apocalyptic thinking by assuming that its purpose was to predict the future. The ancient apocalypticists, Weiss argues, were not invested in predictions. They described their hopes for God’s future in order to encourage the faithful in the present, not to foster obsession with timetables. Weiss invites his readers to recover this original intent of the biblical apocalyptic imagination by using their own imaginations to encourage faithful living in the present. Any student of biblical literature who is interested in the historical development of apocalyptic and its interpretation will be richly rewarded by this book.

      Charles H. Cosgrove, Ph.D.

      Professor of Early Christian Literature

      Garrett Evangelical Theological Seminary

      For the pastor who wants to bring clarity to the confusion that accompanies the hysteria promoted by those who act as harbingers of the “Last Days,” this book will come as a welcome relief. Dr. Weiss puts apocalyptic in its historical context, not as a map to the future, but as a call to faithfulness for its audience during their times of distress. Weiss also traces the many failures of attempting to bring the apocalyptic messages into the present. In the process, the books of the Old and New Testaments will no longer be useful for “end of days” fodder. Apocalyptic then becomes a friend of today by encouraging faithful living now after the manner of the sages of old.

      Rev. Steven F. Kindle, Faith on the Edge Podcast

      Retired United Church of Christ Pastor

      Herold Weiss is a steady and insightful guide into the sometimes puzzling world of Jewish and Christian apocalyptic literature. He is remarkable in his ability to make complex ideas accessible, to explain how texts work, and to show both how and why the tradition develops and changes over time. Given the importance of apocalyptic thinking in the development of the Christian tradition and its enduring influence, this book ought to be required reading.

      Rubén R. Dupertuis, Ph.D.

      Associate Professor of Religion and Chair

      Department of Religion, Trinity University

      Herold Weiss’ End of the Scroll is a tour de force of biblical and extra-canonical scholarship on the apocalypse. I found Weiss’ text lively and captivating in its depth and relevance to our current national and global crises. This book is solid scholarship and yet accessible to educated laypersons as well as to pastors and academics. While primarily focusing on scripture, Weiss also connects the apocalyptic literature of scripture with the current popular interest in apocalyptic and end times theology. Weiss reminds us that apocalyptic imagery involves much more than charting the end of the world, but summons persons to live faithfully amid the challenges of their time. Apocalyptic inspires us to trust God’s future in times of trial, committed to embodying God’s vision and enduring life’s crises with courage and integrity.

      Bruce G. Epperly, Ph.D.

      Pastor, Lecturer, and author of Finding God in Suffering: A ­Journey with Job and many other books

      Short of providing an introduction to the New Testament, Weiss draws attention to it from an apocalyptic perspective, pointing out the dynamics of a timeless appeal. Elegantly written and replete with original insights, each chapter constitutes a gateway into the next, underscoring the enduring relevance of the biblical books linked by a common theme. Readers will soon discover that the end of the scroll is but its beginning, or that of another inspired by it.

      Abraham Terian, Th.D.

      Emeritus Professor of Armenian Patristics

      St. Nersess Armenian Seminary

      The End of the Scroll:

      Biblical Apocalyptic Trajectories

      Herold Weiss

      Energion Publications

      Gonzalez, Florida

      2020

      Copyright © 2020 Herold Weiss

      Unless otherwise noted, all Scripture quotations are from the Revised Standard Version of the Bible, copyright 1952 [2nd edition, 1971] by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

      ISBN: 978-1-63199-494-4

      eISBN: 978-1-63199-495-1

      Library of Congress Control Number: 2020938891

      Energion Publications

      PO Box 841

      Gonzalez, FL 32560

      https://energion.com

      [email protected]

      Dedicated

      to

      The many excellent students

      it has been my privilege to teach

      in institutions of higher learning

      Preface

      In our culture, one of the best ways to understand things is by searching for their origin, or by establishing the function of each of its parts. In this book I follow these paths in search of the purpose that informed the writers and the editors of biblical apocalyptic texts. Anyone reading these texts soon finds out that many of the things they say have been unconfirmed by history. It is also well known that they have been used to lead people to do things that had tragic outcomes. These facts are so well known that they need no demonstration. My purpose in writing this book is to investigate their origin and to establish why in the face of the outcomes just mentioned they were kept for posterity by their first readers. Surely, they considered them worthy of preservation. As biblical documents, they have played a significant role in the history of Christianity, but throughout this time many Christians have been embarrassed by their presence in the canon, and have dismissed them as irrelevant, if not bizarre. My objective has been to clarify their contribution to Christian living.

      Some expositors of biblical texts think that their task is to show how everything in Scripture fits together in a harmonious whole. To do this, however, they do not actually take the whole Bible into account. They select texts from different biblical books to construct a doctrine that fits their ideological presuppositions. The texts used to construct their idiosyncratic doctrinal edifices are selected according to their whims and placed according to blueprints found in their imaginations. They leave most of the blocks in the biblical quarry as eyesores on the ground with lots of debris spread about. To pretend that such constructions represent what the Bible teaches is to sell a forgery. The basic premise for the building of such structures is the claim that the Bible is its own interpreter. It allows them to hide their controlling role as architects. They say that when a text is difficult to understand it must be understood in terms of another biblical text that is clear. The characterization of a text as difficult or clear, however, is determined by whether or not they fit with what these interpreters wish to teach. This methodology ensures that what is presented as what the Bible teaches is what fits the ideology of a particular interpreter.

      As a student of the Bible, I consider it essential to pay attention to what