It has been more than two decades since the publication of George Kennedy’s influential New Testament Interpretation Through Rhetorical Criticism (1984). The essays in Words Well Spoken demonstrate the influence of Kennedy’s work on New Testament studies. The essays offer applications of his method to canonical New Testament books and provide more general discussions of rhetorical analysis. Kennedy’s thoughtful response articulates his present thinking about the New Testament and demonstrates why this scholar continues to be of such value to New Testament studies.
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Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
1. C. Clifton Black and Duane F. Watson
Introduction
2. Margaret D. Zulick
The Recollection of Rhetoric: A Brief History
3. Thomas H. Olbricht
George Kennedy’s Scholarship in the Context of North American Rhetorical Studies
4. Duane F. Watson
The Influence of George Kennedy on Rhetorical Criticism of the New Testament
5. C. Clifton Black
Kennedy and the Gospels: An Ambiguous Legacy, A Promising Bequest
6. Vernon K. Robbins
Rhetography: A New Way of Seeing the Familiar Text
7. Blake Shipp
George Kennedy’s Influence on Rhetorical Interpretation of the Acts of the Apostles
8. Frank W. Hughes
George Kennedy’s Contribution to Rhetorical Criticism of the Pauline Letters
9. James D. Hester
Kennedy and the Reading of Paul: The Energy of Communication
10. Greg Carey
Moving an Audience: One Aspect of Pathos in the Book of Revelation
11. George A. Kennedy
Afterword
Curriculum Vitae: George Alexander Kennedy
Bibliography
List of Contributors
Indexes
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C. Clifton Black (Ph.D., Duke University) is Otto A. Piper Professor of Biblical Theology at Princeton Theological Seminary. He is associate editor of The Catholic Biblical Quarterly and Horizons in Biblical Theology and a series editor for The New Testament Library. Black’s books include The Eighth Day of Creation: An Anthology of Christian Scripture (2008), Anatomy of the New Testament (2006), and The Rhetoric of the Gospel: Theological Artistry in the Gospels and Acts (2001).
Duane F. Watson (Ph.D. Duke University) is Professor of New Testament Studies at Malone College. His most recent titles include The Rhetoric of the New Testament: A Bibliographic Survey (2006), Fabrics of Discourse: Essays in Honor of Vernon K. Robbins (2003), and The History of Biblical Interpretation, Volume 1: The Ancient Period (2003).