criticism, biblical
criticism, biblical The examination of the books of the Bible with the resources of historical investigation, archaeology, palaeography, and linguistics. Biblical criticism starts from a conviction that the heterogeneous collection of books which constitute the Bible were written in a variety of
genres for different purposes and readerships by human authors. A biblical critic is a scholar equipped with linguistic skills and literary or historical knowledge who tries to shed light on what the authors of the books were saying, given the thought-world and social and political situations of their own age. The tools for this enterprise have been refined over the past four centuries and are the fruit of the Reformation, the Renaissance, and the 18th-cent. Enlightenment; but, long before, it was recognized that divine inspiration of scripture did not overrule the humanity of the authors.
Origen (185–254 CE), for example, noticed that the letter to the Hebrews could probably not have been written by Paul. The establishment of a
canon of scripture itself witnesses to a process of discrimination and assessment. The first task of biblical criticism is to establish a reliable text; to get as near as possible to what the original authors wrote in Hebrew (or Aramaic) and Greek. This was already being done for classical authors such as Homer when Erasmus (1466–1536 CE) began to apply the same principles to the text of the NT, comparing the variations in the ancient MSS that were available at that time. In the centuries since then many important discoveries have been made and much international research undertaken. The technical investigation is known as textual criticism; sometimes, especially in less recent books of NT introduction, it is referred to as Lower Criticism. For the NT it compares the large number of MSS, together with the many quotations of scripture made by the early Fathers, and also translations of the Greek into
Latin and Syriac; and the verbal differences, mostly only in small details, are very numerous. In a modern Greek NT some are noted in the apparatus criticus at the bottom of each page. It is apparent that scribes copying MSS occasionally wrote twice (‘dittography’) or omitted a few words, or, in the case of a MS being written from dictation, misheard. It is even possible that scribes sometimes felt at liberty to add something on their own account. The process of tracking down and eliminating such errors is the work of textual criticism. But for all the labour expended, we do not possess the precise words penned by the NT authors. What we can now say with some confidence is that we have the NT text as it was read in the main centres of Christian learning about 200 CE.
Historical criticism, sometimes called Higher Criticism, deals with questions of authorship and date, editorial arrangements of sources, historicity, literary categories (
genres), and doctrinal tendencies. Historical criticism acquired a bad name amongst orthodox churchmen because its pioneers were unbelievers, like Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679 CE) in the
Leviathan; but early work was also done by Roman Catholics: Jean Astruc, a French professor of medicine (1684–1766 CE), noted that Genesis was a compilation of several earlier documents, following a book (Eng. edn., 1682) of OT history by the Oratorian priest Richard Simon (1638–1712 CE) which pioneered
Pentateuchal criticism and was burnt by Louis XIV. These works were translated into German, which in due course led to the establishment of the view that much of the
Pentateuch was written after the time of the great prophets. The classical 19th-cent. view of the source criticism of the Pentateuch was the work of Karl
Graf and Julius
Wellhausen. The traditional view that these books were written by Moses was shown to be untenable. Archaeological discoveries also suggested that the religion of the Hebrews had Marked similarities to that of other peoples. At the same time scientists' work on the origin of species showed that the accounts of
creation in Gen. did not correspond to the fact of biological evolution.
Similar investigation of the gospels followed. Since the three
synoptic gospels often preserve passages where word after word is the same, who copied from whom? Or did some common source which each used exist? The most widely held theory today is that Mark was written first and was used by both Matthew and Luke, but there is no final solution about the non-Marcan material which Matthew and Luke share, though a majority of scholars maintain that Matthew and Luke both had access to a body of teaching material, which has been given the symbol
Q. The scrutiny of the documents in this way is called Source Criticism.
A degree of frustration with Source Criticism, together with interest in recent explorations of folk literature in various cultures, led several German biblical scholars in the 1920s to go behind the written sources and try to show how the traditions embodied in the gospels had come to be shaped during the generation when they were passed on by word of mouth. It was suggested that the stories developed out of a particular life-setting (
Sitz-im-Leben) a kind of form which followed patterns, or ‘laws’, which could be inferred. Hence the name ‘
Form Criticism’. Fundamental to it was the view that the stories and incidents in the synoptic gospels originally existed as independent units and in course of oral transmission were adapted to the needs of the community. These units were then strung together by Mark and his successors without any reliable information relating to chronological or topographical references.
OT scholarship was no less interested in the life-situations in which the literature was developed. Several of the psalms were ascribed to the coronation ceremonies of the kings in the Temple. But on the whole Form Criticism of the OT had a more conservative tone than the corresponding NT discipline.
Subsequent reflection on the gospels has moved toward insisting on the careful coordination and structures of the evangelists —as also in OT scholarship much more regard is had for the final editorial result of the books than in breaking them up into their sources. It is recognized that the gospels are compiled in a sophisticated manner to bring out the theological drives of each author. They are theological interpretations of a piece of history, not simple reports of what actually happened. In Britain, this post-Form Critical outlook was pioneered by R. H. Lightfoot and A. M.
Farrer, and in Germany where the name
Redaction Criticism became familiar, by Willi Marxsen of Münster and Hans
Conzelmann of Göttingen.
The Bible has a central place in the doctrine and the liturgy of all the Christian Churches but it is not venerated as the Qur'an is by Islam. Muslims hold that the Qur'an was dictated to Muhammad by God and that its inerrant narrative and incomparable, incorruptible Arabic has been properly maintained down the centuries. Any thoughts of ‘criticism’ would be
blasphemy. Criticism of the OT and NT by Christians is not blasphemous nor does it mean hostile, destructive criticism.
Many in the Churches, however, are content to ignore biblical criticism with its open and unrestricted efforts to reach the truth. There is a fear that once the gospels are assessed for historical reliability and some events judged not to have happened at all, there is no knowing where such free historical enquiry may end. Nevertheless biblical critics have given impetus and encouragement to ecumenical dialogue in as much as scholarship has undermined untenable prejudices and dogmas. And many biblical critics in the areas mentioned, and also those writing on
Canonical Criticism,
narrative criticism and
Reader-Response Criticism, did or do participate in the liturgical life of the Churches, and insist that as theologians they are at least as interested in the finished state of the texts as in unravelling their underlying sources.
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The Future of Biblical Archaeology: Reassessing Methodologies and Assumptions.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Shofar; 9/22/2006; ; 700+ words
; The Future of Biblical Archaeology: Reassessing Methodologies...26.00. The Future of Biblical Archaeology: Reassessing Methodologies...Davis ("Theory and Method in Biblical Archaeology"), Daniel E. Fleming...
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Shifting Sands: The Rise and Fall of Biblical Archaeology
Magazine article from: Near Eastern Archaeology; 12/1/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...Sands: The Rise and Fall of Biblical Archaeology By Thomas W. Oavis. Oxford...be a concise history of "biblical archaeology"-from its very beginnings...development of the field of biblical archaeology, discussing various luminaries...
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Between Text and Artifact: Integrating Archaeology in Biblical Studies Teaching
Magazine article from: The Catholic Biblical Quarterly; 1/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...and Artifact: Integrating Archaeology in Biblical Studies Teaching (SBL Archaeology...Critical Survey of Handbooks on Biblical Archaeology" (pp. 67-98); Scott...whole controversy about "biblical archaeology." She traces the development...
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The Future of Biblical Archaeology: Reassessing Methodologies and Assumptions; The Proceedings of a Symposium, August 12-14, 2001, at Trinity International University
Magazine article from: The Catholic Biblical Quarterly; 1/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...eds.), The Future of Biblical Archaeology: Reassessing Methodologies...Paper $26. The Future of Biblical Archaeology publishes the proceedings...The first part, entitled "Biblical Archaeology: The Recent Debate and Future...
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The Future of Biblical Archaeology: Reassessing Methodologies and Assumptions
Magazine article from: Trinity Journal; 10/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...Millard, eds. The Future of Biblical Archaeology: Reassessing Methodologies...As a field of endeavor, "biblical archaeology" has unquestionably been...archaeology or departments of biblical archaeology have been discontinued...
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AN Introduction to Biblical Archaeology.
Magazine article from: The Journal of the American Oriental Society; 7/1/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...he acknowledges that "'biblical archaeology' has become the archaeology...period. A postscript treats "Biblical Archaeology and Biblical Studies...intended. An Introduction to Biblical Archaeology would, in fact, be an ideal...
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Analysis: Biblical archaeology
Transcript from: Talk of the Nation (NPR); 3/19/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...00-00-0000 Analysis: Biblical archaeology Host: NEAL CONAN Time...We'll be talking about biblical archaeology. Archaeologists now cast...you look at the history of biblical archaeology, early on biblical scholars...
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The Mythic Past: Biblical Archaeology and the Myth of Israel
Magazine article from: The Middle East Journal; 1/1/2000; ; 700+ words
; The Mythic Past: Biblical Archaeology and the Myth of Israel...between Palestinian and biblical history. Clearly...Palestine retrievable from archaeology has no place for the...Nevertheless, to downgrade biblical history into the annals...
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What Did the Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It? What Archaeology Can Tell Us about the Reality of Ancient Israel
Magazine article from: Interpretation; 7/1/2002; ; 654 words
; ...a primer in Palestinian archaeology. Dever takes on the revisionist school of biblical interpretation, which regards...in conversation with the biblical text. In contrast to a discredited "biblical archaeology," which sought to use...
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What Did the Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It? What Archaeology Can Tell Us About the Reality of Ancient Israel.(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Interpretation; 7/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...a primer in Palestinian archaeology. Dever takes on the revisionist school of biblical interpretation, which regards...in conversation with the biblical text. In contrast to a discredited "biblical archaeology," which sought to use...
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biblical archaeology
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
biblical archaeology term applied to the archaeology...cultural setting of its time. Biblical archaeology developed in earnest in the early...cent. BC After two centuries of biblical archaeology, it is possible to read the Bible...
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Archaeology in the Middle East
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa
...Palmyra. The field of biblical archaeology was inaugurated by...formative period in biblical archaeology. Intense interest...underpinnings of modern archaeology, namely that human existence predated the biblical Flood, the theory...
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archaeology
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...Rawlinson from the Behistun rock in Iran. Archaeology in Mesopotamia was notably advanced in the...beginning in 1947, aroused new interest in biblical studies (see biblical archaeology ). Interest in complex New World cultures...
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criticism, biblical
Book article from: A Dictionary of the Bible
criticism, biblical The examination of the books...historical investigation, archaeology, palaeography, and linguistics. Biblical criticism starts from a conviction...readerships by human authors. A biblical critic is a scholar equipped...
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Archaeology
Encyclopedia entry from: UXL Encyclopedia of Science
...languages. Classical archaeology. Classical archaeologists...The roots of classical archaeology can be traced to the European fascination with Biblical studies and ancient...twentieth century, most archaeology consisted of randomly...
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