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  • Signs and Wonders

  • A Beginner's Guide to the Miracles of Jesus
  • By: Amy-Jill Levine
  • Narrated by: Nan McNamara
  • Length: 5 hrs and 45 mins
  • 5.0 out of 5 stars (1 rating)

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Signs and Wonders

By: Amy-Jill Levine
Narrated by: Nan McNamara
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Summary

Explore the miracles of Jesus in Signs and Wonders with Amy-Jill Levine, professor of New Testament studies and Bible study author.

In Signs and Wonders: A Beginner's Guide to the Miracles of Jesus, Amy-Jill Levine explores selected miracles of Jesus in historical and theological context. For each miracle, she discusses not only how past witnesses would have understood the events, but also how today's listeners can draw meaning from Jesus's words and actions. Chapter topics include:

- Giving sight to the blind: Metaphors of understanding (Mark 8, John 9)

- "Take up your pallet and walk" (the paralyzed man): On the role of caregivers

- A bleeding woman and a dead girl: The importance of women's bodies

- Walking on water and stilling the storm: Ecological readings of the Gospels

- The raising of Lazarus: Taking death seriously

©2022 Amy-Jill Levine (P)2023 Tantor
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Daring and original

Amy-Jill Levine is a very respected and established NT scholar, so that what might be dismissed as the cheeky chat of a bright undergraduate must be given some serious consideration even if it seems shocking or even - dare I say - occasionally blasphemous. In reality, her general stance coincides with much that I have ventured to work out and teach in my own ministry: Jesus must be understood to have been fully human for him to have been of any true inspiration to the rest of us, which must, perforce, include episodes of anger, fatigue and human fallibility. Amy-Jill affirms these views in her wonderfully insightful splurge around our Lord’s public ministry. If there is any significant weakness in this work it is that it reads like a positive shower of gems landing in some disorder: it’s sometimes difficult to know exactly what her main point is when she seems to skip from one story - one subject - to another: ‘too many diversions young woman!!!’ But how else could she work her magic?
The reading is so well done that it is impossible to imagine the author doing it with more authenticity.
My only concern is her implied sense of entitlement which sometimes irritates an English listener. When Peter’s mother-in-law is healed of course she immediately returns to her ascribed role: to imagine otherwise is unworthy of such a scholar! Yes, it’s fine in my book to feel angry at Jesus: his back is B-road and he’s used to it, but his incarnation was as a 1st century Palestinian Jew.
Nevertheless, this is an unmissable read from a very humane and often humorous scholar with her heart in the right place.

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