01459nam a2200289 a 450000500170000000800200001702000300003704100080006708200100007508200120008510000240009710000110012124500340013224500480016624500260021426000110024026000190025126000090027030000110027930000290029030000090031949000420032852006620037065000590103265000120109185600660110320260119071216.02023-12-26 15:11:35 a9780801031571, 0801031575 aeng a225.6 bE21-H93 aHumphrey, Edith Mc. eAuthor aAnd I Turned to See the Voice bThe Rhetoric of Vision in the New Testament cEdith McEwan Humphrey aU.S.A. bBaker Academic c2007 a238tr. bPaperback, illustrations c22cm aStudies in Theological Interpretation a... By means of a literary and rhetorical approach, Humphrey offers new insights into the use of vision-reports, moving beyond previous studies that have tended to focus only on the recorded event (what actually happened?) to the deeper polemical, literary, and theological dimensions (how and to what end do the authors embed the vision-report in their writings?). Humphrey details four uses of vision-reports: to complete the narrative, to direct the argument, to shape the narrative, and to fire the imagination. Taking the cue from these narratives, which are at once ""open"" and ""directive,"" she commends a hermeneutics of receptivity to the reader. aBible - New Testament - Criticism, interpretation, etc aVisions4 uhttps://data.thuviencodoc.org/books/13058/an.jpgyCover Image