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God and the First Families: Parenting, Trauma, and Healing in the Book of Genesis [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 252 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jun-2026
  • Kirjastus: Jewish Publication Society
  • ISBN-10: 0827616015
  • ISBN-13: 9780827616011
  • Pehme köide
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 252 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jun-2026
  • Kirjastus: Jewish Publication Society
  • ISBN-10: 0827616015
  • ISBN-13: 9780827616011
God and the First Families offers a novel exploration of God's role as a parent in the book of Genesis. Compellingly, author Stephen Spector introduces Americans' four main perceptions of God and their four most common styles of parenting as lenses through which we can reckon with God's own methods of parenting in the first biblical book.

God begins as an authoritarian parent who demands obedience and submission to authority, but shifts in striking ways. Next, God's parenting seems entirely benevolent. Stunningly, God reverts to authoritarianism during the near sacrifice of Isaacbut then invents a new parenting style focused on guiding the characters' moral and emotional growth. Many psychologists consider this the most successful childrearing method. Genesis reached that conclusion two and a half millennia ago!

Throughout, Spector engages with familiar storiessibling rivalries, family ruptures, traumasfrom unexpected angles. He dramatizes how parental love in Genesis builds resilience against trauma, another idea validated by modern psychology. Surviving trauma, healing from parental favoritism, repairing broken relationships, earning forgiveness, possibly even reconciling after injuryGenesis offers wisdom on all.

Arvustused

"This wise, compassionate, learned guide to trauma and love in Genesis enables us to better understand both the biblical book and the dynamics in our own fractured families."Rabbi David Wolpe, author of Teaching Your Children About God

"Keen observer Stephen Spector brings a wealth of learning and original insight to this lively rereading of familiar family stories. Readers will gain greater appreciation of the wounds and blessings that come with being part of a familyand useful tips on how to cope and heal."Arnold M. Eisen, chancellor emeritus of the Jewish Theological Seminary

"For those wishing to bring their contemporary understandings of God into line with biblical depictions of the divine, the interpretive strategy employed in the book will provide significant food for thought."Danna Nolan Fewell, editor of The Oxford Handbook of Biblical Narrative

Acknowledgements
Introduction: Parenting Insights from across Millennia

1. Parenting Styles and Varieties of Belief in God
2. The Authoritarian Language of Creation and Adams Love Story
3. Crime and Authoritarian Punishment in Eden
4. The Cain and Abel Murder Mystery
5. The Flood and the Limits of Authoritarianism
6. Abrahams Righteousness and Fear
7. Abrahams Doubt and Gods Benevolence
8. Sarahs Laughter, Abrahams Chutzpah, and Gods Compassion for the
Dispossessed
9. Gods Reversion to Authoritarianism and Isaacs Trauma
10. Recovery from Loss
11. Rebekah as a Wife and Mother
12. Parental Favoritism and Sibling Rivalry in the Story of Jacob and Esau
13. The Emergence of the Authoritative God
14. Jacob Confronts an Authoritarian Father
15. Wrestling with an Angel as a Turning Point for Jacob and for God
16. Jacobs Favoritism and Parental Negligence
17. Joseph and the Consequences of Favoritism
18. Sense and Sexuality in the Story of Tamar
19. Authoritative Parenting Starts to Work
20. Healing a Dysfunctional Family
21. Jacobs Redemption, the Brothers Distrust, and Josephs Lovingkindness


Conclusion: Parenting, Trauma, Healing, Love, and Redemption

Notes
Bibliography
Appendix: Genesis Through the Lens of Trauma Theory
Index
Stephen Spector is a professor of English emeritus at Stony Brook University. He is the author of Operation Solomon: The Daring Rescue of the Ethiopian Jews and Evangelicals and Israel: The Story of American Christian Zionism, among other volumes. Spector has taught the Bible to undergraduate and graduate students for fifty years. He has been a visiting scholar at Hebrew University and a senior research fellow at the National Humanities Center and the Wesleyan Center for Humanities.