Saturday, February 20, 2010
NT Pod 26: The Case Against Q, Programme Notes
For those who may be interested in reading more about this topic, I have a few suggestions. The New Testament Gateway has a section on the Synoptic Problem, which gathers together different resources on the issue, including websites like Stephen Carlson's Synoptic Problem Home Page and Mahlon Smith's Synoptic Gospels Primer. There is also a Books and Articles for those who want to take things a little further.
I have a website related to the specific topic of this podcast and it is called the Case Against Q Website. This has been on the web now for 13 years, which is quite a long time in internet history. When I had a book published on the topic in 2002, I turned the site into a companion site for that book. Now eight years later, I am wondering about turning it back into a free-standing site. But that does, of course, depend on whether I can find the time to update it. You can find lots of material on the topic there, including articles by Farrer, Goulder and me about the Farrer theory, which affirms Marcan Priority but dispenses with Q.
Labels: case against q website, NT Pod, Q, Synoptic Problem
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Website all back
Labels: markgoodacre.org
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Website bandwith issues
My main website itself is still down, though, and in the mean time, you can get to an older back up here at Duke.
I hope to have everything completely fixed and back to normal by tomorrow.
Labels: markgoodacre.org
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Only the true Messiah denies his divinity
Incidentally, this is a fine example of the use of Youtube by official organizations. Since Monty Python put clips like this on Youtube, sales of their DVDs apparently multiplied massively. There is a lesson there for online marketing that is still not understood by very many people.
Labels: Life of Brian, Mark's Gospel, Messianic Secret, Teaching Notes
Monday, February 15, 2010
Clark lectures 2010: Teresa Okure
Teresa Okure Presents 2010 Clark Lectures
A professor of New Testament and gender hermeneutics at the Catholic Institute of West Africa, Okure will speak on Feb. 17. Please note schedule changes made on Feb. 15.
Teresa Okure, professor of New Testament and gender hermeneutics at the Catholic Institute of West Africa, will present the 2010 Duke Divinity School Clark Lectures on Feb. 17.
She will present “Reading the Gospel Miracles as Parables: Mark 5:1-20 as an Example” at 8:30 a.m. in Room 0016 Westbrook. She will present “Rediscovering ‘the New’ in the New Testament,” at 12:20 p.m. in Room 0016 Westbrook.
Both lectures are open to the public.
Okure, who lives in Nigeria, is a Sister of the Society of the Holy Child Jesus. She also has served in various leadership roles at the Catholic Institute of West Africa, including academic dean, dean of student affairs, and head of the Department of Biblical Studies.
A member of various national and international theological and biblical associations, Okure is a well-known biblical scholar who has lectured widely both nationally and internationally. She is the founding president of the Catholic Biblical Association of Nigeria (CABAN) and a co-editor of the new Biblical Commentary Series, Texts@Contexts, the first volumes of which are due to appear in November, published by Fortress Press.
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Labels: Clark Lectures, Duke Events
Sunday, February 14, 2010
Gerry Adams on Judas's Betrayal, The Bible: A History
Labels: The Bible: A History
Michael Goulder obituary in Birmingham's Buzz
. . . . He had one of the most original and powerful minds of his generation, and spanned the very separate fields of Hebrew Bible and New Testament studies in a way unique in the second half of the twentieth century. His most important contributions to New Testament scholarship included arguing long and forcibly for a fresh view of the relationship between the Gospels that overthrew a long consensus and led to a new generation of scholarship. He was also a noted authority on the Psalms.The entry also mentions the memorial service at St Francis Hall on 25 February at 2.30pm.
Michael was incisive in debate, with a brilliant wit . . .
Labels: Michael Goulder
Friday, February 12, 2010
NT Pod 25: Q
Well, it was inevitable that in the end I would get to Q on the NT Pod. So to have waited until episode 25 might be thought of as some kind of achievement. This latest episode is the third in a back to back series on the Synoptic Problem, beginning with NT Pod 23: What is the Synoptic Problem? and continuing with NT Pod 24: Was Mark the First Gospel?. I am running these episodes alongside my New Testament Introduction course which I am teaching at Duke at the moment. I had initially planned to do three back to back episodes on the Synoptic Problem, but decided that it would be better and fairer to take one episode to lay out the case for Q, the current one, and then to give my reasons for disagreeing with that case in the next episode. That one will be along soon.
I have also continued with the extended episodes of the NT Pod, using recordings of the lectures, and I will blogging those here in due course. In the mean time, NT Pod subscribers will already have received them.
Labels: NT Pod, Q, Synoptic Problem
The Bible: A History on the blogs
Labels: The Bible: A History
Michael Goulder on the Resurrection, Bibliography
“Did Jesus of Nazareth Rise from the Dead?”. In J. Barton and G. N. Stanton (eds.), Resurrection. Festschrift Leslie Houlden (London: SPCK, 1994): 58-68
“The Baseless Fabric of a Vision”. In Gavin D'Costa (ed.), Resurrection Reconsidered (Oxford: Oneworld Publications, 1996): 48-61
“The Explanatory Power of Conversion-Visions”. In Paul Copan, and Ronald K. Tacelli (eds.), Jesus' Resurrection: Fact or Figment? : a Debate between William Lane Craig & Gerd Lüdemann (Downers Grove, Ill: InterVarsity Press, 2000): 86-103
“Jesus' Resurrection and Christian Origins: A Response to N.T. Wright.” Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus 3 (2005): 187-195
Labels: Michael Goulder, resurrection
That Top 50 Biblical History Blogs list
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Michael Goulder on the Resurrection and Losing Faith
Labels: Michael Goulder, resurrection
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Michael Goulder: The Times obituary
Professor Michael Goulder: Biblical Scholar
Michael Goulder was Professor of Biblical Studies at the University of Birmingham, well known for his creative approach to the Gospels and the Psalms and for resigning his orders as an Anglican priest not long after contributing to The Myth of God Incarnate, a celebrated collection of essays that questioned the traditional Christian doctrine of the Incarnation . . .Update (20 July 2010): The Times has now placed a lot of its content behind a paywall. The obituary is still available to view at no cost at the link above, but now in a no-frills version and without the picture that originally appeared, and which I have reproduced here (right).
Labels: Michael Goulder
Tuesday, February 09, 2010
Mary Daly Obituary
Mary Daly: Feminist and Theologian
Mary Daly was one of the first American women to train as a Roman Catholic theologian. She became a controversial philosopher of religion, criticised for her audacity and creativity as “a radical lesbian feminist”. Her initial challenge to established theological doctrines and emerging feminist movements may not appear radical today but Daly’s “theology” shocked the Establishment. From the beginning, she challenged what she saw as the oppression of women; that is, the implicit “patriarchy” of the Catholic Church . . .
Labels: obituaries
Douglas MacDowell Obituary
Professor Douglas MacDowell: Classical Scholar
Douglas MacDowell was one of the most distinguished Classical scholars in Britain and beyond. He occupied the Chair of Greek in the University of Glasgow from 1971 to his retirement in 2001, the longest period of office of any Glasgow Professor of Greek since Edmund Lushington, Tennyson’s brother-in-law, retired in 1877 . . .
Labels: obituaries
The Palaeography Chair at Kings College, London
Writing off the UK's last palaeographer
The decision by a London university to axe the UK's only chair in palaeography has been met by outrage from the world's most eminent classicists. John Crace on why the study of ancient writings matters – and why history will be lost without it
Jim offers an important criticism of an otherwise excellent article,
One criticism of the piece though; it shouldn't assume that subjects like paleography can't bring in research grant money. The research councils and other funding sources recognize the value of such things and are quite willing to fund projects on them if they are well thought out.Indeed. Some of the most successful units in gaining research grants have been those specializing in ancient texts. In addition to Jim's own successes, you need only to think of ITSEE at the University of Birmingham.
So what can be done? For a start, we can spread the word. There are already 4,774 members of this Facebook group:
Save Palaeography at King's London
5,995 people have signed the petition:
Save Palaeography at King's College London
When you're done, don't forget to tweet it. Moreover, if you have a blog, why not blog it too?
Top 50 Biblical History Blogs
Monday, February 08, 2010
NT Pod 24: Was Mark the First Gospel?
I uploaded the latest NT Pod at the weekend, the second in the current series of back-to-back episodes on the Synoptic Problem, asking Was Mark the First Gospel?. In it I cover some of the main arguments for Marcan Priority, but I decided to save the argument from editorial fatigue for another NT Pod later in the year. I have also released two extended episodes, which use the audio from my recent classes on the topics, and I will post separately on those in due course.
Labels: NT Pod, Synoptic Problem
Sunday, February 07, 2010
KGO Radio Guest Spot on the Synoptic Problem
Labels: KGO Radio
Saturday, February 06, 2010
Guesting on KGO Radio, Sunday morning
I'll be guesting on God Talk with Brent Walters on KGO Radio, tomorrow morning. The topic will be the Synoptic Problem. God Talk is on from 6am to 9am PST, which is 9am to 12pm my time here on the east side of the USA. I'll be on during the last hour of the show, between 8am and 9am PST, between 11am and 12pm my time. You can listen along on the internet if you are not in the San Francisco area, at KGO Radio. It will be my second time on the show; I did slot on Paul last June.Labels: KGO Radio
NT Pod 23: What is the Synoptic Problem?
I have now reached the part of the New Testament Introduction class where we look at the Synoptic Problem, naturally one of the most enjoyable elements in any New Testament Introduction course. This term, I am following along my teaching with episodes of the NT Pod. The latest episode is NT Pod 23: What is the Synoptic Problem? I released it on Wednesday and it is the first of three back-to-back episodes on the Synoptic Problem. This one introduces the problem and surveys the data. Labels: NT Pod, Synoptic Problem
Pericopes and periscopes
Friday, February 05, 2010
Biblical Studies Bulletin latest
Labels: Biblical Studies Bulletin
PhD position Qumran Institute, University of Groningen (NL)
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PhD position The Jewish Revolt against Rome (0,9 fte) (210026) at the Qumran Institute of the University of Groningen, the Netherlands
The department of Theology and Religious Studies of the University of Groningen is looking for a PhD candidate (0,9 fte) for the project 'The Jewish Revolt against Rome: Religious Groups and the Shaping of Identities in First-Century Judaea'.
This PhD position is financed by a grant of the SNS/Reaal Fund. It will run parallel to the interdisciplinary NWO VENI project The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Jewish War against Rome (66-70), which investigates the impact of Rome on the self-understanding of a Jewish group at Qumran prior to the revolt. PhD candidates are expected to carry out research within the historical and archaeological framework of first-century Judaea in relation to the impact of the Roman Empire on the region and the conflict of 66-70/73. Projects may investigate e.g. Flavius Josephus' position, specific tions, specific sites, regions or interregional connections from different perspectives and on the basis of different sources (literary, archaeological and/or numismatic). The final form of the PhD project will be determined in consultation with the PhD candidate.
We are looking for enthusiastic candidates with a Master's degree or equivalent, in a (sub)discipline in which the doctoral study will take place. Candidates with a degree in Hebrew Bible, Jewish Studies, Ancient History, Classics, or Archaeology are especially encouraged to apply.
The degree must have been obtained within a reasonable period of time and with results that justify the expectation that the student will be able to successfully complete the programme in four years.
This PhD position is available as of September 1st, 2010.
For additional information see:
http://www.rug.nl/ggw/vacatures/10PhDJRR
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Donald Wiseman (1918-2010)
Labels: Donald Wiseman
T. G. H. James obituary
The highlight of the departmental Christmas party was the presentation of a cake, baked by James and iced with an ancient hieratic text, which had to be identified before the cake could be cut.
Labels: obituaries
Mary Beard on Desert Island Discs
The nice thing about Desert Island Discs these days is that you can download it as a podcast too, with the tracks reduced to an even shorter length (10 seconds or so?!) than on the actual programme.
Also mentioned on Rogue Classicism.
Labels: desert island discs, Mary Beard, Radio 4
Tuesday, February 02, 2010
Helen Bond on the Apocalyptic Jesus (and Doctor Who!)
Against this background, a non-apocalyptic Jesus sounds oddly complacent, stuck in an 80s time warp, when the only thing to rail about was conspicuous consumption and social inequalities. Of course, these things are important, and I don’t doubt that Jesus had something to say on the matter, but in a modern context these reconstructions seem to lack an important dimension. There is no point in teaching others to fiddle a better tune if Rome is about to burn all around you.It's naturally a pleasure to see that other NT colleagues enjoy Doctor Who, but Helen is clearly not a geek, as this comment shows:
Over Christmas and New Year, six-million people in Britain tuned in to the popular TV series Dr Who, in a lengthy two-part special called "The End of the World" (luckily David Tennant averted disaster).The two-parter was actually called "The End of Time", though Helen is quite right that its apocalyptic scenario witnesses to some taste for such things among the British public, who gave the two parts unprecedented appreciation indexes of 87 and 89 respectively. Helen's viewing figures are grossly underestimated; the total viewing figures for each episode were in fact over twelve million (source: Blogtor Who). If I were being really geeky, perhaps I might add too that while David Tennant clearly "averted disaster" he did so at the expense of his own identity, and now we have Matt Smith to look forward to.
Labels: Bible and Interpretation, Doctor Who, Helen Bond
NT Pod 22: The Anonymity of the Gospels
I released the latest episode of the NT Pod at the weekend. The topic is The Anonymity of the Gospels.This semester, I am teaching New Testament Introduction here at Duke and I am running the NT Pod alongside classes, providing episodes related to the topics that arise in class. This one came out of the lecture on the authorships and dates of the Gospels. It is a topic I have blogged on here before, and you can read some of my thoughts on it in a little more detail in The Dating Game VIII: John, Thomas and Authorial Self-Representation (cf. the disciples writing the Gospels), as well as in forthcoming publications, of course.
Teaching the Bible e-pub latest
Labels: Teaching the Bible
Monday, February 01, 2010
Biblical Studies Carnival 50
Meanwhile, the Biblioblog top 50 continues over in Free Old Testament Audio Website Blog.
Labels: Biblical Studies Carnivals, biblioblogs top 50



