List of Tables and Illustrations
List of Contributors
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
1. Introduction - Sharon Betsworth, Oklahoma City University, USA
and Julie Faith Parker, Trinity Lutheran Seminary, USA
Part One Orientation to the Field
2. History of Research on Children in the Bible and the Biblical
World: Past Developments, Present State—and Future Potential -
Reidar Aasgaard
3. Accessing Childhoods: Interdisciplinary Tools at the
Intersection of Biblical Studies and Childhood Studies - Laurel W.
Koepf Taylor
Part Two Hebrew Bible
4. Methodology: Who Is a Child and Where Do We Find Children in the
Ancient Near East? - Kristine Henriksen Garroway
5. The Logic of Sacrificing Firstborn Children - Heath D.
Dewrell
6. Children of Diaspora: The Cultural Politics of Identity and
Diasporic Childhood in the Book of Esther - Dong Sung Kim
7. Children in Proverbs, Proverbial Children - Ericka S. Dunbar and
Kenneth N. Ngwa
8. God as a Child in the Hebrew Bible? Playing with the
Possibilities - Julie Faith Parker 155
Part Three Intertextual Issues and Intertestamental
Texts
9. Children and the Memory of Traumatic Violence - Kathleen
Gallagher Elkins
10. A Road-Trip to Manhood: Tobias’s Coming of Age in Tobit 6–12 -
Stephen M. Wilson
Part Four New Testament
11. Methodology: Who Is a Child and Where Do We Find Children in
the Greco-Roman World? - John W. Martens
12. Children Playing in the Marketplaces - Sharon Betsworth
13. “Theirs is the Kingdom”: Children as Proprietors of the Kingdom
of God in Luke 18:15–17 - Amy Lindeman Allen
14. The “Lost Boys” (and Girls) of Q’s “Neverland” - A. James
Murphy
15. Children, Parents, and God/Gods in Interreligious Roman
Households and the Interpretation of 1 Corinthians 7:14 - Judith M.
Gundry
16. Fathers and Daughters in 1 Corinthians 7:36–38: The Social
Implications of Marriage in EarlyChristian Families - John W.
Martens
Part Five Early Christian Apocrypha
17. Absence and Presence of Children in the Apocryphal Acts - Anna
Rebecca Solevåg
18. Traveling with Children: Flight Stories and Pilgrimage Routes
in the Apocryphal Infancy Gospels -Tony Burke
Bibliography
Scripture Index
Ancient Source Index
Subject Index
A handbook of methodological approaches and textual analyses that provide an overview of children and childhood in ancient Jewish and Christian religious texts
Sharon Betsworth is Professor of Religion at Oklahoma
City University, USA. She is the author of Children in Early
Christian Narratives (T&T Clark 2015) and The Reign of God is
Such as These: A Socio-literary Analysis of Daughters in the Gospel
of Mark (T&T Clark 2010).
Julie Faith Parker is Associate Professor of Biblical
Studies at The General Theological Seminary in New York City, USA.
She is the author or editor of seven books, including Valuable and
Vulnerable: Children in the Hebrew Bible, Especially the Elisha
Cycle (Brown University, 2013).
Overall, this book provides an excellent starting point for
students and researchers new to the field of children in the Bible
and the biblical world… This handbook is an especially helpful
guide in providing useful methodologies, a history of the research
field, and new research prospects.
*Review of Biblical Literature*
The study of children in the Bible and the biblical world speaks to
a range of audiences; children are members of communities past and
present, and the Bible continues to shape cultures and the lives of
individuals worldwide. This volume provides a wealth of resources,
taking both biblical studies and child-focused interdisciplinary
research to new levels. Initial chapters provide a valuable
orientation to the significance of the study of children and
childhood in the biblical world and to recent advances in this
rapidly growing area of research. Subsequent contributions display
a range of creative methodological approaches, offering new
insights into biblical and early Christian texts and the history of
childhood in the ancient Near East.
*Marcia J. Bunge, Professor of Religion and the Bernhardson
Distinguished Chair, Gustavus Adolphus College, USA, and editor of
The Child in the Bible*
Building from years of scholarly interactions, conferences,
articles, and monographs, this first compendium on child-centered
approaches to ancient biblical texts continues to solidify the case
for why research on children is critical for biblical studies. From
historical insights to the analyses of theology and reception
history through varying methodological approaches, this collection
further anchors a discipline specific nomenclature for
child-centered approaches.
The editors gather expertise from archaeology, historical contexts,
ancient households, post-colonial studies, linguistics, source
criticism, and trauma studies, which each invite a wide
conversation on the importance of child-centered topics. As such,
the volume is multilayered, bringing seemingly disparate
methodologies and varying fields of study together. This first
compendium is an essential tool for exploring the possibilities of
children, their role, function, and their critical importance in
the interpretation of ancient texts and their receptions.
*Shawn W. Flynn, Associate Professor of the Hebrew Bible and
Academic Dean, University of Alberta, Canada, and author of
Children in Ancient Israel: The Hebrew Bible and Mesopotamia in
Comparative Perspective"*
T&T Clark Handbook of Children in the Bible and the Biblical
World is a welcome and much-needed resource for investigating
childhood in the ancient world and constructions of children in
biblical literature. Combining new and seasoned voices in childist
studies, this volume issues a compelling invitation to learn from
and join in critical conversations on children and childhood in the
biblical world.
*Danna Nolan Fewell, John Fletcher Hurst Professor of Hebrew Bible,
Drew University, USA, and author of The Children of Israel: Reading
the Bible for the Sake of Our Children*
The publication of Handbook of Children in the Bible and the
Biblical World marks a milestone in the development of studies of
childhood and children in the Bible. No longer in its infancy, the
work signals a maturation in this area of research.
*Australian Biblical Review*
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