Beryl Smalley, Thomas of Cantimpré, and the Performative Reading of Scripture: A Study in Two Exempla

Sweetman, Robert. "Beryl Smalley, Thomas of Cantimpré, and the Performative Reading of Scripture: a Study in Two Exempla." In With Reverence for the Word: Medieval Scriptural Exegesis in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, pp. 256-275. Eds. Jane Dammen McAuliffe, Barry D. Walfish, and Joseph W. Goering. New York: Oxford University Press, 2003.

This study uses a number of preaching stories included within Thomas of Cantimpré’s “Book of Bees” to examine Beryl Smalley’s account of the evolution of scholarly approaches to the Scriptures in the context of the rise of the universities in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. It expands historical understanding of the literal sense of scriptures to account for a performative mode of literal reading in which one’s subsequent living exegetes the scripture that one is or has been studying. The life of St. Francis of Assisi provides an exemplary case in point.

How to Read the Bible to Hear God Speak

Calvin G. Seerveld, 2003

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This study shows how Fundamentalist, Dogmatist, and Higher-critical Deconstructivists treat Numbers 22-24, and how readers in the line of the Reformation listen to what God is saying in these chapters for us today.

Religion With/out Religion: The Prayers and Tears of John D. Caputo

Religion With/out Religion: The Prayers and Tears of John D. Caputo. James Olthuis. 2002

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Written in response to Caputo's The Prayers and Tears of Jacques Derrida, this volume examines the frictive relationship between Derridiean deconstruction and religion.

Critical Faith: Toward a Renewed Understanding of Religious Life and its Public Accountability

Critical Faith: Toward a Renewed Understanding of Religious Life and its Public Accountability. Ronald Kuipers. 2002

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Can religious faith be critical and remain recognizable as faith? Or is the idea of a critical faith a contradiction in terms? In this book, Kuipers argues in favour of critical faith.