Showing posts with label teaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teaching. Show all posts

Saturday, December 1, 2012

Not Your Grandma’s Text Criticism

A few days ago Dr. Juan Hernandez was kind enough to send me the proofs of an essay titled, “Modern Critical Editions of the Greek New Testament,” in the second edition of The Text of the New Testament in Contemporary Research: Essays on the Status Quaestionis, scheduled to be released sometime in 2013 from Brill. Hernandez teaches at Bethel University and his dissertation on singular readings of manuscripts of John's Apocalypse was widely praised.

The general thesis of Hernandez’s essay is that modern editions of the Greek text are moving away from rhetoric of the well-established, almost certain “standard text” and instead are adopting, both in introductions and with expanded critical apparatuses, the concept of a “working text.” He convincingly argues that “the critically reconstructed text once viewed as authoritative and fixed, is now considered provisional, even fluid; and the apparatus, once considered as having a secondary and supportive role with its many variants, now houses readings on par with the established text” (pgs 689-90). The essay is definitely worth a read for anyone interested in a critical text, and especially for those who teach hermeneutics, New Testament courses or New Testament Greek.

When I first encountered text criticism in college it was taught as though the work was already done. Certainly there were still a few spelling differences here or there, the occasional variant to discuss, but nothing of real substance or significance. Furthermore, the concept of a stable "original" text was the attainable, almost already attained goal. Thus, text criticism was not really all that interesting, just something that had thankfully been done by someone else with the pleasant result that we had the secure text and could now do the really important work of interpreting. As R. P. C. Hanson quipped, “I look upon the text critic as I look upon the man who comes to clean drains. I should not like to do it myself, but I am very glad that someone likes to do it.”

In the last few years, however, I have noticed a substantial shift. Actually, I’m sure it goes back much further and I am just slow in recognizing it. Brushing up on recent developments in text criticism in order to teach on the subject, I was surprised to find a burgeoning sub-field of NT studies full of unanswered questions and new approaches. I assigned Robert F. Hull Jr.’s The Story of the New Testament Text to my Advanced Greek undergraduate students and they unanimously raved about it. They are fascinated by text criticism, what it means and how to actually do it. Anyone else noticing this trend?

Hernandez is right, text criticism isn't what it used to be. It’s not just a new edition of the NA28 that we’re seeing, it’s a new generation of text critical tools and methods. We’re moving away from the old answers and asking all sorts of interesting questions. Returning to the manuscripts, returning to the texts as artifacts, and rethinking what variants mean for interpretation make text criticism interesting again.


Friday, January 21, 2011

Jesus in Four Hours


One of the high school students in the church where I serve goes to a public school connected with the nearby university. It's an advanced school where they call teachers "professor," the athletic programs are typically uninspiring, and students are actually expected to learn at a high capacity. So, it's something of a novelty.

A couple weeks this semester students have been given a chance to go to a variety of classes put together by other students. Sometimes the classes are taught by fellow students or by outsiders that a student knows. In this format I've been given a unique opportunity to teach about Jesus in a public high school.

I have roughly one hour for four consecutive days to teach about Jesus. If you had four hours to teach about Jesus to a group of high school students what would you teach? What questions would you want to answer?

This is what I'm thinking so far, but I'm very open to suggestions:

  1. The Gospels – what kind of literature are these books? What do they tell us about Jesus? How should we read the gospels? History? Theology?
  2. The Kingdom – Jesus' primary message was announcing the arrival of God's kingdom. Unfortunately, few people ever hear about the kingdom and what Jesus meant by it. What did Jesus mean when he announced the arrival of the kingdom of God? What did his audience think he was doing?
  3. The Cross – It is an undoubted historical fact that Jesus was crucified. Rarely, however, do we think to ask why he was put to death. I want to look at both the theology of his death articulated in the early church and the historical motives for putting Jesus to death. Why did he die?
  4. The Resurrection – Apart from the resurrection, the emergence of the early church is baffling. What did the earliest believers mean when they said Jesus was raised? How did the early Jesus followers become the church?
I'm looking for as much interaction as possible. What would you change, ignore, add? How would you teach Jesus in four hours?