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Author Pentiuc, Eugen J., 1955- author.

Title Hearing the scriptures : liturgical exegesis of the Old Testament in Byzantine Orthodox hymnography / Eugen J. Pentiuc
Published New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2021]
©2021

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Description 1 online resource (xx, 429 pages)
Contents Introduction : brief overview of Byzantine Orthodox Holy Week -- Part I. Hearing the Scriptures through Holy Week Hymns -- 1. Chastity : Joseph and the midnight bridegroom-Holy Monday -- 2. Loyalty : three youths in a fiery furnace-Holy Tuesday -- 3. Bravery : a daring woman and a hiding Eve-Holy Wednesday -- 4. Offering : wisdom's freely shared banquet -- Holy Thursday -- 5. Suffering : the slaughtered lamb and the distraught ewe-Good Friday -- 6. Overcoming : Jonah and the never-setting light-Holy Saturday -- Part II. Liturgical Exegesis -- 7. Key features and hermeneutical procedures
Summary "This is a book on the use and interpretation of Scriptures in Byzantine Orthodox hymnography. The idea of writing such a book emerged with the publication of my The Old Testament in Eastern Orthodox Tradition (Oxford University Press, 2014). In the last two chapters of that work, I dealt with two media through which liturgists have interpreted the Scriptures, namely, the "aural" (e.g., hymnography, lectionaries, homilies, etc.) and "visual" (e.g., portable icons, mosaics, frescoes, liturgical acts, etc.) modes of interpretation, which I coined "liturgical exegesis." In that work, I made a general remark about liturgical exegesis: "The condensed liturgical exegesis is again a challenge to hearers and readers to locate the texts, events, images, and figures woven into the hymnography." I took on that challenge myself, having researched and written the present book, which seeks to identify Scriptures in Byzantine hymnography, a challenge as difficult as finding the proverbial needle in a haystack. Through a comprehensive and minute analysis of selected hymns, I have strived to make sure that no scriptural needle, as tiny and unobservable as it might be (i.e., scriptural hapax legomena [Gr. forms "occurring once" in the Bible] or rare words), remains hidden in the depths of the hymnic tapestry. Therefore, the first goal of my research was to find Scriptures, primarily Old Testament, in Byzantine Orthodox hymnography. The selection criteria for which hymns to consider rested fundamentally upon the presence of references and hints of the Old Testament in the targeted hymns. However, due to the resilient "hiddenness" of scriptural material within the poetic fabric of the hymns, it took me quite some time to decide which hymns should be selected and then thoroughly analyzed. The second goal of my research was to identify key features and hermeneutical procedures characteristic of "liturgical exegesis" in comparison to "discursive exegesis" (i.e., the interpretive method of ancient biblical commentaries)."-- From the preface
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on November 01, 2021)
Subject Orthodox Eastern Church -- Hymns -- History and criticism
Orthodox Eastern Church -- Byzantine Empire
SUBJECT Orthodox Eastern Church fast
Bible. Old Testament -- Hermeneutics
Bible. Old Testament -- Criticism, interpretation, etc. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85013769
Bible. Old Testament -- History
Bible. Old Testament fast
Subject Hymns, Greek -- History and criticism
Eastern churches -- Liturgy.
Hymns
Eastern churches -- Liturgy
Hermeneutics
Hymns, Greek
Byzantine Empire
Genre/Form Electronic books
History
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780190239657
0190239654
9780190239664
0190239662