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  • Shared Stories, Rival Tellings: Early Encounters of Jews, Christians, and Muslims

    Shared Stories, Rival Tellings by Gregg, Robert C.;

    Early Encounters of Jews, Christians, and Muslims

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 24 September 2015

    • ISBN 9780190231491
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages752 pages
    • Size 239x160x40 mm
    • Weight 1429 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 56 illustrations
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    Short description:

    In Shared Stories, Rival Tellings, Robert Gregg performs a comparative investigation of how Jewish, Christian, and Muslim interpreters developed their distinctive and exclusionary understandings of narratives common to their three Holy Books

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    Long description:

    While existing scholarship informs us about early contact between Christians, Muslims, and Jews, the nature of that interaction, and how it developed over time, is still often misunderstood. Robert Gregg emphasizes that there was both mutual curiosity, since all three religions had ancestral traditions and a commanding God in common, and also wary competitiveness, as each group was compelled to sharpen its identity against the other two. Faced with the overlap of many scriptural stories, they were eager to defend the claim that they alone were God's preferred people.

    In Shared Stories, Rival Tellings, Gregg performs a comparative investigation of how Jewish, Christian, and Muslim interpreters--both writers and artists--developed their distinctive and exclusionary understandings of narratives common to their three Holy Books: Cain and Abel, Sara and Hagar, Joseph and Potiphar's Wife, Jonah and the Whale, and Mary the Mother of Jesus. Exposed in the process are the major issues under contention and the social-intellectual forces that contributed to spirited, creative, and sometimes combative exchanges between Muslims, Christians and Jews.

    In illuminating these historical moments, and their implications for contemporary relations between these three religions, Gregg argues that scripture interpreters played an often underappreciated role in each religion's individual development of thought, spirituality, and worship, and in the three religions' debates with one another-and the cultural results of those debates.

    Robert Gregg's Shared Stories is a rich comparative study of diverse Jewish, Christian, and Muslim portrayals of important characters in the three religions' scriptures...It provides an excellent introduction to the subject for students or for scholars (in particular those who may be familiar with the exegetical traditions of one of the three monotheistic religions).

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    Table of Contents:

    Prologue
    Part I: Cain and Abel/Qabil and Habil
    Preview: Chapters 1-3 The first murder
    Chapter 1: Cain's fratricide: rabbis and other early Jewish writers judge the case
    Chapter 2: Cain and Abel in Early Christian Writings and Art
    Chapter 3: Muslims on "...the story of the two sons of Adam"
    Comparative Summary: Cain and Abel/Qabil and Habil
    Part II: Sarah and Hagar: Mothers to Three Families
    Preview: Chapters 4-6 Abraham's rival wives
    Chapter 4: Sarah and Hagar: Jewish portrayals
    Chapter 5: Sarah and Hagar in Christian interpretations
    Chapter 6: Hagar and Ishmael, Ibrahim's family in Mecca
    Comparative Summary: Sarah and Hagar: Mothers to three families
    Part III: Joseph's Temptation by his Egyptian Master's Wife
    Preview: Chapters 7-9 Joseph/Yusuf and the Temptress
    Chapter 7: Joseph and Potiphar's wife--Jewish interpretations
    Chapter 8: Joseph put to the test--Christian sermons and art
    Chapter 9: Yusuf with Zulaykha
    Comparative Summary: Joseph's temptation by his Egyptian master's wife
    Part IV: Jonah the Angry Prophet
    Preview: Chapters 10-12 "The one of the fish"
    Chapter 10: Jonah, Nineveh, the Great Fish, and God: Jews ponder the story
    Chapter 11: Jonah and Jesus: In One Story, Two.
    Chapter 12: Islam's Yunus: from anger to praise
    Comparative Summary: Jonah the angry prophet
    Part V: Mary, Miriam, Maryam
    Preview: Chapters 13-15 Mary through three religions' eyes
    Chapter 13: Mary's Story in Christian imagination: from Jewish maiden to ever-Virgin to Heavenly Advocate
    Chapter 14: Miriam, mother of Yeshu the false messiah: Jewish counter-stories
    Chapter 15: Islam's Maryam: "chosen...above the women of the worlds"
    Comparative Summary: Mary, Miriam, Maryam
    Epilogue
    Endnotes
    Works Cited/Bibliography
    Index

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