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In 2009, Peter Leithart published Deep Exegesis: The Mystery of Reading Scripture (Baylor University Press) - a book that in part aims to advocate a "hermeneutics of the letter."

First, this book advocates a hermeneutic of the letter. That is to say, reading Scripture has to do with attending to the specific contours—the author's word choice, structural organization, tropes and allusions, and intertextual quotations.

Did Leithart invent this term? A quick search on Google returned only two pages of results, almost all of which pertained to his book. One review I read seemed to think his approach was nothing more than close reading. Is this a fair assessment?

I've read the book itself, so I'm not looking for a definition per se, but more I'm wanting to get a sense where Leithart fits in. Is he off on his own using a novel approach? Or is he reading in similar ways to others, but using a different term (i.e. "hermeneuetics of the letter") than they are? And if so, what other names does this approach have?

Soldarnal
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    The RBL review of this title is available. It suggests Leithart isn't breaking such new ground as he appears to claim -- so consonant with your sense. I haven't seen it myself yet, though I find Leithart generally to be a stimulating author. – Dɑvïd Apr 01 '15 at 13:52
  • Interesting (brief) comment from Don Carson (top paragraph on page). @Soldarnal - could you augment your Q with the gloss/definition that Leithart gives "hermeneutics of the letter" on p. vii of the book? Can't see it in the snippet view on Google books, and page isn't available in Amazon "Look inside", though other chunks are. Thanks!
  • – Dɑvïd Apr 02 '15 at 22:22
  • @Davïd Sure thing. I'm not sure the gloss he gives totally captures his methods; but hopefully it helps. Have you ever read "A Son to Me" or his essay on the typological structure of Matthew? They seem to typify the method he expounds in the book. – Soldarnal Apr 03 '15 at 01:18