William M. Wright IV
Dr. William M. Wright IV (Ph.D., Emory University) is a professor of theology at Duquesne University and a specialist in New Testament studies. He is the author of several books, including (with Francis Martin) The Gospel of John and Encountering the Living God in Scripture: Theological and Philosophical Principles for Interpretation. Dr. Wright has been elected to the Studiorum Novi Testamenti Societas and the Academy of Catholic Theology and serves on the U.S. Lutheran-Roman Catholic Ecumenical Dialogue. He is also a Lay Dominican.
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Joseph Ratzinger’s 1988 Erasmus Lecture on the modern crisis in biblical interpretation described the task of meeting this crisis as the work of an entire generation of scholars. With these essays, William Wright makes a substantial contribution to this monumental task. Wright’s essays display a rare combination: a profound theological acuity in theoretical matters brought to bear on concrete examples from Scripture. This is a welcome addition to the ongoing project of renewing Catholic biblical interpretation.
Isaac A. Morales, O.P.
Providence College
No New Testament scholar can afford to bypass this book. The Bible and Catholic Ressourcement is an erudite and lively continuation of the promising Ressourcement project. Wright felicitously weaves the strands of biblical exegesis, as brought to life afresh by de Lubac, Congar, and Benedict XVI, into an immensely rich reading of the Johannine Gospel. A convincing and fresh symphony of Catholic faith and up-to-date exegesis emerges, bringing the liturgical Jesus Christ into vivid focus.
Emery de Gaál
University of St. Mary of the Lake, Mundelein Seminary
Wright’s book is a highly creative engagement with the legacy of Ressourcement written by a serious biblical scholar. It should be welcomed by all seeking to repair the divisions between ‘theologians’ and ‘biblical scholars’ that have been so unhelpful a feature of post-conciliar theology.
Lewis Ayres
Durham University & Australian Catholic University
If Ressourcement reflection in general and that of de Lubac in particular constitute a wellspring for the task of integration and synthesis, Wright carries this task forward not only by his wonderful analysis of Benedict XVI's Jesus of Nazareth, but in his own sophisticated and luminous exegesis which gives full weight to both.
Cyril O'Regan
University of Notre Dame
Wright’s treatment of the biblical hermeneutics of Congar, de Lubac, and Ratzinger is masterful. This is the kind of work the drafters of Dei Verbum could only have imagined in their most hopeful moments. It can be read for both intellectual and spiritual insight, much like Ratzinger’s Jesus of Nazareth volumes.
Tracey Rowland
University of Notre Dame (Australia)
Joseph Ratzinger’s 1988 Erasmus Lecture on the modern crisis in biblical interpretation described the task of meeting this crisis as the work of an entire generation of scholars. With these essays, William Wright makes a substantial contribution to this monumental task. Wright’s essays display a rare combination: a profound theological acuity in theoretical matters brought to bear on concrete examples from Scripture. This is a welcome addition to the ongoing project of renewing Catholic biblical interpretation.
Isaac A. Morales, O.P.
Providence College
No New Testament scholar can afford to bypass this book. The Bible and Catholic Ressourcement is an erudite and lively continuation of the promising Ressourcement project. Wright felicitously weaves the strands of biblical exegesis, as brought to life afresh by de Lubac, Congar, and Benedict XVI, into an immensely rich reading of the Johannine Gospel. A convincing and fresh symphony of Catholic faith and up-to-date exegesis emerges, bringing the liturgical Jesus Christ into vivid focus.
Emery de Gaál
University of St. Mary of the Lake, Mundelein Seminary
Wright’s book is a highly creative engagement with the legacy of Ressourcement written by a serious biblical scholar. It should be welcomed by all seeking to repair the divisions between ‘theologians’ and ‘biblical scholars’ that have been so unhelpful a feature of post-conciliar theology.
Lewis Ayres
Durham University & Australian Catholic University
If Ressourcement reflection in general and that of de Lubac in particular constitute a wellspring for the task of integration and synthesis, Wright carries this task forward not only by his wonderful analysis of Benedict XVI's Jesus of Nazareth, but in his own sophisticated and luminous exegesis which gives full weight to both.
Cyril O'Regan
University of Notre Dame
Wright’s treatment of the biblical hermeneutics of Congar, de Lubac, and Ratzinger is masterful. This is the kind of work the drafters of Dei Verbum could only have imagined in their most hopeful moments. It can be read for both intellectual and spiritual insight, much like Ratzinger’s Jesus of Nazareth volumes.
Tracey Rowland
University of Notre Dame (Australia)
Joseph Ratzinger’s 1988 Erasmus Lecture on the modern crisis in biblical interpretation described the task of meeting this crisis as the work of an entire generation of scholars. With these essays, William Wright makes a substantial contribution to this monumental task. Wright’s essays display a rare combination: a profound theological acuity in theoretical matters brought to bear on concrete examples from Scripture. This is a welcome addition to the ongoing project of renewing Catholic biblical interpretation.
Isaac A. Morales, O.P.
Providence College
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William M. Wright IV
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