Thursday, March 11, 2010

Genesis 19 - A Case Study of How the Bible Provides Interpretive Keys for Itself

Blogger's Note: some of you may have read parts of this material in my booklet, "How Are We to Live Together?" In what follows, I have expanded and added to a section entitled "Sodom and Sodomy: How We Got from There to Here", as I believe that this outlines a profoundly important example of ways in which the Bible guides us in the process of interpretation (and the ways which we ignore this guidance). Read on...

Sodom and Sodomy: How We Got from There to Here

Genesis 19 (paralleled in many ways in Judges 19) tells the story of God’s angels destroying the city of Sodom (prefaced in Genesis 13-14 and 18:16-33). Because of this story, sodomy has come to mean anal intercourse, even though what Genesis reports does not match this cultural assumption. Beyond the Book of Genesis, there are at least 20 references to Sodom and Gomorrah in the Old and New Testaments (see below). Two of these provide explicit scriptural interpretation of the sins for which God destroyed the towns. The first is Ezekiel 16:49 (NAS): "Behold, this was the guilt of your sister Sodom: she and her daughters had arrogance, abundant food, and careless ease, but she did not help the poor and needy.” The second is Jude 1:7 (NAS): “Just as Sodom and Gomorrah and the cities around them, since they in the same way as these indulged in gross immorality and went after strange flesh, are exhibited as an example, in undergoing the punishment of eternal fire.

The Jude passage reads like a mystical trance or science fiction literature, filled as it is with “angels who did not keep their own domain, but abandoned their proper abode” and men who “by dreaming, defile the flesh, and reject authority, and revile angelic majesties.” The “strange flesh” reference makes sense when you consider that the men of Sodom wanted (perhaps) to gang rape two angels (see Genesis 19:1). There is another precedent, in Genesis 6:4, for this kind of human-angelic coupling. The Jewish Publication Society translation reads: “It was then, and later too, that the Nephilim [giants] appeared on earth – when the divine beings cohabited with the daughters of men, who bore them offspring. They were the heroes of old, the men of renown.” Getting from angelic gang rape to a blanket condemnation of all homosexual relationships is more than a stretch – the Jude interpretation does not support it – and the prophet Ezekiel does not mention sex or homosexuality at all.

Take a closer look at Ezekiel 16 and you begin to wonder why virtually every commentator on Sodom and Gomorrah ignores this explicit statement of the sins of Sodom. And Ezekiel is speaking or writing as God’s mouthpiece (see vs. 36: “Thus says the LORD God…”). Look again at the list God apparently put together: pride, indulgence, laziness, and refusal to help the poor (stranger?). Why doesn’t the word Sodomy mean these offenses, for which God explains through the prophet the city suffered the ultimate punishment?

Why indeed? Did Ezekiel (or God) not get the memo? I suppose it goes without saying that (from a heterosexual perspective) it’s far more fun to make scapegoats out of homosexual persons than to accept responsibility for and repent of our own pride, gluttony, laziness, and rape of the poor (ouch!). A good offense is the best defense.

Jesus Christ implies that the sin of Sodom involved refusing hospitality to the stranger, or at least the itinerant (traveling) healer/missionaries he was sending out in Matthew 10:14-15 (“And whoever does not receive you, nor heed your words, as you go out of that house or that city, shake off the dust of your feet. Truly I say to you, it will be more tolerable for the land of Sodom and Gomorrah in the day of judgment, than for that city” NAS) and its parallel in Mark 6:11 ("…any place that does not receive you or listen to you, as you go out from there, shake off the dust from the soles of your feet for a testimony against them" NAS). This interpretation is supported in the related story in Judges 19 (especially verses 15-19).

Take a look at the outline below of parallels between Genesis 19 and Judges 19. To read through them is to enter into a different kind or morality, where hospitality to strangers trumps all other concerns (particularly concern for your daughter’s safety and honor). Look again at the rationale each host uses for refusing to give up the stranger(s) to the mob: “they have come under the shelter of my roof” (Genesis 19:8); “this man has come into my house” (Judges 19:23). Conservatives may reject interpretive efforts to take Jesus Christ seriously as “politically correct”, but the Middle Eastern Code of Hospitality was and is real, even if not in Europe or America. Think of the Afghan villagers recently who refused to surrender to the Taliban soldiers several wounded American (alien) special forces commandoes they had taken under their roof, even though the Taliban fighters threatened to destroy their village (the Taliban fighters respected the Code and spared the village).

How we got from God’s condemnation of pride, gluttony, prosperity, and stinginess (according to Ezekiel 16:49) and inhospitality (Matthew 10:14-15) to creating a new English word for anal sex points to a powerful cultural fear at work in this traditional Christian teaching. True Biblical “literalists” would define “sodomy” as selfishness or inhospitality. That it means something else reveals the ways our cultural context colors (and blinds) our interpretation of the Bible. As on the Road to Emmaus on Resurrection Sunday, consulting the Law and the Prophets around a Table where strangers are welcome to share a meal are the keys to opening our blind eyes.

Parallels between Genesis 19 and Judges 19

1. Visitors arrive at the town in the evening

        a. Now the two angels came to Sodom in the evening (Genesis 19.1)
        b. So they passed along and went their way, and the sun set on them near Gibeah (Judges 19.14)

2. They intend to spend the night in the square

        a. They said however, "No, but we shall spend the night in the square." (Genesis 19.2)
        b. When they entered, they sat down in the open square of the city, for no one took them into his house to spend the night. (Judges 19.15)

3. The man who provides the travelers hospitality is himself an alien (not originally from the town)

        a. Furthermore, they said, "This one came in as an alien, and already he is acting like a judge (Genesis 19.9)
        b. Now the man was from the hill country of Ephraim, and he was staying in Gibeah, but the men of the place were Benjamites. (Judges 19.16)

4. They share a feast in the man’s home

        a. so they turned aside to him and entered his house; and he prepared a feast for them, and baked unleavened bread, and they ate. (Genesis 19.3)
        b. So he took him into his house and gave the donkeys fodder, and they washed their feet and ate and drank. While they were celebrating, (Judges 19.21-22a)

5. The men of the city surround the house and speak to the host

        a. the men of the city, the men of Sodom, surrounded the house, both young and old, all the people from every quarter; and they called to Lot (Genesis 19.4-5a)
        b. the men of the city, certain worthless fellows, surrounded the house, pounding the door; and they spoke to the owner of the house, the old man (Judges 19.22)

6. They demand that the host surrender his male guest(s) so that they may sexually abuse the guest

        a. "Where are the men who came to you tonight? Bring them out to us that we may have relations with them." (Genesis 19.5)
        b. "Bring out the man who came into your house that we may have relations with him." (Judges 19.22)

7. The host pleads with the men of the city not to violate his guest (who is under his protection) and offers them the women in the house to sexually abuse instead

        a. "Please, my brothers, do not act wickedly. Now behold, I have two daughters who have not had relations with man; please let me bring them out to you, and do to them whatever you like; only do nothing to these men, inasmuch as they have come under the shelter of my roof." (Genesis 19.7-8)
        b. "No, my fellows, please do not act so wickedly; since this man has come into my house, do not commit this act of folly. 24 "Here is my virgin daughter and his concubine. Please let me bring them out that you may ravish them and do to them whatever you wish. But do not commit such an act of folly against this man." (Judges 19.23-24)

8. The men of the city refuse the offer – but do not harm the (male) visitor(s)

        a. So they pressed hard against Lot and came near to break the door. (Genesis 19.9)
        b. But the men would not listen to him. (Judges 19.25)

9. The behavior of the men of the city results in the total destruction of the people and the city (by fire)

        a. …for we are about to destroy this place, because their outcry has become so great before the LORD that the LORD has sent us to destroy it. …Then the LORD rained on Sodom and Gomorrah brimstone and fire from the LORD out of heaven, and He overthrew those cities, and all the valley, and all the inhabitants of the cities, and what grew on the ground. (Genesis 19:13, 24-25)
        b. So the sons of Benjamin saw that they were defeated. When the men of Israel gave ground to Benjamin because they relied on the men in ambush whom they had set against Gibeah, the men in ambush hurried and rushed against Gibeah; the men in ambush also deployed and struck all the city with the edge of the sword. Now the appointed sign between the men of Israel and the men in ambush was that they would make a great cloud of smoke rise from the city. But when the cloud began to rise from the city in a column of smoke, Benjamin looked behind them; and behold, the whole city was going up in smoke to heaven… The men of Israel then turned back against the sons of Benjamin and struck them with the edge of the sword, both the entire city with the cattle and all that they found; they also set on fire all the cities which they found. (Judges 20.36-38, 40 and 48)

References to “Sodom” in the Bible (beyond the book of Genesis)

1. Deuteronomy 29:23 'All its land is brimstone and salt, a burning waste, unsown and unproductive, and no grass grows in it, like the overthrow of Sodom and Gomorrah, Admah and Zeboiim, which the LORD overthrew in His anger and in His wrath.'

2. Deuteronomy 32:32 "For their vine is from the vine of Sodom, And from the fields of Gomorrah; Their grapes are grapes of poison, Their clusters, bitter.

3. Isaiah 1:9-10 Unless the LORD of hosts Had left us a few survivors, We would be like Sodom, We would be like Gomorrah. Hear the word of the LORD, You rulers of Sodom; Give ear to the instruction of our God, You people of Gomorrah.

4. Isaiah 3:9 The expression of their faces bears witness against them. And they display their sin like Sodom; They do not even conceal it. Woe to them! For they have brought evil on themselves.

5. Isaiah 13:19 And Babylon, the beauty of kingdoms, the glory of the Chaldeans' pride, Will be as when God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah.

6. Jeremiah 23:14 "Also among the prophets of Jerusalem I have seen a horrible thing: The committing of adultery and walking in falsehood; And they strengthen the hands of evildoers, So that no one has turned back from his wickedness. All of them have become to Me like Sodom, And her inhabitants like Gomorrah.

7. Jeremiah 49:18 "Like the overthrow of Sodom and Gomorrah with its neighbors," says the LORD, "no one will live there, nor will a son of man reside in it.

8. Jeremiah 50:40 "As when God overthrew Sodom And Gomorrah with its neighbors," declares the LORD, "No man will live there, Nor will any son of man reside in it.

9. Lamentations 4:6 For the iniquity of the daughter of my people Is greater than the sin of Sodom, Which was overthrown as in a moment, And no hands were turned toward her.

10. Ezekiel 16:46-58 46 "Now your older sister is Samaria, who lives north of you with her daughters; and your younger sister, who lives south of you, is Sodom with her daughters. 47 "Yet you have not merely walked in their ways or done according to their abominations; but, as if that were too little, you acted more corruptly in all your conduct than they. 48 "As I live," declares the Lord God, "Sodom, your sister, and her daughters, have not done as you and your daughters have done. 49 "Behold, this was the guilt of your sister Sodom: she and her daughters had arrogance, abundant food, and careless ease, but she did not help the poor and needy. 50 "Thus they were haughty and committed abominations before Me. Therefore I removed them when I saw it. 51 "Furthermore, Samaria did not commit half of your sins, for you have multiplied your abominations more than they. Thus you have made your sisters appear righteous by all your abominations which you have committed. 52 "Also bear your disgrace in that you have made judgment favorable for your sisters. Because of your sins in which you acted more abominably than they, they are more in the right than you. Yes, be also ashamed and bear your disgrace, in that you made your sisters appear righteous. 53 "Nevertheless, I will restore their captivity, the captivity of Sodom and her daughters, the captivity of Samaria and her daughters, and along with them your own captivity, 54 in order that you may bear your humiliation, and feel ashamed for all that you have done when you become a consolation to them. 55 "And your sisters, Sodom with her daughters and Samaria with her daughters, will return to their former state, and you with your daughters will also return to your former state. 56 "As the name of your sister Sodom was not heard from your lips in your day of pride, 57 before your wickedness was uncovered, so now you have become the reproach of the daughters of Edom, and of all who are around her, of the daughters of the Philistines-- those surrounding you who despise you. 58 "You have borne the penalty of your lewdness and abominations," the LORD declares.

11. Amos 4:11 "I overthrew you as God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah, And you were like a firebrand snatched from a blaze; Yet you have not returned to Me," declares the LORD.

12. Zephaniah 2:9 "Therefore, as I live," declares the LORD of hosts, The God of Israel, "Surely Moab will be like Sodom, And the sons of Ammon like Gomorrah-- A place possessed by nettles and salt pits, And a perpetual desolation. The remnant of My people will plunder them, And the remainder of My nation will inherit them."

13. Matthew 10:11-16 "11 "And into whatever city or village you enter, inquire who is worthy in it; and abide there until you go away. 12 "And as you enter the house, give it your greeting. 13 "And if the house is worthy, let your greeting of peace come upon it; but if it is not worthy, let your greeting of peace return to you. 14 "And whoever does not receive you, nor heed your words, as you go out of that house or that city, shake off the dust of your feet. 15 "Truly I say to you, it will be more tolerable for the land of Sodom and Gomorrah in the day of judgment, than for that city. 16 "Behold, I send you out as sheep in the midst of wolves; therefore be shrewd as serpents, and innocent as doves.

14. Matthew 11:20, 23-24 “Then He began to reproach the cities in which most of His miracles were done, because they did not repent… And you, Capernaum, will not be exalted to heaven, will you? You shall descend to Hades; for if the miracles had occurred in Sodom which occurred in you, it would have remained to this day. Nevertheless I say to you that it shall be more tolerable for the land of Sodom in the day of judgment, than for you.

15. Luke 10:3-12 3 "Go your ways; behold, I send you out as lambs in the midst of wolves. 4 "Carry no purse, no bag, no shoes; and greet no one on the way. 5 "And whatever house you enter, first say, 'Peace be to this house. 6 "And if a man of peace is there, your peace will rest upon him; but if not, it will return to you. 7 "And stay in that house, eating and drinking what they give you; for the laborer is worthy of his wages. Do not keep moving from house to house. 8 "And whatever city you enter, and they receive you, eat what is set before you; 9 and heal those in it who are sick, and say to them, 'The kingdom of God has come near to you.' 10 "But whatever city you enter and they do not receive you, go out into its streets and say, 11 'Even the dust of your city which clings to our feet, we wipe off in protest against you; yet be sure of this, that the kingdom of God has come near.' 12 "I say to you, it will be more tolerable in that day for Sodom, than for that city.

16. Luke 17:28-29 "It was the same as happened in the days of Lot: they were eating, they were drinking, they were buying, they were selling, they were planting, they were building; but on the day that Lot went out from Sodom it rained fire and brimstone from heaven and destroyed them all.

17. Romans 9:29 And just as Isaiah foretold, "Except the Lord of Sabaoth had left to us a posterity, We would have become as Sodom, and would have resembled Gomorrah."

18. 2 Peter 2:4-11 4 For if God did not spare angels when they sinned, but cast them into hell and committed them to pits of darkness, reserved for judgment; 5 and did not spare the ancient world, but preserved Noah, a preacher of righteousness, with seven others, when He brought a flood upon the world of the ungodly; 6 and if He condemned the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah to destruction by reducing them to ashes, having made them an example to those who would live ungodly thereafter; 7 and if He rescued righteous Lot, oppressed by the sensual conduct of unprincipled men 8 (for by what he saw and heard that righteous man, while living among them, felt his righteous soul tormented day after day with their lawless deeds), 9 then the Lord knows how to rescue the godly from temptation, and to keep the unrighteous under punishment for the day of judgment, 10 and especially those who indulge the flesh in its corrupt desires and despise authority. Daring, self-willed, they do not tremble when they revile angelic majesties, 11 whereas angels who are greater in might and power do not bring a reviling judgment against them before the Lord.

19. Jude 1:5-9 Now I desire to remind you, though you know all things once for all, that the Lord, after saving a people out of the land of Egypt, subsequently destroyed those who did not believe. 6 And angels who did not keep their own domain, but abandoned their proper abode, He has kept in eternal bonds under darkness for the judgment of the great day. 7 Just as Sodom and Gomorrah and the cities around them, since they in the same way as these indulged in gross immorality and went after strange flesh, are exhibited as an example, in undergoing the punishment of eternal fire. 8 Yet in the same manner these men, also by dreaming, defile the flesh, and reject authority, and revile angelic majesties. 9 But Michael the archangel, when he disputed with the devil and argued about the body of Moses, did not dare pronounce against him a railing judgment, but said, "The Lord rebuke you."


20. Revelation 11:8 And their dead bodies will lie in the street of the great city which mystically is called Sodom and Egypt, where also their Lord was crucified.

Friday, February 26, 2010

Seminal Stories of the Bible - for Sunday Feb 28 and Wednesday Mar 3

After a grueling round of relentlessly narrowing down profoundly important passages of the Bible, I have settled on seven passages from the Old Testament and seven passages from the New Testament for us to focus on this Week.

Seven Seminal Passages from the Old Testament:
  1. Covenant - Genesis 12 - God's Covenant with Abram
    key verses: Genesis 12:1-3
  2. Deliverance - Exodus 15 - God's salvation of Israel through the Red Sea
    key verse: Exodus 15:21
  3. Worship - Deuteronomy 6 - The Shema
    key verse: Deuteronomy 6:4-5
  4. Dynasty - 2 Samuel 7 - God makes covenant with King David's Dyansty
    key verse: 2 Samuel 7:16
  5. Oblivion - 1 Kings 19 - Elijah stands (with God) against King Ahab's Omri Dynasty
    key verse: 1 Kings 19:11-12
  6. Messiah - Psalm 110 - Messianic Hymn most often quoted in the New Testament
    key verse: Psalm 110:1
  7. Redeemed - Isaiah 42:1-9 - First of the four Servant Songs reinterpreting Israel's (and God's) place among the nations in the wake of exile
    key verses: Isaiah 42:6-7
Seven Seminal New Testament Passages
  1. Fulfillment - Matthew 5:1-20 - Preamble to the Sermon on the Mount
    key verses: Matthew 5:17-18
  2. Abundance - Mark 4:1-20 - Parable of the Sower
    key verse: Mark 4:20
  3. Companion - Luke 24: 13-35 - The Resurrection Walk to Emmaus
    key verse: Luke 24:26-27
  4. Light - John 1:1-14 - Prologue of John
    key verses: John 1:4-5
  5. Power - Acts 15 - The Jerusalem Council integrates the Gentiles
    key verses: Acts 15:28-29
  6. Way - Philippians 2:1-18 - the Christ Hymn
    key verses: Philippians 2:8-9
  7. Faith - Hebrews 11 - Roll call of Faithfulness
    key verse: Hebrews 11:13
I chose these passages for several reasons:
  1. These passages form a framework for the narrative thread in the entire Bible
  2. Each passage forms a crucial moment in the life of God's people
  3. Taken together, the passages represent a sampling of the various kinds of literature styles in the Bible
  4. Many of the passages are either referenced in other parts of the Bible, or themselves reference other parts of the Bible
I'll update this post to include the very important passages that did not make my cut!

Major Divisions of the 66 Books of the Bible

The basic division of our Bible designates 39 books in the Old Testament and 27 books in the New Testament. 

So here are two basic divisions (Jewish and Christian) of the collection of what Christians call the Old Testament and a division of the books of the New Testament. Wiki includes a helpful chart of these divisions, including Catholic and Eastern Orthodox divisions (which include extra books!).

The Jewish people use three major divisions for the Hebrew Bible (what we call the Old Testament):

Jesus often cited two major divisions: the Law (Hebrew: Torah) and the Prophets (see Matthew 7:12 or Romans 3:21). Later, Judaism sanctioned a third major division, the Writings.
  1. 5 books of the Law (Torah)
  2. 8 books of the Prophets (Nevi'im) including four Early and four Later Prophets (counted as 21 books in the Christian Old Testament)
  3. 11 books of Writings (Ketuvim) counted as 13 books in the Christian Old Testament

1. The Law (Torah, in Hebrew) is the heart of the Hebrew Bible, sometimes also called the Pentateuch (a Greek word meaning "Five Books"). Traditionally ascribed to Moses, it includes the books of:
  1. Genesis, 
  2. Exodus
  3. Leviticus
  4. Numbers, and 
  5. Deuteronomy. 
    Most of the Sunday School stories you know (if you went to Sunday School as a child), are from the first two of these books, which narrate the saga of the children of God from the creation of the world to the Exodus from slavery in Egypt to the Promised Land in Canaan.

    2. The next major division of the Hebrew Bible is the Prophets (Hebrew: Nevi'im). The Jewish tradition combines books that have two parts (because one scroll would not contain them) as well as the 12 "Minor" prophets to come up with eight "books", although in the Christian Old Testament, they are divided into 21 of the 39 total books. They include:

    The Early Prophets (which relate the history of Israel from the time of Moses to the time of the Babylonian exile (approximately 1200 - 586 BCE)):
    1. Joshua, 
    2. Judges (two scrolls), 
    3. Samuel (two scrolls) and 
    4. Kings (two scrolls)
      The Later Prophets:
      1. Isaiah
      2. Jeremiah
      3. Ezekiel
        these Later Prophets include the Twelve Minor Prophets (counted as one book: Trei Asar or "Twelve")
        1. Hosea
        2. Joel
        3. Amos
        4. Obadiah
        5. Jonah
        6. Micah
        7. Nahum
        8. Habbakuk
        9. Zephaniah
        10. Haggai
        11. Zechariah
        12. Malachi

          3. Jewish people call the third division the Writings (Hebrew: Ketuvim). They include:

          The "Books of Truth":
          1. Psalms (the hymnbook of the Israelites), 
          2. Proverbs (a scriptural "Poor Richard's Almanac"), and 
          3. Job; 
             The "Five Scrolls":
            1. Song of Songs (called Song of Solomon in the Christian Old Testament)
            2. Ruth
            3. Lamentations
            4. Ecclesiastes
            5. Esther
              and the remaining Writings:
              1. Daniel (an example of apocalyptic literature in the Hebrew Bible, this book was probably written only a couple of centuries before Jesus Christ, in Hebrew and in Aramaic)
              2. Ezra-Nehemiah (divided into two books in the Christian Old Testament - these are the only historical accounts of the post-exile period)
              3. Chronicles (two scrolls which cover the same historical period covered in the scrolls of the Kings, and which were written much later)).
                Christians adopted the Hebrew scriptures as their own, calling the collection the Old (ancient) Testament. The order of the 39 books that follows mirrors the order in the Bibles we use in worship and for study:
                1. 5 Books of the Law
                2. 12 History Books (the 7 Early Prophets and 5 books from the Writings)
                3. 5 Wisdom Books
                4. 17 Books of Prophecy (5 Major and 12 Minor Prophets)
                1. They retain the first division of the five Books of the Law:
                1. Genesis, 
                2. Exodus
                3. Leviticus
                4. Numbers, and 
                5. Deuteronomy
                  2. The Old Testament creates a separate category called the "Historical Books", which includes twelve books culled from the Jewish Prophets and Writings divisions:

                  From the Jewish Early Prophets
                  1. Joshua
                  2. Judges
                  3. Ruth
                  4. 1 Samuel
                  5. 2 Samuel
                  6. 1 Kings
                  7. 2 Kings
                    From the Jewish Writings
                    1. 1 Chronicles 
                    2. 2 Chronicles
                    3. Ezra
                    4. Nehemiah
                    5. Esther
                      3. The Old Testament retains a truncated version of the Wisdom Books, which includes:
                      1. Job
                      2. Psalms
                      3. Proverbs
                      4. Ecclesiastes
                      5. Song of Solomon
                        4. The Old Testament adds two Writings books to the Books of the Prophets, and divides them into two major divisions:

                        The Major Prophets
                        1. Isaiah
                        2. Jeremiah
                        3. Lamentations (from the Jewish Writings division)
                        4. Ezekiel
                        5. Daniel (from the Jewish Writings division)
                          and the 12 Minor Prophets:
                          1. Hosea
                          2. Joel
                          3. Amos
                          4. Obadiah
                          5. Jonah
                          6. Micah
                          7. Nahum
                          8. Habbakuk
                          9. Zephaniah
                          10. Haggai
                          11. Zechariah
                          12. Malachi
                            The 27 books of the New Testament divide into the following main collections:
                            1. 4 Gospels
                            2. 1 History
                            3. 21 Epistles or Letters
                            4. 1 Apocalypse
                            1. The four Gospels, or the Good News of Jesus Christ:
                            1. Matthew
                            2. Mark
                            3. Luke
                            4. John
                              2. One book of Apostolic History
                              1. Acts of the Apostles (also written by Luke)
                                3. The 13 Pauline Epistles (or Letters) - in order of their length (note that this collection includes nearly half of the 27 books of the New Testament):
                                1. Romans
                                2. 1 Corinthians
                                3. 2 Corinthians
                                4. Galatians
                                5. Ephesians
                                6. Philippians
                                7. Colossians
                                8. 1Thessalonians
                                9. 2 Thessalonians
                                10. 1 Timothy
                                11. 2 Timothy
                                12. Titus
                                13. Philemon
                                  The eight "General" Epistles:
                                  1. Hebrews
                                  2. James
                                  3. 1 Peter
                                  4. 2 Peter
                                  5. 1 John
                                  6. 2 John
                                  7. 3 John
                                  8. Jude
                                    4. and one Apocalypse (Greek word that means "Revelation")
                                    1. Revelation
                                      Now you know all 66 books of the (Christian Protestant) Bible!

                                      Reading the Bible - Where to Start

                                      We had a great conversation Wednesday evening, Feb. 24 (our first Wednesday session of the study, which continues on Sunday mornings through March 21). I'm impressed at how often the question "Where do I start?" comes up. And related to that question is the experience of having read a portion of the Bible and feeling more confused and alienated that before you started reading!

                                      I've been roller skating for about a year now. When I began, I fell a lot. After suffering from many nasty encounters with the floor, I realized that I had to wear protective gear and take it easy on the things I was trying to accomplish if I were going to be able to continue skating. Everyone around me seemed to be skating with ease. I got advice from people (not all of it helpful or welcome), and experienced the reality of the old saw: "It's going to get a lot worse before it gets better."

                                      Getting into any new practice comes with that kind of cost. For one thing, you have to make time for reading scripture in a schedule already too crowded for such reflection. And if you can balance the time, so much of the vocabulary and "culture" of scripture feels foreign and ill-fitting to you. People like me (pastors and teachers) make it seem easy, and our advice about how to go about reading the Bible can sometimes make you feel inadequate and ignored.

                                      Relax. You're trying something new and this kind of break-in (steep learning curve) is normal and appropriate. So take it easy and realize that continuing to show up, adjusting your approach when appropriate (when you have a pretty good idea of how a certain approach is trending - in either a helpful or unhelpful way), will bear fruit in your life. My skating got better - and it continues to get better, because I practice and enjoy it a lot. Your experience of reading scripture and encountering the God to which scripture bears such eloquent witness will get better too!

                                      In the meantime, I'm planning a series of helps to get you better acquainted with the lay of the land in scripture. A great place for Christians to begin is in any one of the Gospel accounts of the life and ministry of Jesus Christ: Matthew, Mark, Luke or John. Or read all four! But take it slowly, and be prepared to go where the Spirit of God leads you in your reading. I like to suggest reading with a journal in hand, so that you can write down notes and reflections. And don't be afraid of writing some of those notes and references in your Bible. (Don't own a Bible? Take one of the pew Bibles in the sanctuary! We'll also discuss approaches to purchasing a good study and devotional Bible).

                                      One of the best ways to get aquainted with the lay of the land - the culture of the Bible - is to learn about the way the Bible is structured. More a library of 66 books than a single volume, the Bible contains many different forms of literature (law, history, poetry, wisdom sayings, prophetic writings, genealogies, stories, parables, letters, gospels, apocalypses, morality tales, collections of sayings, and commentaries). Knowing where you are and what to expect (these different literary forms require different reading strategies) is more than half the battle of getting comfortable in the culture of scripture.

                                      Stay tuned for an explanation of the structure of the Bible in the next Blog installment!

                                      Thursday, February 25, 2010

                                      Ways of Reading the Bible - Finding Jesus in the Scriptures

                                      Here's a wonderful example of a thread or topical chain that runs throughout scripture. I have found it in various forms on many websites without attribution, so I copy it anonymously here (with many of my own modifications and verse references):

                                      In Genesis, Jesus is The Seed of Woman.
                                      In Exodus, Jesus is The Passover Lamb.
                                      In Leviticus, Jesus is The Atonement Cover.
                                      In Numbers, Jesus is The Cloud and The Fire,
                                      In Deuteronomy, Jesus is The Prophet Like Moses.

                                      Joshua presents Jesus as God's Commander,
                                      In Judges, Jesus is The Sign of God,
                                      The book of Ruth presents Jesus as The Family Guardian
                                      In 1 Samuel, Jesus is The Ark of God,
                                      In 2 Samuel, Jesus is The Forever King,
                                      In 1 Kings, Jesus is The True Temple,
                                      In 2 Kings, Jesus is The Covenant Restorer,
                                      1 Chronicles declares Jesus is The Builder of God's House.
                                      In 2 Chronicles, Jesus is God's Promise of Restoration,
                                      while in Ezra, Jesus is The True Foundation.
                                      Nehemiah pictures Jesus as The Rebuilder.
                                      In Esther, Jesus is The Encourager.
                                       
                                      Job describes Jesus as The Arbitrator
                                      In Psalms, Jesus is Our Shepherd
                                      Proverbs calls Jesus Lady Wisdom
                                      and Ecclesiastes calls Jesus Life's Joy.
                                      The Song of Solomon declares Jesus Love Strong As Death

                                      The Prophet Isaiah calls Jesus Prince of Peace.
                                      In Jeremiah, Jesus is Righteous Savior
                                      and in Lamentations, Jesus is Never-Failing Compassion
                                      while Ezekiel witnesses Jesus as Breath of New Life
                                      Daniel names Jesus The 4th Man in The Fire

                                      To Hosea, Jesus is The Holy One Among Us
                                      Joel declares that Jesus is Outpouring Spirit,
                                      while Amos calls Jesus River of Justice.
                                      The book of Obadiah speaks of Jesus as God's Deliverance
                                      while Jonah says Jesus is Forgiver of Enemies
                                      In Micah, Jesus is Our Peace
                                      and Nahum prophesies Jesus as The Restorer
                                      Habakkuk speaks of Jesus as The Flood of God's Glory
                                      while Zephaniah describes Jesus as The One Who Brings Us Home.
                                      In Haggai, Jesus he is The Desire of Nations
                                      Zechariah calls Jesus The One We Have Pierced
                                      and Malachi calls Jesus The Sun of Righteousness.


                                      In Acts, Jesus is the Sufferer With the Saints

                                      In Romans, Jesus is Our Justification
                                      In 1 Corinthians, Paul calls Jesus The Resurrected Lord
                                      In 2 Corinthians, Jesus is The Minister of Reconciliation
                                      Galatians celebrates Jesus as The One Who Sets Us Free
                                      Ephesians calls Jesus The Head of the Church
                                      while in Philippians, Jesus is Strength Giver.
                                      Colossians describes Jesus as The Image of the Invisible God
                                      In 1 Thessalonians, Jesus is The One Who Calls Us,
                                      In 1 Thessalonians, Jesus is The Peace Giver
                                      1 Timothy calls Jesus The Mediator.
                                      2 Timothy declares Jesus The Guard of Our Trust
                                      Titus calls Him The Great God and Savior
                                      while Philemon calls Jesus An Appeal of Love.
                                      In the book of Hebrews He is Our Great High Priest
                                      James declares Him The Lord Coming Near
                                      In 1  Peter, Jesus is The Living Stone
                                      and 2 Peter declares Jesus The Rising Morning Star
                                      while in 1 John, Jesus is Our Advocate,
                                      and in 3 John, Jesus is The Name.

                                      Monday, February 22, 2010

                                      Continuing our journey through the Season of Lent

                                      After missing a snow day Feb. 7 and rescheduling the Gospel Parallels conversation to Feb. 14, we met on Feb. 21 to introduce the practice of Lectio Divina. I've found a wonderful article online by Fr. Luke Dysinger that describes the practice for individuals and groups (like ours), as well as a way to integrate the practice into our daily life.

                                      We introduced this practice of prayerful scripture reading on Feb. 21, but you can experience this part of the class again on Wednesday evening, Feb. 24, at 8 pm in the sanctuary, following the Lenten Prayer service that begins at 7 pm. Please plan to join us for some welcome spiritual refreshment and peace.

                                      Here's an outline of what we've covered so far:
                                      1. Jan. 17 - The Daily Office (prayers of the hours or praying scripture) - we discussed the difference between what you learned about the Bible as a child and what you have learned about the Bible as an adult (passive vs. engaged).
                                      2. Jan. 24 - Psalm 19 and Praying with the Body - we discussed what it means to call the Bible "God's Word". Introduced the "dropped ski" analogy and the difference between appreciating and appropriating the message of scripture. We also discussed the tension between the explicit and implicit word (creation vs. law).
                                      3. Jan. 31 - Following the "Here I Am, Lord" topical thread or chain - discussed Karen Armstrong' assertion that the Bible is a commentary or interpretation of events (rather than a bare reporting of those events). Focused on Gen. 22 (the sacrifice of Isaac) and how we must go to the edge in order to truly know about ourselves.
                                      4. Feb. 14 (skipped Feb. 7 due to snow) - Gospel Parallels of Mark 2:23-28 - we (1) compared the parallel accounts and (2) discussed the interpretive methods used by the pharisees, Jesus, and the Gospel writers. We discussed integrating the Bible story into our life story as a way of doing theology. We also discussed the tension between freedom in Christ and the requirements of the Law.
                                       5. Feb. 21 and 24 (Wednesday evening) - Lectio Divina using Jeremiah 29:10-14 - reading from the TNIV, RSV, and TNK versions and listening for a word that resonates with our lives. This way of inspirational reading (or hearing) contrasts sharply with the more scholarly and pedantic technique we used in comparing the Gospel parallels.

                                      Here is the plan for the remainder of the class sessions:
                                      6. Feb. 28 and March 3 (Wednesday evening) - a whirlwind tour of the "seminal stories" of the Bible. These stories are the primary narratives that provide the structure and foundation of the Biblical narrative.
                                      7. Mar. 7 and 10 (Wednesday evening) - Dennis Dewey and the art of Biblical storytelling - let's experience together how scripture might have been originally transmitted among the Israelites and early Christians.
                                      8. Mar. 14 and 17 (Wednesday evening) - using the Bible as it's own interpretive commentary on Genesis 19 (destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah) - we'll examine the ways scripture references and interprets Genesis 19, as well as the interpretive power of translation.
                                      9. Mar. 21 and 24 (Wednesday evening) - experiencing scripture liturgically - we'll join for a celebration of communion as we gather around the story of passover, the letters of Paul, and the Gospel accounts of the last supper.

                                       

                                      Wednesday, February 3, 2010

                                      Follow-up to conversation on Jan. 31

                                      I enjoyed talking with some of you after our Sunday session. It seems like we're using many different approaches to reading the Bible regularly. A couple of us are using the One Year Bible plan (Ivan is reading it out loud). One member of our group is spending some time going through the Psalms. Another likes to read a passage and devotional from the resource Our Daily Bread.

                                      I got a request today for the resource I mentioned Sunday that identifies thousands of "chains" or topical threads that run through the Bible. The reference is the Thompson Chain Reference Bible. The link is to the New International Version (NIV), but you can also get one in the King James Version (KJV), the New King James Version (NKJV), or the New American Standard Version (NASB). I have found a study Bible version I enjoy even better that the Thompson Chain reference, a study Bible that includes the topical chains in the margins, as the Thompson Chain Reference Bible does (although it lacks the Thompson index section). It's called the Zondervan TNIV (Today's New International Version) Study Bible.

                                      Preparation Material for Sunday, Feb. 7

                                      This week, I'd like to focus on a passage from the gospel accounts that demonstrates how Jesus, the Pharisees, and perhaps also the post-resurrection Christian community (represented by the gospel writer) understood the process and purpose of scriptural interpretation (as well as how to discern between competing interpretations).

                                      The passage comes from Mark 2:23-28 and its parallel passages: Matthew 12:1-14 and Luke 6:1-5. You can download the parallel passage worksheet. The Pharisees confront Jesus about his disciples' apparent violation of sabbath law in scripture. Though the passage does not explicitly reference the scripture they had in mind, there are ample passages in the Torah (the first five books of the Old Testament or Hebrew Bible) such as one of the ten commandments, from Exodus 20:9-10, that they could have used to justify their concern. Other examples come from Exodus 23:12 or Deuteronomy 5:14.

                                      Jesus responds to their reproof by citing a scripture passage (apparently to justify this break with traditional interpretation of the Sabbath prohibitions against engaging in any kind of work). Note that Jesus does not dispute that the disciples are working on the Sabbath. He gives an example (and in Matthew, several examples) of scriptural precedent that allows for certain kinds of work on the sabbath, in what might be called a discourse on the spirit of the law.

                                      Jesus reminds them of 1 Samuel 21:1-9 a story from scripture Jesus sarcastically suggests that the Pharisees might not have read about how King David and his men were allowed to eat sacred bread of presence that scripture mandated was reserved only for the priests, in Leviticus 24:5-9. Exodus 25:30 also mentions this Bread of the Presence. One significant aspect of this story from 1 Samuel involves the ease with which the priest Ahimelek works out a scriptural solution that will allow him to give bread reserved only for priests to David and his men (who were fugitive warriors, not priests). He asks only whether David and his men have abstained from sexual intercourse, which David assures him that they have. Perhaps Ahimelek was thinking of Exodus 19:15 or Leviticus 15:18, both of which stipulated abstaining from sexual intercourse in order to maintain ritual purity.

                                      The priest makes this stipulation in order to justify feeding David and his hungry men with bread that had been consecrated for the priests (Jesus' disciples were also hungry for grain that was prohibited by Sabbath law).

                                      In the Matthew parallel, Jesus next cites Numbers 28:9-10, another example where the Law allows priests (again) to break the Sabbath law prohibiting work (assuming the act of sacrifice involved work for the priests conducting the sacrifice). You can find a similar passage in John 7:22-24, in which Jesus refers to a Mosaic Law of circumcision in Leviticus 12:3 (and corrects himself by referring to the earlier patriarchal circumcision covenant commandment in Genesis 17:10-14). This law, Jesus tells the crowd who accuses him of being possessed by a demon, takes precedence over the law against work on the Sabbath - in Jewish practice if not in explicit Jewish theology.

                                      In this Matthean second citation (and the similar passage in John's Gospel), Jesus employs the logic of a more important command trumping a less important one, implying that his disciples' act of breaking the Sabbath prohibitions against any kind of work to feed their hunger is more lawful than going hungry in order to obey the Sabbath law. This is the kind of argument on which the concluding teaching in Mark is based: "The Sabbath was made for [humanity], and not [humanity] for the Sabbath (Mar 2:27 NLT). Significantly, Matthew and Luke omit this general rule and repeat only the one about Jesus: "the Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath."

                                      Matthew also includes a reference to the prophet Hosea (from Hosea 6:6) that further buttresses his argument that mercy makes flexible the boundaries of the Sabbath Law.

                                      Below is a table comparing the three synoptic (Greek word meaning "seen together" and referring to Matthew, Mark, and Luke) versions of this passage (the words in green are common to all three; the words in blue are common to Matthew and Mark; and the words in blue are common to Mark and Luke). Click on the graphic for a larger view.

                                      Monday, February 1, 2010

                                      List of Resources for further reading

                                      Here is a collection of resources that have helped and inspired me - as I hope they will help and inspire you as you open yourself more and more to the gift of scripture in your faith journey.

                                      Sex and the Single Savior: Gender and Sexuality in Biblical Interpretation by Dale Martin - a friend a colleague recommended this book to me after hearing about the story of Skyline Church the past few years. This book, as well as Martin's other book on this list, Pedagogy of the Bible, makes the case for discernment among the many ways of reading scripture (as opposed to privileging one reading - particularly the historical-critical reading). Martin also gave me the gift of seeing scripture as a vast cathedral space.

                                      Pedagogy of the Bible: An Analysis and Proposal by Dale Martin - fleshes out more explicitly Martin's thesis of the need for discernment in the Christian community among the many readings and ways of reading and interpreting scripture. I liked especially Martins exposition of Premodern (Ancient and the High Middle Ages) Biblical Interpretation in this book - which gave me an appreciation of the many ways Christians have interpreted scripture through the centuries.

                                      Reading the Bible Again for the First Time: Taking the Bible Seriously But Not Literally by Marcus Borg - Jesus Seminar scholar who invites you to move from a "pre-critical naivete through critical thinking to a post-critical naivete" in comprehending the many meanings of scripture. Borg encourages us to participate in a dialogue with the writers and stories of scripture, so that they become our stories as well. This inspirational book asserts that the whole of scripture bears witness to God's ongoing overthrow of economic, political and religious powers in a cycle of exodus-liberation and exile-return.

                                      The Bible: A Biography by Karen Armstrong - this may be the most accessible book by Karen Armstrong, who explores the origins and uses of our scriptures (Jewish and Christian). I especially appreciated how Armstrong explains how scripture writers recorded commentary of history rather than bare reporting or recording of history.

                                      Misquoting Jesus: The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why by Bart Ehrman - great book that demonstrates the reality and causes of textual manuscript variants in our New Testament.Ehrman also explores the significance of these variants for Christians who see the Bible as more than a magical book. If you like this book, you might also be interested in Ehrman's Jesus, Interrupted: Revealing the Hidden Contradictions in the Bible (And Why We Don't Know About Them).

                                      The Good Book: Reading the Bible with Mind and Heart by Peter Gomes -another inspiration for this course I read several years ago. Writes of scripture as a public, living, and inclusive word that "points to the truth" because it "comes from the truth that we call God". His book includes a helpful exploration of scriptural interpretation and twelve topical illustrations of scriptural interpretive discernment. 

                                      The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts by Israel Finkelstein and Asher Silberman - challenging and fascinating book presenting a story of scriptural origins supported by the latest archaeological finds.  Finkelstein and Silberman draw on the learnings of archaeological surveys (covering large areas rather than specific sites in order to discover signs of broader cultural and migration patterns) to make a case that the Torah and historical books of the former prophets were compiled chiefly during Josiah's reign in the late 6th century BCE using ancient stories to interpret Israel's hopes for a new future.

                                      God: A Biography by Jack Miles - Pulitzer-prizewinning book that examines the Hebrew Bible in the order in which the books were written from a literary critical perspective to make a case that God needs people in order to grow in self understanding as a literary character. Miles uses this unique perspective to present a reading that takes seriously the literary style and content of the Hebrew Bible.

                                      Personal Mark by Alec McGowan - an actor who spent some time on Broadway reciting Mark (all the rage in the late 80's and early 90's, believe it or not) reflects on the things he learned while studying for this role as Gospel chronicler. In spite of McGowan's limited scholarly knowledge of scripture (he relies heavily on Barclay's commentaries on the New Testament), he brings a fresh perspective on the familiar stories of Marks' Gospel from a dramatic perspective.

                                      Anatomy of the Fourth Gospel: A Study in Literary Design by Alan Culpepper - great book I used in divinity school as an introduction to a literary critical approach to interpreting the Gospel of John. Culpepper offers this more comprehensive approach to understanding and appreciating the fourth Gospel as a compliment to historical-critical scholarship. In his introduction, Culpepper uses the analogy of the text as a window into another cultural context when approached from a historical, sociological, and theological critical perspective. He contrasts this analogy to seeing the text as a mirror that produces meaning in the "experience of reading the text as a whole" when approached from a literary critical point of view. Seen in this light, "the implicit purpose of the gospel narrative is to alter irrevocably the readers' perception of the real world" Culpepper asserts. His book focus on the narrator, narrative time, plot, characters, and the implicit commentary and readers of the gospel. 

                                      Meeting Jesus Again for the First Time: The Historical Jesus and the Heart of Contemporary Faith by Marcus Borg - a good example of a genre of books written by members of the "Jesus Seminar" to illustrate the quest for the historical Jesus (as opposed to confessional Christ/Messiah). While this project threatens some Christians, Borg's work highlights Jesus' humanity and enables long-time followers of Jesus (like me) to relate to Jesus as a human being - and thus take inspiration from his very real, very human life.

                                      Praying with the Body: Bringing the Psalms to Life by Roy DeLeon - this is the book we used for the body prayer exercise the second week we met (Psalm 34).

                                      The Divine Hours (in three volumes) compiled by Phyllis Tickle - this is the book (the Winter volume) we used to read around the table the first day we met. You can also find these prayers of the hours online.

                                      Resurrection: Myth or Reality? A Bishop's Search for the Origins of Christianity by John Shelby Spong - provides a fascinating take on the scriptures that communicate stories of the resurrection, beginning with Paul's 1 Corinthians 15:3-8, which Spong calls the earliest written account of the resurrection. Spong also concentrates on the resurrection account in John 21 and the parallel account in Luke 5:1-11 as a story of a resurrection Sunday "season". This book will challenge your notions of resurrection, but it demonstrates how a close reading of scripture can unveil new possibilities of meaning and understanding. In his book, Jesus: A Revolutionary Biography, John Dominic Crossan uses much the same exploratory reading style in his chapter titled: "How Many Years was Easter Sunday?"

                                      Monday, January 18, 2010

                                      Goal and Outline of the Course

                                      I am offering an 8-10 week course on Biblical interpretation that aims to welcome laity back into the community conversation in (not merely "of" or "about") the scriptures, validating the many ways we  read, experience, and interpret the texts in the presence and power of the Holy Spirit as well as expanding our repertoire of reading and interpretive methods as a way of appreciating the vast treasure of scripture in our faith.

                                      We will accomplish this validation and expansion by:

                                      1. Exploring various methods/practices of reading scripture (as well as other forms of literature) in order to appreciate and evaluate the interpretive theory and process, and
                                      2. "Christianly" evaluating the readings that result from these various reading and interpretive strategies in terms of their fruitfulness and faithfulness in our life together as well as the ethical/doctrinal implications of each particular method. We will use as a model for this kind of evaluation the Wesleyan "Quadrilateral" (scripture, tradition, reason and experience).

                                      The methods and practices of reading scripture we will survey include:
                                      1. the ways scriptural writers and characters interpret scripture
                                      2. examples of ancient/pre-modern interpetation in sermons
                                      3. examples of Wesleyan interpetation (Enlightenment) in his sermons
                                      4. the practice of Lectio Divina
                                      5. examples of literary criticism (from Alan Culpepper's Anatomy of the New Testament: A Study in Literary Design)
                                      6. evaluating modern and post-modern sermons and the ways preachers interpret and incorporate scripture to buttress an argument
                                      7. devotional reflections and readings in order to make explicit their interpretive methods
                                      8. examine some of the ways scripture is used in art - including movies, paintings, poems, songs, dramas, novels, and works of non-fiction
                                      9. introduce the various methods of historical criticism, including archaeology, history, anthropology, sociology and linguistics and textual study
                                      10. experience Biblical storytelling (dramatic reading of scripture) as a method of interpretation
                                      Throughout this survey, we will also experience a variety of ways of experiencing scripture:
                                      1. reading aloud and to ourselves
                                      2. dramatic reading - Biblical storytelling
                                      3. dramatizations
                                      4. Lectio Divina - praying the scriptures
                                      5. singing (and dancing) the scriptures
                                      6. hearing the scriptures in their original language
                                      7. scriptural commentary/reference and following a topical "chain"
                                      8. liturgical reading 
                                      It is my hope that by the end of this course, participants will incorporate a new way of appreciating and understanding scripture and the many ways we interpret it - not as a mysterious (magical) monolithic Word of God, but as a catalyst for communion with God and the Body of Christ throughout human history. I pray that this new way of understanding what these sacred texts are and our role in engaging and interpreting them will foster a deeper love of scripture and will equip and encourage all of us to take our place in the ongoing community conversation with God and each other through the sacrament of the scriptures at Skyline Church.

                                      Bible Reading Strategies

                                      As promised, here are some links that might help you get a handle on reading the Bible. I've placed a link of this info on our church website but I'll recap it here.

                                      One Year Bible OnLine
                                      A cycle of daily readings from the Old Testament, New Testament, Psalms and Proverbs that takes you through the entire Bible in a year can be found here. This week's readings are here. You can also purchase a One Year Bible in your favorite translation, with the daily readings arranged by date.

                                      The Divine Hours, Volume II: Prayers for Autumn and Wintertime (Divine Hours)The prayer readings of Phyllis Tickle's The Divine Hours we used to begin the conversation yesterday can be found here. They consist of prayers for morning, noon, and evening. Corinne Ware's Saint Benedict on the Freeway: A Rule of Life for the 21st Century offers another take on the concept of praying at specific times throughout the day. Another resource for this kind of prayer throughout the day that involves a focus on scripture is A Contemporary Celtic Prayer Book by William John Fitzgerald.


                                      upper room
                                      The Upper Room produces print and online devotional resources you might also like to use. These are typically daily devotions surrounding a weekly theme. The format highlights a particular verse, offers an accompanying reflection and then closes with a short prayer. The advantage to using this resource is that it makes devotional time highly accessible and focused. Each devotion for the day is also short - you can typically read the offering for the day in five minutes or less. Here also is the disadvantage - there is a temptation to breeze through the meditation and ignore an invitation from the Spirit for further reflection and engagement.

                                      Another daily/weekly devotional guide I have used in the past is A Guide to prayer for All God's People, compiled by Rueben Job and Norman Shawchuck. The Guide uses scripture readings that follow the Revised Common Lectionary, and adds prayers and readings from other devotional authors. This type of devotional activity involves more time and reflection than a typical daily devotional guide with a verse and reflections. It also presents a highly structured form of devotional reading and prayer. The devotional readings collection includes a variety of ancient and contemporary theologians and mystics whose wisdom and passion for God compliments the readings for the week and for the day. Each week is organized around a common theme.


                                      This year, I have also been using a devotional guide by Trevor Hudson and Morton Kelsey titled Journey of the Spirit: Meditations for the Spiritual Seeker. The guide includes a weekly meditation, short quote, prayer and journal suggestion on a theme covering an aspect of the Christian life, plus daily readings of verses of scripture pertaining to the theme. These daily scripture verses are short and lend themselves to memorization (so that you can carry them with you throughout the day) and contemplation. Hudson, in particular, advocates a "less is more" philosophy about Bible study and contemplation, advocating spending more time with shorter, more manageable verses in scripture. 

                                      Success OAVicki and I typically put the sermon notes online Thursday or Friday before the Sunday we will preach the text. You can find these online sermon notes (that we print in the weekly bulletin) here. These sermon notes compliment the sermon (also available online) so that you can use the weekly scripture and theme as a regular devotional that you can meditate on throughout the week and engage more fully with the "take" or reading presented by the pastor during the sermon on the weekend.


                                      I'll be sharing more print and online resources, and look forward to hearing about the resources that help you read and experience the scriptures. Please feel free to share them as a response to this entry.

                                      What Does it Mean to you to refer to the Bible as the "Word of God"

                                      We talked this Sunday (Jan. 17) about the things we learned about the Bible as children and the way our understanding of the Bible changes as we grew into adulthood. I was struck by the ways we identified we moved from a passive observer in the community conversation about scripture to playing a more active role. I also liked the analogy of a movement from mystery to intimacy. And though none of us may feel very active in the process of community interpretation of scripture, our presence in a Bible study certainly indicates movement in our lives beyond passive observers.

                                      I asked you to consider what it means in the church (both big "C" and at Skyline, specifically) to call the scriptures "God's Word" to you. I look forward to learning about your perspective. Please feel free to share your thoughts as a response to this entry.

                                      Impetus for the Course: Communal Interpretation and Formation

                                      Dale Martin's book of essays, Sex and the Single Savior, Gender and Sexuality in Biblical Interpretation employed an imaginative freedom in Biblical interpretation that encouraged and validated innovative and creative readings of Scripture.  These readings are bounded not by any one of these reading strategies (historical criticism) or even Scripture itself, but by the leavening presence of the Holy Spirit in the members of the Body of Christ.

                                      Thanks to Carl Gregg (whom I met at a conference in Nashville last fall), I was inspired to read Martin's Pedagogy of the Bible: An Analysis and Proposal, which further articulated Martin's invitation to experience scripture as "a vast space of textual echo chamber, like entering... a huge cathedral" (p. 62). Martin also writes that "the interpretation of scripture builds on and reinforces truths also taught elsewhere in Christian culture and community" (p. 69).

                                      In "Reading the Bible Again for the First Time: Taking the Bible Seriously But Not Literally", Marcus Borg asserts that to survive over time, it must become "a cultural-linguistic world in its own right" having emerged in a particular culture and drawing from "the language and symbols from that culture" (p. 29). Our scriptures, Borg suggests, are the "foundation [or constitution] of the Christian cultural-linguistic world" that transcends the cultures of ancient Israel and the early Christian movement and becomes "a world in which its followers live" (p.29).

                                      When most Christians think about Biblical authority, they assume what Borg calls a monarchical model, in which the Bible stands over the Christian community, dictating doctrine and ethics. The primary trouble with this model is that the scriptures do not speak - and the monarchical model inevitably involves self-proclaimed interpretive experts who presume to speak not only for scripture but for God. What many Christians take to be the "literal Truth" of scriptures is the voice and interpretation of these "experts". Far too many Christians read the Bible regurgitated.

                                      Borg describes another way of defining scriptural authority: a dialogical model in which the Bible is "our primary ancient conversation partner" (p. 30). This conversation between the community of faith and the stories and writings that the ancient community of faith collected into a canon of scripture involves what Borg calls a "critical conversation" that (1) discerns what "parts of the Bible" the community will honor and will not honor, as well as (2) "allow[s] the texts to shape and judge us".

                                      Martin calls scripture "an instrument used by the Holy Spirit mainly to reinforce Christian doctrine and ethics we have imbibed by several different sources: preaching, liturgy, music, even our parents and grandparents and our friends" (p. 70). Martin rightly sees the Holy Spirit as the guide of this ongoing dialogue between scripture (the collected voices/stories of the ancient Jewish and early Christian communities of faith) and every subsequent generation of the Christian community of faith. Scripture is not in this understanding the source of our faith understanding but a powerful resource - a confirmation of truth the Holy Spirit teaches us in many ways.

                                      Exegesis is a world Bible scholars use to mean the ways in which we "mine" the scriptural texts for meaning. It derives from the Greek word exegesthai, which means "to lead out". In the introduction to her wonderful book, The Bible: A Biography, Karen Armstrong calls exegesis a "spiritual discipline rather than an academic pursuit" (p. 6) in which the exegetes "[continue] to make the Word of God audible in each generation" (p. 5). Armstrong also writes about this dialogue between the community of faith and its scriptures, asserting that "the truth of scripture cannot be assessed unless it is - ritually or ethically - put into practice" (p. 2).

                                      This process is what Martin calls confirmation and what Borg calls critical discernment. Armstrong describes the conversation in this way: "the Bible 'proved' that it was holy because people continually discovered fresh ways to interpret it and found this difficult, ancient set of documents cast light on situations their [human] authors could never have imagined. Revelation was an ongoing process..." (p. 5). As with Borg, this proving process works in both directions. Armstrong quotes an early Christan exegete Philo who liked to describe "his exegesis as a 'conversion' of both the text and the interpreter" (p. 51).

                                      But Armstrong also connects with Martin's assertion that scripture reminds us of truths "we already know". She writes that Philo "experienced knowledge as remembrance, as known to him already at some profound level of his being" (p. 53). In this way, scripture does not merely reflect what we want it to mean, but resonates with the part of our being that God created. For Philo, "the story became suddenly fused with a truth that was part of himself" (p. 53).

                                      By exercising our imagination (and expanding our imagination) we can inhabit a realm of of story and symbol that welcomes us with comfort and confirmation (reminding us of truths we already know) and that also constantly surprises and challenges us to experience the mystery of God anew (swinging us constantly to turn, turn, turn to a place of more of God's presence, power and love).

                                      Martin's message to me involves the recovery and validation of my imaginative freedom - which has long lain dormant under the oppression of the historical-critical method of exegesis I learned at the divinity school. He calls me not to abandon this practice of interpretation, but to move beyond its exclusive (or even primary) use. and here is where the people of Skyline will be blessed: they will also be freed from the burden of a method many of them cannot use (because of the barrier of graduate education) and welcomed to their rightful place in the communion gathered by and in scripture.

                                      These books have inspired me to offer an 8-10 week course on Biblical interpretation that aims to welcome laity back into the community conversation in the scriptures, validating the many ways we  read, experience, and interpret the texts in the presence and power of the Holy Spirit as well as expanding our repertoire of reading and interpretive methods as a way of appreciating the vast treasure of scripture in our faith.