Abraham, Israel and the Nations: The Patriarchal Promise and its Covenantal Development in Genesis
By (Author) Paul R. Williamson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Sheffield Academic Press
1st March 2001
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
222.1106
Hardback
312
620g
The divine promises to Abraham have long been recognized as a key to the book of Genesis as a whole. But their variety, often noted, also raises literary and theological problems. Why do they differ each time, and how are they related to each other and to the story of Abraham Williamson focuses on the promises in Genesis 15 and 17, and concludes that they are concerned with two distinct but related issues. Genesis 15 guarantees God's promise to make Abraham into a great nation, while Genesis 17 focuses chiefly on God's promise to mediate blessing (through Abraham) to the nations. The two chapters are connected, however, by the theme of an individual, royal descendant who will come from the nation (Israel) and mediate blessing to all the nations of the earth.
"Williamson has made a significant contribution, both to the legitimacy of synchronic reading and to the literary and theological interpretation of the covenant episodes of Genesis 15 and 17." --Themelios Spring 2002"
"Williamson has made a significant contribution, both to the legitimacy of synchronic reading and to the literary and theological interpretation of the covenant episodes of Genesis 15 and 17." --Themelios Spring 2002
Paul Williamson is a lecturer at the Irish Baptist College, Belfast, Northern Ireland.