John Buehrens was president of the Unitarian Universalist Association from 1993 to 2001 and is now minister of the First Parish in Needham, Massachusetts, and special assistant to the secretary general of the World Conference of Religions for Peace. He is coauthor, with Forrest Church, of A Chosen Faith.
'Biblical literacy is not just for Biblical literalists. To grasp
the nuances of Western art and literature or the religious subtext
of Western law and society requires a working knowledge of the
Hebrew and Christian scriptures. Yet, to the uninitiated, the Bible
is daunting. One opens its pages only to get lost in its maze. John
Buehrens has performed a great service for the many religious
liberals and seekers who would explore the Bible if only they could
find a trusted guide. Addressed to thoughtful skeptics who know
enough to be skeptical of their own ignorance, Understanding the
Bible is an accessible, unpretentious introduction to the most
influential writings of all time.' --Forrest Church, author of The
American Creed and Lifecraft: The Art of Meaning in the
Everyday
'Understanding the Bible is a thoughtful and honest introduction to
the tragedy, compassion, mercy, justice, grief, and ecstasy that we
share with the tellers of biblical stories and with the stories
themselves. Read Buehren's enlightening as well as entertaining
work and you almost certainly will find yourself learning,
thinking, and laughing as you reach for a copy of the Bible to read
it again or for the first time.' --C. Welton Gaddy, President, The
Interfaith Alliance
'Spiritual seekers of a liberal persuasion have too often dismissed
the Bible, perhaps because of unhappy childhood experiences with
literal interpretations. The Bible is neither history nor science,
but rather stories of human struggle and divine presence throughout
that struggle. John Buehrens engages us in the powerful stories of
the Judeo Christian scripture, returning to us a rich heritage
without which we would be both culturally and spiritually
impoverished.' --Marilyn Sewell, editor of Cries of the Spirit
'If with Saint Augustine, you 'believe in thinking and wish to
think in believing,' John Buehrens' book is for you. He spells out
clearly the historic importance and textual complexities of the
Bible, which then enables you to stand face to face, soul to soul,
with blazing biblical insights sorely needed in these dark days.'
--William Sloane Coffin, author of A Passion for the Possible
According to this engaging but not always convincing liberal gloss on the Good Book, biblical literalism is an idolatrous departure from the Bible's "enduring but non-literal wisdom," which progressives can reclaim through informed interpretations of biblical metaphor and symbolism. Drawing on historical and contemporary Bible scholarship, Buehrens, a Unitarian minister and co-author of A Chosen Faith, gives an illuminating if brief rundown of each book in the Bible, one informed by feminist, literary and lefty political critiques. The results are mixed. Themes of liberation and social justice emerge in the Exodus narrative, the Prophetic books and the Gospels. But on fundamentalist hot-button issues like homosexuality and women's rights, the Bible's clear statements defy interpretive rehabilitation. Faced with outright prohibition on a man "lying with a man as with a woman," Buehrens suggests that "the inner spirit of what is intended" there might be different. He champions "reading against the grain": with that interpretive strategy, the New Testament's urging of submissiveness on wives and servants, for example, attests to husbands' and masters' anxiety over the egalitarianism of Church congregations. And his anti-literalist, Bible-as-metaphor approach sometimes throws the religion out with the bathwater, as when nonbelievers are reassured that stories of miracles and resurrections can also be seen as metaphorical rather than actual events. Unfortunately, Buehrens's laudable attempt at "reading the Bible to overcome oppression" drains away much substantive content. (June) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
'Biblical literacy is not just for Biblical literalists. To grasp
the nuances of Western art and literature or the religious subtext
of Western law and society requires a working knowledge of the
Hebrew and Christian scriptures. Yet, to the uninitiated, the Bible
is daunting. One opens its pages only to get lost in its maze. John
Buehrens has performed a great service for the many religious
liberals and seekers who would explore the Bible if only they could
find a trusted guide. Addressed to thoughtful skeptics who know
enough to be skeptical of their own ignorance, Understanding the
Bible is an accessible, unpretentious introduction to the most
influential writings of all time.' --Forrest Church, author of
The American Creed and Lifecraft: The Art of Meaning in the
Everyday
'Understanding the Bible is a thoughtful and honest
introduction to the tragedy, compassion, mercy, justice, grief, and
ecstasy that we share with the tellers of biblical stories and with
the stories themselves. Read Buehren's enlightening as well as
entertaining work and you almost certainly will find yourself
learning, thinking, and laughing as you reach for a copy of the
Bible to read it again or for the first time.' --C. Welton Gaddy,
President, The Interfaith Alliance
'Spiritual seekers of a liberal persuasion have too often dismissed
the Bible, perhaps because of unhappy childhood experiences with
literal interpretations. The Bible is neither history nor science,
but rather stories of human struggle and divine presence throughout
that struggle. John Buehrens engages us in the powerful stories of
the Judeo Christian scripture, returning to us a rich heritage
without which we would be both culturally and spiritually
impoverished.' --Marilyn Sewell, editor of Cries of the
Spirit
'If with Saint Augustine, you 'believe in thinking and wish to
think in believing,' John Buehrens' book is for you. He spells out
clearly the historic importance and textual complexities of the
Bible, which then enables you to stand face to face, soul to soul,
with blazing biblical insights sorely needed in these dark days.'
--William Sloane Coffin, author of A Passion for the
Possible
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