Title: The Interpretive Journey New Testament
1The Interpretive JourneyNew Testament
Unit 4
- Letters
- Gospels
- Acts
- Revelation
2NT Letters
- Introduction
- As in the ancient world, letters play an
important role in our lives today
3New Testament Letters Pauline General Romans Hebr
ews 1, 2 Corinthians James Galatians 1, 2
Peter Ephesians 1, 2, 3 John Philippians Jude Colo
ssians 1, 2 Thessalonians 1, 2 Timothy Titus
Philemon
4- Characteristics of NT letters
- Comparable to other ancient letters
Pauls letters are quite long by ancient
standards, averaging 2,495 words. (R.
Richards) Why did Paul need the extra space?
NT includes more informal, personal letters
(like Philemon) as well as more formal letters
(like Romans)
5- Authoritative substitutes for the author's
personal presence - Substitute for personal presence
- Authoritative substitute
- (Christs representatives)
- Situational written to address specific
situations or problems in the churches - To clarify an issue (Thessalonians)
- To address a doctrinal problem (Colossians)
- To confront the ethical behavior of readers
(James)
6- Implications of the occasional nature of letters
- Never meant to be read as exhaustive dictionaries
of doctrine - Be careful not to conclude too much from any one
letter - Galatians freedom
- 1 Corinthians obedience
- Reconstruction the original situation that called
for the letter in the first place
7- Carefully written and delivered
- The actual job of writing down a letter was
normally assigned to a trained scribe or
secretary (amanuensis). - I, Tertius, who wrote down this letter, greet
you in the Lord. (Rom. 1622) - Customary for the author to add a final greeting
in his own handwriting - I Paul, write this greeting in my own hand.
(1 Cor. 1621) - Cosenders played a significant role
- Paul, Silas and Timothy, (1 Thess. 11)
- Delivery depended on trusted letter carriers
- Tychichus will tell you all the news about me.
(Col. 47)
8- Intended for the Christian community
- Meant to be read aloud again and again to the
church
- Meant to be exchanged with other churches
9- Form of NT letters
- Standard form of a contemporary letter
Standard form of a NT letter
Introduction Writer
Recipients Greeting Body of the
letter (largest section focusing on the
specific situation) Conclusion (a variety of
elements normally ending in a grace
benediction)
Date Name Address Greeting, Body
of the letter Closing signature
10- How to interpret a NT letter
- Step 1 Grasp the text in their town
- Read the letter from beginning to end, the way
letters are meant to be read. This will give you
a sense of the big picture. - Reconstruct the historical-cultural context of
the biblical writer and his audience. - Identify the literary context of your particular
passage. - Determine the meaning of the text for the
biblical audience (observe, observe, observe!)
11- Step 2 Measure the width of the river
- For NT letters the river is usually not very
wide, but there are exceptions. - Step 3 Cross the principlizing bridge
- Look for the broader theological message
reflected in the text. To find theological
principles in letters ask yourself the following
questions - Does the author state a principle?
- Do you see a principle in the surrounding
context? - Do you see a reason behind a particular command
or instruction?
12- Does your theological principle satisfy the
following criteria - It should be reflected in the biblical text
- It should be timeless and not tied to a specific
situation - It should not be culturally bound
- It should be consistent with the teaching of the
rest of Scripture - It should be both relevant to both the biblical
audience and the contemporary audience - Step 4 Grasp the text in our town
13- Conclusion
- Provide a window into the struggles and victories
of the early church - Serve as authoritative substitutes for church
leaders who could not always minister in person - Written to address specific situations and meet
the practical needs of believers - Meant to be read from beginning to end, the same
way you would read a personal letter today - Use the Interpretive Journey to help you hear God
speak to you through NT letters.
14NT Gospels
- Introduction
- Gospel g good news
- Four Gospels g four different versions of the
one story of Jesus
15- Two main concerns
- What are the Gospels? (literary genre)
- How should we read the Gospels?
16- What are the Gospels?
- Stories
- Stories of Jesus drawn from the personal
experience of his followers, especially his
apostles - But different from modern biographies
- Do not cover the whole life of Jesus
- Often arrange events and sayings topically rather
than chronologically - Give a lot of attention to the last week of
Jesus life - Do not include a detailed psychological analysis
of Jesus
17- Gospels are ancient biographies rather than
modern biographies - Not obsessed with strict chronological sequencing
- Variation in wording
- Variation in order of events
- Christ-centered or Christological biography
- Two purposes of the Gospel writers
1. To tell individual stories of Jesus 2.
Through the individual stories of Jesus, to say
something important to their readers
18- How should we read the Gospels?
- Our method of reading the Gospels must match the
means God used to inspire them. - Here we turn the two purposes of the Gospel
writers into two interpretive questions
- What is the main message of this particular
story? - 2. What is the Gospel writer trying to say to
his readers by the way he connects the smaller
stories?
19(No Transcript)
20- Question 1 How do we read individual stories?
- Ask the standard story questions
- Who? What? When? Where? Why? How?
- Look for interpretive clues from the author
himself. - Take note of anything that is repeated in the
story. - Pay careful attention to direct discourse.
- Question 2 How do we read a series of stories?
Look for Connections
- Common themes or patterns
- Logical connections (e.g., cause and effect)
- How stories are joined to together (transitions,
conjunctions) - Role of key characters
21- Special literary forms in the Gospels?
- a truth is overstated
for effect - If your right eye causes you to sin, gouge it
out and throw it away. It is better for you to
lose one part of your body than for your whole
body to be thrown into hell.
Matthew 529
Exaggeration
implicit or
implicit comparison You are the salt of the
earth. Matthew 513 You are like whitewashed
tombs Matthew 2327
Metaphor Simile
22- contrast between what
is expected and what actually happens - And I'll say to myself, You have
plenty of good things laid up for many years.
Take life easy eat, drink and be merry. But
God said to him, You fool! This very night your
life will be demanded from you.
Luke 1219-20
Narrative Irony
questions
designed to make a point rather than retrieve
an answer Who of you by worrying can add a
single hour to his life? Matthew 627
Rhetorical Questions
23- two or more lines of
text that are intended to be read together - Synonymous lines say basically the same thing
- Contrastive second line contrasts with the
first line - Developmental second line advances thought of
first - What kind of parallelism is the verse below?
- Ask and it will be given to you seek and
you will find knock and the door will be
opened to you. Matthew 77
Parallelism
24- a story with two
levels of meaning, where certain details in the
story stand for other things - A story where every detail stands for something
else? - A story with only one point?
- A story with one main point for each main
character
Parables
25- Conclusion
- Gospels g good news of Jesus Christ
- Four versions of the one story of Jesus
- Christological biography
- Two interpretive questions
- What is the main message of each story?
- What is the Gospel writer trying to say to his
readers (and to us) by the way he connects the
smaller stories?
26NT Acts
- Introduction
- Four versions of the life and ministry of Jesus,
one story of the birth and growth of the early
church - Title?
- The continuing acts of Jesus by his Spirit
through the apostles and other early Christian
leaders - Acts for short
- Acts presents unique interpretive challenges
- Normative the church in every age should
imitate the early church - Descriptive early church valuable and
inspiring, but not necessarily
binding on us
27- Acts a sequel to Luke
- Luke produced a single work in two parts
Luke-Acts. - Luke intended to link these two books together
- Compare Luke 11-4 with Acts 11-2
- Thematic and structural parallels between the two
books - Definite overlap between the ending of Luke and
the beginning of Acts - What Jesus began to do during his earthly
ministry he now continues to do through his
Spirit-empowered followers.
28- What kind of book is Acts?
- Acts is a story that focuses on key church
leaders. - Acts is theological history.
- As a historian Luke composes a reliable record of
what happened in the move of the gospel from
Jerusalem to Rome. - As a theologian, Luke tells the story for the
purpose of advancing the Christian faith. - Both historian and theologian?
29- Luke shapes his story for theological purposes.
How do we find theology in a story? - Ask the standard story questions
- Pay attention to clues and instructions from the
author - Look carefully at direct discourse
- Single most helpful guideline g look for
repeated themes and patterns.
30- Why did Luke write Acts?
- Many have undertaken to draw up an account of
the things that have been fulfilled among us,
just as they were handed down to us by those who
from the first were eyewitnesses and servants of
the word. Therefore, since I myself have
carefully investigated everything from the
beginning, it seemed good also to me to write an
orderly account for you, most excellent
Theophilus, so that you may know the certainty of
the things you have been taught.
Luke 11-4 - Acts as a comprehensive discipleship manual?
31- Luke shows believers that what God promised in
the OT and fulfilled in Jesus, he now continues
to work out through his church.
- Lukes purposes/themes
- Holy Spirit
- Gods sovereignty
- Church
- Prayer
- Suffering
- Gentiles
- Witness
32- How is Acts organized?
- Acts 18 holds the key to understanding how
Luke organizes his story of the triumphant
expansion of the gospel from Jerusalem (heart of
Israel) to Rome (heart of the empire).
In the very last verse of Acts, we find Paul in
a Roman prison, but the gospel of Jesus Christ
marches on without hindrance (last word in
the Greek text).
33- Grasping the message of Acts
- We read Acts in the much the same way that we
read the Gospels - One major interpretive challenge
34- We suggest that we interpret Acts as both
normative and descriptive. Difficulty is knowing
what is normative and what is merely descriptive. - Guidelines for discerning what is normative.
- Look for what Luke intended to communicate.
- Look for positive and negative examples in the
characters of the story. - Read individual episodes in light of the overall
story. - Look to other parts of Acts for clarification.
- Look for repeated patterns and themes.
35NT Revelation
- Introduction
- Your initial response to reading Revelation?
- revelation of Jesus Christ (Rev. 11)
- revelation unveiling or open display
- of Jesus Christ both about Jesus and from
Jesus - In this final chapter of the Bible, God pulls
back the curtain to give his people a glimpse of
his plans for human historyplans that center
around Jesus.
36- Historical context
- Persecution of Christians is becoming more
intense and widespread. - 19 23, 9-10, 13 38 69
- Emperor Domitian (A.D. 81-96)
or
37- But some Christians are turning away from Christ
and compromising with the world system. - Revelation has a double-edged message
Comfort for those suffering persecution
Warning for the complacent and compromising
38- Literary genre?
- A letter
- Opens and closes like a NT letter (14-5 2221)
- Whole book is a letter, not just chapters 2-3
- Like other NT letters, Revelation is situational
- The central theme may be overcoming
39- A prophetic letter (13 226-7, 10, 18-19)
- Includes both prediction and proclamation with an
emphasis on proclamation. - Revelation is not just about the future it is
about what God wants in the here and now. - An unsealed or open book (2210)
40- A prophetic-apocalyptic letter
- Apocalyptic
- Literature in which God promises to intervene in
human history to overthrow evil and establish his
kingdom - Intensified form of Hebrew prophecy written
during time of crisis - Ezekiel, Daniel, Zechariah in the OT
- Abundance of strange and bizarre images (picture
language)
41- What is the purpose of Revelation?
- Readers enter the symbolic world created by the
images of Revelation to get heavenly perspective
on their own world.
- Revelation uses prophetic counter-images to
answer the question Who is Lord? - Main message God will win!
42- Interpreting Revelation
- Traditional approaches
- Preterist
- Historicist
- Futurist
- Idealist
combines strengths of each
43- Guidelines for reading Revelation
- Read Revelation with humility.
- Try to discover the message to the original
readers. - Dont try to detect a strict chronological map of
future events. - Take Revelation seriously, but dont always take
it literally. - Pay attention when John identifies an image.
- Look to the OT and historical-cultural context
when interpreting images and symbols. - Above all, focus on the main idea and dont press
all the details.
44- How does Revelation unfold?
- Introduction (11-322)
- Vision of God and the Lamb (41-514)
- Opening of the Seven Seals (61-81)
- Sounding of the Seven Trumpets (82-1119)
- People of God vs. Powers of Evil (121-1420)
- Pouring out of the Seven Bowls (151-1621)
- Judgment of Babylon (171-195)
- Gods Ultimate Victory (196-225)
- Conclusion (226-21)
45- Conclusion
- A prophetic-apocalyptic letter
- Using powerful picture language
- To comfort the suffering and warn the
comfortable. - Revelation answers the question Who is Lord?
- Revelation gives us the heavenly perspective we
need to overcome. - God will win!