List of illustrations
1: The Bible in the modern world: classic or sacred text?
2: How the Biblical books were written
3: The making of the Bible
4: The translation, production and distribution of the Bible
5: Jewish and Christian readings of the binding of Isaac
6: Galatians through history
7: The Bible and its critics
8: The Bible in the post-colonial world
9: The Bible in politics
10: The Bible in high and popular culture
11: Conclusion
References
Further reading
Index of biblical references
General index
John Riches was the Chaplain and Fellow at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, where he taught philosophy of religion from 1968 to 1972. He then taught the New Testament at Glasgow University from 1973 to 2002, with periods as a visiting lecturer in theological colleges in apartheid and post-apartheid South Africa. Riches' major areas of study have been the Gospels and Paul, with a particular interest in the history of reception of the Bible.
Review from previous edition clear and lively . . . a distinguished
addition to the series
*Christopher Rowland, University of Oxford*
Very Short John Riches' book may be, but it is not simple - nor
could it be. It is a masterly reduction, without minimizing the
problems: indeed, it exposes them as they need to be exposed.
*Canon Eric James*
John Riches makes the Bible's strong vitality abundantly
apparent
*Tom Butler, Bishop of Southwark*
John Riches reminds us that one of the most read books in the world
- the Bible - is now most widely read in unfamiliar places - South
Africa, Zimbabwe, Botswana, the Philippines, and Peru - by poor and
marginalized people.
*Gerald West, University of Natal*
This lively book will be read with profit and delight by a wide
range of readers. The author's many examples of the ways the Bible
has been used and misused in different parts of the world make
fascinating, and sometimes disturbing reading.
*Graham Stanton, King's College, London*
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