Friday, December 20, 2013

[OT] Fwd: Discovering the Old Testament podcast


Discovering the Old Testament

By Sheldon Greaves

Podcast:
http://www.lafkospress.com/discovering-the-old-testament-2/

A series of brief lectures about the history, culture, archaeology, and languages behind the Old Testament (Hebrew Scriptures) based on a series of seminars and a summer course taught at Stanford University in 2013. We examine the Old Testament in the context of its mysterious and exotic world and times. An ongoing educational tool for personal study, adult education groups, sermon preparation, or personal enrichment.

Sheldon Greaves received his Ph.D. in ancient Near Eastern Studies from the University of California at Berkeley in 1996, with his main area of emphasis on the Hebrew Bible. His other areas of emphasis were Canaanite Religion and Religion and Magic in Ancient Mesopotamia. He has published articles on wordplay in Ugaritic magical texts and Babylonian omens, as well as the book of Genesis.


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Thursday, February 28, 2013

[OT] Basics of Ancient Ugaritic: A Concise Grammar, Workbook, and Lexicon

Review
=====

Title: Basics of Ancient Ugaritic: A Concise Grammar, Workbook, and Lexicon 
Author: Michael Williams
Publisher: Zondervan
Genre: Ancient Languages, Biblical Studies
Year Published: 2012
Number of Pages: 143
Binding: Paperback
ISBN10: 031049592X

ISBN13: 978-0310495925 
Price: $49.99

Reviewed by Bryan Buchanan for the Association for Mormon Letters 

 
There are "mostly dead" languages (think Latin) and then "all dead" languages that literally had to be unearthed.  Ugaritic is a prime example of the latter. Named for the ancient city of Ugarit (known in modern times as Ras Shamra) along the Mediterranean coast of present-day Syria, Ugaritic is a language from the same Northwest Semitic family as Hebrew and Aramaic.  The alphabet is--oddly enough--a cuneiform system of 30 letters (no vowels, much like Hebrew).  The language, once transliterated away from the unfamiliar symbols, suddenly becomes a very familiar-looking language for someone who knows even basic biblical Hebrew.
 
A completely accidental discovery of a tomb and subsequent excavations in and around Ras Shamra turned up more than 1500 texts.  The bulk of these deal with epic texts such as the "Legend of Aqhat," "The Legend of King Kirta/Keret" and the Ba'al and Anat cycles.  The last of these, Ba'al and Anat, are likely of the greatest interest given their relationship to deities and accounts found in the Hebrew Bible.  Williams notes that El roughly corresponds to Elohim (God the Father in Mormon terms) while Ba'al (the son of El) can be seen in Mormon context as Jehovah/Jesus Christ.  Interestingly, each of these deities has a consort: Athirat/Asherah connected with El and Anat with Ba'al.  Finally, Mot—as a deity not worshipped as he is an enemy to Ba'al—can be seen as a Satan-like figure.  All of these deities appear in the Hebrew Bible, though often in vague or muddied allusions.
 
The way in which Ugaritic texts interface with the narratives of the Hebrew Bible is fascinating.  For example, there is a puzzle of how Daniel could appear in Ezekiel 14 and 28 since he is mentioned as someone familiar to everyone but would come toward the end of Ezekiel's era.  As the king in the legend of Aqhat text is named "Dan'el" perhaps the gymnastics weren't necessary in the first place.  Another instance that I found intriguing is the *rapa'uma* of the Ugaritic texts—the Hebrew Bible mentions *repha'im* but their nature is unclear.  Williams notes that these figures are "inhabitants of the underworld and may be deified royal ancestors."  Isa 14:9 notes that these *repha'im* meet those that come to *sheol* (identified as "a world of spirits" in Joseph Smith's thought).  With the combination of family history and theosis in their theology, Mormons will undoubtedly find this connection of interest.
 
Following a chapter on the relationship of Ugaritic and Hebrew generally [1] and one on the alphabet, Williams discusses the nouns.  Like other Semitic languages, Ugaritic uses a triliteral root system where (usually) three consonants constitute the core of the noun. Williams discusses five aspects of a noun: case, gender, definiteness, number and state.  As per his standard, the details are kept to a minimum and many times he simply says "we'll talk about this later."  A paradigm chart and a few exercises finish off this chapter.
 
As he introduces the different types of adjectives, Williams must deal with increasing amounts of terminology: substantive, predicative, comparative, participles, etc.  He does so concisely, often giving a similar example in English to make the concept clear.  This chapter is even more brief than the previous section on nouns—only four pages in this case. [2]  The chapter on prepositions is similarly short and to the point—for someone with background in biblical Hebrew, these are all familiar and function in much the same way.  The pronouns (both independent and suffixes) are again very much analogous to their Hebrew counterparts.  There are, however, relative and demonstrative pronouns that will be new territory.
 
To initiate the section on verbs, Williams helpfully alerts the reader that one has to step outside of Western-style grammar and forget traditional "tenses."  Ugaritic seems to be even more fluid in this regard than Hebrew and much depends on context.  As he does in other places in the text, Williams reminds the reader that scholarly judgment is still out on many aspects of Ugaritic and the verbal structures are perhaps the best example of this.  He introduces the two main "conjugations" and paradigms charts but does not go into any more detail.  The next chapter discusses "moods" such as indicative, energic (meaning something like "really" doing something—I have never encountered this idea in other languages and found it interesting), jussive and imperative.
 
A very short treatment of infinitives and their functions then leads into the thematic stems (equivalent to the *binyanim* of Hebrew).  I found this section very entertaining—as verbs are the heart of any language, it is intriguing to see how they function (especially in a language essentially frozen in time several thousand years ago!).  The basic form is known as the G stem and everything branches out from there.  The different stems can indicate reflexive, passive and causative effects.  Then, since any language outside of Esperanto wouldn't be any fun without some odd verbs, Williams discusses "weak" verbs that do not include all "strong" consonants. Again, with some Hebrew in your toolbox, this idea is very normal but will take some getting used to otherwise.
 
The final chapter serves as the junk drawer where Williams can place linguistic items that don't really fit anywhere else.  I particularly enjoyed the "Attention Grabbers" that express ideas like "look!", "behold!", and "woe!"  Given the relationship of Ugaritic to the Hebrew Bible, these terms feel very familiar.  Several appendices provide a comparative alphabet chart, designations for the several major collections of Ugaritic texts, an extensive vocabulary list, bibliography and answers to the exercises.
 
In assessing "Basics of Ancient Ugaritic," audience might be the key term.  As part of the "Basics" lineup from a publisher not devoted solely or even primarily to academic output, its level of detail seems appropriate.  That said, compared to the other titles in the series (Hebrew, Greek, Aramaic, etc.), it came off to me as overly simplistic.  For example, having reviewed the recent title on Aramaic, I wasn't quite satisfied with how this turned out. 
 
One case in point—in the introduction ("Taking the 'Ugh' Out of Ugaritic") the author notes he intends to include humor and create a few laughs.  "Informality" seems to be a more accurate term.  Phrases such as "don't let X alarm you" and "that wasn't so bad" struck me not as humorous but simply a conscious effort to avoid the jargony flavor of most grammars (which is a fine goal). 
 
However, I think there is an essential difference between this particular "Basics" title and, say, the Hebrew or Greek ones.  Where you undoubtedly will have many people picking up the latter simply because they are biblical languages and they have some passing curiosity, that is much less likely to be the case with Ugaritic.   Those who purchase this book have, by that very action, demonstrated that they are of a more serious bent.  Therefore, treating this book in a more informal manner than even the Hebrew or Greek seems to me not to be the best approach.  However, in saying this, my intent is not to leave one with the impression that this book is a failure.  Williams has taken a language that most people have never heard of (I got some great reactions telling people I was reviewing this book) and produced a very usable one-volume introduction to Ugaritic, a language important on its own terms and doubly so due to its intimate connection to Hebrew and the Hebrew Bible.
  
 
[1] I found it odd that he did not address the parallel development of morphology in Ugaritic and Hebrew (I can't imagine many people coming to Ugaritic cold)—for example, once one knows that the "t" in Ugaritic can correspond to "sh" in Hebrew, the "tlt" in Ugaritic is easily seen as the cognate of "shalosh" ("three") in Hebrew.
 
[2] The book checks in under 150 pages (more like 100 without the appendices) and, yet retails at $49.99.  While, compared to many textbooks, this is certainly not unheard of.  It appears to be a print-on-demand title, making the price seem a bit steep.

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Thursday, October 13, 2011

[OT] Review: Scripture and the Authority of God: How to Read the Bible Today



q?_encoding=UTF8&Format=_SL110_&ASIN=0062011952&MarketPlace=US&ID=AsinImage&WS=1&tag=mormonchronic-20&ServiceVersion=20070822"...Writing a book about the Bible is like building a sandcastle in front of the Matterhorn.  The best you can hope to do is to catch the eye of those who are looking down instead of up, or those who are so familiar with the skyline that they have stopped noticing its peculiar beauty...."

Review
======

Title: Scripture and the Authority of God: How to Read the Bible Today
Author: N. T. Wright
Publisher: HarperOne
Genre: Bible
Year: 2011
Pages: 224
Binding: Hardcover
ISBN13: 9780062011954
Price: $25.99

Reviewed by Blair Dee Hodges for the Association for Mormon Letters

N.T.  Wright has been called the C.S.  Lewis for our time.  Like Lewis, Wright is Anglican.  Like Lewis, Wrights overriding purpose is to demonstrate Christianitys relevance for our times (Lewis with modernism, Wright with postmodernism).  Lewis wrote "Surprised by Joy," Wright wrote "Surprised by Hope." Like Lewis, Wrights style is cleverly engaging.  This particular similarity is evident from the first line of Wrights latest publication:

Writing a book about the Bible is like building a sandcastle in front of the Matterhorn.  The best you can hope to do is to catch the eye of those who are looking down instead of up, or those who are so familiar with the skyline that they have stopped noticing its peculiar beauty (ix).

Odds are, if youve enjoyed Lewiss theological or devotional writings, youll enjoy Wrights.  Some differences between the two deserve attention.  Unlike Lewis, who was content to remain a lay Anglican, Wright is Bishop of Durham and sits in the UKs House of Lords.  Unlike Lewis, who was an armchair theologian and literary critic whose fiction largely outranks his non-fiction, Wright is a distinguished Bible scholar who takes higher criticism much more seriously than Lewis could have.  Lewis still serves as a sort of safe source for many Mormons who are pleased to find similar theological ground in the works of a non-LDS author.  Wright can easily serve a similar purpose for Mormons in regards to contemporary biblical scholarship.[1] He has a knack for making complex academic discussions comprehensible to regular folk like me.  It is with this in mind that I recommend his latest book, "Scripture and the Athority of God."[2] Its a lot thicker than its 224 pages appear at first g
 lance as evinced by this over-long, chapter-by-chapter review, but at least the prose is almost always accessible and the analogies creative!

Taken as a whole, Wright writes, Christendom cant live without the Bible, but it doesnt seem to have much idea of how to live with it (ix).  With no pretense at completeness, Wrights Prologue gives an overview of the place of Old Testament scripture within the Christian church beginning with the time of Jesus.[3] He contextualizes the writing of the New Testament and outlines the growth of tradition and authority in biblical use up to the Reformation when individual scripture reading accelerated.  Reason comes to the fore during Enlightenment debates over scripture, debates which echo today.  These periods receive closer attention in subsequent chapters.  His prologue concludes with a look at how contemporary culture views scripture in tandem with politics, philosophy, theology and ethics.  He sees Bible believers and disbelievers making selective, shallow use of the Bible.  So-called conservatives privilege a literal reading of Paul while ignoring his ecclesial, ecumenical,  sacramental, and ecological dimensions.  So-called radicals, in a gallery stacked with iconoclasts enjoy saying things like Paul says this, and we now know hes wrong (19).  These, and other approaches, receive Wrights scorn throughout the book.

In the first chapter Wright displaces the Bible as the primary authority by, oddly enough, quoting the Bible as identifying God as its source of authority.[4] The book doesnt argue *that* the Bible should have authority; its approaching the question of *how* a book can have authority and what shape that authority can take (16).  God, not the Bible, is the authority, and scripture has authority only in a delegated or mediated sense (23).  Further, the Bibles over-arching content is narrative; it tells a story.  Rather than being a rule-book from which we pick and choose things to do, the Bible tells a story within which the reader is also situated.  Scripture is there to be a means of Gods action in and through uswhich will include, but go far beyond, the mere conveying of information (28).  Mormons will be comfortable with Wrights description of a much older notion of revelation, according to which God is continually revealing himself to and within the world he has made, and   particularly to and within his people Israel (29).[5] This is a key interpretive principle Wright will return to throughout his book.

Chapter Two serves to describe scripture as a record of Gods response to evil and suffering in the world through a selected people, Israel.  The records tell the story of God and his people, places obligations upon them, and gives voice to prophets who try to call a straying Israel to repentance.  God was equipping his people to serve his purposes, the establishment of a Kingdom (35).  Scripture told Israel that God was with them and that he wanted things to get better.  It formed the controlling *story* for Israel, and it formed the call to a present *obedience* (38-39, emphasis in original).

Chapter Three brings Jesus into the picture.  By analyzing the sayings and actions of Jesus in comparison with the Old Testament, Wright argues that at the heart of [Jesus's] work lay the sense of bringing the story of scripture to its climax, and thereby offering to God the *obedience* through which the Kingdom would be accomplished (41, emphasis in orig.).  Thus, sifting through the Old Testament for prophecies about individual acts of Jesus largely misses the point.  As the word made flesh, Jesus viewed himself as enacting and fulfilling scripture, although this raised some interesting contradictions.  Wright identifies the conundrum pressing heavily upon early Christian believers: finding ways to account for continuity and discontinuity with the Old Testament.

This is the bridge to Chapter Four, which analyzes the early apostolic churchs approach to scripture.  When Christians today refer to the word, they usually mean the Bible itself.  The word, Wright argues, clearly preceded the creation of our current canon, though.  Early Christians understood the word to be the story of Jesus, the enacting of the promises of Hebrew scripture with ongoing obligations and expectations for the new covenant movement (48).  Here Wright has set the stage for his fully Christian theology of scriptural authority:

Planted firmly in the soil of the missionary community, confronting the powers of the world with the news of the Kingdom of God, refreshed and invigorated by the Spirit, growing particularly through the preaching and teaching of the apostles, and bearing fruit in the transformation of human lives as the start of Gods project to put the whole creation to rights (50).

Wright argues that inattention to this narrative-driven nature of scripture results in the sterile debate between people who say, The Bible says and those who answer, Yes, and the Bible also says you should stone adulterers, and you shouldnt wear clothes made of two types of cloth.  We earnestly need to get past this unnecessary roadblock and on to more serious engagement (122).

Chapter Five is eminently interesting, as Wright looks at The First Sixteen Centuries.  Mormons might be disposed to disregard this chapter on the grounds of the Great Apostasy, but Wright doesnt follow the LDS narrative.  Mormons can learn much from careful and charitable examinations of this period especially because the goings-on still affect how people, including Mormons, read the Bible today.

He describes Four Senses of interpretation (69): 1.  The literal, or how the writers understood what they were recording (a complex method because not all scripture was intended to be taken scientifically, historically, etc.  and the Bible contains parables, metaphors, etc.) 2.  The allegorical, whereby Christians discovered (or rather, imputed) Christian elements in non-Christian verses.  (Abrahams sacrifice of Isaac representing Gods sacrifice of Jesus, for instance.) 3.  The analogical sense, which Wright describes as a way of discovering in the text a picture of the future life (69).  A Psalm speaking of going up to Jerusalem became a way to imagine going up to the heavenly city.  4.  The moral sense, a way of discovering lessons on how to behave hidden within texts which were not straightforwardly teaching such a thing (69).

Wrights at his best here.  He recognizes the utility of these approaches: wherever one opened the Bible one might discover not only what happened in the past, but an open door upon the riches of Christian truth, the glory that lay ahead, and the solid ground of Christian morality (70).  At the same time, he calls attention to the heavy cost: now almost anything could be proved from scripture (70-71).  The tale could easily wag the dog:

It is no longer authoritative in any strict sense; that is, it may be cited as though in proof of some point or other, but it is not leading the way, energizing the church with the fresh breath of God himself.  The question must be asked, whether scripture is being used to serve an existing theology or vice versa (71, see also 67).

In the next chapter on the Enlightenment, Wright brings the narrative to the present in order to make a stirring case against anti-intellectualism, but also against the deification of intellectualism.  Today, he argues, we ought to be aware what Enlightenment assertions must be politely denied, which of its challenges may be taken up and by what means, and which of its accomplishments must be welcomed and enhanced (84).

Speaking of politely denying, the gloves come off in Chapter Seven where Wright identifies a short list of Misreadings of Scripture (107).  He acknowledges the over-simplification here, but at the risk of caricature he dismisses things like the rapture, prosperity gospel, the death penalty, and attacks the tacit acceptance of the economic status quo (108).  He also challenges claims to objectivity, cultural relativity, grab-bag exegesis, skin-deep-only appeals to contextual readings and a host of other hot-button issues (109-111).

While acknowledging the murkiness of the past, Wright holds that we do, in some sense, have serious and academic methods by which we can say definitely that some readings of ancient texts are historically preferable to others (113).  In chapter eight, How to Get Back on Track, Wright proposes a five-part recommendation for approaching scripture today.  As a reminder, up to this point Wright has made a case that the authority of scripture, when unpacked, offers a picture of Gods sovereign and saving plan for the entire cosmos, dramatically inaugurated by Jesus himself, now to be implemented through the Spirit-led life of the church *precisely as the scripture-reading community* (115-116, emphasis in orig.) Thus, reading scripture today requires respect for tradition.  They may be wrong sometimes, he adds, but every key figure in the history of the church has left his, her, or its mark on subsequent readings of scripture (118).  It requires respect for reason.  This includes be
 ing self-aware of ones interpretive context in the wider scheme of things.  It also requires giving attention to, and celebrating, the many and massive discoveries in biology, archaeology, physics, astronomy, and so on, which shed great light on Gods world and the human condition (120).  His five-step model highlights the necessity for both public and private study, academic and devotional approaches.[6]

An interesting underlying tension throughout Wrights book (and his work more broadly) is that a solid pathway needs to be carved between academic research and devotional application of scripture.  In the final two chapters Wright presents models of how his desired approach can refresh scriptural interpretation in regards to the Sabbath and monogamy.  One might quibble with his explanation that these two topics were chosen on the grounds that they have not been particularly hot topics in recent discussion, hoping that method will be highlighted more than his particular conclusion (xii).  Especially in regards to monogamy![7] I have a few other quibbles and a few big disagreements with some of Wrights claims and conclusions.  But I appreciate his fresh formulation of the questions surrounding the different ways we use the Bible.  I found his attention to historic and contemporary approaches to scripture helpful in identifying shortcomings in my own scriptural interpretations.
 Wrights book is a much-needed admonition to exercise a more well-reasoned-while-still-devotional reading of scripture.

____________________________________________

Footnotes:

1.  In fact, his work has already been recognized by several LDS authors who commend his approach on the New Paul Perspective in the ongoing debate over grace and works.  See the Book Notes from the "FARMS Review" here: http://maxwellinstitute.byu.edu/publications/review/?vol=23&num=1&id=828.

2.  The book is a revised and expanded American edition of his previous UK book "Scripture and the Authority of GodGetting Beyond the Bible Wars," copyrighted in the US under the title of "The Last Word: Beyond the Bible Wars to a New Understanding of the Authority of Scripture" (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2005).  Wright has added two case studies to the end of the volume, enacting the sort of scriptural approach the book advocates on two specific topics.

3.  If you follow biblical scholarship at all, the term Old Testament will set off alarm bells.  In academic pursuits, words often serve as clues about controlling assumptions.  Wright is well aware that the *way* we say things can easily get in the way of *what* were saying.  His preface calls attention to his use of the term, as opposed to Hebrew Scriptures, preferring not to pretend to a neutral set of labels here because his analysis is Christian-centric (xiii).  Other similar decisions will certainly bring criticism.  For example, Wright doesnt delve too deeply here into authorship issues but hes clearly aware of them, as when he distinguishes between Paul and the author of the Letter to the Hebrews without calling attention to the distinction (21-22).

4.  Wright seems aware of this circularity though this book doesnt address it, presumably because he writes to a Christian audience already assuming some sort of biblical truth.  He clearly recognizes the power of appealing to what the Bible says (see for instance 26, 28, 31, 41, 92, etc.).

5.  I hesitate to over-emphasize only those ideas which resonate with Mormons.  Without a doubt, some of Wrights positions dont fit well at all within LDS thought, not least of all his position on the written canon being closed and defense of various Christian creeds (119, 126).  Nor his five-part story of Gods history, with creation, fall, Israel, Jesus, and the church (though he allows for modifications, p.  122).  Still, his critique of some Protestant ideas will sit well with many Mormons, and perhaps even laudably challenge a few current problematic LDS assumptions.  (Im thinking particularly of a certain form of biblical literalism or fundamentalism, see pp.  72, 74, 79, 92, and anti-intellectualism, pp.  85-86, 91-92, 134-135).

6.  Wrights Five Strategies for Honoring the Authority of Scripture:

1) A Totally Contextual Reading of Scripture: In each word, sentence, verse, chapter, and book, the cultural setting must be carefully examined.  All scripture is culturally conditioned (128).  Because time keeps moving, this project is never complete; because scripture is recorded by people, it is never wholly pure.  Wright calls this an *incarnational* reading of scripture, paying attention to the full humanity both of the text and of its readers (130, emphasis in orig.).  This term reminded me of a similar-with-important-differences LDS approach.  See James E.  Faulconer, Scripture as Incarnation, in "Historicity and the Latter-day Saint Scriptures," ed.  Paul Y.  Hoskisson (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, 2001), 1762.  Most importantly to Wright, the context should include his outlined overarching storyline of Gods creation and desire for the world to be made right again, his calling of a people and his expectation of their mission to the wo
 rld.

2) A Liturgically Grounded Reading of Scripture: Wright views corporate worship as the primary place to hear scripture.  When listening in communion with other Christians across space and time we follow the example of Israel, Jesus, Paul and others who recognized scripture as requiring a central place in worship (130-131).  Utmost concern should be paid to selection, not favoring easy or common verses over the whole of the Old and New Testament story as outlined by Wright earlier in the book.

3) A Privately Studied Reading of Scripture: Western individualism tends to highlight individual reading as the primary mode, Wright says, but this should not replace communal reading.  At the same time, it is an opportunity for personal reflection, a way to change a mind and soften a heart by wrestling with scripture.  I was particularly impressed with Wrights description of the complex pathway whereby each Christian is simultaneously called to worship and prayer, supplied with fresh understanding, puzzled by new questions (and so stimulated to yet more study and questioning), and equipped to take their own place in the ongoing story of Gods people (134).  A paradox in scripture study is the opportunity it affords to find, not only answers, but more questions as well.

4) A Reading of Scripture Refreshed by Appropriate Scholarship: Such scholarship is a great gift of God to the church, and I would argue that gift is for Mormons too, and not exclusively written *by* Mormons.  Wright says such study requires careful loyalty and joyful openness, a hard path to negotiate, no doubt.

5) A Reading of Scripture Taught By the Churchs Accredited Leaders: It should be plain by now that Wright seems to include most Christian denominations generally in his label of church.  Here he calls for various leaders, often hampered by or overly focused on administrative tasks, to become more serious about presenting scripture as audible sacraments (139).  He wants to avoid a division between clergy on one hand and scholars on the other.  (This issue presents a unique challenge within Mormonism which deserves its own post!)

7.  Incidentally, this is the only place Mormonism receives explicit mention, and its a confusing mention at that.  He says that monogamy is generally assumed in the western world to be the primary and appropriate type of marriage today and adds: Of course, in America itself, as is well known, the Mormons have made their case, and live their own lifestyle.  But that is regarded by most Americans as raising a question, not offering an answer (176).  Im not sure what he means, other than that he believes Mormons still practice polygamy?  At any rate, some Mormons might welcome his critique of polygamys place in the Bible, which he sees as Gods winking at ignorance (a la Acts 17:30).  A Mormon view might say it is Gods circumstantial exception (Jacob 2:24-30).

http://forums.mormonletters.org/yaf_postsm2294_Wright-Scripture-and-the-Authority-of-God-How-to-Read-the-Bible-Today-reviewed-by-Blair-Dee-Hodges.aspx#2294


[OT] Review: The Oxford Handbook of the Dead Sea Scrolls



51Q8Sqt9P%2BL._BO2,204,203,200_PIsitb-sticker-arrow-click,TopRight,35,-76_AA300_SH20_OU01_.jpg"....To a Mormon audience (just as with a New Testament readership), these essays serve as a reminder not to pound square proto†Mormon pegs into the round holes of history. ...."

Review
======

Title: The Oxford Handbook of the Dead Sea Scrolls
Editors: Timothy H. Lim & John J. Collins
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Genre: Ancient Near East Studies, Biblical Studies
Year Published: 2011
Number of pages: 768
Binding: Hardbound
ISBN-10: 0199207232
ISBN-13: 978-0199207237
Price: $150.00

Reviewed by Bryan Buchanan for the Association for Mormon Letters

Mormons have long been interested in the Dead Sea Scrolls (hereafter DSS).  Hugh Nibley was likely the first writer to discuss the subject from a uniquely Mormon perspective.  As years passed, many Mormons (due in part to misinformed authors) began to envision a community of proto†Mormons at Qumran.  Though LDS writers have since developed more responsible perspectives [1] showing that such conclusions were unwarranted, interest among Mormons remains high.  A recent comment by Elder Dallin Oaks in a conference address contains one element of this interestÂafter discussing the Book of Mormon prophecy that other scriptural writings would come forth in the last days, he stated that Âthe finding of the Dead Sea Scrolls shows one way this can occur. [2] Only in very recent memory has the wealth of secular research on the scrolls begun to slowly filter into Mormon writing, an unfortunate characteristic of virtually every topic within biblical studies.  The newly published *Oxford Handbook of The Dead Sea Scrolls* (edited by Timothy H.  Lim and John J.  Collins) is an excellent example of the type of scholarship that Mormon commentators on scroll research should be consulting.

One of the first books I read as an undergraduate was Norman GolbÂs influential (albeit controversial) *Who Wrote the Dead Sea Scrolls*††in summarizing GolbÂs conclusions to my classmates, even my respected archaeology professor was intrigued.  Since that time, I have maintained interest in the ongoing discussion of just what are the scrolls and who were responsible for them.  From the title of this work, I assumed this would be a detailed overview of all things DSS.  Not so.  I soon learned that this compilation focused on areas of disagreement and unresolved issues rather than serving as an introduction to the field.  As such, the essays (to varying degrees) presuppose a fairly substantial background in the basic issues of the DSS.  Contributors include well†known names such as Michael Wise and James VanderKam as well as up†and†coming scholars.  These thirty essays (split up into seven sections) provide, in the words of the editors, Âpromising directions for future research.Â

Given that detailed comment on each essay would be far too lengthy for such a review, I will select several essays that would be of particular interest to a Mormon readership.  First is John J.  Collins analysis of ÂSectarian Communities in the Dead Sea Scrolls. Collins reviews the contents of the two fundamental sectarian texts found in the DSS: the Damascus Document and the Serekh (often referred to as the Community Rule).  He flatly states that, despite assumptions made by many that they are seamless companions, the two documents Âdo not, however, reflect the life of a single community. Furthermore, he demonstrates that the *yahad* (=community, congregation) described therein Âcannot be identified simply with one settlement in the wilderness, a blow to the traditional understanding of a virtually monolithic Essene community at Qumran.

Next is Ronald HendelÂs essay ÂAssessing the Text†Critical Theories of the Hebrew Bible. Far more technical and of a more limited scope than Collins contribution, Hendel assesses the value of the Qumran corpus to the understanding of the makeup of the Hebrew Bible.  Among other matters, Hendel notes that the biblical texts (the majority of the DSS) represent a Âkaleidoscope of different textual traditions.  Though he does not explore the question of deliberate textual corruption, a Mormon reader would see from his discussion of the variants in Exodus passages that the wholesale sabotage of biblical texts by unscrupulous scribes envisioned by Mormons is definitely *not* authenticated by textual evidence.

Finally, I look at ÂCritical Issues in the Investigation of the Scrolls and the New Testament, written by Jorg Frey.  Frey begins by noting that, much like Mormon observations, early scroll scholarship was Âdominated by New Testament specialists eager (and, in many cases, overzealous) to find connections in the DSS.  After discussing purported links between the DSS and John the Baptist as well as John the evangelist and suggestions that fragments of Mark and 1 Timothy were among those in Cave 7, Frey concludes (in similar language to that of Dana Pike, cited above) that Âsmoking gun correlations are simply not there.  The value of the DSS, then, is that Âit would be impossible to get an adequate view of the literature and thought of ancient Palestinian Judaism without the information provided by the scrolls.Â

As I stated above, *The Oxford Handbook of the Dead Sea Scrolls* should not be approached as an introductory text.  Having said that, given an adequate foundation in DSS issues, this compilation would prove very valuable to any interested reader.  To a Mormon audience (just as with a New Testament readership), these essays serve as a reminder not to pound square proto†Mormon pegs into the round holes of history.  In addition, as Frey points out, the DSS are a wealth of information on one strain of Judaism during the foundational years of the New Testament era.  These scholarly essays are a helpful historiographical signpost, indicating where understanding has been and where it is headed.


Footnotes:

[1]  See, for example, Dana M. Pike, "The Dead Sea Scrolls and Latter-day Saints: Where Do We Go from Here?", *Studies in the Bible and Antiquity*, Volume 2 (2010), 29-48 (available at http://maxwellinstitute.byu.edu/publications/studies/?vol=2&id=51).

[2]  Dallin H. Oaks, Â"All Men Everywhere," General Conference April 2006 (available at http://lds.org/conference/talk/display/0,5232,49-1-602-25,00.html)


http://forums.mormonletters.org/yaf_postsm2293_Lim-and-Collins-The-Oxford-Handbook-of-the-Dead-Sea-Scrolls-reviewed-by-Bryan-Buchanan.aspx#2293

Sunday, October 10, 2010

[OT] Creation of Eve

Eve & Creatures (Gen. 2:18-25)
  • At the end of creation "it was very good," but now "it is not good" that Adam is alone.  In chapter 1, it was "good" before man and woman were created, but after it was "very good"
  • "helper" is literally "a helper as in front of him" - like him, suited to him, corresponding to him
  • The created animals are considered by some commentators unsuccessful attempts to create a helper for Adam.
  • Note the creatures (v.20) are of the three spheres of creation - land, sky & water
  • The creatures are formed, even though they were already formed in chapter 1
  • God, having dominion over the universe,  named the parts of the universe and it's time divisions in chapter 1, but lets man name the creatures over which he has dominion
  • She is called Issha (woman) because she was take from Ish (man)
  • The Rib is an allegory of the relationship of man and woman.  Just as the rib is found at the side of the man and is attached to him, even so the wife, the rib of her husband stands at his side to be his helper/counterpart.
  • 2:23 is divided into two parts.  In Hebrew, part 1 has 3 segments with two words, both accented.  The 2nd part has two segments each with 3 words, all accented, totaling 6 accented words.  Zo'th ("this," "she," "she") occurs three times in the man's utterance.  It is at the beginning, center and end of his speech.
Then the man said,
'This, at last, / is bone of my bones / and flesh of my flesh;
she shall be called Woman [Issa] / because she was taken out of Man [Is].'
  • 2:24 "Therefore a man leaves..." is not Adam's words, but a comment.
  • "A man leaves his father and his mother and cleaves to his wife" has been interpreted by some as a reference to matriarchy.  However, later note that "he shall rule over you"
Gen 2:18-25
  18 And the Lord God said, It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him an help meet for him.
  19 And out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field, and every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was the name thereof.
  20 And Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to every beast of the field; but for Adam there was not found an help meet for him.
  21 And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and he slept: and he took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh instead thereof;
  22 And the rib, which the Lord God had taken from man, made he a woman, and brought her unto the man.
  23 And Adam said, This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh: she shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of Man.
  24 Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife: and they shall be one flesh.
  25 And they were both naked, the man and his wife, and were not ashamed.

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

[OT] Modern pronunciation of Old Testament names

Jeff Spector at MormonMatters notes:

One thing that has always intrigued me about the English version of the Old Testament were how the names, the Hebrew names, were modified away from a Hebrew pronunciation.  Sometimes the names are close and sometimes not even. The key to pronouncing a Hebrew name or any Hebrew word is that he accent is always syllable .

In some cases, a Greek/Latin pronunciation is used, in others, Middle English.

He has included a table including Old Testament name,  language where today's pronunciation comes from & the Hebrew transliteration.

 Check it out here.

Sunday, June 6, 2010

[OT] Thou shalt surely die

"In the day you eat of it you shall die" (Gen 2:16-17). 

The serpent challenges the truthfulness of this statement, and Adam and Eve die much later.  Common explanations for God's seemingly inconstant statement are:
  • Day may mean time
  • Cruel conditions out of the garden may be like death
  • You shall not attain the measure of life originally allotted to you (1000 years)
  • You deserve death, which will be fulfilled in due time
  • This is an exaggerated statement to motivate Adam from further sinning
  • Adam was to die until he repented
  • You are now immortal, but shall become mortal -- a type of death
  • Separation from God in the garden comprises a type of spiritual death
Cassuto's explanation is that Adam will not be allowed to eat from the tree of life, which would have prevented him from ever dieing.  After choosing the fruit of knowledge, he was not allowed to eat of the tree of life, ensuring he would eventually die.