A Smaller God: On the Divinely Human Nature of Biblical Literature
The Bible is a perplexing book. It blends primitive beliefs with timeless truths, swings between compassionate love and ruthless violence, and forms a sympathetic heavenly father from the remains of a savage tribal god. What are we to make of it all? Petri Merenlahti takes an entertaining journey through biblical literature and returns with an original theology of imperfection. Looking at the Bible through the lenses of history, culture, literature, and psychology, he calls his readers to let go of an idealized image of the Christian Scriptures and embrace their limited human nature instead. This is vital, he argues, because false idealization and psychological splitting are major sources of religious fanaticism and violence. Merenlahti insists that we make a difference between the smaller God of human imagination and the transcendent God that should remain beyond it. We will then be rewarded with wisdom instead of fanaticism, mercy instead of moralism, and peace instead of hatred and guilt.
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A Smaller God: On the Divinely Human Nature of Biblical Literature
The Bible is a perplexing book. It blends primitive beliefs with timeless truths, swings between compassionate love and ruthless violence, and forms a sympathetic heavenly father from the remains of a savage tribal god. What are we to make of it all? Petri Merenlahti takes an entertaining journey through biblical literature and returns with an original theology of imperfection. Looking at the Bible through the lenses of history, culture, literature, and psychology, he calls his readers to let go of an idealized image of the Christian Scriptures and embrace their limited human nature instead. This is vital, he argues, because false idealization and psychological splitting are major sources of religious fanaticism and violence. Merenlahti insists that we make a difference between the smaller God of human imagination and the transcendent God that should remain beyond it. We will then be rewarded with wisdom instead of fanaticism, mercy instead of moralism, and peace instead of hatred and guilt.
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A Smaller God: On the Divinely Human Nature of Biblical Literature

A Smaller God: On the Divinely Human Nature of Biblical Literature

A Smaller God: On the Divinely Human Nature of Biblical Literature

A Smaller God: On the Divinely Human Nature of Biblical Literature

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Overview

The Bible is a perplexing book. It blends primitive beliefs with timeless truths, swings between compassionate love and ruthless violence, and forms a sympathetic heavenly father from the remains of a savage tribal god. What are we to make of it all? Petri Merenlahti takes an entertaining journey through biblical literature and returns with an original theology of imperfection. Looking at the Bible through the lenses of history, culture, literature, and psychology, he calls his readers to let go of an idealized image of the Christian Scriptures and embrace their limited human nature instead. This is vital, he argues, because false idealization and psychological splitting are major sources of religious fanaticism and violence. Merenlahti insists that we make a difference between the smaller God of human imagination and the transcendent God that should remain beyond it. We will then be rewarded with wisdom instead of fanaticism, mercy instead of moralism, and peace instead of hatred and guilt.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781630877408
Publisher: Wipf & Stock Publishers
Publication date: 12/16/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 134
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Rev. Dr. Petri Merenlahti is Theological Advisor to the Archbishop of Turku and Finland. He is the author of Poetics for the Gospels? Rethinking Narrative Criticism (2002).
Rev. Dr.Petri Merenlahti is Theological Advisor to the Archbishop of Turku and Finland. He is the author of Poetics for the Gospels? Rethinking Narrative Criticism (2002).
David Rhoads is emeritus Professor of New Testament at the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago. He is author of Reading Mark: Engaging the Gospel (2004).

Table of Contents

Foreword David Rhoads ix

Preface xiii

1 A Divinely Human Book 1

2 A True Story? 12

3 An Immigrant God 31

4 So Much Out of So Little 48

5 A Malady or a Cure? 66

6 A Story without a Beginning 84

7 Childish Ways 99

Bibliography 107

Name and Subject Index 113

Scripture Index 117

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