The New Testament around the World
Exploring Key Texts from Different Contexts
by Mariam Kamell Kovalishyn, ed.
You must sign in to see if this title is available for request. Sign In or Register Now
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app
1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date Apr 29 2025 | Archive Date May 13 2025
Baker Academic & Brazos Press | Baker Academic
Talking about this book? Use #TheNewTestamentaroundtheWorld #NetGalley. More hashtag tips!
Description
This volume, ideal as a supplemental textbook for courses in the New Testament, brings together distinguished scholars from around the world with perspectives we might not typically encounter and includes some minority voices focused on life within the United States as well. Each contributor writes on a biblical book or group of books, and together they cover the whole New Testament. These authors expose students and pastors in the West to new questions and ways of reading familiar texts. The result is an eye-opening, spiritually enriching experience that will supplement and strengthen our own biblical interpretation.
Advance Praise
“Kovalishyn takes us around the world in twenty-two chapters by twenty-two Bible interpreters. This work demonstrates how one’s cultural and geographical location affects interpretation. Familiar texts are discussed from unfamiliar perspectives, yielding new insights and deeper understandings for Western readers. These samples of ‘situated exegesis’ will be of interest to a broad audience, from pastors to students to scholars of hermeneutics. Highly recommended.”—Karen H. Jobes, Professor Emerita of New Testament and Greek Exegesis, Wheaton College
“None of us reads the Bible neutrally. Whether we recognize it or not, we read and interpret the Bible from our own culture, experiences, and personal perspective. That is a bad thing if we assume we know everything but a good thing if we are willing to read Scripture with others and learn from each other’s vantage points. These global readings are a gift of learning for those who want to better understand culturally diverse interpretations of the New Testament.”—Nijay K. Gupta, Julius R. Mantey Professor of New Testament, Northern Seminary
“The excellent scholarly essays in this important book, covering aspects of the New Testament from Matthew to Revelation, demonstrate the significance of contextual scriptural interpretation. Each chapter makes an important contribution, and the book as a whole is part of a seismic shift in the field of New Testament studies. I hope this volume is widely read by scholars and students alike.”—Michael J. Gorman, Raymond E. Brown Professor of Biblical Studies and Theology, St. Mary’s Seminary & University
“This a book I’ve been waiting for. In it, we listen to and learn from scholars across the majority world. Each author offers a close reading of a New Testament text in its context, alongside an exploration of their own cultural and social locations. The insights arising from this intersection are both fresh and compelling. I highly recommend this as a textbook for courses on the Bible.”—Jeannine K. Brown, David Price Professor of Biblical and Theological Foundations, Bethel Seminary
“I wish I were still teaching full-time so that I could use this as my main supplemental textbook in my New Testament introduction and survey courses. Many works have tried to show how crucial it is to read the Bible through the eyes of other cultures, nationalities, and ethnicities besides white American ones, but few have succeeded as well as Mariam Kovalishyn and her cadre of authors. Highly recommended!”—Craig L. Blomberg, Distinguished Professor Emeritus of New Testament, Denver Seminary
“This book truly is just as much a reformation as it is a revolution. It is not just new; in many ways it is a return to original hermeneutics. Modernist, white, Western ways of interpreting Scripture, which have held sway for much of church history, are not the only, or even the primary, ways of understanding the Bible. Our brothers and sisters from around the world provide cultural lenses that are much more similar to those of first-century readers. This is not a relativistic reading of the Bible; it is a more authentic one. This is an invaluable polycentric resource that forms a bridge between the ancient world and our modern global one.”—Allen Yeh, vice president of academic affairs and academic dean, International Theological Seminary
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781540962966 |
PRICE | $32.99 (USD) |
PAGES | 368 |
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews

Interested in how cultures and worldviews affect comprehension and application? Whether you're exploring scripture for the first time, or interested in deepening your understanding of how Jesus and the Early Church is understood around the world, you'll enjoy this.
If you're into anthropology and intercultural studies, you'll love it. The compilation of theology by scholars from every continent was very interesting.
My husband's a theologian who wrestles with reading the text in its context. "What did it mean to hearers (readers) who encountered the gospels and letters for the first time? And what does it mean to us now?"
How do we perceive the Living Word? Our approach is colored by our backgrounds, of course. Everyone who reads scripture has his/her own biases.
My husband and I have interesting conversations on walks and around the table, together, with our students, and with others. This will provide fodder for discussion, no doubt about it.