Notes on “The Story of the Bible” Class No. 1


Links to Other Classes

Next Class: No. 2   —   Index


Preliminaries

The King James Bible is available as a free PDF downloaded from: http://www.bookbindery.ca/KJBIBLE.pdf

Toby referenced:

Luke Timothy Johnson, Emory University, lecturer


Lecture 1: Telling the Story of a Book

the Bible as a book of stories
Jesus speaks in parables and is also portrayed as a teller of stories

“Texts of Terror” by Phyllis Trible

Bible = ta biblia [Greek] = the books

The Bible was written by people who were poor and oppressed.

Five Questions

  1. Where does the story of the Bible begin?
  2. In what forms does the Bible appear?
  3. How many Bibles are there, and how many stories are there to tell?
  4. In how many languages and how many versions does the Bible appear?
  5. How does the interpretation of the Bible become part of its story?

Four Chronological Stages of the Course (24 lectures)

  1. origins - where and how were they composed and the process by which they became a collection (canon)
  2. multiple versions of the Christian Bible in antiquity and patterns of interpretation in Jewish and Christianity
  3. multiple strands of the Bible's story renaissance, reformation, and enlightenment
  4. carries the story in modernity with discussion of dissention

DVD: https://www.amazon.com/Great-Courses-Story-Bible/dp/1598032496

Description: Discover the story of the world’s most consistently best-selling book, which came into being through a remarkable and complicated process. In 24 stimulating lectures, Professor Johnson investigates the many forms the Bible has taken and the ways history, scholarship, and technology have helped shape this great tradition, as well as the Bible's powerful influence on human history and culture. The Bible has long served as a powerful force, both reflecting and shaping the cultures that have read and embraced it. Over the centuries, perceptions of the Bible have inspired men and women and shaped nations; they've sent nations to war and martyrs to their deaths. The struggle of translation has been a battleground for controlling the meaning of sacred text, a struggle that reached its peak during the Renaissance and the Enlightenment. From the early history of the New Testament, when Hebrew and Greek sources built a new story on the foundation of the ancient Jewish tradition, to the world-changing invention of the printing press, a revolutionary innovation that contributed to the Protestant Reformation, this enthralling story gives you a deep appreciation for the tremendous power of this astonishing book - one that has endured through centuries and touched the lives of countless millions.

Course Guidebook: https://www.amazon.com/Lecture-Transcript-Course-Guidebook-Courses/dp/1598032518

24 lectures of 30 minutes each

  1. Telling the Story of a Book
  2. Making TaNaK
  3. Forms of Jewish Scripture
  4. Birth of the Christian Bible
  5. Formation of Jewish and Christian Canons
  6. Writing and Copying Manuscripts
  7. Imperial Sponsorship and the Bible
  8. Texts and Translations-The Ancient East
  9. Old latin and the Vulgate
  10. Other Ancient Versions
  11. Monasteries and Manuscripts
  12. Interpretation within Judaism
  13. Interpretation in Medieval Christianity
  14. The Renaissance, Printing, and the Bible
  15. The Protestant Reformation and the Bible
  16. Translating the Bible into Modern languages
  17. The First Efforts at Englishing the Bible
  18. The King James Version
  19. The Romance of Manuscripts
  20. Searching for the Critical Text
  21. The Historical-Critical Approach
  22. The Bible in Contemporary Judaism
  23. Contemporary Christians and Their Bibles
  24. The Bible’s Story Continues

Septuagint and Targens = first translations


Lecture 2: Making TaNaK

The Hebrew Bible is organized into three main sections

In Islam, the Bible is only holy in Arabic

The origins are much disputed and highly speculative

Generally accepted truths

Basic Information

“Torah” is rich in connotation, but at its root it means “teaching” or “instruction”

Since the Enlightenment scholars have agreed that not all books were written by the same person, and that they were written over a long period of time. Evidence:

The TaNaK is the grand notion of the creation of the Jewish people and their relationship with G-d.

1800 BCE is generally accepted as the Bible’s origin

Contents

The Law = 5 books (from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bible)

Nevi’im = 21 writings in the 2nd portion

Ketuvim = 13 writings

Total= 39 writings in Jewish Bible