historical criticism
historical criticism Every writing in the OT and NT emerged from a particular social, political, and cultural environment over the course of many centuries, and historical criticism is a modern and tested method of exploring their various origins and tracing their development and significance. Dates and events, as well as people and places mentioned in the narratives, have all to be scrutinized. The scriptures were certainly studied in detail by the Fathers with abundant use of
typology, as by Justin Martyr (
c.150 CE) in his
Apology and
Dialogue with Trypho the Jew. Inconsistencies between the gospels were noted, and Origen was aware of the necessity of textual
criticism. Medieval theologians also found an application or meaning beyond the literal, through
allegorical,
typological, and mystical interpretations. But with the Renaissance there came a determination to give to the Bible that same rigorous scrutiny of what purported to be history as that which was already being applied to the classical literature of Greece and Rome. The first known critic was a French Roman Catholic priest, Richard Simon (1678–1712 CE). He thought that the uncertainty about scripture brought by criticism undermined Protestant dependence upon it, from which Catholicism was happily free. After him most of the great names are German.
The method involved an examination of the texts to check their authenticity and to establish their probable authorship. Comparison is made with documents from other sources and with external evidence provided e.g. by archaeology. Motives, tendencies, interests, presuppositions will all be taken into account. Vocabulary and style must be scrutinized. A major achievement of the 19th cent. was the recognition by Karl
Graf and Julius
Wellhausen that the Pentateuch was compiled from different sources and reached its final form after the time of the great prophets. Other books were seen to be later than had been supposed: Daniel apparently describes events of the 6th cent.
BCE but has been shown to come from the middle of the 2nd cent. in virtue of its accurate account in ch. 11 of Antiochus Epiphanes; the book of Isaiah has been divided to reflect at least two historical periods. Hermann Gunkel (1862–1932) was the founder of OT
Form Criticism after a study of the laws of folk-behaviour in passing on traditions. The OT exhibits characteristics similar to those of early Scandinavia; there exist in the OT recurrent literary categories with a related form, and the social situation in which they were produced can be sought, and the functions which the traditions served can be surmised. Gunkel's OT method was applied to the NT by his pupils, e.g. Rudolf
Bultmann.
The first attempt to map a consistent historical study of the NT was also made in Germany. F. C.
Baur (1792–1860) used the terms thesis, antithesis, and synthesis of the philosopher G. W. F. Hegel (Jewish Christianity met Gentile Christianity and gave birth to
Early Catholicism). J. J.
Griesbach (1745–1812) was a pioneer in synoptic criticism. Research into the life of Jesus took a sceptical turn with D. F. Strauss's
Life of Jesus Critically Examined (1835), which argued that the apparent historical form of the gospels was but the clothing for legends. Much further work on the quest for the historical Jesus continued with J. E. Renan, Adolf
von Harnack, and William
Wrede; until more recently Rudolf
Bultmann (1884–1976), Gunther
Bornkamm (1905–90), and Hans
Conzelmann (1915–89)—who are a few of the many workers in this field. Scholars in America and Great Britain have been no less active.
It has always been important to determine both the date and authorship of each composition, which is done sometimes by indications within the text itself or, sometimes, by archaeological evidence. The dates of 1 Cor. and 2 Cor. are established by the discovery of an inscription at Delphi proving that
Gallio was proconsul of
Achaia in 51/2 CE. Many hypotheses and guesses have been offered for the places where the books of the NT were compiled: Palestine,
Egypt,
Syria, Asia Minor,
Rome. Sometimes fragments of an author's work have been collected together and edited, and sometimes editorial work has combined several sources into a composite whole, as with the
Pentateuch. Historical criticism is therefore closely related to this kind of analysis, and the effects on historical criticism of
Form Criticism were very marked: it suggested that the gospels consist of collections of small units which have passed through a stage of oral tradition shaped according to the needs of the community. Hard on the heels of Form Criticism came
Redaction Criticism, which emphasized the overriding theological ideas of the
evangelists which governed their selection and placing of the available material, and this method too had important implications for the historicity of the narratives. To what extent did the aim of interpretation (e.g. about
eschatology) affect the narratives of the
teaching of Jesus? Or the necessity to invoke the authority of the OT to buttress the claim for the Messiahship of Jesus? Thus the gospel of Luke is not written to prepare for the imminence of the
Parousia but to teach Christians to live in the continuing future. The gospel of Matthew, especially in chs. 11 and 12, contrasts the new era which Jesus has brought with the old which preceded it, which is part of the doctrine of Messiahship.
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Feast of Fools masquerade ball
Newspaper article from: The Sun, San Bernardino, Calif.; 2/16/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...Inland Empire Fellowship is holding a Feast of Fools, a masquerade ball event complete...held between Aug. 22 and Oct. 2. Feast of Fools is different from our other...Cione said the third annual Feast of Fools event will be like a masquerade...
|
|
The Feast of Fools.
Magazine article from: World Literature Today; 6/22/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...Kafka, Koestler. Now comes The Feast of Fools, the most ambitious, the most brilliantly...styles. A list of "players in the feast of fools," the medieval name for...Mann's Magic Mountain? In The Feast of Fools astrology, cosmology...
|
|
`FEAST OF FOOLS' LIGHT, WITTY FARE.(CAPITAL REGION)
Newspaper article from: Albany Times Union (Albany, NY); 8/6/1998; 700+ words
; ...commissioned work of celebration: ``Feast of Fools'' -- Concertino for Bassoon...this concert. ``Feast of Fools'' is a light-hearted divertimento...little subtitle about the ``fool'' of the title, a jester...the new piece. ``Feast of Fools'' will have a second playing...
|
|
Magic Hat's Feast of Fools.(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Modern Brewery Age; 10/25/2004; 533 words
; Magic Hat is now offering a special "Feast of Fools" Holiday 12-pack. According to the company, this "new assembly...a new and unknown beer. This brew will only be sold in the "feast of fools" package.
|
|
Fill up on food, fellowship at Feast of Fools March 5.(Neighbor)
Newspaper article from: Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, IL); 2/26/2000; ; 607 words
; ...plan to attend Lutheran Church of the Master's Feast of Fools March 5. The church's senior high youth group...and so far 8,000 young adults have signed up. Feast of Fools will take place from 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. March...
|
|
Fools' feast to help send kids to camp.(Neighbor)(Carol Stream)
Newspaper article from: Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, IL); 2/12/2004; 636 words
; Byline: Jenny Campbell The "Feast of Fools" spaghetti dinner and talent show offers a home-cooked meal and talented performances from the time the doors open at 4:45...
|
|
Feast of Fools features 'Pagan Idol' competition
Newspaper article from: The Sun, San Bernardino, Calif.; 2/22/2006; ; 700+ words
; It was a gathering complete with colorful costumes, dancing and plenty of Pagans. The third annual Feast of Fools kicked off at the Grand Terrace Lions Community Center with singing, sword and belly dancing - in its first ever Pagan Idol competition...
|
|
Realism show at Davenport museum may make you look twice.("Feast the Eye, Fool the Eye: Still-life and Trompe l'oeil Paintings From the Oscar and Maria Salzer Collection" at Figge Art Museum)
Newspaper article from: Chicago Tribune (Chicago, IL); 8/15/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...Museum of Art, has opened its new quarters in that city with an exhibition dedicated to artistic deceit. Called "Feast the Eye, Fool the Eye: Still-life and Trompe l'oeil Paintings From the Oscar and Maria Salzer Collection," the show is...
|
|
FEAST OF FRENCH FOOLS AT FESTIVAL
Newspaper article from: Belfast Telegraph; 5/4/2009; 234 words
; Les Accousniacs, a street theatre group from France, raise a smile at the 'Festival of Fools' event in the Victoria Centre, Belfast, yesterday. Performers from across the world will be entertaining shoppers again today in the city centre
|
|
FEAST OF FOOLS Jowell ends our carnival tradition
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Telegraph London; 4/10/2005; ; 700+ words
; An extraordinary blunder by Tessa Jowell and her officials at the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) threatens to bring an end to one of the West Country's most spectacular traditions - the vast processions of brightly-lit carnival floats which parade each autumn through the streets of
|
|
Feast of Fools
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Feast of Fools burlesque religious festival of the Middle...fitted out as a high clergyman. During the feast, lower clergymen and minor officials parodied...of the Church. A similar burlesque, the Feast of the Ass, celebrating the donkey on which...
|
|
Fools, Feast of
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to the Theatre
Fools, Feast of, see FEAST OF FOOLS .
|
|
Fool
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to the Theatre
Fool, licensed buffoon of the medieval Feast of Fools , later an important member...confused with the Court Fool . The traditional costume...either a replica of a fool's head on a stick or...figured in the Feast of Fools.
|
|
fool, the
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
fool, the, a character appearing...to the licensed clown of the Feast of Fools. He appears in numerous incarnations...s company the part of the fool was played by W. Kemp until...the more complex parts of the fool in King Lear and Feste in Twelfth...
|
|
Holy fools
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
Holy fools. Figures who subvert prevailing...immediate conformity. The holy fool endeavours to express the...advance into truth. Holy fools are also an important part...festivities, often at the Feast of Fools. This was held at the New...
|