![]() vigilantly taxonomish
What a pretentious thread title.
OK, so. Welcome to another liveblogging, ladies and gentlefellows. This'll be rather different from my last one.
I have read parts of the Bible before, but I have only once attempted to read it in full. On that occasion, I don't think I finished The Book of Genesis.
The copy of the Book which I have in front of me is the Good News Bible. I suppose in some respects it's a controversial translation, but then, what Biblical translation isn't? I've chosen this version in spite of the somewhat simplistic language, because it's the version favoured by the church that I attended and the version which I am most familiar with. I do, however, have access to the Revised Standard Edition and the King James Bible, which I can consult if anyone takes issue with aspects of the translation I have here.
Disclaimer: I am an agnostic and a former Christian. I am going to give my honest opinions here, because to do otherwise would, to my mind, not be a proper liveblogging. While I won't promise to be entirely reverent the whole time, this is emphatically not a Mickey take. I'm going to be respectful, and I request that comments be kept similarly respectful, please.
Oh, and the Bible is rather long, so who knows how far I'll get.
![]() You can't even write racist abuse in excrement on somebody's car without the politically correct brigade jumping down your throat!
![]() vigilantly taxonomish
^^ Yes, but I used it.
Thanks for the word, by the way.
edited 25th Dec '09 1:21:39 PM by BobbyG ![]() Have a Banana!
Exegesis? I did one of those last year. I was shocked to discover that this semester's Biblical Foundations class was not required to do that paper. Sure, it was a lot of work, but it's one of the few things that should be Serious Business.
"Brunch" is a wonderful word. It's code for "I slept in late", but sounds so high-class.
![]() DUMB
I want to do an exegesis of the Vedas now... I mean, they have armies of flying monkeys.
No wait, that's the Mahabharata. But I really want to read that anyway.
edited 25th Dec '09 1:29:34 PM by Tzetze rrrrrrrrr
I've tried many different versions of the Christian Bible. My overall impression is still "meh."
The best ones I've seen are either transliterated with the original Hebrew and/or Greek next to the English translations, or the New Jerusalem Bible (which includes alternate interpretations and theological references in footnotes).
Sakamoto demands an explanation for this shit.
![]() Lead.
This should be interesting. I'm actually devout Christian so it'll be nice to hear a view different from the fundamentalists' and the haters'.
The emotions of others can seem like such well guarded mysteries, people 8egin to 8elieve that's how their own emotions should 8e treated.
![]() vigilantly taxonomish
Y'know, I'm not sure the thread title was such a great idea. Y'all are no doubt expecting a much more sophisticated analysis than I'm actually capable of.
Are you sitting comfortably? Then we'll begin.
The edition I have opens each book with a short summary and a helpful table of contents. This is handy for the purposes of liveblogging, because it means that the longer books are divided up into smaller headed sections, longer than the traditional chapters. We therefore begin The Old Testament with "The Story of Creation", which is an extremely familiar passage to me, and one of the more famous parts of the Bible.
Genesis 1
The book of Genesis begins with God's creation of the universe. At this point, the Earth exists, but is empty and without form, submerged in water and absolutely devoid of light. The Spirit of God (a footnote informs me that this could equally be "the power of God", "a wind from God" or "an awesome wind") moves over the water, and God commands:
edited 25th Dec '09 6:18:11 PM by BobbyG ![]() DUMB
For the "we", that's probably attributable to translation... I've never heard of that before. Perhaps somebody who actually knows something about biblical criticism knows better than I do.
The thing I never got about Genesis was why it happens twice, or actually why it happens twice and nobody finds this strange.
![]() ALMSIVI
Tzetze, everyone finds it strange. It's one of those things that Biblical scholars argue about. Or used to. They might've reached some sort of concensus, but seeing as though they're arguing about the Bible, I doubt it.
![]() "You fail to grasp the basic principles of mad science. Common sense would be cheating." - Narbonic
![]() DUMB
Katrika's reaction is just what I mean.
The story of God creating the animals and so on is repeated. I've usually heard that it was a scribe putting together two stories, but I've never heard a Christian notice it before and it's strange to me.
![]() vigilantly taxonomish
I don't think it actually happens twice, but I do know that it's described twice, and the details are different the second time.
That always seemed kind of weird to me, too. I've heard two possible explanations: either that Genesis describes two different creation myths (using "myth" in the sense of mythology here, not of untruth), both of which were current, or alternatively, that the early parts of Genesis are metaphorical, and the exact details aren't fixed because the details themselves aren't important.
The use of the plural by God to refer to Himself occurs in Genesis 1 verse 26. It's the same in both the King James Version and the Revised Standard Version, although it's probably worth noting that the RSV was based on the American Standard Version, which was based on the KJV, so of course it's the same in both.
![]() You can't even write racist abuse in excrement on somebody's car without the politically correct brigade jumping down your throat!
![]() Fanged Hero
Genesis 1 and Genesis 2 have different sources, from what I recall.
I forget which source contributes to which chapter, though.
![]() "You fail to grasp the basic principles of mad science. Common sense would be cheating." - Narbonic
![]() DUMB
Relevant quotations to illustrate what I mean, from the KJV:
![]() "You fail to grasp the basic principles of mad science. Common sense would be cheating." - Narbonic
![]() Fanged Hero
No, I'm talking about
thisedited 25th Dec '09 6:37:21 PM by Kinkajou ![]() You can't even write racist abuse in excrement on somebody's car without the politically correct brigade jumping down your throat!
![]() DUMB
The point is that the "recap" isn't the same.
Of course saying that the story was later misedited doesn't dilute the holiness of the text, but I just wish that more people would see it.
Where the hell is Zephid? He knows this stuff better than anyone here.
![]() "You fail to grasp the basic principles of mad science. Common sense would be cheating." - Narbonic
![]() Fanged Hero
Again: Genesis 1 - 2:4 and 2:4-25 have different sources.
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