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{{short description|Religious studies of scriptures}}
'''Scriptural Reasoning''' ("SR") is one type of interdisciplinary, [[interfaith]] scriptural reading. It is an evolving practice of diverse methodologies in which [[Christians]], [[Jews]], [[Muslims]],
Theologians of different faiths have strongly challenged the claims made by some of Scriptural Reasoning's founder practitioners that they have requisite knowledge of ancient traditions of Islamic, Jewish and Christian exegesis and, on that basis, "not only the capacity, but also the authority to correct" or "repair" modernist binarist or fundamentalist interpretations of the [[Bible]] or [[Quran]]. Some Scriptural Reasoning projects have been criticised by academics for alleged lack of parity between participating religions, for instrumentalising of sacred texts for political agendas and money, and for alleged victimisation of whistleblowers.
== Method ==
Scriptural Reasoning involves participants from multiple religious traditions<ref>It
A participant from any one religious tradition might therefore:
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== Purpose ==
It is impossible to give a definitive or authoritative account of the purpose of SR.
Nevertheless, it is possible to distinguish three commonly-cited and not mutually-exclusive purposes.
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==== Tent of Meeting ====
Scriptural Reasoning has sometimes been described as a "tent of meeting" - a Biblical ''mishkan'' (
<blockquote>Participants in SR practice come to it as both representatives of academic institutions and particular "houses" (churches, mosques, synagogues) of worship. SR meets, however, outside of these institutions and houses in special times and in separate spaces that are likened to Biblical "tents of meeting". Practitioners come together in these tents of meeting to read and reason with scriptures. They then return to their academic and religious institutions and to the world with renewed energy and wisdom for these institutions and the world.<ref>See {{Harvnb |Kepnes|2006| p=368}}. Note that various third party sources point to Kepnes’ handbook as a helpful description of SR. See, for example, {{Harvnb |Anglican Communion Network for Inter Faith Concerns (NIFCON)|2008| p=6}}, {{Harvnb |Clooney|2008| p=252}}, and {{Harvnb|Ochs|2019|p=3n6}}.</ref></blockquote>
==== Hearth ====
Scriptural Reasoning has been compared to gathering around the warmth of a hearth, where - Ochs explains - the hearth represents "those dimensions of life that members of a religion turn to in times of crisis, tension, or uncertainty in the hope of drawing nearer to the source of their deepest values and identities."<ref>{{Cite book sfn|last=Ochs |first=Peter |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1129027890 |title=Religion without violence : the practice and philosophy of scriptural reasoning |date=2019 |others=David F. Ford |isbn=1-5326-3893-0 |___location=Eugene, Oregon |pagesp=18 |oclc=1129027890}}</ref> This metaphor builds on the rabbinic notion of Torah as a "fire," drawn from texts like Jeremiah 23:29--"Is not my word like fire, says the LORD?" and Deuteronomy 33:2, as interpreted midrashically by the rabbis. In ''Sifre Devarim'' 343, the editor concludes that "the words of Torah are compared to fire" before developing this comparison in various respects. Most relevant to SR is that, "Just as a person that is too close to a fire is burned and if he is too far coldness [results], so too with the words of the Torah. As long as a person is involved in them, they are life-giving, but when one removes himself from them, they kill him..."
In this vein, James and Rashkover write:<blockquote>The same sacredness and life that rewards ''l'shma'' study can also be the cause of absolutism and violence when a community feels under threat. Scripture is ''powerful'': "Is not my word like fire, says the Lord?" (Jer. 23:29). The same fire that warms and gives life can also kill and destroy. Ochs discerns that the impulse to guard the sacredness of scripture, even violently, is often an index of the community's ''love'' of their sacred scriptures as a primal source of divine life. Rather than unleashing the destroying fire of scriptural passion, SR is a practice of offering a measure of scripture's warmth to others.<ref>{{Harvnb|James|Rashkover|2021|p=23}}, with reference to {{Harvnb|Ochs|2015|p=489}}.</ref></blockquote>More recently, Ochs has generalized his concept of scripture into that of a ''hearth,'' "those dimensions of life that members of a religion turn to in times of crisis, tension, or uncertainty in the hope of drawing nearer to the source of their deepest values and identities."<ref>{{Harvnb|Ochs|2019|p=18}}. Ochs develops an extended account of a "hearth" in the same book.</ref> SR, in this view, becomes a prototype of a broader family of "hearth-to-hearth" engagements.
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They began a Scriptural Reasoning Theory Group at [[Cambridge University]], in partnership with the [https://www.interfaith.cam.ac.uk/ Cambridge Interfaith Program]. It was renamed the Scriptural Reasoning in the University group in 2007 and continued meeting through 2020.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ochs|2013|p=627}}. See also {{Harvnb |Society for Scriptural Reasoning|2005}}.</ref>) This group focused on applying Scriptural Reasoning in academia and producing original scholarship about SR.<ref>For an example of this work, see the essays {{Harvnb|James|2017}}, {{Harvnb|Rashkover|2017}}, and {{Harvnb|Weiss|2017}} in the 2017 issue of the ''Journal of Scriptural Reasoning''.</ref> Out of this group emerged the [https://www.interfaith.cam.ac.uk/research/scriptureandviolence Scripture & Violence Project], which has published academic work on the relationship between violence and the Abrahamic scriptures and makes available resources for laypeople to engage with these issues.<ref>An initial publication of the Scripture and Violence project was {{Harvnb|Synder|Weiss|2021}}. Public resources are available at [http://www.scriptureandviolence.org www.scriptureandviolence.org].</ref>
Other academic developments of SR include a Scriptural Reasoning project at the [https://www.ctinquiry.org/ Center for Theological Inquiry] in Princeton, which examined SR and the history of medieval scriptural commentaries;<ref>{{Harvnb|Ochs|2013|p=627}}. See also {{Harvnb |Gaylord|2006| p=327}}.</ref> the [http://www.scripturesindialogue.org/ Scriptures in Dialogue] project founded by [[Leo Baeck College]]; and the SR Oxford group of the [http://www.scripturalreasoning.org.uk/ Scriptural Reasoning Society ("Oxford School")] founded by the [http://www.interfaithalliance.org.uk/ Interfaith Alliance UK].
Scriptural Reasoning has also become a "civic practice" in the community, examples of which include the [http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/journals/abraham/cvsrg.html Central Virginia Scriptural Reasoning Group] sponsored by [[Eastern Mennonite University]], at [http://www.stethelburgas.org/ St Ethelburga's Centre for Reconciliation and Peace] at [[St Ethelburga's Bishopsgate]], the SR Camden and SR Westminster groups of the Scriptural Reasoning Society sponsored by Camden Faith Communities Partnership, [[Liberal Judaism (United Kingdom)]] and different places of worship in London.
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== Criticisms ==
Criticisms of Scriptural Reasoning which have been made by academics from different traditions address some of its founding practitioners' claims to their having requisite knowledge of ancient traditions of Islamic, Jewish and Christian exegesis and, on that basis, the purported authority to "correct" or "repair" binarist or fundamentalist interpretations of Scripture. Scholars also challenge SR's underlying presuppositions, and raise concerns about the dynamics of power, money and control in SR's practical outworking.
=== Christian ===
Theologian Adrian Thatcher has questioned whether Scriptural Reasoning flattens theological differences in the way the three traditions approach their respective Scriptures,
Christina Grenholm and [[Daniel Patte]]
Catholic theologian, [[Gavin D'Costa]] offers a fourfold criticism of David Ford's presentation of Scriptural Reasoning. Firstly, he asserts that Christological and ecclesiological doctrine necessary for Christian biblical reading is marginalized by SR. He comments:
<blockquote>"Ford's tent insinuates (and nothing stronger can be said here) the logic of liberalism: the Bible has no binding authority, nor has the church's reading of it got primary status, nor can Christian scripture/Christ actually narrate the other texts of scriptures: Jewish and Muslim".<ref>{{Harvnb|D'Costa|2012}}</ref></blockquote>
D'Costa moreover argues that "SR seems to eschew any canopy over the project, but the metaphysics of Christian scriptural reading generates precisely such a canopy". Furthermore, he asserts that "there is a vaguely pluralistic agenda present" and that "SR is analogised [by Ford] to shared worship". D'Costa states that SR neglects scope for witness and evangelism. His critique has been responded to by Darren Sarisky.<ref>{{Harvnb|Sarisky|2019}}</ref>
=== Muslim ===
Under the title, ''The Broken Promise of Scriptural Reasoning'', Muslim theologian, Muhammad Al-Hussaini, presents a critique of David Ford's Anglican-led Scriptural Reasoning initiatives, which he argues lack parity between participant religions, have been characterised by colonialist politics of control, and which he categorises as '''amalīyya fāsida'' ([[Arabic]]: عملية فاسدة), "corrupt practice".<ref>{{Harvnb|Al-Hussaini|2022| p=xviii}}: 'This was followed up with the written proposal from St Ethelburga’s that David Ford chair a “Scriptural Reasoning Reference Group” which would thereon exercise authority in relation to the proper usage and handling in SR of sacred Islamic and Jewish texts—matters which for centuries have been the sovereign and autonomous prerogative of jurists respectively of Islamic ''<nowiki/>sharī'a'' and Jewish ''<nowiki/>halakhāh'' alone'.</ref> He states that Fordian Scriptural Reasoning has "No ''minhag/minhaj'', no timeless established Judaeo-Islamic discipline of dialectical ''exegesis traditionis'', of thickly-reading holy books using instruments of philology, grammar, received oral tradition and sensitive exposition of concentric layers of literal through to allegorical readings of a verse". He contends, "Instead, Ford’s Anglican-led SR becomes merely a poor kind of inter-faith Protestant Bible study fashioned within the competency limitations of its self-appointed leadership". He expresses concern at what he suggests "appeared to be SR’s failure to respect indigenous ways of reading Islamic Scripture, namely alongside [[hadith]] and classical commentaries", and further asserts, "Over time I became increasingly offended at the instrumentalising of biblical and Quranic materials for political and funding agendas".<ref>{{Harvnb|Al-Hussaini|2020}}: 'In my protesting such fraudulent behaviour with respect to sacred texts of God [alleged financial dishonesty], I was instructed that, far from democratic parity of control in the project between the three participating faith houses, there was instead what David Ford claimed as “the asymmetries of hospitality” arising out of Anglican hosting and ownership in this initiative'.</ref>
Muslim theologian, [[Timothy Winter]], argues that the presuppositions and motivations of Scriptural Reasoning are alien to the Islamic context. He states, "Scriptural reasoning is not method, but rather a promiscuous openness to methods of a kind unfamiliar to Islamic conventions of reading". He also asserts that Scriptural Reasoning's claims to correct secular reasonings through a re-engagement with traditional reading have little resonance for Islam that has not experienced such changes in any meaningful sense. He writes, "There cannot be a 'return to Scripture' in Peter Ochs's sense, since the Qur’an has nowhere been abandoned, and Muslim interlocutors in SR are much more likely to feel part of an unbroken tradition than advocates of a latter-day ressourcement". He asserts the closer proximity of Jewish-Islamic traditional exegesis: "The three-way dynamic helps to reduce binary polarisations, but it does carry a bias towards the ‘Semitic.’ Muslim-Jewish relations turn out to be privileged for several reasons which may relate to this traditional category". He goes on to state, "The cognate quality of Arabic and Hebrew, which frequently enriches the practice of comparative SR", but states, "If SR tends to exclude the search for precision, and to celebrate an ‘irremediable vagueness’ (Ochs), Muslims may demur".<ref>{{Harvnb|Winter|2006}}</ref>
Muslim theologian, Mohamed Elsharkawy, positively contrasts practices of Scriptural Reasoning in different contexts but sees SR in the United Kingdom as particularly "heavily contaminated with a Church of England Orientalism and a state counter-extremism agenda". He writes:
▲Theologian Adrian Thatcher has questioned whether Scriptural Reasoning flattens theological differences in the way the three traditions approach their respective Scriptures, noting especially "the paucity of references to Jesus Christ" in the essays in ''The Promise of Scriptural Reasoning'' (see, e.g., Ford and Pecknold 2006), and asking whether this "may indicate … the further erosion of Christocentric biblical interpretation."<ref>See {{Harvnb |Thatcher|2008| pp=193–4, n.1}}.</ref>
<blockquote>The monied UK interfaith agenda exists in part to give credibility to a declining Church of England, and David Ford's Scriptural Reasoning openly admits its Anglican origins and dominant polity. Funding of some Church-led Scriptural Reasoning projects with British government counter-extremism cash betrays the overarching agenda towards Islam, Muslims and our classical hermeneutics, as do proposed grand interfaith projects with the likes of Tony Blair. In place of our ancient ''tafsir al-qur'an'', humbly seeking Allah's multifaceted meanings in every Arabic verse of His Book, Fordian Scriptural Reasoning is at times crude reading with an agenda, and those who have spoken out against this have been hurt. <ref>{{Harvnb|Elsharkawy|2022}}</ref></blockquote>
▲Another theologian, [[James Gustafson|James M. Gustafson]], questions the claim he believes implied by Peter Ochs' descriptions of Scriptural Reasoning that it "has not only the capacity, but also the authority to correct 'modernist reason'" – and asking whether Scriptural Reasoning has been sufficiently open to the critical discourses fostered in modernity. His claims have been responded to directly by S. Mark Heim.<ref>{{Harvnb |Gustafson|2004| pp=37–39}}; {{Harvnb |Heim|2004}}.</ref>
He asserts that from the early days of SR there has been exclusion and bullying of some Christian theologians and later Muslim scholars who have raised concerns about alleged malfeasance within Scriptural Reasoning projects, and he proposes a "Reform of Scriptural Reasoning" through repentance, engagement with SR's critics and an end to what he calls "the endless uncritical self-marketing of Scriptural Reasoning by a dominant clique".
▲Christina Grenholm and [[Daniel Patte]] ask whether SR "presupposes a view of Christianity as a separate nation with clear borders and set markers" and whether it lacks a "critical perspective that would reveal that there are different kinds of 'scriptural reasonings.'"<ref>{{Harvnb |Grenholm|Patte|2005| pp=16 n.14}}.</ref>
== Footnotes ==
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* {{Citation | last=Adams|first=Nicholas|date=July 2006|title=Making Deep Reasonings Public|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0025.2006.00324.x|journal=[[Modern Theology]]|volume=22|issue=3|pages=385–401|doi=10.1111/j.1468-0025.2006.00324.x|issn=0266-7177}}
* {{Citation | last = Afzaal | first = Ahmed | title = Rendezvous in Orlando | journal = The Qu'ranic Horizons: Quarterly Journal of the Qu'ranic Academy | pages = 3–12 | date = October–December 1998 | url = http://www.ionaonline.org/Internal_Pages/Periodicals/Year_1998/The_Quranic_Horizons_October-December_1998.pdf | access-date = 2009-03-19 }}
* {{Citation | last = Al-Hussaini | first = Muhammad | contribution = The Broken Promise of Scriptural Reasoning: The Politics of Colonialism and Abuse in Anglican-led Inter-religious Engagement | title = Faith in Unions: Racism and Religious Discrimination in the Faith Workers Branch of Unite the Union | editor-last = Isiorho | editor-first = David | pages = ix–xxi | place = Eugene, OR | publisher = Wipf and Stock | year = 2022 | isbn = 978-1-5326-9917-7 | url = http://www.scripturalreasoning.org.uk/the_broken_promise_of_scriptural_reasoning.pdf }}
* {{Citation | last = Al-Hussaini | first = Muhammad | title = Is Anglican hospitality too one-sided? | magazine = Church of England Newspaper | date = July 3, 2020 | url = http://www.scripturalreasoning.org.uk/church_of_england_newspaper_3_july_2020.pdf}}
* {{Citation | last = Anglican Communion Network for Inter Faith Concerns (NIFCON) | author-link = Anglican Communion | title = Generous Love: The Truth of the Gospel and the Call to Dialogue; An Anglican Theology of Inter Faith Relations | place = London | publisher = [[Anglican Consultative Council]] | year = 2008 | url = http://nifcon.anglicancommunion.org/resources/documents/generous_love_A4_with_foreward.pdf | isbn = 9780955826108 | access-date = 2009-03-19 }}
* {{Citation | first = Jeffrey W. | last = Bailey | title = Sacred Book Club: Reading Scriptures Across Interfaith Lines | journal = [[The Christian Century]] | date = September 5, 2006 | url = http://www.christiancentury.org/article.lasso?id=2332}}
* {{Citation | last = Batnitzky | first = Leora. | title = Pragmatism and Biblical Hermeneutics: Some Comments on the Work of Peter Ochs | journal = [[Modern Theology]] | volume = 24 | issue = 3 | pages = 479–485 | date = July 2008 | doi = 10.1111/j.1468-0025.2008.00470.x}}
* {{Citation | last = Burrell | first = David B. | title = Review of David Novak, ''Talking with Christians: Musings of a Jewish Theologian'' (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2005) and Michael Wyschogrod, ''Abraham's Promise: Judaism and Jewish-Christian Relations'' (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2004) | journal = [[Modern Theology]] | volume = 22 | issue = 4 | pages = 705–709 | date = October 2006 | url = http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118602410/abstract | archive-url = https://archive.today/20130105202119/http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118602410/abstract | url-status = dead | archive-date = 2013-01-05 | doi = 10.1111/j.1468-0025.2006.00344.x}}
* {{Citation | last = Campbell | first = William S. | title = Jewish Responses to the Revised Understanding of Judaism and of Self-understanding in Christianity | journal = Journal of Beliefs and Values | volume = 22 | issue = 2 | pages = 123–131 | date = October 2001 | doi = 10.1080/13617670120079532 | s2cid = 170472616 }}
* {{Citation | last = Campbell | first = William S.. | title = Paul and the Creation of Christian Identity | place = New York | publisher = Continuum | year = 2006 | isbn = 978-0-567-04434-1 | url =https://books.google.com/books?id=06OsR5_KC5sC }}
* {{Citation | last = Clooney | first = Francis Xavier | title = Beyond Compare: St Francis De Sales and Vedanta Desika on Loving Surrender to God | place = Washington DC | publisher = Georgetown University Press | year = 2008 | isbn = 978-1-58901-211-0 }}
* {{Citation | last = D'Costa | first = Gavin | contribution = Catholics Reading the Scripture of Other Religions: Some Reflexions | title = Mission in Dialogue: Essays in Honour of Michael L. Fitzgerald | editor-last = Belo | editor-first = Catarina | editor2-last = Pérennès | editor2-first = Jean-Jacques | pages = 33-43 | place = Louvain | publisher = Peeters | year = 2012 | isbn = 904-2-926171 |ref=none}}
* {{Citation | last = Donnelly | first = Phillip J. | title = Milton's Scriptural Reasoning: Narrative and Protestant Toleration | place = Cambridge | publisher = Cambridge University Press | year = 2009 | isbn = 978-0-521-50973-2}}
* {{Citation | last =
* {{Citation | last1 = Fatahllah | first1 = Muhammad | last2 = Al-ansari | first2 = Salah | last3 = Al-Salamoni | first3 = Muhammad | title = Fatwa on Scriptural Reasoning (English) | date = 17 July 2007 | url = http://www.scripturalreasoning.org.uk/fatwa_english.pdf | access-date = 2009-03-20}}; also in Arabic: {{Citation | * {{Citation | last = Ford | first = David F. | author-link = David F. Ford | title = An Interfaith Wisdom: Scriptural Reasoning Between Jews, Christians and Muslims | journal = [[Modern Theology]] | volume = 22 | issue = 3 | pages = 345–366 | date = June 2006 | doi = 10.1111/j.1468-0025.2006.00322.x}}
** Also published as {{Citation | last = Ford | first = David F. | contribution = An Interfaith Wisdom: Scriptural Reasoning Between Jews, Christians and Muslims | title = The Promise of Scriptural Reasoning | editor-last = Pecknold | editor-first = C.C. | editor2-last = Ford | editor2-first = David F. | pages = 1–22 | place = Malden, MI / Oxford | publisher = Blackwell | year = 2006 | isbn = 978-1-4051-4630-2 |ref=none}}
* {{Citation | last = Ford | first = David F. | author-link = David F. Ford | title = Christian Wisdom: Desiring God and Learning in Love | place = Cambridge | publisher = Cambridge University Press | year = 2007 | isbn = 978-0-521-87545-5 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=1Z6L9U35ZhcC }}
* {{Citation | last = Ford | first = David F. | author-link = David F. Ford | title = Jews, Christians, and Muslims meet around their Scriptures: An Interfaith Practice for the 21st Century | url = https://www.interfaith.cam.ac.uk/resources/lecturespapersandspeeches/jewschristiansandmuslimsmeetaroundtheirscriptures}}
* {{Citation | last = Ford | first = David F. | author-link = David F. Ford | title = Scriptural Reasoning: Its Anglican Origins, its Development, Practice, and Significance | date = 2013 | journal = [[Journal of Anglican Studies]] | volume = 11 | issue = 2 | pages =
* {{Citation | editor-last = Frymer-Kensky | editor-first = Tikva | editor-last2 = Novak | editor-first2 = David | editor-last3 = Ochs | editor-first3 = Peter | editor-last4 = Sandmel | editor-first4 = David | editor-last5 = Signer | editor-first5 = Michael | year = 2002 | title = Christianity in Jewish Terms | publisher = Basic Books | isbn = 978-0-813-36572-5}}
* {{Citation | last = Gaylord | first = Alan T. | title = Reflections on D. W. Robertson, Jr., and "Exegetical Criticism" | journal = [[The Chaucer Review]] | volume = 40 | issue = 3 | pages = 311–333 | year = 2006 | url = http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/chaucer_review/toc/cr40.3.html | issn = 0009-2002 | doi=10.1353/cr.2006.0003| s2cid = 171039996 }}
* {{Citation |
* {{Citation | last = Gustafson | first = James F. | title = An Examined Faith: The Grace of Self-Doubt | place = Minneapolis, MN | publisher = Fortress Press | year = 2004 | isbn = 978-0-8006-3628-9 }}
* {{Citation | last = Hardy | first = Daniel W. | author-link = Peter Ochs | contribution = Textual Reasoning: A Concluding Reflection | title = Textual Reasonings: Jewish Philosophy and Text Study at the End of the Twentieth Century | editor-last = Ochs | editor-first = Peter | editor2-last = Levene | editor2-first = Nancy | pages = 269–276 | place = Grand Rapids, MI | publisher = Eerdmans | year = 2002 | isbn = 0-8028-3997-5}}
* {{Citation | last = Hauerwas | first = Stanley | author-link = Stanley Hauerwas | contribution = Why 'The Way the Words Run' Matters: Reflections on Becoming a 'Major Biblical Scholar' | title = The Word Leaps the Gap: Essays on Scripture and Theology in Honor of Richard B. Hays | editor-last = Wagner | editor-first = J. Ross | editor2-last = Grieb | editor2-first = A. Katherine | editor3-last = Rowe | editor3-first = C. Kavin | pages = 1–19 | place = Grand Rapids, MI | publisher = Eerdmans | year = 2008 | isbn = 978-0-8028-6356-0 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=28p5YpLdxkkC}}
* {{Citation | last = Heim | first = S. Mark | title = A Faith Worthy of Doubt, a review of James M. Gustafson's ''An Examined Faith: The Grace of Self-Doubt'' (Fortress, 2004). | journal = [[The Christian Century]] | pages = 25–36 | date = June 20, 2004 | url = http://www.religion-online.org/article/doubting-theology/ | access-date = 2018-10-22 }}
* {{Citation |
* {{Citation | last = Higton | first = Mike | contribution = For Its Own Sake, For God's Sake: Wisdom and Delight in the University | title = The Vocation of Theology Today: A Festschrift for David Ford | year = 2013 | place = Eugene, OR | publisher = Wipf and Stock | pages =
* {{Citation | last = James | first = Mark Randall | title = Peter Ochs and the Logic of Scriptural Reasoning | journal = [[Modern Theology]] | volume = 38 | issue = 1 | pages =
* {{Citation | last = James | first = Mark Randall | date = July 2017 | title = Scriptural Reasoning as Communal Thinking |url=https://jsr.shanti.virginia.edu/back-issues/volume-16-no-1-june-2017-recent-reflections-on-scriptural-reasoning/scriptural-reasoning-as-communal-thinking/| journal = The Journal of Scriptural Reasoning | volume = 16 | issue = 1}}
* {{Citation |
* {{Citation | last = Kepnes | first = Steven | title = A Handbook for Scriptural Reasoning | journal = [[Modern Theology]] | volume = 22 | issue = 3 | pages = 367–383 | date = June 2006 | doi = 10.1111/j.1468-0025.2006.00323.x}}
** Also published as {{Citation | last = Kepnes | first = Steven | contribution = A Handbook for Scriptural Reasoning | title = The Promise of Scriptural Reasoning | editor-last = Pecknold | editor-first = C.C. | editor2-last = Ford | editor2-first = David F. | pages = 23–39 | place = Malden, MI / Oxford | publisher = Blackwell | year = 2006 | isbn = 978-1-4051-4630-2 |ref=none}}
* {{Citation | last = Lamberth | first = David C. | title = Assessing Peter Ochs through ''Peirce, Pragmatism and the Logic of Scripture'' | journal = [[Modern Theology]] | volume = 24 | issue = 3 | pages = 459–467 | date = July 2008 | doi = 10.1111/j.1468-0025.2008.00468.x}}
* {{Citation | last = Levene | first = Nancy | author-link = Peter Ochs | contribution = Introduction | title = Textual Reasonings: Jewish Philosophy and Text Study at the End of the Twentieth Century | editor-last = Ochs | editor-first = Peter | editor2-last = Levene | editor2-first = Nancy | pages = 15–27 | place = Grand Rapids, MI | publisher = Eerdmans | year = 2002 | isbn = 0-8028-3997-5}}
* {{Citation | last = Moyaert | first = Marianne | year = 2019 | contribution = Scriptural Reasoning as a Ritualized Practice | editor-last = Moyaert | editor-first = Marianne | title = Interreligious Relations and the Negotiation of Ritual Boundaries | series = Interreligious Studies in Theory and Practice | publisher = Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. | doi = 10.1007/978-3-030-05701-5_6| s2cid = 201459671 }}
* {{Citation | last = Mudge | first = Lewis S. | title = The Gift of Responsibility: The Promise of Dialogue Among Christians, Jews and Muslims | place = New York | publisher = Continuum | year = 2008 | isbn = 978-0-8264-2839-4}}
* {{Citation | last = Ochs | first = Peter | author-link = Peter Ochs | contribution = Introduction | title = Textual Reasonings: Jewish Philosophy and Text Study at the End of the Twentieth Century | editor-last = Ochs | editor-first = Peter | editor2-last = Levene | editor2-first = Nancy | pages = 2–14 | place = Grand Rapids, MI | publisher = Eerdmans | year = 2002a | isbn = 0-8028-3997-5}}
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* {{Citation | last = Ochs | first = Peter | author-link = Peter Ochs | year = 2007 | title = A Common Word between Us and You Speaking the Truth (Dabru Emet): A response | url = https://www.interfaith.cam.ac.uk/resources/acommonword/peterochsresponse}}
* {{Citation | last = Ochs | first = Peter | author-link = Peter Ochs | year = 2012 | title = An Introduction to Scriptural Reasoning | journal = Journal of Remnin University of China | volume = 26 | issue = 5 | pages = 16–22}}
* {{Citation | last = Ochs | first = Peter | author-link = Peter Ochs | year = 2013 | title = Re-socializing Scholars of Religious, Theological, and Theo-Philosophical Inquiry | journal = [[Modern Theology]] | volume = 29 | issue = 4 | pages = 210–18| doi = 10.1111/moth.12070 }}
* {{Citation | last = Ochs | first = Peter | author-link = Peter Ochs | year = 2015 | contribution = The Possibilities and Limits of Inter-religious Dialogue | title = The Oxford Handbook of Religion, Conflict, and Peacebuilding | editor-last = Omer | editor-first = Atalia | editor-last2 = Appleby | editor-first2 = R. Scott | editor-last3 = Little | editor-first3 = David | place = New York | publisher = Oxford University Press | pages =488–515}}
* {{Citation | last = Ochs | first = Peter | author-link = Peter Ochs | year = 2019 | title = Religion Without Violence: The Practice and Philosophy of Scriptural Reasoning | place = Eugene, OR | publisher = Cascade | isbn = 978-1-5326-3893-0 | oclc = 1265089093}}
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** Also published as {{Citation | last = Pecknold | first = C.C. | contribution = Preface: The Promise of Scriptural Reasoning | title = The Promise of Scriptural Reasoning | editor-last = Pecknold | editor-first = C.C. | editor2-last = Ford | editor2-first = David F. | pages = vii–xi | place = Malden, MI / Oxford | publisher = Blackwell | year = 2006 | isbn = 978-1-4051-4630-2 |ref=none}}
* {{Citation | last = Rashkover | first = Randi | date = July 2017 | title = Scriptural Reasoning: From Text Study to Inquiry |url=https://jsr.shanti.virginia.edu/back-issues/volume-16-no-1-june-2017-recent-reflections-on-scriptural-reasoning/scriptural-reasoning-from-text-study-to-inquiry/| journal = The Journal of Scriptural Reasoning | volume = 16 | issue = 1}}
* {{Citation | last = Rashkover | first = Randi | url = http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1zjg23m | title = Nature and Norm: Judaism, Christianity, and the Theopolitical Problem |date = 2020 | place = Brookline, MA | publisher = Academic Studies Press | doi = 10.2307/j.ctv1zjg23m | isbn = 978-1-64469-510-4}}
* {{Citation | last = Rosen | first = David | year = 2021 | title = Dabru Emet: Its Significance for the Jewish-Christian Dialogue | url = https://www.bc.edu/content/dam/files/research_sites/cjl/texts/cjrelations/resources/articles/rosen.htm | access-date = 2020-02-13}}
* {{Citation | last = Sarisky | first = Darren | title = Religious Commitment in Scriptural Reasoning: A Critical Engagement with Gavin D'Costa's “Catholics Reading the Scripture of Other Religions” | journal = [[Modern Theology]] | volume = 36 | issue = 2 | pages = 317–335 | date = May 2019 | doi = 10.1111/moth.12521}}
* {{Citation | last = scripturalreasoning.org | title = Guidelines for Scriptural Reasoning | url = http://www.scripturalreasoning.org/guidelines-for-scriptural-reasoning.html | access-date = 2020-02-14}}
* {{Citation | last = Scriptural Reasoning Society | title = The Scriptural Reasoning Society - Scriptures in Dialogue | year = n.d. | url = http://www.scripturalreasoning.org.uk/ | access-date = 2009-03-20}}
* {{Citation | last = Scriptural Reasoning Society | title = The Community Ethic of the Scriptural Reasoning Society: The 'Oxford Ethic' | year = 2007 | url = http://www.scripturalreasoning.org.uk/oxford_ethic.pdf | access-date = 2009-03-20}}
* {{Citation | last = Scriptural Reasoning Society | title = The Scriptural Reasoning Covenant | year = 2008 | url = http://www.scripturalreasoning.org.uk/scriptural_reasoning_covenant.pdf | access-date = 2009-03-20}}
* {{Citation | last = Slater | first = Gary | year = 2015 | title = C.S. Peirce and the Nested Continua Model of Religious Interpretation | place = Oxford | publisher = Oxford University Press}}
* {{Citation | last = Smith | first = James K.A. | title = How Religious Practices Matter: Peter Ochs' "Alternative Nurturance" of Philosophy of Religion | journal = [[Modern Theology]] | volume = 24 | issue = 3 | pages = 469–478 | date = July 2008 | doi = 10.1111/j.1468-0025.2008.00469.x | author-link = James K. A. Smith}}
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* {{Citation | last = Weiss | first = Daniel | date = July 2017 | title = Scriptural Reasoning in the Academy: The Uses and Disadvantages of Expertise and Impartiality |url=https://jsr.shanti.virginia.edu/back-issues/volume-16-no-1-june-2017-recent-reflections-on-scriptural-reasoning/scriptural-reasoning-in-the-academy-the-uses-and-disadvantages-o-expertise-and-impartiality/| journal = The Journal of Scriptural Reasoning | volume = 16 | issue = 1}}
* {{Citation | last = Williams | first = Jenny | title = Sense and Spirituality | magazine = The Baptist Times | date = March 12, 2009 | url = http://www.scripturalreasoning.org.uk/the_baptist_times_12_march_2009.pdf}}
* {{Citation | last = Winter | first = Tim | contribution = Qurānic reasoning as an academic practice | title = The Promise of Scriptural Reasoning | editor-last = Pecknold | editor-first = C.C. | editor2-last = Ford | editor2-first = David F. | pages = 449-463 | place = Malden, MI / Oxford | publisher = Blackwell | year = 2006 | isbn = 978-1-4051-4630-2 |ref=none}}
== External links ==
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