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The Bible: A Global History

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ISBN: 9781541619722

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“A marvelous work of scholarship and storytelling" (Wall Street Journal​), offering a global history of the world’s best-known and most influential book

For Christians, the Bible is a book inspired by God. Its eternal words are transmitted across the world by fallible human hands. Following Jesus’s departing instruction to go out into the world, the Bible has been a book in motion from its very beginnings, and every community it has encountered has read, heard, and seen the Bible through its own language and culture.  
 
In The Bible, Bruce Gordon tells the astounding story of the Bible’s journey around the globe and across more than two thousand years, showing how it has shaped and been shaped by changing beliefs and believers’ radically different needs. The Bible has been a tool for violence and oppression, and it has expressed hopes for liberation. God speaks with one voice, but the people who receive it are scattered and divided—found in desert monasteries and Chinese house churches, in Byzantine cathedrals and Guatemalan villages. 
 
Breathtakingly global in scope, The Bible tells the story of this sacred book through the stories of its many and diverse human encounters, revealing not a static text but a living, dynamic cultural force.

“A marvelous work of scholarship and storytelling…Mr. Gordon has written the life of the Book of Books, and the sense in his narrative that this book is alive, as if somehow it has agency and finds ways to make itself known and felt, is inescapable.”—Barton Swaim, Wall Street Journal

“Gordon’s compelling, sensitive, accessible, and balanced work is a Christian people’s history of the Bible through time and space…A remarkable work of original synthesis, weaving many strands of scholarship into a coherent and lively narrative.” —Christianity Today

“Fascinating…The Bible: A Global History tells the riveting tale of how the writings of a marginal sect in the ancient Near East came to be considered (together with the Jewish scriptures) the sacred texts of a new religion, before becoming—via medieval scribes, the early modern printing press and 20th-century mass production lines—the most reproduced and translated book ever.”—UnHerd

“Really admirable...[Gordon] manages to sketch the history and the geography of its existence in an enviably competent way. He does a sterling job of telling the story.”—The Tablet

“In confident, easy-to-read prose, Gordon takes us on a journey through time and space, showing how this book has transformed societies and historical eras.”—Premier Christianity

“Enlightening.”—National Review

“Smoothly capturing a sprawling and complex history, Gordon frames the Bible as a cultural artifact and a dynamic site where identity is negotiated; a force that binds communities; and an arena where foreign influences are contested. The result is a fascinating look at how the ‘most influential book in the world’ came to be.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"Not only a well-researched and thorough history of the Bible around the world but also a gripping account of literacy, bookmaking, and power.”—Shelf Awareness (starred review)

“A feat of good storytelling…From Gordon’s sprawling, fascinating history, we conclude the Bible isn’t just a global book but a living and active one too.”—Gospel Coalition

“A magnificent survey of how the Bible was dispersed from its Middle Eastern origins to become the planet’s most reproduced and republished book.”—Booklist

“An approachable history suitable for lay readers.”—Kirkus

“What I loved best about this book—aside from the elegant prose and the abundance of startling facts—is the sense of a strong, wise mind behind it. Bruce Gordon has written a book that will engage anyone interested in the Bible, which is anyone interested in human history.”—Christian Wiman, author of Zero at the Bone

“A wonderful book. A highly comprehensive guide to the worldwide reception of Scripture.”—John Barton, author of A History of the Bible

“This extraordinary book is both a stupendous intellectual achievement and a marvelously accessible guide that will delight everyone interested in how the Christian texts became the Bible, and why it has played such an enduring role in reading and worship in the millennia since.”—Andrew Pettegree, coauthor of The Library

“Even the best-informed readers will have much to learn from Bruce Gordon’s erudite and accessible history of the Bible, which ranges knowledgeably across eras and Christian traditions, and indeed across continents. It deserves to find the widest possible audience.”—Philip Jenkins, author of The Next Christendom

“With stunning prose and relentless insight that could only come from this rightly celebrated historian, Bruce Gordon has given us the book that we need at this moment, a real history of the Bible. In Gordon’s capable hands, the Bible becomes a sojourner through history who constantly makes history, and through whom history can be fruitfully understood in all its depths. This book is, quite simply, an intellectual feast.”—Willie James Jennings, author of The Christian Imagination

“If the word of God is alive, it has now met its best modern biographer. Filled with surprises, and sometimes aching with beauty, this is a book to take you wide-eyed round the world and then lead you back to that old leatherbound volume on your shelf.”—Alec Ryrie, author of Protestants

“This is the best survey yet written of the global transmission, and impact, of the world's most influential book. The Bible is readable enough to be enjoyed by anybody, while any expert is likely to learn something new from it.”—Ronald Hutton, author of The Witch

“This is a stunning love song to the Bible. Bruce Gordon has managed the rare feat of telling a complicated story that spans two thousand years in an engaging and accessible way. His book brings new perspectives and a fresh energy to the rediscovery of the Bible and how it has been shaped and reshaped by countless communities in different decades and centuries around the world. It made me want to savor this precious book of books even more, and it reignited my enthusiasm for telling the unknown stories about its nature and origins. In years to come, this will be a classic text for anyone intrigued by the most popular book of all time.”—Chine McDonald, author of God Is Not a White Man

“This is a beautifully written exploration of the journey of the Bible, as the most influential book in the world. It goes from manuscripts to translations, from antiquity to the contemporary world, from the Mediterranean to Africa and China. It shows how the Bible, in all its richness, plays multiple roles: used for good or ill, and certainly as a tool for colonialism. Yet, the Bible is vitally important in the twists and turns of world history, as is shown everywhere in the pages of this fascinating narrative.”—Joan E. Taylor, Professor of Christian Origins and Second Temple Judaism, King’s College London

“From papyrus and purple-painted parchment, through six centuries of print and forward as far as the network-free app, Bruce Gordon guides us on the boundless, unending odyssey of the ‘Book of Books.’ The Bible is a testament to the power not only of Scripture but of the written word itself to connect humanity, to educate, liberate, and also to repress. Gordon bears witness to the individual lives leavened by the ever-changing form of the ‘Book of Life,’ from Frederick Douglass to the football fans of today’s South Africa. This is a compelling account of two millennia of Western book culture, and the places and, above all, the people the Bible has touched.”—James G. Clark, Professor of History, University of Exeter

Professor Gordon, a native of Canada, taught from 1994 to 2008 at the University of St. Andrews, Scotland, where he was professor of modern history and deputy director of the St. Andrews Reformation Institute. His biography of John Calvin will appear with Yale University Press in 2009. Among his other works, The Swiss Reformation was the first comprehensive study of the subject and was named an Outstanding Publication for 2003 by Choice magazine. Clerical Reformation and the Rural Reformation examined the creation of the Protestant ministry in Zurich and its numerous parishes in the sixteenth century. Professor Gordon has edited books on the development of Protestant historical writing, the place of the dead in late-medieval and early-modern society, and the Swiss Reformer Heinrich Bullinger. He currently heads a project on the Protestant Latin Bible of the sixteenth century and is on the editorial board of two monograph series: St. Andrews Studies in Reformation History. (Ashgate), and Zürcher Beiträge zur Reformationsgeschichte (Theologischer Verlag Zürich). His research interests range across late-medieval and early-modern religious history, in particular the Swiss and German Reformations, Bibles, devotional literature, the clergy, death and the dead, historical writing and historiography. He is a fellow of the Royal Historical Society.

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    $19.99