The present collection of essays, selected by a priest-teacher and
laywoman-student at Loyola University, brings together wide-ranging,
mind-opening, and absorbing studies on major aspects of biblical
scholarship. The volume comprises four major sections. In the first,
Free Scholarship in the Church, McKenzie emerges as an articulate
spokesman for freedom of intellectual inquiry within the household of
the faith. Part 2, Inspiration and Revelation, are lucid, intellectually
exhilarating investigations into the meaning of God's word and the
historical processes from which the Bible emerged. Part 3, Myth and the
Old Testament, includes probing essays that bring the reader face to
face with an important and difficult subject: the attitude of the
biblical man to nature and to the mythologies of his pagan neighbors.
The final section, Messianism, is devoted to a study of the hopes of
Israel of old and their fulfillment in Jesus Christ, along with the use
of messianic passages for apologetic purposes.