Cowley Publications
Pages: 181
Trim: 5¾ x 8¾
978-1-56101-146-9 • Paperback • January 1998 • $19.95 • (£14.99)
978-1-4616-2408-0 • eBook • January 1998 • $18.99 • (£14.99)
Michael Johnston is rector of Grace Church in Oak Park, Illinois, and has taught Bible study in a number of parish groups. He has also taught homiletics at Seabury-Weston Theological Seminary and in the Diocesan School for Deacons, and has studied and traveled extensively in the Holy Land.
Part 1 An Icon of the Word
Chapter 2 Telling the Story
Chapter 3 Passing on the Story
Chapter 4 Making the Story Our Own
Chapter 5 Breaking Open the Word
Chapter 6 Forming Community Character
Chapter 7 Who is the God of the Bible?
Chapter 8 Who is the Jesus of the Bible?
Chapter 9 The Word as Sacrament
Part 10 Finding Jesus
Part 11 Resources
Part 12 Questions for Group Study
Engaging the Word teaches the reader how to use critical and practical tools to explore the Hebrew and Christian scriptures intelligently and perceptively
— Midwest Book Review
Johnston . . . teaches the reader to read the Bible in three senses: the literal, the historical, and the prophetic or spiritual sense. This helps cut through the idea that reading with untutored eyes will automatically help readers find the word of God. The greatest strength in the book is Johnston's discussion of the God of the Bible and the Jesus of the Bible. He gives the reader permission to see that there are many differing pictures, images, icons of God depicted in the Bible.
— The Living Church
The book will be of great use, I believe, for the many of us who have been marginalized in various ways by the experience of the church: women, gay men, lesbians, people of color or of minority ethnicity. It should find eager audiences in urban and university parishes.
— The Anglican Theological Review
Engaging the Word builds on the foundation laid in the earlier Opening the Bible, and it is as practical and profound as that companion volume. Michael Johnston demonstrates how the Bible is to be engaged responsibly by contemporary readers. He proposes both a theological understanding of the Bible and a hermeneutic that honors the questions and the cultural insights of our time.
— Sewanee Theological Review
This volume is rather more speculative than its predecessors [in the New Church's Teaching Series], offering a strategy for reading the Bible (using a literal–historical –prophetic matrix), and a methodology for group study. Unafraid of controversy, Johnston bases his reading of Mark on a relentlessly political hermeneutic connected with the Roman Occupation and the fall of Jerusalem. However, he insists that his strategy remains viable whatever hermeneutic is adopted or preferred, and I think the book as a whole supports his contention.
— Theological Book Review
A group of adults who want to encourage an open exploration of the Bible, contemporary challenges to its authority, and other related issues can find solid content based on a good grasp of the work of recent biblical scholars in Michael Johnston's easily read text. The book focuses on what it means to read the Bible as part of a community of faith, rather than simply for personal spiritual enlightenment.
— Encounter