Sometimes a good modern example serves to remind us of the
importance of the “big picture” when we study ancient documents. In a JETS article from March 2009 (Volume 52,
No. 1) – I’m a little behind in my
reading, Peter J. Gentry wrote an excellent article called “The Text of the Old
Testament”. In the article he examines the
history of the Old Testament texts, scribal practices, Ancient versions,
discoveries and history of interpretation among other things. In section IV, “Assessing the Witnesses and
Reconstructing the Text History” he addresses the texts from the Judean
Desert. In his critique of Sidnie White Crawford,
he makes an excellent observation that caught my attention. After a study of the Qumran texts Crawford concludes
that “…both canon and text were fluid and not standardized at this time.” She means during the late Second Temple
period the Old Testament texts were still fluid. Gentry does not agree, but also does not
discount the evidence. In footnote 66 on
page 37 he says this:
In many ways, the
history of the biblical text at this time is not dissimilar to a Christian or
Jewish bookstore today. One wonders what
an archaeologist would conclude after excavating remains of a contemporary
Christian bookstore some 2000 years hence.
The number and variety of translations of the Bible is bewildering to
people today, not to mention some future historian of the text. Here are some examples of what one may
encounter:
- The
New Student Bible
-
Life
Application Bible (Take the Next Step)
-
Psalty’s
Kids’ Bible
-
NIV
Young Discover’s Bible
-
The
Adventure Bible
-
The
Full Life Study Bible
-
Disciple’s
Study Bible
-
Women’s
Devotional Bible
-
The
Family Worship bible
-
The
Devotional Bible
-
Youth
Bible
-
The
Discover Bible
-
The
Daily Bible
-
The
One Year Bible
-
The
Spirit-Filled Life Bible
-
The
Orthodox Study Bible
-
Rainbow
Bible
-
Precious
Moments
- Mother’s Love N.T. and Psalms
His point is with reference to the development of the Old
Testament text. However, in my view, the
principle can be applied to our study of any ancient text or tradition. It is an excellent reminder that our analysis
of historical texts, be they epistles, gospels, inscriptions or whatever, must
be seen against the background of the historical and sociological context. In other words, we must remember the big
historical picture. Thank you for the reminder
professor Gentry!
1 comment:
So true..."context" is always so much more than we see at first glance. In everything....
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