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Psalms Old and New: Exegesis, Intertextuality, and Hermeneutics is unavailable, but you can change that!

Reading the book of Psalms in its original context is the crucial prerequisite for reading its citation and use in later interpretation, including the New Testament writings, argues Ben Witherington III. Here he offers pastors, teachers, and students an accessible commentary to the Psalms, as well as a reasoned consideration of how they were heard and read in early Christianity. By reading...

Philemon, James, 2 Peter, the Johannine Epistles, and Jude.23 Some of this can be accounted for by the fact that the quoting from or alluding to the OT in general is almost entirely absent in various of these documents. One could theorize that perhaps the converts in Thessalonike, for example, were so overwhelmingly from a pagan background that Paul refrained from using a sacred text with which they would be totally unfamiliar. But this hardly explains the almost total absence of Psalm material in
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