I look forward this class..I think you'll' enjoy it, too..
...I did when I took it in 1983>>
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STRATEGY:
BIB 314 asks, "Who is Jesus?"
and "What is Church?"
This class asks
- "1)How do I read a text of Scripture via a Three Worlds approach?"
- 2)"What does Scripture have to say about community?
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Do The Handicapped Go to Hell?"
.
Watch this edited version South Park's "Do The Handicapped Go to Hell?" episode below,
The rest of the episode may be terribly offensive to some, I am not endorsing it...but those bits are prophetic, here it is:
TEXTS.
a TEXT is technically ":any message in any medium, designed to communicate anything"
so obviously the Bible counts as a TEXT message.
Texts need contexts.
Thanks for texting me (cell phone) random text messages during class to illustrate that texts need contexts.
How you read the text changes as much as everything.
Spaces matter.
Like this:
Professor Ernest Brennecke of Columbia is credited with inventing a sentence that can be made to have eight different meanings by placing ONE WORD in all possible positions in the sentence:
"I hit him in the eye yesterday."
The word is "ONLY".
The Message:
1.ONLY I hit him in the eye yesterday. (No one else did.)
2.I ONLY hit him in the eye yesterday. (Did not slap him.)
3.I hit ONLY him in the eye yesterday. (I did not hit others.)
4.I hit him ONLY in the eye yesterday. (I did not hit outside the eye.)
5.I hit him in ONLY the eye yesterday. (Not other organs.)
6.I hit him in the ONLY eye yesterday. (He doesn't have another eye..)
7.I hit him in the eye ONLY yesterday. (Not today.)
8.I hit him in the eye yesterday ONLY. (Did not wait for today.)
Like this 'text message' from Jesus:
I SAY TO YOU TODAY, "YOU WILL BE WITH ME IN PARADISE.'
or is it,
I SAY TO YOU, " TODAY YOU WILL BE WITH ME IN PARADISE."
The original manuscripts of the Bible not only run all letters, all caps, together, but include no punctuation.
Punctuation matters.
Everything is context.
Context is everything.
i..won't even mention the "but, cheeks" story (:
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WORLDS
We became familiar/reacquainted with the "Three Worlds" concept which comes from your Hauer/Young Textbook, see especially chapters two and three, and see class notes.
Here below is how one student summarized the worlds (she has more detail here)
Literary World--The literary world of the Bible is simply the text itself, apart from anything outside the text. We mean the world (or, better, worlds) created by the text; the words on the page, by the stories, songs, letters and the myriad other types of literature that make up the Bible. All good literature (and the Bible is, among other things, good literature) creates in readers' minds magnificent, mysterious, and often moving worlds that take on a reality of their own, whether or not they represent anything real outside the pages (Hauer and Young ch 2).
Historical World--The historical world of the Bible isthe world "behind the text" or "outside the text". It is the context in which the Bible came to be written, translated, and interpreted over time, until the present. In studying the historical world of the Bible, we look for evidence outside the text that helps us answer questions such as, who wrote this text, when was it written, to whom was it written, and why was it written. We also probe the text itself for evidence that links it to historical times, places, situations, and persons (Hauer and Young 2)..
Contemporary World--The contemporary world is the "world in front of the text" or the "world of the reader." In one sense, there are as many contemporary worlds of the Bible as there are readers, for each of us brings our own particular concerns and questions to the text. They inevitably shape our reading experience. We are all interested in answering the questions of whether the Bible in general, or particular texts, have any relevance to our personal lives (Hauer and Young ch3).
-Brolin
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We noted how careful we should be reading texts:
Fantastic job, making observations of Philemon, already preparing for your signature paper. Remember to look for any clues/cues to tome/emotion/volume. Remember this video?:
Keep your notes.
Great job, too, noting differences in the two creation accounts, Genesis 1 and 2. What do you remember, as far as literary differences?
make observations about; compare and contrast, the two stories of creation: Gen 1:1 – 2:3 and Gen. 2:4-25).
Greg Camp and Laura Roberts (FPU faculty) note:
The two accounts are separate but complementary, like the four gospels. They can be read at different levels, from literal to figurative, with no bearing on the truth of it. Poetry is not less true than a newspaper, just a different kind or mode of truth. And, one must always ask the question what the implied author intended and what the implied audience would have understood. Ancient notions of history are very different from ours.Genesis 1:repetitious, tabular, formaldays of creation reported in the same way, formulaicauthority and brevitystyle of ordering material into a series of similar solemn commands are unchallengedcontent presents major divisions of creation known to writercatalog or tabulation of events and commandsvocabulary = create (bara), humanity as likeness/image, male/fernaleGod = Elohim, characterized as powerful cosmic organizer, speaks things into being, stands outside of cosmos and controls itHumanity = created as vice regent, created in image gives representative statuspolemic against mythical concepts of life and creationGenesis 2:relationship of characters emphasizedlanguage is picturesque and flowing, poetic terms, colorfulGod's actions more interrelated than separated by divisions of time or set expressions (idioms)no two acts are alike and none are preceded by divine commandvocabulary = form (yasar), humanity as living being, man/womanGod = Yahweh, characterized by immanence, personal nearness, involvement on human scene, intimate master, depicted humanly (hands, walking, digging)Humanity = ready contact with and immediate responsibility to God. Humanity's creation linked to ground (word play on adam = man and adamah = ground) and curse is alienation from the land, is distinctive because Yahweh personally addresses himpolemic against fertility cults in Canaan
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Which list of the Ten Commandments is the "real" list??
We joked you could win $100 by saying, :Let me read you a list of the Ten Commandments, the only list the Bible explicity calls the Ten Commandments. Tell if this is the list. A hundred bucks says I'm right. Then read them the Ten Commandments from Exodus 34!!:
Exodus 20 Exodus 34: Note: this list, NOT THE
OTHER, is the one that says "THESE ARE
THE TEN COMMANDMENTS"
These look only loosely related to the list we've all heard from Exodus 2O
.Here's Colbert (interviewing a congressman about the Ten Commandments), which
We joked you could win $100 by saying, :Let me read you a list of the Ten Commandments, the only list the Bible explicity calls the Ten Commandments. Tell if this is the list. A hundred bucks says I'm right. Then read them the Ten Commandments from Exodus 34!!:
Exodus 20 Exodus 34: Note: this list, NOT THE
OTHER, is the one that says "THESE ARE
THE TEN COMMANDMENTS"
1. I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage. You shall have no other gods before me. | 1. Thou shalt worship no idol. (For the Lord is a jealous god). Smash all idols, | |
2. You shall not make for yourself a graven image. You shall not bow down to them or serve them. | 2. Thou shalt make thee no molten gods. | |
3. You shall not take the name of the Lord your God in vain. | 3. The feast of unleavened bread shalt thou keep in the month when the ear is on the corn. | |
4. Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. | 4. All the first-born are mine. | |
5. Honor your father and your mother. | 5. Six days shalt thou work, but on the seventh thou shalt rest. | |
6. You shall not kill. | 6. Thou shalt observe the feast of weeks, even of the first fruits of the wheat harvest, and the feast of ingathering at the year's end. | |
7. You shall not commit adultery. | 7. Thou shalt not offer the blood of my sacrifice with leavened bread. | |
8. You shall not steal. | 8. The fat of my feast shall not remain all night until the morning. | |
9. You shall not bear false witness against your neighbor. | 9. The first of the first fruits of thy ground thou shalt bring unto the house of the Lord thy God. | |
10. You shall not covet. | 10. Thou shalt not boil a kid in its mother's milk. |
These look only loosely related to the list we've all heard from Exodus 2O
.Here's Colbert (interviewing a congressman about the Ten Commandments), which
turns out to have several helpful serious points about the "literary world" of the topic Here it is:
Mon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
| ||||
and the "question of the day"..
Off the top of your head, list words and ideas that come to mind when you think of the story of the giving of the Ten Commandments on Mt Sinai.
Then scroll down for the question..
Was "wedding" on your list?
.....or "love"?
What does all this have to do with a wedding?
THE TEN COMMANDMENTS AS A WEDDING:
T Ray VanderLaan video on Mount Sinai we watched is not online but on this DVD.
Too bad the video is not online, but most of the study guide IS..
see pp.197-251 here
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Here are the ten signs that replace the terms for Week 5. We covered #1 tonight: It's theThree Worlds (see above). We'll cover the rest next week.
Remember: you can delete all scriptures to be read for week 2, except Exodus 20 and 34, and Matthew 5-7.
See extra credit homework at top of page.
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