increasingly challenged by some insistent voices that seek to exclude any sort of explicitly religious or theological perspective from a place at the table in scholarly study of the Bible.”12 As the heyday of historical-critical study of the Bible wanes, Hays is one of an ever-increasing number of scholars who are proponents and practitioners of theological interpretation of Scripture. Such interpretation, however, is difficult to quantify, as “it is not a set of discrete procedures that could be
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