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Scripture and Violence
Philip and the Qur'an
Summary of the volume
Topics covered in this introductory essay
What is "violence"?
Does it make sense to talk about "religious violence"?
What do the Bible and Qur'an have to do with violence?
What role do passages from the Bible and the Qur'an play in motivating or justifying violence?
What is involved in interpreting and applying scriptural texts today?
How do religious communities actually engage with texts?
Why do people think, say, or imply that those who consider certain scriptures "sacred" might be more inclined to violence - or less inclined to violence - than others?
Other contributions to the volume
Notes
Works cited
Reading and debating the Qur’an with ISIS
Interviewees
Initial jihadi impulses and the Qur'an
Openness to a different reading of the Qur'an
Desire to shape history
Conclusion
Works cited
“And God said”: do biblical commands to conquer land make people more violent, or less?
Violent applications of the biblical conquest story in history
Alternative understandings of divine conquest commands
Divine and human authorization for violence in the Hebrew Bible
To fight or not to fight?
The need for direct divine consultation
Warfare and the "spirit of the Lord"
Possible applications of these scriptural dynamics
Classical rabbinic approaches
Implications for contemporary assumptions concerning scripture and violence
Conclusion
Notes
Works cited
Invoking the Qur’an in a Muslim debate over suicide attacks
Modern discourse: suicide attacks or martyrdom operations?
Modern constructions of "suicide" attacks as martyrdom
Modern constructions of "suicide" attacks as suicide
Conclusion
Notes
Works cited
Texts and violence in modern Israel: interpreting Pinchas
The poster: "and the plague was stopped"
Talmudic context: "and Pinchas prayed"
Pinchas in the Babylonian Talmud
Pinchas in the Palestinian Talmud
Pinchas in the Taimuds: miracles, prayer, and protest
The letter: unformed and void
Conclusion
Notes
Works cited
Why saying “only some Muslims are violent” is no better than saying “all Muslims are violent”
Hunter's fanatics
Sir Syed's loyal Muslims
Re-reading claims about scripture and violence
Notes
Works cited
Left behind? The New Testament and American evangelical Christian support for war
The book of Revelation predicts nuclear warfare
Left Behind and rapture theology
American politics and the book of Revelation
Concluding reflections
Notes
Works cited
“There never was and never will be”: violence and interpretive erasure in the Jewish tradition
A text of violence
Is violence always a part of redemption?
The text in question
Rabbinic erasure of a violent text
Burning the texts of Jews
The theology of erasure: a whole offering for the sake of God
Conclusion
Notes
Works cited
Reading scripture reverentially but not univocally: why words in themselves are not dangerous
Outline of the argument
Reading scripture canonically and responsively
Scripture and violence: concluding reflections
Notes
Works cited
Wrestling with scripture and avoiding violence in the university classroom
Fragile identities and pedagogical concerns
Two one-sided approaches to scriptures
Closed-off religious readings
Closed-off historical-critical readings
Toward a differential and dialogical hermeneutics
Where do you read from?
Introducing different reading strategies
Organizing Scriptural Reasoning activities
Conclusion
Notes
Works cited
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