Die Geschichte der Kinder- und Schulbibel
Evangelisch – katholisch – jüdisch
Gottfried Adam, Rainer Lachmann, Christoph Melchior, Christine Reents, Martin Rothgangel
The representative analysis of classical and innovative Bible adaptations in their varying individual, social, religious and educational contexts, and a bibliography of about 1000 titles provide a differentiated portrayal of the development of bibles for children and their use in school from the late Middle Ages to the 21st century. The volume focusses on Bible adaptations of Protestant, Catholic and Jewish origin. The study distinguishes between books with Bible verses, Bible paraphrases, Bible stories and picture Bibles and traces their development. The new concern for children in the Age of Enlightenment, the intense interest in biblical pietism, the introduction of compulsory schooling and bible instruction as well as new concepts for religious education gave rise to characteristic further and new developments of Bible adaptations. In the light of an increasingly complex market for children’s bibles, this historical retrospective inspires us to compile and put to the test childrens‘ bibles that meet contemporary exegetical and didactic requirements.