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 | Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs NIV Application Commentary By: Iain W. Provan
Retail Price: 27.99 Our Price: 22.39 | 
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Availability: Usually Ships in 24 Hours... Hardback / 400 pages Publisher: Zondervan Publishing Publication Date: April 2001 ISBN: 031021372X |
Publisher's Synopsis
The NIV Application Commentary Ecclesiastes/Song of Songs.
Ecclesiastes and Song of Songs have always presented
particular challenges to their readers, especially if
those readers are seeking to understand them as part of
Christian Scripture.
Ecclesiastes regularly challenges the reader as to grammar
and syntax. The interpretation even of words which occur
frequently in the book is often unclear and a matter of
dispute, partly because there is frequent word-play in the
course of the argument. The argument is itself complex and
sometimes puzzling and has often provoked the charge of
inconsistency or outright self-contradiction. When
considered in the larger context of the OT, Ecclesiastes
stands out as an unusual book, whose connection with the
main stream of biblical tradition seems tenuous. We find
ourselves apparently reading about the meaninglessness of
life and the certainty of death in a universe in which God
is certainly present but is distant and somewhat
uninvolved. When considered in the context of the NT, the
dissonance between Ecclesiastes and its scriptural context
seems even greater; for if there is one thing that we do
not find in this book, it is the joy of resurrection.
Perhaps this is one reason why Ecclesiastes is seldom read
or preached on in modern churches.
The Song of Songs (also known as the Song of Solomon) has
been read, historically, by Christians, in two primary
ways--as a text which concerns the love and sexual
intimacy of human beings and as a text which uses the
language of human love and intimacy to speak of something
else--the relationship between Christ and the church.
Christians have often felt that they must choose between
these options--thata text about human love and sexual
intimacy could not be at the same time a spiritual text.
It is one of the challenges of reading the Song to explore
how far this is necessarily true and how far Christian
readers have been influenced in their reading more by
Platonism and Gnosticism than by biblical thinking about
the nature of the human being and of human sexuality.
Another challenge is to discover whether the Song is
really one "song" at all, or simply a haphazard collection
of shorter poems cast together because of their common
theme of love; and still another is to gain clarity on
what, precisely, is the connection between the Song and
Solomon.
This commentary sets out to wrestle honestly with all the
challenges of reading these biblical books--the challenges
of reading the texts in themselves, and the challenges of
reading them as intrinsic parts of Christian Scripture.
Using the standard structure of the NIVAC series, it
explores their "original meaning," the "bridging contexts"
that enable their journey to the present, and
their "contemporary significance." In the course of the
exploration, these books are seen to be deeply relevant in
what they have to say both to the contemporary church and
the contemporary culture.
Author Biography: Iain Provan is Marshall Sheppard
Professor of Biblical Studies at Regent College. An
ordained minister of the Church of Scotland, he is the
author of commentaries on Lamentations and 1 and 2 Kings.
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