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).
John Tolan, Université de Nantes, Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations
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.
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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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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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"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)." -- John Tolan, Université de Nantes, Islam and Christian-Muslim
Relations
"[Gregg's] expertise in ancient languages, facility with exegesis, and skills in interpreting art
illumine and enrich each interpretation. This volume helps the reader understand and
appreciate the shared heritage of and theological differences between Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam."--Missiology: An International Review
"His immense learning, humane sensibility, and elegant prose make this book a joy to read, and to look at--there are some great illustrations The reader, whatever their level of knowledge of any of the three religious traditions being discussed, will be carried with ease by Gregg's learning worn lightly and his judicious comments. But the reader will also be carried by the power of the stories, their different tellings and re-tellings and the sheer complexity
and inventiveness in these morphing moments."--Reviews in Religion and Theology
"...an abundance of memorable, surprising stories that will provide new insights even for readers who think they know this material very well." -- Christian Century
"Robert C. Gregg's book Shared Stories, Rival Tellings is an ode to those creative encounters between stories and readers (or hearers) in specific historical moments, and a powerful demonstration of the enormous value of "retellings" of sacred stories for understanding processes of identity formation, doctrinal differentiation, and religious competition."-- Marginalia
"...[A]n important well-written work... its breadth and depth make it a worthwhile investment for students of comparative religion, Judaism, early Christianity, and Islam." --Publishers Weekly
"A carefully crafted and explicitly balanced historical study...The variety of plates which enflesh the narratives and illustrate the richness of ancient imaginations are stunning. Very few of us will not learn something from the breadth."--Journal of the Bible and its Reception
and creativity of this book.
"A breathtaking combination of the verbal and the visual."--Journey with Jesus
"Tragically, religious conflict is alive and well in the twenty-first century. This is what makes Shared Stories, Rival Tellings such a timely and inspiring work of scholarship, a study that shows the interconnections among Jewish, Christian, and Muslim scriptural interpretation. There are other helpful introductions to early Jewish and Christian biblical interpretation, but this volume makes its mark by enfolding Islam within its story and--in a move
that makes this work even more of a gem--by drawing on art history as well as on texts. This work, dare I say it, is the opposite of religious extremism in its openness and ability to engage multiple
perspectives." --Steve Weitzman, Herbert D. Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies, University of Pennsylvania
"Robert Gregg brilliantly interweaves versions of Bible stories as Jews, Christians, and Muslims variously tell them--complementing, challenging, or clashing with one another--in a book that's fascinating and enormously informative about relationships within this diverse, often contentious, family of traditions." --Elaine Pagels, Harrington Spear Paine Foundation Professor of Religion, Princeton University
"Jews, Christians, Muslims--all have sacred stories. Some overlap, some also compete. No one has ever attempted to engage five of these Abrahamic sagas with equal seriousness and unflinching honesty. Combining art with narrative analysis, Bob Gregg has not only scaled the mountain, he has provided us a vista of the other side: a luxuriant tableau of piety and performance, at once animating, unsettling and delighting all who worship, or want to espy others who
worship, the God of Abraham. A triumph, a masterpiece, a classic." --Bruce B. Lawrence, author of Who is Allah? (2015)
"In a period when relations between religious traditions are characterized by suspicion and lack of understanding, Gregg's even-handed and irenic treatment of each religion's biblical interpretation provides a positive appreciation of each on its own terms and an invitation for each religion to consider rejoining with the others in an important conversation." --Commonweal
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Selling point: Provides an extensive yet accessible guide to many ancient texts
Selling point: Includes artwork as well as historical writings to illuminate religious interpreters' genius and impact
Selling point: Explores the historical contexts of the divides between Jews, Christians, and Muslims
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Robert C. Gregg is Professor in Religious Studies, Emeritus, at Stanford University. His publications are historical studies of belief systems, with special attention to the competition of religions in the late Roman-early medieval Mediterranean and Levant.
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Selling point: Provides an extensive yet accessible guide to many ancient texts
Selling point: Includes artwork as well as historical writings to illuminate religious interpreters' genius and impact
Selling point: Explores the historical contexts of the divides between Jews, Christians, and Muslims
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780190231491
Publisert
2015
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Inc; Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
1429 gr
Høyde
239 mm
Bredde
160 mm
Dybde
41 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
752
Forfatter