Reviewed by: Interpreting Scripture: Essays on the Bible and Hermeneutics by N. T. Wright, and: Interpreting Jesus: Essay on the Gospels by N. T. Wright, and: Interpreting Paul: Essays on the Author and His Letters by N. T. Wright Regina Boisclair n. t. wright, Interpreting Scripture: Essays on the Bible and Hermeneutics (Collected Essays of N. T. Wright; Grand Rapids: Zondervan Academic, 2020). Pp. xii + 387. $37.09. n. t. wright, Interpreting Jesus: Essay on the Gospels (Collected Essays of N. T. Wright; Grand Rapids: Zondervan Academic, 2020). Pp. xii + 345. $34.99. n. t. wright, Interpreting Paul: Essays on the Author and His Letters (Collected Essays of N. T. Wright; Grand Rapids: Zondervan Academic, 2020). Pp. xi + 207. $34.99. In three volumes, N. T. Wright collects his various published and unpublished studies. Some are scholarly, some popular, some pastoral. He prefaces each essay with a description of the original context for which it was presented. The pagination for those previous published papers is noted in square brackets throughout the relevant articles. Each volume includes a Bibliography, Acknowledgments that identify where the articles were previously published, and indexes of Ancient Sources and Modern Authors. Most of these studies develop particular points from W.'s continued reflections on issues addressed in his numerous books. Underlying most articles in all three volumes is W.'s conviction that the Christian Bible with its repeated accounts of exile and return conveys a unified story—of God's [End Page 352] promise to return and unite with creation—which was prominent in first-century Judaism. The promise was accomplished by Jesus and continues through the Spirit. Interpreting Scripture offers twenty studies. It opens with "Introduction to The Language and Imagery of the Bible by G. B. Caird," followed by "The Lord's Prayer as Paradigm of Christian Prayer"; "God and Caesar: Then and Now"; "Christian Origins and the Question of God"; "Faith, Virtue, Justification, and the Journey to Freedom"; "Neither Anarchy nor Tyranny: Government and the New Testament"; "The Bishop and Living under Scripture"; "Imagining the Kingdom: Mission and Theology in Early Christianity"; "Revelation and Christian Hope: Political Implications of the Revelation to John"; "The Monarchs and the Message: Reflections on Bible Translation from the Sixteenth to the Twenty-First Century"; "Joy: Some New Testament Perspectives and Questions"; "Pastoral Theology for Perplexing Topics: Paul and Adiaphora"; "Apocalyptic and the Sudden Fulfilment of Divine Promise"; "The Bible and Christian Mission"; "Wouldn't You Love to Know? Towards a Christian View of Reality"; "Sign and Means of New Creation: Public Worship and the Creative Power of Scripture"; "The Powerful Breath of the New Creation"; "Sacred Space in the City"; "Foreword to The Church and Its Vocation: Lesslie Newbigin's Missionary Ecclesiology by Michael Goheen"; "The Honest to God Controversy"; and "Christ and the Cosmos: Kingdom and Creation in Gospel Perspective." Interpreting Jesus contains seventeen studies and opens with "Towards a Third 'Quest'? Jesus Then and Now," followed by "Jesus, Israel and the Cross"; "'Constraints' and the Jesus of History"; "Taking the Text with Her Pleasure: A Post-Post-Modernist Response to J. Dominic Crossan, The Historical Jesus"; "Jesus"; "Five Gospels but No Gospel: Jesus and the Seminar"; "Resurrection in Q?"; "Introduction to the Second Edition of B. F. Meyer, The Aims of Jesus"; "Kingdom Come: The Public Meaning of the Gospels"; "Whence and Whither Historical Jesus Studies in the Life of the Church"; "The Evangelists' Use of the Old Testament as an Implicit Overarching Narrative"; "John, Jesus and 'The Ruler of the World': Demonic Politics in the Fourth Gospel?"; "Pictures, Stories and the Cross: Where Do the Echoes Lead?"; "Son of Man – Lord of the Temple? Gospel Echoes of Psalm 8 and the Ongoing Christological Challenge"; "Son of God and Christian Origins"; "History, Ecclesiology and New Creation in the Fourth Gospel: Early Christian Perspectives on God's Action in Jesus, with Special References to the Prologue in John"; "Son of Man and New Creation: The Biblical Roots of Trinitarian Theology." Interpreting Paul provides twelve studies. It opens with "A New Perspective on Käsemann? Apocalyptic, Covenant, and the Righteousness of God," followed by "Justification by (Covenantal Faith) to the (Covenantal) Doers: Romans 2 within the Argument...