Called by Stories: Biblical Sagas and Their Challenge for Law

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Duke University Press, 2000 - Bibles - 271 pages
Distinguished legal scholar and Presbyterian minister Milner S. Ball examines great sagas and tales from the Bible for the light they shed on the practice of law and on the meaning of a life lived in the legal profession. Scholars and laypersons alike typically think of the law as a discipline dominated by reason and empirical methods. Ball shows that many of the dilemmas and decisions that legal professionals confront are more usefully approached through an experience of narrative in which we come to know ourselves and our actions through stories.
He begins with the story of Moses, who is obliged both to speak for God to the Hebrews and to advocate for the Hebrews before God. What, asks Ball, does Moses's predicament say to lawyers professionally bound to zealous representation of only one client? In the story of Rachel, Ball finds insights that comprehend the role of tears and emotion in the judicial process. He relates these insights to specific contemporary situations, such as a plant closing and the subsequent movement of jobs to Mexico and legal disputes over the sovereignty of native Hawaiians. In a discussion of "The Gospel According to John," Ball points out that the writer of this gospel is free simultaneously to be critical of law and to rely extensively on it. Ball uses this narrative to explore the boundaries of free will and independence in lawyering. By venturing into the world of powerful events and biblical characters, Ball enables readers to contest their own expectations and fundamental assumptions.
Employing legal theory, theology, and literary criticism, Called by Stories distills a wisdom in biblical texts that speaks specifically to the working life of legal professionals. As such, it will enrich lovers of narrative and poetry, ethicists, literary and biblical scholars, theologians, lawyers, law students, judges, and others who seek to discern deeper meanings in the texts that have shaped their lives.

 

Contents

Prologue
1
Moses
7
Law and the Mouth for God
9
Intercession
18
Counsel for the Situation
22
The Word in Moses Situation
27
The Risks
31
The Promise of Succession
38
Law and Tears
83
The Womb of God and Tears
99
The Gospel According to John
107
The Jerusalem Trial
109
A Divine Lawsuit
115
A Reversal and Appeal
120
Two Women
123
Moses and the Spirit
125

The Promise of Justice
41
Psalm 114
42
The Encompassing Women
49
The Midwives
51
Socratic Midwifery That Isnt
58
Socratic Midwifery That Is
61
Are You the Lawyers?
65
Miriam
74
Rachel
77
Jeremiahs Rachel Poem
79
Disbelief
129
Johns Freedom from and for Law
134
Lawyers Independence
137
Epilogue
146
Acknowledgments
151
Appendix
153
Notes
187
Index
265
Copyright

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About the author (2000)

Milner S. Ball is both Harmon W. Caldwell Professor of Constitutional Law at the University of Georgia School of Law and an ordained Presbyterian minister. He served as a judge on the International People's Tribunal in Hawai'i in 1993 and was a founder of the annual Robert Cover Public Interest Law Retreat. A member of the Theological Anthropology Project at the Center of Theological Inquiry at Princeton, he is the author of many books, including The Promise of American Law, Lying Down Together, and The Word and the Law.