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Product Description: J. Alan Groves, 1952-2007, was Professor of Old Testament at Westminster Theological Seminary. He was instrumental in developing the definitive electronic version of the Old Testament—the Michigan-Claremont-Westminster electronic BHS—now maintained by the J. Alan Groves Center for Advanced Biblical Research and used as the basis of many printed and electronic editions of the Hebrew Bible.
These essays honoring Al include subjects such as "Why Do Bad Things Happen to Good People?," "Psalm 23 as Messianic Prophecy," "Beauty in an iPod Culture," "Jonah and Janus," "Israel's Via Dolorosa," and eight others. View the full table of contents.
Contributions come from Samuel L. Boyd, William Edgar, Peter Enns, Christopher J. Fantuzzo, Douglas J. Green, Bradley C. Gregory, Karen H. Jobes, Michael B. Kelly, Tremper Longman III, Kirk E. Lowery, Adrian T. Smith, Bruce K. Waltke and J. Alan Groves with a foreword by Moisés Sliva.
225 Pages
Published October 2010
About the Editors: Peter Enns is senior fellow in Biblical Studies at the BioLogos Foundation, Douglas J. Green is Professor of Old Testament and Biblical Theology at Westminster Theological Seminary and Michael B. Kelly is Assistant Professor of Old Testament at Westminster Theological Seminary.
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"I cherish very special memories of my work with Al - an innovative, thorough, and knowledgeable scholar, and above all a dear friend. My work with him in the 1980s on the digitization of the Leningrad Codex was pleasant and instructive in all aspects. Subsequently, he slowly became a leader in this field. He was at the forefront of the computerized study of the Hebrew Bible and its grammatical analysis, and without him this field would be different today. This fine collection of studies is a token of appreciation for his work, and will remain an everlasting memory of his activities and personality."
- Emanuel Tov, J. L. Magnes Professor Emeritus of Bible, Hebrew University, Jerusalem
"It is a pleasure to commend this tribute to Al Groves, a pioneer of the inter- face between computers and the study of the Hebrew Bible, whose death was a huge and untimely loss. The collection here reflects Al Groves’ particular interests, and testifies to the vigor and creativity of Old Testament studies in the best traditions of Westminster Theological Seminary, as well as to the immense personal and scholarly influence of the honoree."
- Gordon McConville, Professor of Old Testament Theology, University of Gloucestershire
"Al’s interest in the Hebrew biblical text brought him into contact with the fledgling Center for Computer Analysis of Texts (CCAT) that was attempting to gather computerized texts, especially for the subproject Computer Analysis of Texts for Septuagint Studies. Al worked with the late Jack (John) Abercrombie to correct and adjust the computerized Hebrew text that had been acquired from the University of Michigan (Van Parunak) in cooperation with Claremont Graduate School (Dick Whittaker). In the development of things, further work on this Hebrew material was done in the Netherlands by E. Talstra and his team, with Al contributing on this side of the waters. Al became the person in charge of the Hebrew biblical text developments, at first as an arm of CCAT but soon as an independent project. It was a tremendously valuable develop- ment in all ways, and his attention to detail and cooperative spirit were much appreciated by all."
- Robert A. Kraft, Berg Professor of Religious Studies, University of Pennsylvania
"Al Groves would surely have opened this volume of scholarly essays eagerly, and on scanning the contents page thought: “Why, I know every one of these contributors personally!”—little thinking that this was the motivation for the entire book. He would have been deeply moved, honored, surprised, grateful, and happy to know he was so much loved.
"Al Groves had a special capacity to make people feel his care for, and interest in, them—and not only as students or scholars but as whole individuals. At the same time, he could gently question and probe both mind and heart in pastoral concern. Reading these pages with gratitude, he would often, surely, have paused and thought: “Now, we must talk further about this.”
"It is wonderfully fitting that some of his closest friends, colleagues, teach- ers, and students here offer their learning and their love to the memory of such a man. This physical reminder of his largeness of heart, his lovability, his ability joyfully to unite faith and learning, makes one feel again how much he meant to those who knew, loved, and learned from him—and how much he is missed."
- Sinclair B Ferguson, The First Presbyterian Church, Columbia, South Carolina; Professor of Systematic Theology, Redeemer Seminary, Dallas
'“Ah, Mercy!”' That word that was ever on Al’s lips also well describes the focus of his work and his life. As he was conscious of having received mercy, so he lived it and, like Micah, loved it. And as he read his Hebrew Bible (and his Greek New Testament, too), he saw God’s chesed everywhere in it. The essays in this volume are a fitting tribute to Al, the lover of mercy, because, as Al himself was always concerned to do (even in the midst of parsing an ambiguous verb), they point beyond technical matters to some of the ways in which the Bible directs us both to love and to live God’s mercy. Thanks be to God."
- Dan McCartney, Professor of New Testament Interpretation, Redeemer Seminary, Dallas
"For two traits, yea for three, will I remember Al Groves: For prayers redolent with thanksgiving and praise and short on petitions, For scholarship alive both to textual ideologies and to Yahweh’s mission, And for an unnatural gift of parsing lunch bills into fair divisions. For these traits, yea for many more, may the God of Israel be praised!"
- Stephen S. Taylor, Associate Professor of New Testament, Biblical Seminary, Hatfield, Pennsylvania
"Teaching in a theological climate is a very lonely and sometimes daunting enterprise. Even with the most absorbed and friendly class, you are all alone there in front. What you say will inevitably be passed on—sometimes garbled and distorted. When you read the exams and one student after another gets it all wrong, there is really only one conclusion available: you, with all your preparation and good intentions, have deceived a whole class, and they will go on to deceive the waiting world. It is hard to be fearless and open to learning and willing to teach something new and important. It is easy to be safe and lazy. I think teaching the Old Testament is the hardest. It is so far away from today; is Jesus really there? But at Westminster Theological Seminary it was different. Ray Dillard showed us Jesus in the OldTestament, with integrity and with joy.
"Ray was pastoral in his preaching and in his recruitment and leadership of his band of brothers in the Old Testament department. The group he brought together and nurtured was truly a team. But that can’t happen, can it? Remember how lonesome it is up in front? Someone has said that if it happens, it’s possible. It happened. That had to be unique in Old Testament theological education.
"But it wasn’t unique; it continued. At Ray’s much-too-early death, suddenly the unspectacular Al Groves was there, as pastoral of his brood as Ray had been. He had his own kind of cutting-edge scholarship in the arcane world of the Old Testament text. How could the cellar of a crumbling mansion produce the very best Old Testament text ever—and computerized at that? How could that kind of world-class scholarship come with the pastor’s heart, for students and especially for his colleagues? It happened again with Al.
"We must speak the truth in love. In a seminary, truth means the very best painstaking scholarship. In love means with kindness and care for all the students, and especially for colleagues in the hard and sometimes hostile world of evangelical Old Testament scholarship. That was Al Groves. It happened again. Isn’t the Lord kind?"
- Clair Davis, Chaplain and Professor of Church History, Redeemer Seminary, Dallas
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