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Walter Brueggemann-2006-11-13-Cambridge University Press eBooks
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My study of Jeremiah goes back to ancient days, to my study with Lionel A. Whiston, Jr., at Eden Theological Seminary and with James Muilenburg at Union Theological Seminary. Since that time, I have been privileged to be in mostly friendly and always generative conversations with the principal interpreters of Jeremiah in our present generation: Robert P. Carroll, Ronald E. Clements, Terence E. Fretheim, William L. Holladay, Patrick D. Miller, Kathleen M. O'Connor, and Louis Stulman. (I heard Abraham Heschel lecture in only one series, and that concerned Jeremiah.) The present book reflects my engagement with these several writings in a way that has clarified and situated my own scholarship.

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My study of Jeremiah goes back to ancient days, to my study with Lionel A. Whiston, Jr., at Eden Theological Seminary and with James Muilenburg at Union Theological Seminary. Since that time, I have been privileged to be in mostly friendly and always generative conversations with the principal interpreters of Jeremiah in our present generation: Robert P. Carroll, Ronald E. Clements, Terence E. Fretheim, William L. Holladay, Patrick D. Miller, Kathleen M. O'Connor, and Louis Stulman. (I heard Abraham Heschel lecture in only one series, and that concerned Jeremiah.) The present book reflects my engagement with these several writings in a way that has clarified and situated my own scholarship.

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Philosophy

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