Saturday, January 30, 2010
NT Pod 21: A Historical Approach to the New Testament
With another NT Pod on the horizon, I was reminded tonight that I had not mentioned the previous episode here on the NT Blog. So this corrects that lack. Let me add a few words about where we are with the NT Pod at the moment.This semester, I am teaching Introduction to the New Testament at Duke and I have decided to use the NT Pod to supplement the classes, to add short pieces that relate to what we are covering in class. I like to begin with some reflections on what is involved in a historical approach to the New Testament, and this gave me the opportunity to add some reflections on the topic in the NT Pod. Since the beginning, the NT Pod has had the subtitle "A Historical Approach to the New Testament" and now, in episode 21, we finally have the chance to explore what an historical approach involves.
As usual, you can find the NT Pod at its own site, you can subscribe in your reader, or you can subscribe via Duke's iTunes U.
Labels: NT Pod
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
The Bible: A History First Reviews
The Weekend's Television: The Bible: A History, Sun, Channel 4
Reviewed by Tom Sutcliffe
. . . . The principal punchbag in this programme was Richard Dawkins, criticised by Jacobson for intemperately attacking certitude with a mirror-image certainty. I guess Dawkins's prose style riles Jacobson – its impatience and asperity with certain kinds of human folly. And one might point out (from a safe distance) that if you want to excoriate irascibility and fierceness of language, it might help to be a bit less tetchy and short fuse than Howard Jacobson. But then this was a writer's appreciation of the Creation story, from a man who understands that the Authorized Version reverberates through English prose and poetry, and isn't too worried that some people choose to take it literally . . .
Labels: The Bible: A History
Saturday, January 23, 2010
The Bible: A History begins on Channel 4 today
Channel 4 have added an a new interview on their website:
interview with Howard Jacobson
And the Telegraph have a piece on the episode:
Richard Dawkins pushing a form of 'aggressive atheism', says presenter
Professor Richard Dawkins has been accused of “parading his own failure of imagination” by failing to consider the possible existence of God in an attack by the author Howard Jacobson.
By Urmee Khan
Labels: The Bible: A History
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Morna Hooker to give C. K. Barrett Lecture
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Durham University
C.K. BARRETT LECTURE
(A public lecture open to the university community, the churches and the wider public)
PROFESSOR MORNA HOOKER
(University of Cambridge)
‘Scriptural Holiness: Paul’s Understanding of Sanctification’
Tuesday 16 February 2010
7.30pm
Kingsley Barrett Lecture Room, Calman Learning Centre,
Science Site (behind the Library)
Stockton Road, Durham
(For map, see http://www.dur.ac.uk/map/durham/)
Refreshments After the Lecture
Free Entry
Morna Hooker is Lady Margaret’s Professor Emerita in the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Robinson College. She was the first woman to be elected President of the Studiorum Novi Testamenti Societas, an international society of New Testament scholars. In 2004 she was awarded the Burkitt Medal for Biblical Studies by the British Academy.
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Friday, January 15, 2010
World of the Bible Survey
Labels: World of the Bible
Thursday, January 14, 2010
The Bible: A History: air date
Labels: The Bible: A History
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
The Biblioblog Top 50 Archives comes back
Labels: biblioblogs top 50
Monday, January 11, 2010
Life after the Biblioblog Top 50
I now understand what I had not realized earlier, that the Free Old Testament Audio Website blog is attempting to replace the Biblioblog Top 50 itself and not just the occasional updates that used to appear on Jim West's deleted blog. So thanks to Jeremy for that, and kudos to the artist formerly known as NT Wrong that his absence is so clearly felt that others spring up to fill the void. I wish people would not do this, though, and delete or hide old blogs. It doesn't make a lot of sense. Even if you become convinced that there is so little value in it yourself that it should be removed from the web, it might just be that others have a higher opinion of your efforts and that the archives might continue to be of use. Luckily, there are ways of accessing archive material if you know how, but it would be so much more beneficial to keep the archives for such blogs publicly available. So this is me informally registering some general grumpiness about the whole business of hidden and deleted blogs, with perhaps a bit more to come in due course.
Labels: Biblioblogs, biblioblogs top 50, N. T. Wrong
Jesus: The Evidence, Episode 3, featuring Koester and Quispel
The last three minutes is here.
The topic is the resurrection, Nag Hammadi and Gnostic Christianity (and the Gospel of Thomas), Paul, Marcion and the canon, and Constantine. It features lots of a young(er) Helmut Koester (in Jerusalem and a couple of other locations, one indoors) and, like The Gnostics (1987) documentary, the late Gilles Quispel (in Rome).
Labels: Gilles Quispel, Helmut Koester, Jesus: The Evidence
Missing the biblioblog rankings?
Labels: Biblioblogs, biblioblogs top 50
Sunday, January 10, 2010
Richard Hays Megapost
Labels: Richard Hays
Saturday, January 09, 2010
Hurtado on the ending of Mark
Larry W. Hurtado, "The Women, the Tomb, and the Climax of Mark," in Zuleika Rodgers, Margaret Daly-Denton, Anne Fitzpatrick McKinley (eds.), A Wandering Galilean: Essays in Honour of Sean Freyne (Leiden: Brill, 2009): 427-50
Labels: Larry Hurtado, Mark 16.1-8, Mark's Gospel
Friday, January 08, 2010
Interview with Richard Hays on Hesed we 'emet
Labels: Duke Graduate, Richard Hays
The Morton Smith segment of Jesus: The Evidence excerpted
Labels: Jesus: The Evidence, Morton Smith Youtube, Secret Mark
Latest JSNT
Journal for the Study of the New Testament 32 (December 2009)
Lochlan Shelfer
The Legal Precision of the Term πάράκλητος (131-150)
Rafael Rodríguez
Reading and Hearing in Ancient Contexts (151-178)
John C. Poirier
The Synoptic Problem and the Field of New Testament Introduction (179-190)
Alan J.P. Garrow
The Eschatological Tradition behind 1 Thessalonians: Didache 16 (191-215)
Joshua W. Jipp
Rereading the Story of Abraham, Isaac, and ‘Us’ in Romans 4 (217-242)
Labels: Journal for the Study of the New Testament
John Poirier on New Testament Introduction and the Synoptic Problem
The synoptic problem is an important and visible subfield within NT studies, yet, for some reason, almost every NT introduction written in the past forty or so years has passed on a defective understanding of that subfield. Two problems in particular plague these NT introductions: (1) their discussions of the synoptic problem tend to rely on a logical argument disproven almost sixty years ago, and (2) they tend to misrepresent the current state of the question by marginalizing the Farrer hypothesis, which today is the Two-Source Theory’s leading competitor.It's an excellent article, based on a paper Poirier gave in the Synoptics section at the SBL Annual Meeting in 2008. As Rafael points out, the article's claims are further born out by the recent publication of Mark Allan Powell, Introducing the New Testament, which I recently discussed in a post on Mark Allan Powell on the Synoptic Problem.
Labels: Farrer Theory ignored, John Poirier, Journal for the Study of the New Testament, Mark Allan Powell, Synoptic Problem
Thursday, January 07, 2010
Michael Goulder
Labels: Michael Goulder
Whatever happened to the Gospel of Mark film?
I have often blogged about this in the past (see Gospel of Mark film) and from time to time I receive emails asking if I know any more about it. The teaser trailer first came out in March 2005 and as far as I can tell, filming never began on this project, as Visual Bible International fell into every greater financial problems. It is my impression that the teaser trailer was released to encourage interest in making the film, and that it was not released after any actual filming had been done. (The video does feature Henry Ian Cusick's eyes, but this and the other images were probably gleaned from the Gospel of John filming).
There does appear to be one new piece of information, though, among comments on the Youtube upload of the teaser trailer above, as follows:
I just received a reply to my email question from Philip Saville the director himself of the Gospel of John and He replied, I quoteThis comment is dated to November 2009. It's interesting that Saville does not declare the project dead, and the reference to "put it together" is intriguing since that expression might be more appropriate to editing rather than filming. But he may, of course, simply mean put together the funding and so on. So it is not promising.
" Many many thanks for your enquiry about The Gospel of Mark.
Regrettably we haven't as yet been able to put it together.
Sorry to disappoint........Maybe next year?
Meanwhile I wish you and all your youtube-rs well over Thanksgiving.
Stay well
Philip Saville "
I agree with Mike that the Gospel of Mark would be fantastic for film treatment. It ought to be more amenable than Matthew, which was the Visual Bible's first film, or John, which was their second.
Labels: Gospel of Mark film, Visual Bible
2009 Review of Biblical Studies and Tech Tools
Labels: Technology
Wednesday, January 06, 2010
Jesus: The Evidence, Episode 2 on Youtube (the one with Morton Smith)
There are other things of interest in this episode including more Geza Vermes and also Anthony Harvey. Ignore the "3 of 6" on the uploader's heading; this is episode 2, and the first few minutes of the episode are in a separate upload, headed 2 of 6. The character you see in the still above is Ian Wilson, the author of books on the Turin Shroud, who also authored the book Jesus: The Evidence that accompanied this series.
Labels: Jesus: The Evidence, Morton Smith Youtube
Jesus: the Evidence, Episode 1 on Youtube
Fascinating viewing. As I mentioned previously, it is quite different from the contemporary style of documentary in that the scholars speak directly to the camera rather than to an off-screen presenter or director. Moreover, it is clear that they are speaking from a script and not arranging the words as they speak.
There is another version of the episode available here, but the aspect ratio is horrible, even if it is a bit less wobbly.
Labels: Jesus: The Evidence
Catto on "Synagogues" in the New Testament Period
‘Synagogues’ in the New Testament Period
For those who have not seen it, Catto recently published Reconstructing the First-Century Synagogue: A Critical Analysis of Current Research in the Library of New Testament Studies.
Labels: Bible and Interpretation, Library of New Testament Studies, synagogues
Teaching the Bible e-pub latest
Teaching the Bible
There is a bit of a "work" theme here, with an essay by Jim West on All in a Day's Work, and a link to my NT Pod 18 on the topic Was Jesus a Carpenter? Also featured are articles on Form Criticism by Joshua James and Moses’ Birth, the Abandoned Hero Motif, and Form Criticism by Isaac Alderman.
Labels: Teaching the Bible
Tuesday, January 05, 2010
Not the Messiah -- listen while you can!
Not the Messiah
A comic oratorio inspired by Life of Brian, celebrating 40 years of Monty Python's Flying Circus. Eric Idle, Michael Palin and fellow Pythons join the BBC Symphony Chorus and Orchestra. Every musical style and genre is included, from Handel to Gilbert and Sullivan to Mariachi band.
Eric Idle and John du Prez: Not the Messiah (He's a Very Naughty Boy)
Eric Idle (bariton-ish)It's wonderful and hilarious and I strongly recommend it. And the good news is that it is not locked-down to UK listeners only, so you don't even need to perform the usual hocus-pocus to listen to it. I must admit that I've grabbed a copy while I can, pending, of course, the release of the CD in due course.
Judith ...... Shannon Mercer (soprano)
Mandy ...... Rosalind Plowright (mezzo)
Brian ...... William Ferguson (tenor)
Reg ...... Christopher Purves (bass)
BBC Symphony Chorus
BBC Symphony Orchestra
John du Prez (conductor)
With guest appearances by fellow Pythons Michael Palin, Terry Jones and Terry Gilliam.
Previous posts on Not the Messiah here.
Labels: Life of Brian, Not the Messiah
The Bible: A History Latest
. . . . My role in the program was to act as Gerry’s mentor, to accompany him on his trips (including one dark evening when we found ourselves paddling in the Sea of Galilee in a thunderstorm discussing Jesus’ miracles), and to discuss the days’ findings with him every evening. We spent hours arguing whether first-century Galilee was “occupied”; the meaning of “democracy” in ancient societies; high priestly “collaboration” (and alternatives); and whether Jesus foresaw his own death. I’ve not often had the chance to discuss these things with a man who has been on the run from political authority, who has experienced internment, who has been shot at (and still bears the scars), and who is now protected from the “real IRA” who regard him as a traitor – and I have to say that I learned from him too . . .Tommy Wasserman shares his thoughts on Evangelical Textual Criticism, Sinn Fein Leader Gerry Adams in Search for Jesus and Papyrus 45, including comments about filming of P45. And Matt Page comments over on Bible Films.
Labels: Helen Bond, The Bible: A History
Paul writing in TV Documentaries
Labels: Apostle Paul, TV documentaries

