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Semeia 28: The Bible and Feminist Hermeneutics is unavailable, but you can change that!

Semeia is an experimental journal devoted to the exploration of new and emergent areas and methods of biblical criticism. Studies employing the methods, models, and findings of linguistics, folklore studies, contemporary literary criticism, structuralism, social anthropology, and other such disciplines and approaches, are invited. Although experimental in both form and content, Semeia proposes to...

Over the years, there has been considerable discussion regarding the origin or source of the passages in Colossians, Ephesians, 1 Timothy, Titus, and 1 Peter, what their relationship is to the documents in which they now appear, and whether they represent an apostolic or a post-apostolic point of view. On the basis of some rather striking similarities in content, vocabulary, and form, many scholars have concluded that they can be traced to a common source of sources, or at least a common tradition,
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