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About: Mark Elliott

» Mark Elliott is Lecturer in Church History at the University of St Andrews and teaches in the areas of Early and Medieval Church, pre-Enlightenment Theology, and Christian life and thought since Reformation times.

Website: http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/divinity/elliot1.html
Contact: Email the author

Articles by M. Elliott

M. Elliott has contributed 8 posts to Scripture & Theology.

SHS 8: The Bible and the University

By M. Elliott, 20 June 2008

2 Comments

» See the introductory post if this series is new to you. » Special thanks go to Dr. Elliott and to Paternoster’s European Journal of Theology for permission to represent the reviews that first appeared in 2003 (on SHS 1 through 3) and 2008 (on SHS 4 through 8). Where I have some evaluative comments of my [...]

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SHS 7: Canon and Biblical Interpretation

By M. Elliott, 6 June 2008

0 Comments

» See the introductory post if this series is new to you. » Special thanks go to Dr. Elliott and to Paternoster’s European Journal of Theology for permission to represent the reviews that first appeared in 2003 (on SHS 1 through 3) and 2008 (on SHS 4 through 8). Where I have some evaluative comments of my [...]

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SHS 6: Reading Luke: Interpretation, Reflection, Formation

By M. Elliott, 23 May 2008

1 Comment

» See the introductory post if this series is new to you. » Special thanks go to Dr. Elliott and to Paternoster’s European Journal of Theology for permission to represent the reviews that first appeared in 2003 (on SHS 1 through 3) and 2008 (on SHS 4 through 8). Where I have some evaluative comments of my [...]

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SHS 5: Out of Egypt: Biblical Theology and Biblical Interpretation

By M. Elliott, 9 May 2008

4 Comments

John Webster writes on the clarity of Scripture with special attention in the small-print section to Luther, Zwingli and especially Bullinger... Rusty Reno shows how the patristic-era exegetes like Origen and Chrystostom did not feel they had to explain scripture and draw out abstract lessons from it. This is a very worthwhile and stimulating paper... There is a wise point [via Al Wolters] learned from Theodore ‘that the use of figurative language does not somehow compromise the ability to tell the truth about historical states of affairs.’(284) There is also the possibility of multiple fulfilments of prophecy. This is a nice study in the history of exegesis... By the way, why does Scobie in quoting George Herbert put [sic] after ‘the constellation of the storie [sic]’? Does he think that Herbert didn’t know to spell?

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SHS 4: ‘Behind’ the Text: History and Biblical Interpretation

By M. Elliott, 25 April 2008

2 Comments

Here Alvin Plantinga takes on Robert Gordon; van Inwagen lines up against Colin Greene and Joel Green, and there is an essay by William Alston that seems appended to that phase of the book. There are two ‘Catholic’ contributions from Mary Healy and Peter Williamson. Re-thinking history is what goes on in the next six essays, while the last four-Möller, Seitz, Neil MacDonald and Stephen Wright seem a little more miscellaneous.

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SHS 3: A Royal Priesthood? A Dialogue with Oliver O’Donovan

By M. Elliott, 11 April 2008

2 Comments

It is perhaps fitting that in this volume most of the best moments come when the orchestra and its other soloists quieten down and allow the pianist to respond in this concerto... O’Donovan is just the right polymath theologian to draw out the best from his sparring-partners.

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SHS 2: After Pentecost: Language and Biblical Interpretation

By M. Elliott, 5 April 2008

1 Comment

The importance and value of speech-act theory is the main theme of the second volume... In his introduction Bartholomew strongly hinted that the Wolterstorff-Hesse interaction was the heartbeat of the book... Thiselton thinks that we must as biblical exegetes move beyond explanation to understanding and beyond significance to application... Vanhoozer has spelled out how the communicative act mediates between the word and the deed... His is by far the strongest essay in the collection so far. Two other chapters are especially worthy of attention in this strong set of essays. First, Stephen I Wright’s interaction with Stephen Prickett who has observed that in the C20 miracle has been turned into parable and parable into universal truths... Second, for Neil B. MacDonald, meaning did not dislodge from that of the story to a historical referent during the Enlightenment as Hans Frei claimed.

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SHS 1: Renewing Biblical Interpretation

By M. Elliott, 28 March 2008

1 Comment

Neil Macdonald’s intriguing point is that ‘events’ are bigger than author’s intentions.... Stephen Wright deals helpfully with the question of the bible’s imperfection.... Also positive is Trevor Hart’s essay on Imagination.... the most successful of the ‘conversations’ in Book One.... Chris Seitz [contributes] an essay that is less about interpretation and more about the nature of Scripture and the tragedy of Anglican biblical interpretation.... Colin Greene['s essay] is more than a little diffuse, and reads as though by someone who is very new to Lessing and Pannenberg....

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News & Asides
  • A conference entitled Divine Identity Christology in the Gospels: Tyndale House Colloquium has been announced for 11 December 2008 at Tyndale House, Cambridge. It features Professors Richard Bauckham and Richard Hays. Mike Bird has posted schedule details at Euangelion. (more...)
  • Call for Papers: SST/IJST Colin Gunton Memorial Essay Prize 2008, What is theological interpretation?. Closing date: 31 October 2008. (more...)
  • Conference on The Holy Trinity in the Holy Scriptures: Interpreting the Bible for the Church, Tyndale University College, Toronto, from 28–30 May 2008. (more...)
  • Professor M. Bockmuehl announces A Workshop on Early Christian Hopes for Life after Death with N.T. Wright. The free workshop will take place at Keble College, Oxford, on 31 May 2008. Numbers are limited. (more...)
  • The Pope and Jesus of Nazareth, a conference hosted by The Centre of Theology and Philosophy and the Department of Theology and Religious Studies at the University of Nottingham, 19 and 20 June 2008. (more...)