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Books on the topic 'Biblicismo'

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1

S, Bielo James, ed. The social life of Scriptures: Cross-cultural perspectives on biblicism. Rutgers University Press, 2009.

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2

The Bible made impossible: Why biblicism is not a truly evangelical reading of Scripture. Brazos, 2011.

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3

Tobin, Ron. Salvation : Choice or Chosen: A Pursuit of Biblicism. The Old Paths Publications, Inc., 2018.

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4

Malley, Brian. How the Bible Works: An Anthropological Study of Evangelical Biblicism (Cognitive Science of Religion). AltaMira Press, 2004.

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5

How the Bible Works: An Anthropological Study of Evangelical Biblicism (Cognitive Science of Religion). AltaMira Press, 2004.

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6

Rohart, Charles. De Oneribus Biblicis Contra Gentes: Dissertatio Inauguralis (Classic Reprint) (Latin Edition). Forgotten Books, 2019.

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7

The influence of biblicist heresy on the late medieval doctrine of Scripture and tradition. 1988.

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8

Stievermann, Jan. Biblical Interpretation in Eighteenth-Century America. Edited by Paul C. Gutjahr. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190258849.013.27.

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Although the Bible in many ways continued to reign supreme in American culture through the American Revolution, there were changes at work that rendered its status and meaning much more equivocal by the end of the eighteenth century. New intellectual challenges arose to the authority of scripture, and its reach over the increasingly differentiated spheres of society diminished. Also, biblical interpretation (and the right to engage therein) became deeply contested as colonial religion was transformed by the Enlightenment and the evangelical revivals. Moreover, its entanglement with the discour
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9

Holland, David. The Bible and Mormonism. Edited by Paul C. Gutjahr. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190258849.013.11.

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This chapter focuses on the key dialectical tensions in the Latter-day Saints’ distinctive brand of biblicism. The Bible fundamentally shapes both the forms and the substance of the Mormon experience, but it also functions as one sacred text among others. The extra-biblical scriptures of Mormonism seek to strengthen the Bible’s revelatory claims even as their presence denies it the singular status it enjoys in most other Christian cultures. Where many other modern Christian movements sought to downplay the Bible’s particularism in favor of its universalism, the Latter-day Saint approach to the
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10

Shalev, Eran. The Bible and the Creation of the Nation. Edited by Paul C. Gutjahr. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190258849.013.22.

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During the American Revolution and the formative years of the creation of the nation, the Bible was pivotal in shaping the public discourse and contemporaries’ political imagination. The Bible, especially the Old Testament, enabled politicians, commentators, laymen, and ministers to depict their young nation as a new, chosen Israel and to rely on its lessons for political guidance. This chapter examines the nature of that distinct biblicism in the early United States at one of its most formative political periods. It studies the ways in which the Bible shaped and helped to facilitate crucial d
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11

Stephens, Randall J. The Bible and Fundamentalism. Edited by Paul C. Gutjahr. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190258849.013.7.

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This chapter on the Bible and fundamentalism describes the growth of the movement and pinpoints various influences in play since the nineteenth century. Among those were: a new apocalyptic outlook, Scottish Common Sense philosophy, revivalism, biblicism, and a militant style. The chapter also provides important definitions and summarizes some recent scholarly developments in the study of the movement. Much of the cultural energy of adherents came from their strident opposition to theological modernism, evolutionary biology, and a new, permissive popular culture. Because of that historians once
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12

Fesko, J. V. The Covenant of Works. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190071363.001.0001.

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The book surveys the origins of the doctrine of the covenant of works. The doctrine originates in the patristic era and fully flowers in the sixteenth century among Reformed theologians. The doctrine develops from a web of biblical texts and becomes codified in confessions of the seventeenth century. But in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, support for the doctrine began to wane until Reformed theologians in the twentieth century outright rejected it. There were, however, theologians who continued to promote the doctrine because they continued to use the same interpretive methods as ear
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13

Price, David H. In the Beginning Was the Image. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190074401.001.0001.

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This pioneering study focuses on decisive contributions by Albrecht Dürer, Lucas Cranach the Elder, and Hans Holbein the Younger to the popular promotion of the printed Bible and, beyond that, to the evangelical impulses that transformed ecclesiastical art. The Renaissance, always recognized as a time of artistic and theological foment for Christianity, also witnessed a visual re-formation of the Bible. Material culture played its part, since the printing press allowed proliferation of biblical images and texts on a previously unimaginable scale. Contrary to commonly accepted claims that the R
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14

Atkins, Gareth. Evangelicals. Edited by Frederick D. Aquino and Benjamin J. King. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198718284.013.9.

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For perhaps a decade between 1816 and 1826, Newman counted himself an Evangelical. Precisely what that meant has been obscured by his own later reflections, and by biographers interested more in his spiritual destination than his starting point. This chapter situates Newman within the Anglican Evangelical movement of the 1810s and 20s, a milieu more diverse and integrated into the Church of England than many accounts imply. The first section considers his youthful reading: Thomas Scott, Joseph Milner, and others. The second considers his opinions in the 1820s, arguing that his move away from E
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15

Berman, Joshua A. Inconsistency in the Torah. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190658809.001.0001.

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This book proposes a new approach to the Pentateuch’s narrative and legal inconsistencies that scholars have taken as signs of fragmentation and competing agendas. Recent studies of the scribal culture of the ancient Near East reveal that the models of textual growth hypothesized by biblicists often find no basis in the empirical evidence of these neighboring cultures. It reveals precursors for a variety of Pentateuchal inconsistencies in the narrative literature of the ancient Near East, deliberately deployed by a single agent. It explores the inconsistencies between the Pentateuch’s law corp
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