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35- ’AND ALSO MUCH CATTLE?!’: PROPHETIC PASSIONS AND THE END OF JONAH † Rickie D. Moore* Church of God School of Theology 900 Walker Street NE, Cleveland, TN 37312, USA t Rickie D. Moore (PhD, Vanderbilt University) is Professor of Old Testament at the Church of God School of Theology in Cleveland, Tennessee, USA. * An earlier version of this paper was presented at the Twenty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the Society for Pentecostal Studies, Toronto, Canada, March 1996. Introduction This paper proposes to take a look at the end of Jonah in order to pursue a much larger end. Contrary to the rhetorical strategy that I find in the book of Jonah, which ends with an unanswered question, I want to be up front about this more ultimate aim. To put it sharply, my intent is to point out passions which I take to be crucial right now to the process of Bible study in the Pentecostal tradition. My aim emerges from the attempt to conceive and to encourage others to con- ceive with me the need, the merit, and the possibilities for what I once heard William Faupel refer to as a Pentecostal reading of the Bible.’
Journal of Pentecostal Theology – Brill
Published: Jan 1, 1997
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