2018-03-09T13:15:52-05:00

 

Creation of the Sun, Sistine Chapel
Creation of the Sun, Sistine Chapel

So, here’s the background of my click-bait post. I address several of these in my podcast on Genesis 1, or previous posts.

  • Genesis 1 really likes the number 7. Can you spot all the multiples of 7 in there?
    • You probably can’t, because even if you read Hebrew, these are not all exactly obvious.

      “After the introductory verse (1:1), the section is divided into seven paragraphs, each of which appertains to one of the seven days….Each of the three nouns that occur in the first verse and express the basic concepts of the section, viz God [אֱלֹהִים ʾElōhīm] heavens [שָׁמַיִם šāmayim], earth [אֶרֶץ ʾereṣ], are repeated in the section a given number of times that is a multiple of seven: thus the name of God occurs thirty-five times, that is, five times seven; earth is found twenty-one times, that is, three times seven; similarly heavens (or firmament, רָקִיעַ rāqīaʿ) appears twenty-one times.
      (e). The ten sayings with which, according to the Talmud, the world was created —that is, the ten utterances of God beginning with the words, and … said—are clearly divisible into two groups: the first group contains seven Divine fiats enjoining the creation of the creatures, to wit, ‛Let there be light’, ‘Let there be a firmament’, ‘Let the waters be gathered together’, ‘Let the earth put forth vegetation’, ‘Let there be lights’, ‘Let the waters bring forth swarms’, ‘Let the earth bring forth’; the second group comprises three pronouncements that emphasize God’s concern for man’s welfare (three being the number of emphasis), namely, ‘Let us make man’ (not a command but an expression of the will to create man), ‘Be fruitful and multiply’, ‘Behold I have given unto you every plant yielding seed’. Thus we have here, too, a series of seven corresponding dicta.
      (f). The terms light and day are found, in all, seven times in the first paragraph, and there are seven references to light in the fourth paragraph.
      (g). Water is mentioned seven times in the course of paragraphs two and three.
      (h). In the fifth and sixth paragraphs forms of the word חַיָּה ḥayyā [rendered ‘living’ or ‘beasts’] occur seven times.
      (i). The expression it was good appears seven times (the seventh time—very good).
      (j). The first verse has seven words.
      (k). The second verse contains fourteen words—twice seven.
      (l). In the seventh paragraph, which deals with the seventh day, there occur the following three consecutive sentences, each of which consists of seven words and contains in the middle the expression the seventh day:
      And on THE SEVENTH DAY God finished His work which He had done, and He rested on THE SEVENTH DAY from all His work which He had done.
      So God blessed THE SEVENTH DAY and hallowed it.
      (m). The words in the seventh paragraph total thirty-five—five times seven.”

      – Cassuto, Genesis.

    • I’m not typically a fan of number symbolism, I think it’s too easy to manipulate and see what you want to see. However, given the obvious “seven day” pattern, I suspect these are not all accidental or impositions by the interpreter.
  • Genesis 1 doesn’t portray the creation of a lone human couple but humanity in general.
    • In 1:26-27, it says God creates humanity, male and female. The idea that this is a human couple is spillover from Genesis 2-3, where a human couple named Human and Life (or more traditionally Adam and Eve) are created. (On Human and Life, see my chapter “‘Adam, Where Art Thou?’ Onomastics, Etymology, and Translation in Genesis 2-3”  in this book.
  • The created humans are commanded to be vegetarian.
    • Contrast 1:29-30 “I have given you every plant yielding seed that is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree with seed in its fruit; you shall have them for food, And to every beast of the earth, and to every bird of the air, and to everything that creeps on the earth, everything that has the breath of life, I have given every green plant for food.” (Gen 1:30 NRSV) with Genesis 9:3-4 “Every moving thing that lives shall be food for you; and just as I gave you the green plants, I give you everything. Only, you shall not eat flesh with its life, that is, its blood.”
  • The “days” of Genesis 1 are literal 24-hour days, but don’t have anything to do with the age of the earth. Indeed, Genesis 1 (probably) isn’t even about physical/material origins.
    • Arguments making the days of Genesis indefinitely long ages (the day-age interpretation, see my paper here) are based on the assumption of concordism, that science and scripture must be saying the same things, even if the latter speaks in “artistic” or “metaphorical” language. The more I study the Hebrew Bible, ancient Near East, and creation stories (as well as the history of science), the more I am convinced this assumption is completely baseless when applied to the Hebrew Bible. Genesis is not trying to present any kind of “natural history” of the world, and attempts to turn it into one are far off base. Any argument about interpretation of “days” as anything other than 24-hr periods must first acknowledge and provide a warrant for the validity of this assumption.
    • “It is not too much to see in all this a common preoccupation with the scientific method, scientific evidence, and scientific results, which descend upon these ancient pages like a cloud of termites eager to devour and digest the materials in terms of their own appetites. This is not to debunk science or historiography as such. Rather, the issue is one of appropriateness. Our contemporary preoccupations could hardly have been the preoccupations of ancient Israel…. It is quite doubtful that these texts have waited in obscurity through the millennia for their hidden meanings to be revealed by modern science. It is at least a good possibility that the “real meaning” was understood by the authors themselves.… Charles Darwin, in comparing his observations of nature with the biblical accounts of creation, assumed that they were the same sort of statement and declared that the Old Testament offers a “manifestly false history of the earth.” While religious objections have tended to focus on the word false, and many evolutionists—following Darwin—have been inclined to agree that it is false, the central issue is whether the biblical materials are being offered as a “history of the earth” in a sense comparable to the modern meaning of natural history. If they are not, then both the attempts at demonstrating their scientific falsity and the attempts at demonstrating their scientific truth are inappropriate and misleading.” Hyers, Meaning of Creation:Genesis and Modern Science, 3, 6.
    • Similarly, the argument that “they can’t be literal 24-hr days because the sun isn’t created until day 4” continues with concordist assumptions, that Genesis 1 is working within the framework of a modern cosmology and understanding. But Israelites had a very different cosmology, and they knew that daylight came even when the sun was “absent,” like on a cloudy day. Again, this is only an argument if you assume that Genesis has to be speaking about physical or material origins. Much later post-biblical Jewish interpretation says the light in the first three days was the light of God.
    • Lastly, the argument that Heb. yom “day” can mean an indefinite period of time is true, but only in idioms which we do not find in Genesis 1, where the 24-hr meaning is supported contextually by things such as the “morning/evening” refrain and the modeling of ceasing all work on the seventh day, which loses all force if day doesn’t actually mean “day” here.
    • So the days of Genesis are literal, but also literary, not actual, historical days. (If that seems confusing, the Cheshire cat is a literal cat, but not a real or actual cat.) That is, the presentation of creation in a seven-day period is not due to simply “recounting the past” or because “that’s how it happened,” but for other reasons which I don’t have space or time to go into here. My old post here gets at it a little, and I cover it in the book.
    • There is also a question as to whether Genesis even depicts creation in physical/material terms. That is, it appears from ancient accounts that ancient Near Eastern peoples thought about existence less in physical terms (as we tend to today), and more in functional terms. To exist meant to have a name and a function within a system, and Genesis portrays the arranging of that system of functionality and naming. Genesis is the organization of God’s cosmic temple, not the physical construction of it (which is what modern science is discovering.) This is the argument of John Walton (see my links and brief discussion here), and while it has some problems, I think there’s something to it.
  • Genesis 1 is only 1 of 3 creation stories/themes in the Old Testament, and they’re far from consistent with each other
    • That is, there is Genesis 1-2:4, Genesis 2:4ff, and the tradition of the pre-creation battle with the waters scattered throughout Job, Psalms, Isaiah, etc. This is directly contradicted in Genesis 1. See, again, Mark Smith’s Priestly Vision of Genesis 1 or my old post here.
  • The Bible devotes more than 12x as much space to the story of Joseph in Egypt than to creation in Genesis 1.
    • By wordcount, this is easily true. Modernity has placed far more importance on Genesis 1 than the ancients apparently did, which also suggests the purposes we attribute to it are different than their ancient ones. LDS Old Testament scholar Sidney Sperry alluded to this when he wrote that “the writer of Genesis (in its present form) is more interested in showing to Israel who its great ancestors were than to tell about the origin of life and its institutions. This is readily seen in the fact that the origins of life and its institutions are briefly and concisely handled in the first eleven chapters, while thirty-nine chapters are required to tell about Abraham, the father of the faithful, and his immediate family.”

As always, you can help me pay my tuition here, or you can support my work through making your regular Amazon purchases through book links on my posts. You can also get updates by email whenever a post goes up (subscription box on the right). If you friend me on Facebook, please drop me a note telling me you’re a reader. I tend not to accept friend requests from people I’m not acquainted with.

2018-04-04T13:58:04-05:00

Looking NE from St. Peter's to the old city and Mt. of Olives
Looking NE from St. Peter’s to the old city and Mt. of Olives

First, there’s a Kindle sale on some John Walton books I recommend, including some I haven’t read yet in the Lost World series. Lost World of Genesis 1; Lost World of Genesis 2-3; Lost World of the Israelite Conquest; Lost World of Scripture (about Israelite oral culture).

This post of recommendations focuses on the history and culture of the Old Testament. I’ve bolded my simple choices for those who don’t want lots of detailed options.

 

First, my free accessible stuff online.

Logos also offers some free stuff, like a Study Bible and Bible Dictionary. Again, Logos is a free app, you buy books and packages separately. I’ve starred the things available in Logos. (See my post here for instructions/demo and a follow-up here with another demo.)

Jehovah and the World of the Old Testament has an introduction to some of the history/culture, and is still $10 at Deseret Book

To learn more about all the peoples and civilizations around the Old Testament, like Egyptians, Hittites, Babylonians, etc., Arnold/Strawn, The World around the Old Testament: The People and Places of the Ancient Near East If you want to go deeper on this, you want Jack Sasson’s 4-volumes-in-2 Civilizations of the Ancient Near East.

Actual history books.

Physical and Social Structures

Reference Works

These are organized by topic or some other logic, not book/chapter/verse. I’ve starred those available in Logos, since reference works in particular benefit from the tagging/searching/linking capabilities of Logos.

Bible and other Dictionaries

  • The Oxford Companion to the Bible.
    • This is essentially a Bible Dictionary with some history and history of interpretation thrown in. It’s respectable, and it can be had used for $1.50 or so.
  • * Anchor Bible Dictionary
    • After a change in publisher, this is now the Anchor Yale Bible Dictionary. It’s ecumenical, academic, and 7000+ pages,  but 25 yrs old at this point, and apparently out of print and expensive. I got mine on sale at Logos. (It’s currently on sale for $190 instead of 260. Remember, Logos itself is free. You can treat it like a supercharged Kindle and just buy individual books.)
  • * IVP Dictionary of the Old Testament
    • This is a multi-volume Protestant series that is quite good, imo. It often leans conservative, but surprises me in good ways. You can buy a set or individual volumes, and there’s a New Testament counterpart as well. I also got this on deep sale at Logos, once upon a time. I keep my eyes open.

*Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible.  I bet you didn’t know there were enough of these in the Bible to merit an entire dictionary of almost a thousand pages 😉

 

As always, you can help me pay my tuition here. You can also get updates by email whenever a post goes up (subscription box on the right). If you friend me on Facebook, please drop me a note telling me you’re a reader. I tend not to accept friend requests from people I’m not acquainted with.

2018-03-09T13:11:31-05:00

genesis-hebrew2LDS Perspectives interviewed me about my book on Genesis 1, which is still in progress.

The beginning of the Old Testament is challenging for a number of reasons. It’s foreign, it’s inconsistent (two creation stories?), it interfaces with history and science in uncomfortable and controversial ways (evolution, “giants”/”sons of god” marrying “daughters of men,” the flood, etc.)

And then for Mormons, add in the Book of Moses, the Book of Abraham, and the Temple, which parallel these chapters. Now if you open your Old Testament teacher’s manual, how much background, explanation, or guidance do you really get with any of this stuff?

I want to make sure, upfront, that we understand about genre. Listen to my podcast here, watch my Sperry Symposium presentation here (jump to minute 42 if you just want genre stuff.) We default to the assumption that all scripture is history, but that’s not a valid assumption for the reasons I explain. Devout Christians like C.S. Lewis were just fine with God using “myth” (properly understood) in scripture (also here).  Moreover, history and history-writing itself are quite complicated. See my posts here, here, and here.

Genesis, non-LDS perspectives

First, I’d recommend my post on 10 Books for Getting a Handle on the Early Chapters of Genesis. And second, my post yesterday about  Mormons and evolution has a lot of non-LDS interpretive recommendations I’d put here, so just look at that instead. But if you’re looking for a traditional commentary, I’d go with

Genesis, LDS stuff

Podcasts- LDS Perspectives is killing it, and not just because of my stuff on Genre in the Bible and Genesis 1.

  • Upcoming podcast with retired BYU Assyriologist/Religion Prof. Paul Hoskisson on Symbolism and the Food.
  • Philip Barlow and Cory Crawford‘s podcasts both dovetail with Bokovoy’s book above. These ideas can be new and challenging to LDS, but they are discussions we need to be having, I think. We don’t necessarily all need to agree, but we do need to read carefully, think critically, and talk about scripture charitably, when we do disagree.

Book of Moses/JST

The Book of Moses is the Joseph Smith Translation to the early chapters of Genesis. So, what is the JST? Well, it’s lots of things in fact. Significantly, conservative LDS scholars and BYU employees have argued that we can’t simply assume the JST is pure textual restoration. It’s prophetic commentary, modern updating, and a variety of things including (rarely, in my opinion) textual restoration. You can see my views in print in the JST section of my article on Bible translations. Below is some recent and groundbreaking work on Moses and the JST.

Abraham

The Book of Abraham is particularly complex and complicated. For a short overview, see this book online. It is widely understood, though the details are disputed, that the English text of the Book of Abraham post-dates Joseph Smith’s study of Hebrew.  On that topic, BYU’s Matt Grey has been doing some fantastic work, summarized in this podcast and this paper presentation. Also see John Gee on the BOA papyri, in this podcast. Gee is probably the best known LDS scholar working on the Book of Abraham, and is eminently qualified. He recently published An Introduction to the Book of AbrahamI haven’t read it yet, and anticipate (as with every book and scholarly argument) points of agreement and disagreement, but that it’s also worth reading.

More generally, the Book of Abraham is known for its shift to a plural, “the gods.” On that, see Stephen Smoot’s podcast on the Divine Council, and the back-and-forth between David Bokovoy and Michael Heiser. Heiser writes a critique, Bokovoy responds, Heiser summarizes graciously.

I wrote a little bit about Kolob here, another thing the Book of Abraham is known for.

Lastly, below I post the introductory text from Section 2 of my book.

For Latter-day Saints, any discussion of the early chapters of Genesis is complicated by the existence of the parallel creation accounts found in the Book of Moses, the Book of Abraham, and the Temple. A full exploration of these accounts is further complicated by temple covenants of narrow non-disclosure, which is expanded by most LDS into a culture of near-silence. Close attention to these creation accounts raises a number of related questions: if they are all revelatory, why don’t they all agree? Why are they different? What is the relationship between them? Don’t Moses, Abraham, and the Temple supersede Genesis? If so, why focus on Genesis?

In this second part of the book, I examine these accounts. Although much scholarship exists on Abraham and Moses individually, examining them together with (vaguely and respectfully) the Temple account and how they are different will prove fruitful in explaining why they are different. Moreover, understanding the nature of the Book of Moses and Joseph Smith Translation are the key in unlocking most of these questions.

In producing the JST, Joseph Smith was highly attuned to problems in the biblical text— contradictions, inconsistencies, seams, “bumps,” as well as italicized text in the KJV. Many of the changes he made modified such passages. The very first chapters of the Bible offered a massive bump, which I term the Double Creation Problem. That is, Genesis 1-2:4 offers one creation account, but then Genesis 2:4 seems to start over and create everything again. They are back-to-back creation stories.

Joseph Smith went at this problem in what would become a stereotypically Mormon way, one which also echoes ancient prophetic, interpretive patterns. The JST was “not a simple, mechanical recording of divine dictum, but rather a study-and-thought process accompanied and prompted by revelation from the Lord” (per Robert J. Matthews).  Joseph provided one solution to the Double Creation Problem by embedding new prophetic knowledge (premortal existence) into a reworked text of Genesis, the Book of Moses, which is formally the JST to Genesis. After several more years of revelation as well as studying Hebrew, he provided a slightly different solution in the Book of Abraham, again embedding new prophetic knowledge and reworking the text in a JST-like process. Still apparently wrestling with this problem through study and thought accompanied by revelation, the Temple account resolved the Double Creation Problem in a way distinctly different from, but based on his previous work in Moses and Abraham. The trajectory of Moses and Abraham point to the Temple.

To be clear, I am examining merely one facet of the creation portion of Moses, Abraham, and the temple. I do not think Joseph’s wrestling with the Double-Creation Problem fully accounts for these texts and rituals, but is an important and unrecognized aspect of them. Moreover, framing the Moses, Abraham, and Temple creation accounts as outgrowth of Joseph’s JST mindset and prophetic problem solving greatly reduces the problems that come from assuming they are merely English translations of fully independent ancient revelations to Moses and Abraham. Framing it this way shows what he was doing, namely, solving a textual problem by applying new doctrinal knowledge, not serving as prophetic typewriter for three identical copies of the same ancient revelation.

I begin by examining more fully the Double-Creation Problem, the nature and process of the JST, the nature of Moses, Abraham, and the Temple accounts, and their potential solutions to the Double Creation problem.

I conclude that section with this summary.

Likely prompted by the command to translate the Bible, and confronted with the Double-Creation Problem found at its beginning, Joseph Smith progressively transformed Genesis 1. From a narrowly-focused, non-scientific ancient Near Eastern account (see Part 3), it became Moses, then Abraham, in the process revealing truths about premortal existence, the council in heaven, and others. The culmination of this progressive transformation was the temple. Therein, Joseph definitively solved the problem of double-creation, simultaneously rendering Genesis into its most modern and scientifically-compatible form while providing the structure and narrative for a ritual of covenant making, priestly initiation, and royal coronation. Such is the modern Mormon interpretive life of Genesis 1, but its ancient Near Eastern biography remains to be told, in section 3 “The Ancient Context of Genesis 1”

As always, you can help me pay my tuition here. You can also get updates by email whenever a post goes up (subscription box on the right). If you friend me on Facebook, please drop me a note telling me you’re a reader. I tend not to accept friend requests from people I’m not acquainted with.

2018-04-04T13:58:04-05:00

Public domain, http://www.publicdomainpictures.net/view-image.php?image=8577&picture=old-books
Public domain

This is the second in a series of posts about resources for study and teaching the Old Testament in 2018. If you feel overwhelmed by the information below, I recommend going back to the first post, a shortlist of five books to give you a leg up, without lots of discussion to cut through. Future posts will provide resources on “paradigm changers,” the JST, history/culture of the Old Testament, the early chapters of Genesis, creation/evolution, how to profitably study, take notes, teach, etc.

Before I get into it today, note that Deseret Book is selling one of my short-list volumes for $10. No reason not to pick it up at that price.

We often forget that we are not actually reading the Bible itself, but an English translation. Translation matters. Everyone’s first and primary interaction with scripture is in a language not their own. The Bible, of course, is translated from Greek, Hebrew and Aramaic, but even D&C is not the American English of 2017. This means that for most people, their understanding of what scripture says depends heavily on what the translation implies. Well, what if it’s not a great English translation? Knowledge of how we got that English, what stands behind it, why translations differ, how the LDS Church came to use the King James Version as its official English Bible, etc. contributes greatly to our understanding and appreciation of the Bible.  For those without much time, I’ve chosen three select resources and bolded them.

Mormons and the Bible

  • Mormon leadership has read the Bible in a variety of ways, as detailed by Phillip Barlow’s Mormons and the Bible (Oxford Press). This is a must-read for understanding different views, interpretations, and usages of the Bible in LDS tradition. It demonstrates that we cannot simply “follow the Brethren” in how we read the Bible, because they haven’t all read it the same way.
  • Barlow has also written on how the King James Version went from the de facto Bible to the official Bible, which happened much more recently than many of us might expect. “Why the King James Version? From the Common to the Official Bible of Mormonism” Dialogue 22:2 (Summer 1986). PDF here, online version here.
  • Grant Hardy looks at how LDS usage of the KJV affects missionary work. While it has some positives, it has some serious negatives as well, e.g. “The KJV is no longer the dominant Bible of the English-speaking world, and the only denominations that still hold exclusively to that four-hundred-year- old translation are Latter-day Saints and a few marginal fringe groups.” There was an early edition of this paper, and a slightly different published edition.
  • Ronan Head responds to Hardy, “Unity and the King James Bible”
  • BYU’s Religious Studies Center put out an entire volume on The King James Bible and the Restoration, with a variety of topics covered well. Amazon link for print, but the whole thing is online from the RSC site.
  • Little has been written (to my knowledge) about non-English LDS usage of the Bible, but Joshua Sears examines the 2009 LDS Bible in Spanish, based on the 1909 Reina-Valera version, with some interesting observations.
  • David Seely put together a useful historical tool available here, “Reading the Old Testament in Light of the Restoration: A Comprehensive Bibliography of LDS Writings on the Old Testament (1830–1997)”

The KJV Itself

Since 2011 was the 400th anniversary of the KJV’s publication, a spate of books and articles appeared on its history and influence. What do we know about it? Lots. For example, the language of the KJV was already archaic when published in 1611. See my post here or this BYU Studies article “Through a Glass Darkly: Trying to Understand the Scriptures.” I’ve reproduced my list of resources from that post below. If you want only one, read McGrath.

If you need to do serious academic work on the KJV, David Norton is a name you should know.

Modern Translations

This is the single best tool in your box. I can’t recommend picking up one (or several!) highly enough. That said, all translations are not created equal and there are tons out there. See my article in the next section. I don’t think LDS should feel any reluctance in supplementing our official KJV with individual study of other translations and original languages. Joseph Smith did it.

  • Harper-Collins Study Bible– Based on the New Revised Standard Version (which I recommend as a stand-alone translation), this is often assigned for New Testament 101, or Hebrew Bible 101 at colleges. The publisher is the Society of Biblical Literature, and translation and notes are done by a variety of scholars, so there’s little religious bias.
  • NKJV Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible–   This exists in two versions, one with the New King James Version translation, which is basically an update to some of the archaic language of the KJV, but still has many of its problems. It also exists with the New International Version translation, which is highly problematic. The NIV is demonstrably biased; it cheats. So be sure to get the NKJV version.  As you might guess from the title, the notes and essays focus on the cultural backgrounds, those things ancient audiences (likely) knew which moderns don’t. Review here. It’s edited by John Walton, an Evangelical scholar I like, and my understanding is that the notes and essays are derived or shortened from this stand-alone series.
  • Jewish Study Bible– This translation and notes/essays are all written by Jewish scholars, which means it only covers the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament. It’s a fantastic resource that will enlighten and challenge (since, for example, Jews are unlikely to interpret Isaiah as messianic prophecies of Jesus.) The JPS is not at all defensive about “weird stuff” in the Old Testament, and draws on some of the best scholarship available.  A New Testament (NRSV) annotated from the same Jewish perspective is available as the The Jewish Annotated New Testament
  • NET Bible-The advantage of the New Electronic Translation is it’s entirely free and online at http://Netbible.org, and in free App form, called Lumina. There are thousands and thousands of footnotes, often about translation or background. Plus, the online reading page allows a lot of nice study options. Try clicking on the Parallel tab, for example. And note the sympathetic highlighting! (Try mousing over a greek or Hebrew word, see all its other occurrences there also highlighted, and sometimes the translation in English.) When it works, it’s great!
  • Faithlife Study Bible.  I recommend this mainly because it’s sometimes free, and designed to expand, integrate with, and maximize use of Logos resources.

Hebrew-focused translations with notes oriented towards literary and language aspects of the text, like allusion, poetry, and wordplay. These are great, but lengthy, multiple volumes each.

Understanding Bible Translations and Languages

So why are there so many translations? Why are they different? Is it just bias? Isn’t the KJV good enough? Are we limited to it, as LDS?

  • I’ve written an article in BYU’s Religious Educator about why translations differ, which includes personal study suggestions on how to use multiple translations and get at underlying Greek and Hebrew (the last bit superseded by my two posts below.) There are four primary factors.
    1. Different textual sources used for the translation.  (Traditional Hebrew text(s), Dead Sea Scrolls, Septuagint, Vulgate, Targums, etc.)
    2. Different readings of grammar and syntax.  (Hebrew is very different than English.)
    3. Different readings of individual word semantics (Uh, Hebrew is very different than English. This article in the Ensign gets at some relevant data. )
    4. Conscious choices about translation philosophy, style, and register. (Should we translate to 6-th grade English or 12th grade English? Should we be offensive where the text intended to be offensive?)
  • I also cover some of this ground in my article “The Israelite Roots of Atonement Terminology” BYU Studies 55:1 (2016). There I examine what “atone” “redeem” and “save” meant in an Israelite context. They weren’t synonyms.
  • Rather than use paper tools like Strong’s Concordance, there are now good, free electronic tools that do a better job. See my post here and here. If you see someone cite Strong’s Concordance for the meaning of a word, rest assured they do not really know the ancient languages.
  • If you want to learn a little Hebrew, start with the alphabet, found in your King James Version at Psalm 119. It’s an acrostic, so each section begins with succeeding letters of the Hebrew alphabet. Check out Hebrew4Christians for some useful introductions about letters, grammar, etc. (FYI, I’m NOT on board with their sensationalistic “Discover amazing secrets hidden in the Hebrew Bible and even in the very letters of the Hebrew alphabet! Learn how Yeshua is revealed “Aleph to Tav” – from the first Hebrew letter to the last!” Hebrew isn’t magic. It’s just a language.) And if you do know a little Hebrew, this is hilarious.

Deeper Dives into Background

As always, you can help me pay my tuition here, or you can support my work through making your regular Amazon purchases through this Amazon link. You can also get updates by email whenever a post goes up (subscription box on the right). If you friend me on Facebook, please drop me a note telling me you’re a reader. I tend not to accept friend requests from people I’m not acquainted with.

2018-04-05T11:55:03-05:00

My image.
My image.

Coming back to the Old Testament means I’ve been at this solo blog thing for a while, and I have a lot of prewritten material to work with. In the next year, I’ll be reposting and updating all of my Old Testament Gospel Doctrine posts, so they should appear as “new” posts in your feed and on the blog. If for some reason you get ahead of my updating/resposting, a google search for Benjamin Scribe Old Testament Lesson X or using the blog index (link at the top of every page) can get you to the old post you’re looking for. I also anticipate writing some new posts.

Between now and December when I start those, I’ll be posting two things. First, my Sperry paper will get turned into individual post-size chunks, and then I’ll post the whole thing as a PDF. I also recorded my final presentation of it, and will post that as a screencast, soon. The paper has some things the fireside didn’t, and vice-verse.

Second, I have several posts in the works about what resources to read to better understand, appreciate, and teach the Old Testament. I’ll probably start with a Top 5 post, and then some individualized posts about different kinds of resources.

Along those lines, at the bottom of every post is a link to my GoFundMe PhD campaign. I recently changed the rewards structure so that anyone who donates $25 or more gets early access to one ($25) or several ($50+) of my forthcoming papers/publications… although not my book. I can report that the book is moving forward and being refined and I remain quite excited about it, but I made the mistake of leaving the hardest writing for last. It might be 80% done (to pick a number), but I’m really struggling with the last parts as well as the editing of what I’ve already written. The perfect is the enemy of the good and all that, but it also needs to meet a certain standard.

As for the rest, I’ll cap my coursework by participating in an archaeological dig in Israel over the summer, but have begun early reading for my three comprehensive exams: American religious history, Reformation history, and history of science. Since Claremont requires the dissertation proposal along with the exams, I’ve been working on that as well. I’ve got some good ideas, but have to do some research and read the tea leaves before I decide on what I’m doing. It will almost certainly involve intellectual history, interpretation of scripture, evolution/creationism, and probably Mormonism in some way, all yet TBD.

The future is bright, and I’m really looking forward to Old Testament again. As I’ve said in my firesides, I think the Old Testament is a gift we have failed to really unwrap.

As always, you can help me pay my tuition here. You can also get updates by email whenever a post goes up (subscription box on the right). If you friend me on Facebook, please drop me a note telling me you’re a reader. I tend not to accept friend requests from people I’m not acquainted with. Thanks for reading

 

2018-03-09T13:16:29-05:00

My image.
My image.

My FairMormon presentation reiterated parts of two previous papers I have presented. That text should be online soon (as I understand.) Below I offer the very rough presentation text from the two previous papers.

The society for Mormon Philosophy and Theology paper, with lots of my raw material. LINK.

My MSH paper,”Science, Scripture, And Secularism: Rethinking some Inherited Assumptions.” LINK

Below are some books I would recommend. (These are, of course, not LDS, not approved by the Church, I have some disagreements, etc., but generally still good to read.)

In general, for presuppositions, see Misreading Scripture with Western Eyes

The intellectual history of creationism, evolution, and the “modern synthesis”

Cosmology in the Hebrew Bible

On Genesis

See my post here.

For wrestling with the nature of scripture and the OT, I highly recommend 

For Bibles and Study Bibles, see

  • The “recommendations for personal study” section of my article here
  • My post here (Old Testament specific)
  • My post here (New Testament specific)

I was asked about a book in the Q&A, Friedman’s Who Wrote the Bible, which I recommend along with his The Bible with Sources Revealed. In that connection, I mentioned David Bokovoy’s book, Authoring the Old Testament, from Kofford Press.

As always, you can help me pay my tuition here, or you can support my work through making your regular Amazon purchases through this Amazon link. You can also get updates by email whenever a post goes up (subscription box on the right). If you friend me on Facebook, please drop me a note telling me you’re a reader. I tend not to accept friend requests from people I’m not acquainted with.

2017-07-20T18:29:02-05:00

Ben contemplates his words, at Petra.
Ben contemplates his words, at Petra.

I was interviewed last year for the LDS Perspectives podcast, which I recommend. Therein, I allude to a lot of different books and papers, linked below. I also cited John Widtsoe on genre, from his 1930 book In Search of Truth available online here Widtsoe said,

“As in all good books every literary device is used in the Bible that will drive the lesson home. It contains history, poetry and allegory. These are not always distinguishable, now that the centuries have passed away since the original writing.”

Here is further reading that I alluded.

As always, you can help me pay my tuition here, or you can support my work through making your regular Amazon purchases through this Amazon link. You can also get updates by email whenever a post goes up (subscription box on the right). If you friend me on Facebook, please drop me a note telling me you’re a reader. I tend not to accept friend requests from people I’m not acquainted with.

2018-03-09T13:16:48-05:00

In a little less than a month, I’ll be speaking at the FAIRMormon Conference in Provo. Titled Truth, Scripture, and Interpretation: Some Precursors to Reading Genesis, my paper will be about the importance of recognizing the presuppositions we make when interpretating scripture. We can use various metaphors for this. Each of us (including inspired prophets and apostles) has a Black Box made up of worldview and presuppositions about revelation, prophets, and scripture. The contents of the box differ for every person, time, and culture. 6a00d83451be8f69e201bb07e83109970d-800wiThe scriptural text gets fed into our black box, and out comes “what scripture says.” But since the content of those black boxes differs, so too does the end product of “what (we think) scripture says.”

(This was the half the problem, I think, in early 20th century arguments between Apostles. Few of them ever made their own presuppositions explicit in argument, so it basically came down to Joseph Fielding Smith saying “Well this is my reading” and Roberts/Widtsoe/Talmage/others countering “Well this is MY reading.” It didn’t really go anywhere. But there’s no time to go into that in the conference. See essays 3-6, 8-9 in The Search for Harmony: Essays in Science and Mormonism, which is also available online. )

I’ll be unpacking a few of those common assumptions, particularly as they apply to Genesis and young-earth creationism. This is a first step towards trying to turn our Black Box into a Glass Box, where our assumptions are visible and therefore, able to be evaluated and changed.

However, the vast majority of the time will be spent not on interpretive details of Genesis, but on that black box of assumptions (thus my subtitle “precursors to reading Genesis.”) I think we don’t really interpret or understand scripture until we’re aware of the presuppositions we bring to it. Indeed, I think the most dangerous interpretations come when we think we’re simply giving a “face value” reading with no interpretation at all, completely unaware of our lenses, which can seriously distort meaning. (Thus the title and lens metaphor of one of the books I recommend often, Misreading Scripture with Western Eyes.Screen Shot 2017-04-01 at 1.24.43 PM) Since EVERY reading is an interpretation, the best readings will take account of and compensate for our presuppositions and lenses.

That summary sounds much more dry than I think it will be, but it’s important and I’m a decent presenter.

I’ll be followed by Ugo Perego, a geneticist, speaking about evolution, creationism, and the misuse of genetics. Matt Bowen is speaking the day before on Genesis 2-3 and literature.

So if you’re interested in the early chapters of Genesis, there is something for you at the FAIRMormon Conference this year.

The text of my presentation should be posted relatively soon after the conference, but that’s not entirely under my control.

As always, you can help me pay my tuition here, or you can support my work through making your regular Amazon purchases through this Amazon link. You can also get updates by email whenever a post goes up (subscription box on the right). If you friend me on Facebook, please drop me a note telling me you’re a reader. I tend not to accept friend requests from people I’m not acquainted with.

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