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11-20-2006, 11:21 AM | #1 |
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"Whose Bible is it?" by J. Pelikan: Scholarship or Sermon?
I've just finished Whose Bible Is It? by Jaroslav Pelikan, and I found it a bit of a disappointment. I wonder of other forumers have read it and share that impression.
The book is subtitled A Short History of the Scriptures. It is indeed fairly short, just over 250 pages in the Penguin soft cover edition. It also does a bit of history of the bible, but not as much as it could have. It starts with several chapters that summarize the contents of the OT and the NT. Interesting, but not the first thing one would expect in a history. Interspersed with this, in the OT part, are some no doubt interesting things about the various parts of the OT, how Judaism sees it. Also interspersed with this is a not insignificant bit of preaching, testifying, witnessing, or whatever you want to call it. This makes the book difficult to read, you constantly have to be on guard and wonder what is scholarship and what is personal religious conviction. For example, Pelikan points out the oral background of the OT, in a chapter called "The God who Speaks." Fine, except for the fact that you get the impression that Pelikan firmly believes that God actually spoke. What is the problem with that? Well, he correctly remarks that the written version of the OT follows a spoken one, in other words the written words follow the spoken words of the OT which follow the spoken words of God. Fine, but what is left undiscussed is if the word of God developed in parallel with the spoken word, and whether that process continued with the written version. That should at least have been mentioned. He also explains how in Judaism it is irreverent to pronounce the name of God, which is why in the King James OT we see "the LORD." Fine, but not a word about the JDEP redaction. Isn't that a bit strange? The book continues that way, with interesting bits intermingled with bits of personal religious conviction, the reader has to constantly figure out which is which. Here is a quite revealing quote from the "final sermon" (as the last few chapters may be termed): (My bold) In other words, only confessional scholarship counts according to Pelikan. And scholarship is strictly secondary to religion. His regard for those outside the church is, with regard to understanding the bile at least, rather limited: So if you don't suffer from an immediate conversion to the ways of church or synagogue when you read the bible, you are obviously not getting it! One can only imagine what Pelikan thinks of actual atheists reading the bible. Now I don't want to leave the impression that the whole book is one long sermon. It isn't and it certainly contains interesting parts. But the preaching as exemplified by the two quotes above deal the credibility of the whole book a serious blow. Gerard Stafleu |
11-21-2006, 04:42 AM | #2 |
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Thanks, GS. I was actually intending to buy this book the next time I am in Bangkok, but from what you've said I'll give it a pass.
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11-21-2006, 06:11 AM | #3 | |
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Just for comparison's sake, try to get the little volume by Philip R. Davies, "Whose Bible is it, Anyway? (or via: amazon.co.uk)" from T & T Clark (a part of the Continuum chain).
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A great little read. Jim Linville |
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11-21-2006, 08:35 AM | #4 |
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Thanks Jim, good timing: my wife just asked me for a Christmas list!
Gerard |
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