Must There be Scapegoats?: Violence and Redemption in the BibleGracewing, 2000 - 243 pages "Schwager reverses three millennia of conventional understanding of the Bible as he argues that the God of the Old Testament is not a God of violence; that Jesus sacrifice is not an act of appeasement of the Father; and that the suffering and death of an infinite victim is not compensation for an infinite offence against God."-- Back cover. |
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Contents
Violence and the Sacred | 1 |
From the God of Vengeance | 43 |
Jesus as Scapegoat | 136 |
Copyright | |
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Must There be Scapegoats?: Violence and Redemption in the Bible Raymund Schwager Limited preview - 2000 |
Common terms and phrases
According accusation action Acts aggression anger Assyria become biblical blood Christian collective delusion covenant cult death deceit decisive described disciples divine Egypt enemies evil deeds evildoers explicitly Ezek faith fate Father foreign gods fundamental Girard Girard's theory God's Gospel of John Gospel of Luke Gospel of Mark Gospel of Matthew hand hatred healing heart Hegel hermeneutical hidden holy Ibid idea imitation individual interpretation Israel Jerusalem Jesus Jews judgment kill king kingdom Lamech lence Letter Luke Matt mimesis murder nations Old Testament writings one's opponents passage passion Paul peace persecuted perspective Pharisees precisely primitive prophets psalms punishment question random victim rejected stone rejection of Jesus relationship René Girard revealed rival rivalry sacred sacrifices scapegoat mechanism scribes Second Isaiah servant sexual shows songs speak spirit statements supplicant sword synoptic Gospels Testament texts theme theology tion true truth ultimately understanding unmasked vengeance violence word Yahweh