About this item
Highlights
- The question of the good life--what it looks like for people and societies to be well ordered and flourishing--has universal significance, but its proposed solutions are just as far reaching.
- About the Author: Iain Provan is the Marshall Sheppard Professor of Biblical Studies at Regent College and lives in the Vancouver, Canada area.
- 500 Pages
- Religion + Beliefs, Christian Theology
Description
About the Book
Provan helps us understand how we should and should not read Scripture in arriving at these conclusions, clarifying for the faithful Christian what the limits of the search for what is right look like.Book Synopsis
The question of the good life--what it looks like for people and societies to be well ordered and flourishing--has universal significance, but its proposed solutions are just as far reaching. At the core of this concern is the nature of the good itself: what is "right"? We must attend to this ethical dilemma before we can begin to envision a life lived to the fullest.
With Seeking What Is Right, Iain Provan invites us to consider how Scripture--the Old Testament in particular--can aid us in this quest. In rooting the definition of the good in God's special revelation, Provan moves beyond the constraints of family, tribe, culture, state, or nature. When we read ourselves into the story of Scripture, we learn a formative ethic that speaks directly to our humanity. Provan delves into Western Christian history to demonstrate the various ways this has been done: how our forebears identified with the narrative of God's people, Israel, and how they applied the Old Testament to their particular times and concerns. This serves as a foundation upon which modern Christians can assess their decisions as people who read the whole biblical story "from the beginning" in our time.
Provan challenges us to grapple with ethical issues dominating our contemporary culture as a people in exile, a people formed by disciplines steeped in the patterns and teachings of Scripture. To come alongside ancient Israel in its own experiences of exile, to listen with Israel to the utterances of a holy God, is to approach a true picture of the good life that illuminates all facets of human existence. Provan helps us understand how we should and should not read Scripture in arriving at these conclusions, clarifying for the faithful Christian what the limits of the search for "what is right" look like.
Review Quotes
On the whole, Provan's project is a masterful and sweeping attempt to look at a historically informed ethic rooted in the grand narrative of Scripture. It is reminiscent of a kind of broad and interdisciplinary project that one rarely sees in today's academic climate of specialization and atomization. The broad picture of the Old Testament view of the good life and its relation to our contemporary context is its strength.
--Benjamin J. M. Johnson "Review of Biblical Literature"This volume guides the audience to read the Bible deeply and accurately so that they can live a good life according to it.
--Larisa Levicheva "Themelios"Combining hermeneutics, ethics, and church history Provan points toward how the Bible can and should shape life, making this a helpful resource for thinking about how we preach and disciple.
--Ray Van Neste "Preaching Magazine"Provan's Old Testament ethics invites the reader into an exceptional and rich interdisciplinary conversation.
--Andrew Myers "Catholic Biblical Quarterly"About the Author
Iain Provan is the Marshall Sheppard Professor of Biblical Studies at Regent College and lives in the Vancouver, Canada area. He is the author of The Reformation and the Right Reading of Scripture; Convenient Myths: The Axial Age, Dark Green Religion, and the World that Never Was; and Seriously Dangerous Religion: What the Old Testament Really Says and Why It Matters.