ews, Christians, and Muslims have in common an understanding of Jesus as prophet

ews, Christians, and Muslims have in common an understanding of Jesus as prophet

ews, Christians, and Muslims have in common an understanding of Jesus as prophet. Although this understanding is expressed in unique ways by these “people of the Book” who share a common scriiptural and historical heritage, the radically inclusive relationship of Jesus with women stands to inform the practices of these faiths toward women today.
Begin by reading the scriiptural version of the woman’s story, followed by the rearticulated version written from a woman’s perspective, which utilizes a hermeneutics of suspicion (reading between the lines of the original text to insert historical, cultural, social, and religious context).
You will then write a reaction to or reflection on this rearticulated selection as compared to the original scriiptural version, in which you might briefly share a personal insight into the story; react to the rearticulated, feminist perspective; identify and analyze personal gender biases; or consider the scriiptural story’s ramification(s) for the present and future of women.
The selection from No Longer Silent assigned this week: Journey Home (p. 119).
Format requirements: .doc or .docx file, double-spaced.
Use the attached word document as an example