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table of contents | 1. Paul among the Ecologists 2. Romans and its Most Famous Readers 3. The Human Ecology of Romans (Rom. 16.1-27; 1.1-7) 4. ‘Not Ashamed of the Good News’ (Rom. 1.16) 5. Romans by Way of the First Question (Rom. 2.1-3) 6. ‘Their Throats Are Opened Graves’ (Rom. 3.13) 7. ‘He Is the Father of All of Us’ (Rom. 4.16): Abraham as Ecological Role Model 8. The Love of God in Widescreen (Rom. 5.1-21; 8.31-39) 9. ‘Where Sin Kept Increasing’ (Rom. 5.20) 10. ‘I Was Once Alive’ (Rom. 7.9) 11. ‘The Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus’ (Rom. 8.2) 12. ‘The Whole Creation Groans’ (Rom. 8.22) 13. ‘Out of Zion Will Come the Deliverer’ (Rom. 11.26) |
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Cherryl Hunt, Review of Biblical Literature. –
T]his commentary views Romans as a garment lined with the Hebrew scriptures, with their perspectives on human and nonhuman creation; the lining provides ecological substance to the letter, allowing a thick reading of the text; in some places, such as Rom 8:19–23, the lining shows through more clearly. … [A] worthwhile and interesting read.