A PIERCING LIGHT THROUGH THE BIBLICAL FOG:
The Bible’s Literary and Theological Inner Core
by
Book Details
About the Book
The Bible can be a difficult book to read because of an obscuring fog that overhangs much of the biblical text. Many would-be readers have begun with Genesis, but have soon given up the effort. They were confused, frustrated by their inability to follow and understand the narrative. This book is intended to help such readers as well as those thinking of undertaking the task for the first time. The author is a recognized anthropologist, an ex-Jesuit with a background in theological and biblical studies. He has spent considerable time living with non-literate populations. These experiences made him realize how much of the Bible is a product of non-literate cultures. These insights have been confirmed and expanded by archeological, historical, anthropological, and literary research. Seen from this perspective, most of the Bible consists of theological stories that were later committed to writing rather than a written document of narrative history directly dictated by God. In large part the biblical story is a Jewish Epic with its stages of blessing, tragedy and redemption. It highlights the role of the covenants and the prophets in providing the underlying theological structure of the entire Bible. A brief Introduction in Genesis and the Pauline letters extend the moral lesson of the Epic to all of humanity. The relationship between the literary and theological structures can be diagrammed on a chart that lays out a synthetic view of the entire Bible as well as an outline of this book. Open the front or back covers to view the chart.
About the Author
John D. Early is Professor Emeritus of Anthropology, Florida Atlantic University. His educational background includes a Bachelor and a Master of Arts degrees in Social Philosophy from St. Louis University, a Master of Arts in Theology from Woodstock College (a Jesuit Seminary), a Master of Arts in Sociology from Fordham University, and a PhD in Anthropology-Sociology from Harvard University. Dr. Early began his career as priest-anthropologist, although he resigned from the priesthood in 1969. As a member of the Harvard-Chiapas Research Project, he went to Mexico to study the Mayan worldview and its Catholic elements. Seeing the many Mayan infant and child deaths due ultimately to social injustice, his interest turned to demographic research. It was needed to alert the world to the situation and as a basis for planning the Mayan literacy, cooperative, and health programs that he worked with in Guatemala. This led to research on the evolution of human population dynamics, little understood by the developed world. Included were the hunting-gathering Agta in the Philippines, the tribal Yanomami in Brazil, and the Mayan peasants in Mexico and Guatemala. After publishing four books on population dynamics, he returned to his original interest in two later books—religious worldviews and their moral implications for the implementation of social justice. Three of his books have been translated into Spanish for wider international circulation.