Appropriating Hebrews's Scriptural Hermeneutic for the Twenty-First Century
By (Author) Dana M. Harris
Edited by J. David Stark
Contributions by Dr. Nick Brennan
Contributions by Ardel Caneday
Contributions by Gareth Lee Cockerill
Contributions by Assistant Lecturer Rodrigo F. de Sousa
Contributions by Bryan R. Dyer
Contributions by Dana M. Harris
Contributions by David M. Moffitt
Contributions by William Olhausen
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
13th November 2025
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Hardback
256
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
Twenty-first-century readers cannot interpret Israels Scriptures identically to how the author of Hebrews did. The contours of twenty-first century worldviews are too different. That said, Hebrews invites those who read after it (in time) also to reading after it (in approach). For those who accept this invitation, this volumes essays surface four clusters in the overall mosaic of Hebrewss approach to Israels Scriptures. First, Hebrews explicitly, if briefly and partially, states its hermeneutic orientation to Israels Scriptures (1:12). Second, Hebrews understands history through the proclamation that the author accepts and commends about Jesus. Third, this proclamation creates numerous other implications that Hebrews may or may not explicitly state but that nonetheless shape how the author interprets his Scriptures. And fourth, Hebrewss exhortation (13:22) fosters faithfulness in its audience through both encouragements and warnings drawn from Israels Scriptures. Attention to Israels Scriptures in light of these clusters helps readers to understand Israels Scriptures not identically to Hebrewss author but in the same way as that authornamely, in the way marked out by Jesus for those who would come after him.
J. David Stark is Professor of Biblical Studies and the Winnie and Cecil May Jr. Biblical Research Fellow at Faulkner University and a Senior Research Fellow at the Kirby Laing Centre for Public Theology in Cambridge.
Dana M. Harris is Professor of New Testament and Department Chair at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, Bannockburn, Illinois.