Jacqueline E. Lapsley is associate professor of Old Testament at
Princeton Theological Seminary. She earned her M.A. from the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, her M.Div. from Princeton Seminary,
and her Ph.D. from Emory University. She is interested in literary
readings of the Old Testament narratives, the prophets, Old Testament
ethics, and theological anthropology in the Old Testament. Her courses
cover sin and salvation in the Old Testament, women in the Old Testament
narratives, and Old Testament ethics. Associate Editor of A Dictionary
of Scripture and Ethics (forthcoming from Baker Academic). She is
likewise co-editing with Carol Newsom and Sharon Ringe, a revision of
the Women’s Bible Commentary (forthcoming 2012 from Westminster/John
Knox Press). She is also co-chair of the Ethics and Biblical
Interpretation Group at SBL. Professor Lapsley is an ordained elder and
teaches and preaches in congregations.
Major Publications
“A
Feeling for God: Emotions and Moral Formation in Ezekiel.” In Character
Ethics and the Old Testament: Appropriating Scripture for Moral Life,
edited by M. Daniel Carroll R. and Jacqueline E. Lapsley (Westminster
John Knox Press, 2007)
“Ezekiel Through the Spectacles of Faith.” In
Reformed Theology: Identity and Ecumenicity II: Biblical Interpretation
in the Reformed Tradition, edited by Michael Welker and Wallace M.
Alston Jr. (Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2007)
“Alternative
Worlds: Reading the Bible as Scripture.” In Engaging Biblical Authority:
Perspectives on the Bible as Scripture, edited by William P. Brown
(Westminster John Knox Press, 2007)
Character Ethics and the Old
Testament: Moral Dimensions in Scripture, coedited with M. Daniel
Carroll R. (Westminster John Knox Press, 2007)
Whispering the Word: Hearing Women’s Stories in the Old Testament (Westminster John Knox Press, 2005)
Can These Bones Live? The Problem of the Moral Self in the book of Ezekiel (de Gruyter, 2000)
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