Notes on “The Story of the Bible” Class No. 9


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Preliminaries

Luke Timothy Johnson, Emory University, lecturer


Lecture 15: The Protestant Reformation and the Bible

Official outline from The Teaching Company

The Protestant Reformation of the 16th explicitly challenged medieval Catholicism based on the Bible

There was a developing understanding of purgatory

The complexities of cannon law and scholastic philosophy were scorned by the reformers to the degree that they replaced Biblical piety

The fundamental change in the Reformation was that tradition was to be interpreted in terms of the Bible, not vice-versa

The supreme place given the Bible can be assessed from a number of states

Martin Luther

Augsberg Confessions

Reform Tradition

Three statements of faith

Westminster Confession - John Knox

Church of England

39 Articles 1596 (?)

sola fide, sola scriptura = by faith alone, by Scripture alone

In all forms of Protestantism, the Bible is central

A great deal of art and music and literature was affected by Protestantism and Scriptural interpretation of the Reformation


Lecture 16: Translating the Bible Into Modern Languages

Official outline from The Teaching Company

The Council of Trent circa 1565

The unity of Church and State continued

Ongoing wars between Catholic and Protestant nations

Latin continued to be the language of scholars, but modern languages were taking over

The Bible could support any position

Thus, interpretation became critical, as it could influence meaning

Bible variations

The bottom line is that one had to know who one was talking to before claiming that an argument is supported by the Bible

There were, of course, competing translations

Other translations quickly appeared

All this changed happened in decades rather than centuries

In some ways the Bible was almost too familiar