Title: FOUNDATIONS OF BIBLE STUDY
1FOUNDATIONS OF BIBLE STUDY
- More Pointers on Observation
2The "Materials" in Observation
- We identified five kinds of materials
- Biography (persons).
- Geography (places, but could also include more
specific locations such as house, synagogue,
etc.). - Chronology (time).
- History (events).
- Ideology (ideas).
- 52
3The 1st stage of Analytical Reading or Rules for
finding what a book is about
- Classify the book according to kind and subject
matter. - State what the whole book is about with the
utmost brevity. - Enumerate its major parts in their order and
relation, and outline these parts as you have
outlined the whole. - Define the problem or problems the author is
trying to solve. - Adler, Mortimer J. and Charles VanDoren. 1972.
How to read a book The classic guide to
intelligent reading. New York, NY A Touchstone
Book.
4"Materials" Observation in Mark 9
- Biographical Repetition
- In 94, 5 Elijah is mentioned as appearing to
Peter, James, and John, and Elijah is mentioned
again in 911-13 when these men question Jesus
regarding Elijah and Jesus replies. (In this
observation of repetition we are focusing on
mention of the person of Elijah.) - Historical Progression
- In the above passage Peter, James, and John
first "see" Elijah and then later they ask
Jesus a question about him. (Note that the focus
is now on what happened (event), even though the
same persons are involved. We observe a
progression from seeing to questioning. Perhaps
we could also see something of a cause-effect
relation here, though that may be more
interpretive in view of the statement Jesus makes
in verse 9 and the disciples reaction to that in
verse 10.) - 53
5"Materials" Observation in Mark 9
- Geographical Progression
- Between 92,9,14 the narrative relates Jesus'
association with Peter, James, and John to first
being on the mountain, then, to coming down the
mountain, and finally to their approaching the
disciples and a great crowd. Clearly our focus is
on the locations of Jesus with the three men, and
there is a progression in that respect. Thus we
have a geographical progression. - Chronological Connective (indicating simultaneous
action) - We observe a grammatical relation in 99. "As"
at the beginning of the sentence indicates that
it was while Jesus and the three men were
descending the mountain that Jesus exhorted them
to be silent about what they has just seen. - 53
6"Materials" Observation in Mark 9
- Ideological Contrast
- In 912 Jesus affirms that Elijah comes for
restoration purposes (in response to a question
vs.11), but then abruptly speaks of the suffering
of the Son of Man. There is a sudden change of
topic, even though the logical connective "and
how" does not make this contrast explicit. This
is observation of a grammatical relation between
two clauses, with the focus on the subject matter
concerned. - Ideological Interchange (with Progression)
- Between 912-13 Jesus speaks of Elijah coming
(vs.12a), then refers to the suffering of the Son
of Man (vs.12b), and then returns to the Elijah
topic, but with the explanation that Elijah has
already come (vs. 13). This is an observation of
a literary relation, since we are not really
relating verse 13 to verse 12a grammatically. - 53-54
7"Materials" Observation in Mark 9
- Historical Contrast
- In 92-8 there is no dialogue between Jesus and
the three men with him, as Jesus is transfigured
before them (although Jesus speaks with Elijah
and Moses). But in 99-14 there is dialogue
Jesus' command (vs. 9) the question from the
three (vs.11) Jesus' response (vss. 12-13). The
focus is upon what happened (event). Note also
that here we are relating two paragraphs as
wholes to each other. We shall discuss this
further in Chapter Four. - Historical Progression (a subject with its three
verbs) - We observe in 915 three predicates following
the subject ("crowd") "were greatly amazed,"
"ran up to him," and "greeted him." In this
series of predicates there is a progression in
the way the crowd responds to Jesus. - 54
8Observation of Implicit Structural Relationships
- Many times the line of demarcation between what
is observation and what is interpretation is
fairly thin. - This is the case when structural relations are
more implicit than explicit. - The arrangement of the text makes quite clear
that a particular relation is intended, but there
is no connecting word which makes the relation
explicit. - 54
9Observation of Implicit Structural Relationships
- Ex The reference to John's preaching mission in
14 is followed immediately by a description of
the mass exodus to him from Judea and Jerusalem
(15). - Mark surely intends his readers to see a
cause-effect relation between verses 4 and 5. But
there is no connecting word or phrase such as
"therefore" or "for this reason. - When in doubt, it is probably safer to regard the
relation that we think we see as interpretation
on our part. - 54
10Analyzing the Structure of a Paragraph
- The main criterion for identifying a paragraph is
a unifying theme which is dominant enough to
separate a group of verses or lines off from
other verses or lines. - The dominant theme might center around an event,
such as Jesus' baptism in Mark 19-11. Or a
dominant idea might form the paragraph, such as
the parable in Mark 426-29 wherein the Kingdom
of God is compared to a growing seed. - Similarly, sub-themes within a paragraph unit
help to determine the boundaries of a give
paragraph. - 55
11Analyzing the Structure of a Paragraph
- Mark 135-39 as a sample of paragraph analysis.
- Jesus withdraws and prays, verse 35.
- Simon and others with him pursue Jesus, find him,
and state that everyone is searching for Jesus,
verses 36-37. - Jesus responds with a pronouncement of his
mission, verse 38. - Jesus engages in his mission, verse 39.
- 56
12Analyzing the Structure of a Paragraph
- The "broad structure of the paragraph
- I. The purpose of Simon and others to locate
Jesus (vss. 35-37). -
- The purpose of Jesus to go elsewhere for his
mission (vss.38-39). - 56
13Analyzing the Structure of a Paragraph
- In the broad structure, we observe quite a
contrast in purposes. (The people want to find
Jesus Jesus wants to leave the people and go
elsewhere to fulfill his mission.) - There is a cause-effect relation between "a" and
"b" in that the absence of Jesus precipitated the
search for Jesus. This is evident from what Mark
says about Jesus' withdrawal. - There is a contrast between "b" and "c.
- There is a progression between "c" and "d.
- 56
14Recognizing a "Spiritual Truth" in Your Study
- If you have difficulty in recognizing a spiritual
truth, it probably reflects a need to work
further at integrating the intellectual and
devotional aspects of Bible study. - Most of our prior study has been to ascertain
what the text meant to those to whom it was
given. This is the work of exegesis, and it is
not only appropriate but necessary. - However, if our contemplation of the text does
not go beyond this, our study is little more than
academic. - 57
15Assignment for Week 3
- Type up your assessment of Assignment 2 and turn
in on class3. - Assignment 3
- Review ch. 2- literary relations
- Read ch. 3.
- Read Mark 114-45 and observe the following
- Try to observe relations between clauses and
between sentences. - Try to observe relations between paragraphs and
any significant relations between Mark 114-45
and 11-13
16Assignment for Week 3
- State no less than 10 and no more than 12 of your
most significant observations. - Make your observation cover the entire portion of
Mark 114-45 as you think is best. - Remember to always number your observations and
to included verse references with your
observations as appropriate. - For each paragraph, give a brief title of a few
words that are drawn from that paragraph. The
title should remind YOU of the contents of the
paragraph. - Read Traina pp 55-79 online (under week 2) at
www.garrettministries.org or on reserve in
library.