Introduction / Patrick D. Miller
1. Trajectories in Old Testament Literature and the Sociology of Ancient Israel
2. Covenant as a Subversive Paradigm
3. Covenant and Social Possibility
4. Social Criticism and Social Vision in the Deuteronomic Formula of the Judges
5. "Vine and Fig Tree": A Case Study in Imagination and Criticism
6. At the Mercy of Babylon: A Subversive Rereading of the Empire
7. A Poem of Summons (Isaiah 55:1-3) and a Narrative of Resistance (Daniel 1)
8. Israel's Social Criticism and Yahweh's Sexuality
9. Theodicy in a Social Dimension
10. The Social Nature of the Biblical Text for Preaching
11. The Prophet as a Destabilizing Presence
12. The Social Significance of Solomon as a Patron of Wisdom
13. Rethinking Church Models through Scripture
14. Reflections on Biblical Understandings of Property
15. Revelation and Violence: A Study in Contextualization.