How To Be a Biblical Scholar

Well, it requires years of studying and learning several languages, that's for sure, but you can begin with something very simple and fairly easy to do. All you need to do at minimum is to recognize something very basic but very very important about the canonized Biblical texts, and then proceed to read some ancient contextual literature you probably have not read before.

First you must recognize that the texts of the Bible were written and canonized during definitive periods in the ancient Jewish/Christian past. Again for emphasis, that's "definitive periods in the ancient Jewish/Christian past."

We can talk about when these texts were written, but the JEDP theory approaches what is much more likely than that Moses ever wrote the Torah. Only evangelical scholars who teach for evangelical colleges who must sign doctrinal statements each year think differently (why the need for this if the evidence for evangelical scholarship is there in the first place, right?).

But back to my main point. These texts have a context. And they were written and accepted during certain periods of time in the ancient past.

I'll assume you agree.

Now think on this. We can easily compare these texts with the texts from surrounding cultures. There are OT Parallels such that it's at least understandable why someone would write a whole book called The Secret Origins of the Bible.

But there is even more than this to grasp and understand. There is the Intertestamental Period of about 400+ years between the Old and New Testaments. And there is a lot of literature written during this time period, especially by the Jews. Furthermore, after the rise of Christianity there are discoveries about other Christianities with their own Scriptures, which Bart Ehrman has written about.

So here's what you should do if you want to be an educated biblical scholar (rather than a backwoods evangelical). Read this comparative literature. Do you think the ideas in the Bible are new and revealed from heaven? Read this literature. Do you think the ideas in the OT were seeds that miraculously blossomed in the NT without a preceding context? Read the intertestamental literature. Do you really want to know what the earliest Christians thought about their Christianities? Read the early Christian literature.

You see, Christians take the biblical texts as if they are a divine history of their faith for the first millennium or more without attempting to discern the context for these documents. There is a discernible development to their intellectual history and it looks completely like the evolution of a faith, not a divinely revealed one.

Here's a meager comparison. It would be like reading a history of the United States that was partially written during the Revolutionary War without referring to why early Americans revolted in the first place (i.e., the context), and partially written during the Stock Market Crash by a rich author, without any context as to what caused the crash in the first place.

There is a complete lack of historical perspective in the periodically written texts of the Bible. Add to that the extraordinary claims or "wonders" we find in it and there simply is no good reason to believe them.

They say the key to buying a home or a business is Location. Location. Location. Well, the key to understanding the origins of the Judaic-Christian faith is Context. Context. Context.

3 comments:

Thom Stark said...

Thanks God for the Genetic Fallacy, right? Otherwise we Christians would have to pay attention to the implications of contextual readings.

mmcelhaney said...

I have to admit that most people have never bothered to study the context of the Bible. He does have some valid points that the Bible is composed from several viewpoints. We are talking about 66 books, over 40 different authors, 3 continents, different cultures, various genres, three different languages, and most of Authors could not have known one another given it took 1500 years for them all to be written. Loftus' meager comparison is indeed meager. If someone from today were to read such a history of United States it would indeed be a confused mess. However the Bible is different. Each book was written with a specific audience in mind and the contemporary readers of those documents would have known and understood the context of those writings. Centuries removed it takes more study to get an understanding of those contexts.

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UU4077 said...

Interestingly, there are "mainline" seminaries that actually have books in their libraries (including some mentioned here) to assist students in understanding context.

It shouldn't be a secret. In fact, it is vitally necessary to proper understanding.

After all, how can you truly understand myth without context around which it developed.