Cowley Publications
Pages: 152
Trim: 5¾ x 8¾
978-1-56101-144-5 • Paperback • January 1997 • $14.95 • (£11.99)
978-1-4616-6069-9 • eBook • January 1997 • $13.99 • (£10.99)
Robert Ferlo is rector of the Church of St. Luke in the Fields in New York City, and has led studies of the Bible in a number of parishes and dioceses. Before his ordination as an Episcopal priest, he taught English at Yale University.
Chapter 1 Why Read the Bible?
Chapter 2 Preparing to Read
Chapter 3 Scanning the Page
Chapter 4 Comparing Translations
Chapter 5 Interpreting the Explanatory Notes
Chapter 6 Reading the Bible, Reading Scripture
Part 7 Resources
Part 8 Questions for Group Study
The second volume in the New Church's Teaching Series addresses the how, why, and what questions of reading Holy Scripture. Roger Ferlo, a one-time professor of English at Yale and currently the rector of the Church of St. Luke in the Fields in New York City, displays his well-earned reputation as a teacher in this excellent introduction. . . . The book is probably best read in the way the author (and his editor) intends, as part of a six-session introductory study of the Bible, with one of the six chapters read before each meeting. It would thus provide a common—and very common sense—understanding of the history of Scripture. . . . Is the reader of Scripture to be caught in a battle between literalist and analytical ways of reading the Bible? And how does that relate to the way Scripture is used by religious communities in worship? . . . Opening the Bible offers a way to read the text sacred to Christians with some understanding of what is on the printed page and how it came to be there. Ferlo has written a good introduction without talking down to his readers or sidestepping current debates. Neglecting or refusing to read critically makes the Bible a closed book. But reading critically just for its own sake renders Scripture mute. What makes this volume live is the spirit which Ferlo brings to his task, a passionate love of conversation, engagement, and friendship to which believers are called by the Spirit of the living God.
— Rev. Arthur E. Walmsley, Deering, NH