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The history of scholarship narrates a complicated past for the interpretation of the "Shepherd Discourse" in the Fourth Gospel. Both the internal and contextual integrity of John 9:39-10:21 have been compromised by a misapplied analogy dividing the passage into a parable and explanation structure, and by reading models that favor historical approaches. As a result, the images and figures encountered in the discourse have not been allowed their full imaginative impact and the tendency is to look outside the Gospel for their referents and explanations. The meaning of the "Shepherd Discourse"…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The history of scholarship narrates a complicated past for the interpretation of the "Shepherd Discourse" in the Fourth Gospel. Both the internal and contextual integrity of John 9:39-10:21 have been compromised by a misapplied analogy dividing the passage into a parable and explanation structure, and by reading models that favor historical approaches. As a result, the images and figures encountered in the discourse have not been allowed their full imaginative impact and the tendency is to look outside the Gospel for their referents and explanations. The meaning of the "Shepherd Discourse" lies not in its relation to the rest of the Fourth Gospel, but to that which is imported into the narrative. Moreover, its function as the discourse to chapter 9, and in the whole of the Gospel, is overlooked.
Lewis employs the strategy of rereading, borrowed from literary theory, to address the internal integrity of the discourse and the relationship of the discourse to the rest of the narrative. The literary phenomenon of rereading highlights the interconnectedness of the whole of the discourse and allows all of the imagery to be assessed at a figurative level. Rereading also foregrounds the function of John 9:39-10:21 as the discourse to the healing of the blind man in chapter nine, and calls attention to the importance of the "Shepherd Discourse" for the interpretation of the Fourth Gospel, especially the often-ignored image of Jesus as the door. This book suggests that rereading is necessitated by the Gospel itself as a fundamental feature of its unique theological expression.
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Autorenporträt
The Author: Karoline M. Lewis is assistant professor of biblical preaching at Luther Seminary in St. Paul, Minnesota, and an ordained pastor in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. She previously taught in the department of religion at Augsburg College in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and currently serves as committee officer for the Upper Midwest Region of the Society of Biblical Literature. She received a Ph.D. in New Testament from Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia.