Song, Prayer, Scripture
Aspects of the Reception of the Book of Psalms from the Hebrew Bible to the 21st Century
Series: The Library of Hebrew Bible/Old Testament Studies;
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Product details:
- Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing (UK)
- Date of Publication 21 August 2025
- Number of Volumes Hardback
- ISBN 9780567711830
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages336 pages
- Size 232x162x26 mm
- Weight 640 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 12 bw 680
Categories
Long description:
Experts from the field of biblical studies shed light on the many ways in which the Psalter psalms have been used through the ages.
The focus across the volume is on the role that these psalms play in scribal, liturgical, didactic, iconographic, and literary contexts. The book is structured in four parts, covering different styles/uses of the Psalms.
In part I (song) the focus in on psalms as songs, and how their uses in different performative settings have generated new interpretations. In part II (prayer) the focus is on the liturgical uses of psalms, not only how they can be used as prayers in various communities of faith but also on how they may not be used. In part III (scripture: interpretation) the focus in on the reception of several individual psalms in Jewish, Christian, and Muslim traditions. Finally, in part IV (scripture: manuscripts) the focus is on scribal activity: transmission, translation, and illumination.
Table of Contents:
"
Preface
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction
Part I: Song
1. Hearing the People Through the Voice of David: On the Paratextual Framing of Psalm 30 - David Davage, ï¿1⁄2rebro School of Theology, Sweden
2. The Psalms and Psalms 132 in the Early Days of the ""New World"" - Melody Knowles, Virginia Theological Seminary, USA
3. Liturgy, Temple Memory, and Canonization: Reimagining the Temple Psalter in Rabbinic Judaism - Abraham J. Berkowitz - Hebrew Union College, USA
4. Psalms and Circles in the Theurgy of the ï¿1⁄2lus Coï¿1⁄2ns - Ola Wikander, Lund University, Sweden
Part II: Prayer
5. Psalmody as an Alternative to Theodicy - John Goldingay, Fuller Theological Seminary, USA
6. Pastoral Concerns in Conflict: The Place and Use of Imprecatory Psalms in the Liturgy of the Hours - Elisabet Nord, Lund University, Sweden
7. The Potential of the Psalmist's Anger - Rachel Wrenn, Trinity Lutheran Seminary at Capital University, USA
8. How the Psalms Made Their Way into the Swedish Lectionary - LarsOlov Eriksson, Johannelund School of Theology, Sweden
Part III: Scripture: Interpretation
9. Luther and Calvin Read Psalms 1-2 - Susan Gillingham, University of Oxford, UK
10. Psalm 16 in the New Testament and Early Christian Literature - Antti Laato, ï¿1⁄2bo Akademi University, Finland
11. One Psalm Across Four Traditions: Psalm 48 - Robert Miller, The Catholic University of America, USA
12. ""Please Open Your Ear, My People, To My Torah ...!"" What Psalm 78 Wants to Say to Whom - Beat Weber, University of Pretoria, South Africa
13. The Psalter and King David: A Reception Historical Perspective - Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer, ï¿1⁄2rebro School of Theology, Sweden
Part IV: Scripture: Manuscripts and Translations
14. The Continuity between Jewish and Christian Psalms Manuscripts - Tommy Wasserman and Andreas Nilsson, ï¿1⁄2rebro School of Theology, Sweden
15. Going to the Zoo with Saint Jerome: The Rendering of Animal and Plant Names in Jerome's Latin Psalm Translations - Martijn Jaspers, University of Leuven (KU Leuven), Belgium
16. Updates on the Gï¿1⁄2ttingen Project ""Die Editio critica maior des griechischen Psalters"" (2020-2040) - Margherita Matera, Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Gï¿1⁄2ttingen, Germany
17. Speaking Images: Illuminating the Psalter in Byzantium - Barbara Crostini, Uppsala University, Sweden
Bibliography
Index