Digital Verbum Edition
How we read and understand the Scriptures today is the result of two thousand years of interpretation. Throughout history, communities with different worldviews sought to make the Scriptures relevant to their own time and place. The richness of this history gives us the range of interpretive approaches we now have today.
A History of Biblical Interpretation is three volumes following the methods of interpretation throughout the history of the Bible, starting with the formation of the Hebrew Scriptures all the way to the dawn of the twentieth century.
Detailed and extensive, this set was written by internationally renowned scholars who are experts in their subject. Each volume comprehensively treats the many different methods of interpretation, the many important interpreters who have written in various eras, and the many key issues that have surfaced repeatedly over the long course of biblical interpretation.
Alan J. Hauser is professor of biblical studies at Appalachian State University, Boone, North Carolina. He is also coeditor of Art and Meaning: Rhetoric in Biblical Literature and coauthor of From Carmel to Horeb: Elijah in Crisis and Rhetorical Criticism of the Bible: A Comprehensive Bibliography with Notes on History and Method.
Duane F. Watson is professor of New Testament studies at Malone University, Canton, Ohio. He is also the author of Invention, Arrangement, and Style: Rhetorical Criticism of Jude and 2 Peter, editor of Persuasive Artistry: Studies in New Testament Rhetoric, and coauthor of Rhetorical Criticism of the Bible: A Comprehensive Bibliography with Notes on History and Method.