Scripture and Tradition: What the Bible Really Says
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Scripture and Tradition: What the Bible Really Says  -     Edited By: Craig Evans, Lee McDonald
    By: Edith M. Humphrey

Scripture and Tradition: What the Bible Really Says

Baker Academic / 2013 / Paperback

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Stock No: WW039836

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Product Description

An in-depth look at the role of tradition and Scripture for accessible for all readers.

In some of the church's history, Scripture has been pitted against tradition and vice versa. In Scripture and Tradition: What Scripture Really Says prominent New Testament scholar Edith Humphrey--who understands the issue from both Protestant and Catholic/Orthodox perspectives--revisits this perennial point of tension.

She demonstrates that the Bible itself reveals the importance of tradition, exploring how the Gospels, Acts, and the Epistles show Jesus and the apostles claiming the authority of tradition as God's Word, both written and spoken. Arguing that Scripture and tradition are not in opposition but are necessarily and inextricably intertwined, Humphrey defends tradition as God's gift to the church. She also works to dismantle rigid views of sola scriptura while holding a high view of Scripture's authority.

Product Information

Title: Scripture and Tradition: What the Bible Really Says
By: Edith M. Humphrey
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 160
Vendor: Baker Academic
Publication Date: 2013
Dimensions: 8.50 X 5.50 (inches)
Weight: 10 ounces
ISBN: 0801039835
ISBN-13: 9780801039836
Series: Acadia Studies in Bible and Theology
Stock No: WW039836

Publisher's Description

In some of the church's history, Scripture has been pitted against tradition and vice versa. Prominent New Testament scholar Edith Humphrey, who understands the issue from both Protestant and Catholic/Orthodox perspectives, revisits this perennial point of tension. She demonstrates that the Bible itself reveals the importance of tradition, exploring how the Gospels, Acts, and the Epistles show Jesus and the apostles claiming the authority of tradition as God's Word, both written and spoken. Arguing that Scripture and tradition are not in opposition but are necessarily and inextricably intertwined, Humphrey defends tradition as God's gift to the church. She also works to dismantle rigid views of sola scriptura while holding a high view of Scripture's authority.

Author Bio

Edith M. Humphrey (PhD, McGill University) is the William F. Orr Professor of New Testament at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She is the author of several books, including Grand Entrance: Worship on Earth as in Heaven and Ecstasy and Intimacy: When the Holy Spirit Meets the Human Spirit, and of numerous articles on the literary and rhetorical study of the Bible.

Endorsements

In Scripture and Tradition, Edith Humphrey provides an intelligent and nuanced way forward, past the stifling oppositions that have dominated the discussions on Scripture and tradition in the recent past. Fusing personal reflection with an excellently articulated and accessible argument, Humphrey shows us how the narrative character of the Christian faith and life mandates that we live in tradition, rejecting the trappings of traditionalism. For as Jaroslav Pelikan noted many years ago, 'Tradition is the living faith of the dead; traditionalism is the dead faith of the living.'
-George Kalantzis,
associate professor of theology, Wheaton College; director, The Wheaton Center for Early Christian Studies

Edith Humphrey bridges the gap between the apostolic and postapostolic church by exploring the biblical foundations for Christian tradition. She invites readers to embrace the Bible's own witness to tradition as an essential key to the entire life of the church. Elegantly written and exegetically compelling, this book reveals how 'biblical' tradition takes us beyond the impasse of the 'Scripture versus tradition' debates that have beleaguered Christianity since the Reformation.
-Bradley Nassif,
professor of biblical and theological studies, North Park University

Edith Humphrey's great gift for combining biblical scholarship with pastoral insight is charitably applied to one of the most significant stumbling blocks for Christian unity: the relation between Scripture and tradition. Her focus on Scripture's own sense of tradition provides a way into the subject that will appeal especially to Protestants who share (and among whom she learned) her deep respect for Scripture. Yet these same readers may begin to discover that the tradition of which she speaks does not diminish but rather sustains, and is sustained by, that respect. What is therefore diminished is the stumbling block itself.
-Douglas Farrow,
professor of Christian thought, McGill University

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