The latest, Christmas Eve, reviews from the Review of Biblical Literature include the following:
New Testament and Cognate Studies
- Margaret P. Aymer, First Pure, Then Peaceable: Frederick Douglass Reads James, reviewed by Wesley Wachob
- Michael F. Bird and James G. Crossley, How Did Christianity Begin? A Believer and Non-believer Examine the Evidence, reviewed by Leif Vaage
- John Byron, Recent Research on Paul and Slavery, reviewed by Lars Kierspel
- Carl P. Cosaert, The Text of the Gospels in Clement of Alexandria, reviewed by Michael Bird
- Jesús Luzarraga, El Evangelio de Juan en las versiones siríacas, reviewed by Ilaria L. E. Ramelli
- James F. McGrath, The Only True God: Early Christian Monotheism in Its Jewish Context, reviewed by Lori Baron
Hermeneutics and Cognate Fields
- David G. Firth and Jamie A. Grant, eds., Words and the Word: Explorations in Biblical Interpretation and Literary Theory, reviewed by Jacobus Kok
- Anton Grabner-Haider, ed., Kulturgeschichte der Bibel, reviewed by Birger Olsson
- Scott J. Hafemann and Paul R. House, eds., Central Themes in Biblical Theology: Mapping Unity in Diversity, reviewed by Paul Sanders
- Christine E. Joynes, ed., Perspectives on the Passion: Encountering the Bible through the Arts, reviewed by Lee Jefferson
- Abraham Kuruvilla, Text to Praxis: Hermeneutics and Homiletics in Dialogue, reviewed by Robert Kysar
Jewish Scripture and Cognate Fields
- Yehudah B. Cohn, Tangled Up in Text: Tefillin and the Ancient World, reviewed by Aaron Koller
- John Goldingay, ed., Uprooting and Planting: Essays on Jeremiah for Leslie Allen, reviewed by Wilhelm Wessels
- Mosheh Lichtenstein, Moses: Envoy of God, Envoy of His People, reviewed by Eugene Merrill
- Richard H. Wilkinson, ed., Egyptology Today, reviewed by Aren Maeir
Leave a Reply