Thus by centering the first paragraph around Junia, the author is further situating herself within the history of feminist scholarship that she had already laid the groundwork for in the opening sentence by referring to “literary-feminist exegesis” (exegesis = critical interpretation of scripture)....
I think about who I want to be, where I want to be; I think about my goals, my potential, my infinite Self that I am striving tobecome. AND YES…I always fall short. Everyone ALWAYS falls short in the face of Eternal and
and it is this very mosaic that makes us exquisitely human. In embracing our humanity, we find the strength to forgive, to heal, and to move forward
we also watched something else unfold.This daywas a day of tremendous loss, shock, grief, heartache, and despair. Oh the despair. The agony so many felt physically and emotionally. But also onthis daywe saw a nation rise up. We saw the best of humanity step up against the worst. ...
sociology, literature, or wherever, the more you will see the penetrating insights and the exact identifications the Bible contains. Some students have remarked that, yes, they always “believed” the Bible, but they have been surprised by how modern and accurate its portrait of humanity really ...