Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables, Maps, and Figures
- List of Contributors
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Text and canon
- Part II Historical background
- Part III Methods and approaches
- Part IV Subcollections and genres
- Part V Reception and use
- 18 The Hebrew Bible in Judaism
- 19 The Old Testament in Christianity
- 20 The Hebrew Bible in Islam
- 21 The Hebrew Bible in art and literature
- 22 The Old Testament in public: the Ten Commandments, evolution, and Sabbath closing laws
- 23 The Theology of the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament
- Index
- Cambridge Companions to Religion (continued from page iii)
- References
19 - The Old Testament in Christianity
from Part V - Reception and use
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2016
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables, Maps, and Figures
- List of Contributors
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Text and canon
- Part II Historical background
- Part III Methods and approaches
- Part IV Subcollections and genres
- Part V Reception and use
- 18 The Hebrew Bible in Judaism
- 19 The Old Testament in Christianity
- 20 The Hebrew Bible in Islam
- 21 The Hebrew Bible in art and literature
- 22 The Old Testament in public: the Ten Commandments, evolution, and Sabbath closing laws
- 23 The Theology of the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament
- Index
- Cambridge Companions to Religion (continued from page iii)
- References
Summary
Some issues in life are not capable of final resolution. Questions such as ‘What is the good life?’ and ‘How can we get good government?’ and ‘Whom can I trust?’ are not amenable to definitive answers in the same way as many mathematical and scientific questions. Rather, such fundamental questions of living recur afresh in every age. Part of the thesis of this chapter is that the role of the Old Testament in Christianity is, in essence, such an irresolvable issue. Christians ancient and modern have not found unanimity or finality in understanding and using the Old Testament – and this may be a sign not of failure but rather of the intrinsic variety of the challenges that the Old Testament poses for Christian faith. A collection of religious literature that is pre-Christian in origin, written over centuries and initially compiled by Jews (as Israel's Scriptures), and only subsequently appropriated by Christians (as the Old Testament), inherently poses intriguing, albeit enriching, questions to Christians.
Lack of definitive resolution therefore should in no way call into question the importance of wrestling with understanding the Old Testament within Christian faith. A. H. J. Gunneweg, for example, wrote
It would be no exaggeration to understand the hermeneutical problem of the Old Testament as the problem of Christian theology, and not just one problem among others…. If the interpretation of holy scripture is an essential task for theology, and if the Bible is the basis of Christian life, the foundation of the church and the medium of revelation, then it is of fundamental importance for the theologian to ask whether and why the collection of Israelite and Jewish writings to which the Christian church has given the name Old Testament are part – indeed the most substantial part – of the canon of scripture and what their relevance is. This question affects the extent and also qualitatively the substance of what may be regarded as Christian.
Thus, engagement in debates about the understanding and appropriation of the Old Testament – debates which in practice probably take place more in contexts of worship and everyday life than in formal academic contexts – is itself part of what constitutes Christian faith.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament , pp. 388 - 406Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2016