Digital Logos Edition
The Bible appears to give mixed and even conflicting signals on four contentious issues: slavery, the Sabbath, war, and God’s charge for women. In Slavery, Sabbath, War, and Women, New Testament scholar Willard Swartley seeks, in a spirit of unity and dialogue, to clarify the interpretive difficulties surrounding these topics. A predecessor to his 2003 publication, Homosexuality, this book presents a thorough, spirit-filled discussion of some of the most nuanced and sensitive issues facing the church today.
The Logos digital edition of Slavery, Sabbath, War, and Women, comes packed with the Logos features you’ve come to love. With every Bible reference hyperlinked for instant access and with every cross-reference networked across your resource library, Passage Guide, and other Bible study tools, Slavery, Sabbath, War, and Women takes you deeper into today’s most pressing church issues.
“Biblical truth is concrete, shaped usually by specific contexts, needs, and opportunities. Interpretation should affirm and celebrate this feature of divine revelation, communicated through many different writers in different linguistic, cultural, and political contexts. The variety itself becomes the missionary’s textbook. The biblical text spoke God’s Word in a variety of cultural, economic, political, and social settings.” (Page 188)
“The teaching calls us away from ‘letter-use’ to ‘spirit-use,’ hearing its main intentions and not using specific verses—even clear directives (e.g., Lev. 25:44–45)—to mitigate and silence the clear moral and theological imperatives of biblical faith.” (Pages 61–62)
“Mennonite approach to the problem. Rather than using the Bible to speak directly to slavery, the basic biblical value structure had so informed their thinking and practice so as to put slavery at odds with their way of life.” (Page 54)
“These should carry greater weight than specific statements on a given topic even though the statements speak expressly to the topic under discussion.” (Page 61)
“Canaan includes all of Ham’s posterity, then Assyrians, some Persians, and all Grecians and Romans should be slaves.54” (Page 39)
This book admirably demonstrates the importance of hermeneutical issues by grounding them concretely in four practical areas of biblical interpretation. This book contributes positively to the ongoing hermeneutical discussion.
—Anthony Thiselton, University of Sheffield
In a fair and judicious manner the author presents the problems of the role of the Bible in dispute over important theological questions. The serious student will find here a powerful stimulus toward clarification and critical examination of the principles and methods of interpretation he or she uses.
—Paul D. Hanson, Harvard School of Divinity
Swartley takes seriously the diversity of Scripture, its varied historical contexts, and its location within the life of believing communities. Clearly written, the book can be used with profit by students, teachers, ministers, and lay people.
—Phyllis Trible, Union Theological Seminary