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YOU CAN UNDERSTAND THE BIBLE, by Peter Kreeft

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 Contents - Jun 2012AD2000 June 2012 - Buy a copy now
Society: Cardinal George Pell: Science and religion can coexist - Cardinal George Pell
Secularism: Same-sex 'marriage' is an attack on parents' rights and religious freedom - Patrick Byrne
News: The Church Around the World
NET Ministries: Another Catholic youth ministry success story - Br Barry Coldrey
Women Religious: Vatican takes action against dissenting US nuns - Babette Francis
Christendom: Hungary's new constitution a rebuke to secular Europe - Edward Pentin
Faith and Reason: Cardinal Pell debates Richard Dawkins on Q&A: a commentary - Frank Mobbs
Australian student campaigns for US college's Catholic identity - David Walsh
American priest's work for the protection of life in Russia - Eva-Maria Kolman
Latin: Pope John XXIII's document on Latin: 50th anniversary - Salvatore Cernuzio
Remembering the Catholic priests on board the 'Titanic' - AD2000 Report
Books: ABOUT BIOETHICS: Philosophical and Theological Approaches - Angela Schumann (reviewer)
Books: DEFEND THE FAITH, by Robert M. Haddad - Jennifer Nowell (reviewer)
Books: OUR GLORIOUS POPES, by Catherine Goddard Clarke - Michael Daniel (reviewer)
Books: YOU CAN UNDERSTAND THE BIBLE, by Peter Kreeft - Arthur Ballingall (reviewer)
Poetry: Simon of Cyrene - Bruce Dawe
Books: Order books from www.freedompublishing.com.au
Reflection: Benedict XVI: Pentecost and the Church's universality - Pope Benedict XVI

YOU CAN UNDERSTAND THE BIBLE
by Peter Kreeft
(Ignatius Press, 2005, 328pp, $33.90, ISBN: 978-1-58617-045-5. Available from Freedom Publishing)

This recent book by prolific American author, Peter Kreeft, tackles a common difficulty many Catholics have in reading large sections of the Bible - let alone the Old and New Testaments in their entirety. Most retire from that task, quite early, possibly daunted or discouraged by the immensity of the Scriptures. Unfortunately, not many take up the challenge again, at least in the short term.

Dr Kreeft is a Professor of Philosophy at Boston College, a convert to Catholicism and the author of over 40 books including Prayer, The Great Conversation, Back to Virtue, A Refutation of Moral Relativism, Making Sense out of Suffering and How to win the Culture War.

In You understand the Bible, Kreeft begins with an easy-to-grasp overview of the Bible while at the same time anticipating the common problems encountered by the relatively unlearned reader. In this regard, he explains that his book is a reference for "amateurs."

Each chapter eases a beginner's path in terms of the "who, why and where" questions as Kreeft examines each book of the Bible in a way that allows for the difficulties of the non-specialist reader.

By way of an example of Kreeft's approach, during his treatment of the New Testament, he perceptively describes the dissolute condition of ancient Corinth that St Paul had to contend with, comparing at length the amoral condition of that world with that of our own times.

At the time of St Paul, Corinth could be described as the "Surfers Paradise" of the Eastern Mediterranean, not to mention "Sin City". On a high hill above the city stood a Temple to Aphrodite, replete with a thousand temple prostitutes, while two-thirds of Corinth's 700.000 citizens were slaves. Life was indeed cheap and there were few rules.

St Paul began his preaching in Corinth in the years AD51-52, and his chief difficulty in preaching to an intelligent, wealthy and educated audience was a prevailing climate of sceptism that excluded the possibility of anyone being raised from the dead, as in Christ's resurrection. It was a challenge St Paul addressed with courage.

Kreeft's treatment of the many other parts of the Bible is equally interesting.

In short, he has produced an easy to follow, illuminating guide for the relative beginner wishing to read the Scriptures. One hopes this will motivate more of us to embark with confidence on a spiritually rewarding journey through the Bible.

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Reprinted from AD2000 Vol 25 No 5 (June 2012), p. 17

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