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Invitation to Biblical Interpretation: Exploring the Hermeneutical Triad of History, Literature, and Theology is unavailable, but you can change that!

Bible scholars Andreas Köstenberger and Richard Patterson present the “hermeneutical triad” method—an interpretive approach to the Bible that gives due consideration to the historical setting, literary context, and theological message of a given passage. Working through the major genres of Scripture and showing how their method applies to each one, Köstenberger and Patterson provide interpretive...

individual lines, which commonly feature the heightened use of imagery and figurative speech. Although the basic unit of thought remains the individual line, the most recurring feature of Hebrew poetry is repetition. This can be seen especially in the poet’s use of parallelism, the practice of using similar language of approximately the same number of words and length, and containing a corresponding thought, phrase, or idea over succeeding lines. Parallelism may occur in various patterns and be used
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