The Passion and Persuasion
A Biblical Deconstruction of the Evangelical Rhetoric of the Cross
by
Book Details
About the Book
Robert Hach is a professor of Rhetoric and Composition at Miami Dade College in Miami, Florida. His first book, Possession and Persuasion: The Rhetoric of Christian Faith, is a rhetorical analysis of the development of Christian faith from its associational beginnings as the persuasive power of the spoken message that Jesus passed on to his first-century followers, to its organizational emergence as the possessive power of the religious institution that eventually became known as "the Church." In the present volume, The Passion and Persuasion: A Biblical Deconstruction of the Evangelical Rhetoric of the Cross, the author analyzes the rhetoric of evangelical Christianity regarding the crucifixion of Jesus and shows that the evangelical doctrine of the atonement both misreads the New Testament language about Jesus' crucifixion and perverts the biblical portrayal of Jesus' God. By exposing the logical and theological fallacies of the evangelical doctrine, as well as its pernicious rhetorical effects, the author clears the way for an understanding of the crucifixion of Jesus that is not only demonstrably truer to the biblical language but also infinitely richer in its effect on believing hearts.
About the Author
Robert Hach is an English professor at Miami-Dade Community College, where he specializes in rhetoric and composition. After graduating from the University of Florida, where he joined a sectarian Christian movement (presently known as the International Churches of Christ), he spent eleven years as a church leader and campus and community recruiter in several U.S. cities. After leaving the movement, he earned a master's degree in English Rhetoric at Barry University in Miami, Florida, where he continues to live with his wife Brenda and younger of two daughters, Bethany and Ariel.