Friday, April 27, 2007

Kneel Before God / Krypton 94342


As I was driving in my newly-repaired truck this afternoon, I heard an interesting story on NPR.
Basically, another audio Bible is coming out, but this one features an interesting cast of characters. For instance, Luke Perry (of Beverly Hills: 90210 fame) is Judas, Marisa Tomei as Mary Magdelene, Richard Dreyfuss as Moses (a better choice than Heston, I believe), and the one and only Jim Caviezel as Jesus himself (who else can play Jesus?).

The real kicker for me, though, is Terence Stamp who played Zod in "Superman II" as the voice of God. There is something ridiculous about Zod playing God.


As far as the title of the post :
"Kneel before Zod" was a line out of Superman II
"Krypton" is the planet from which Superman and Zod come from and 94342 is one of the zip codes of Jerusalem (you know, like Beverly Hills : 90210.....)

Lack of Posting : Part Deux.

If you're from the south, you may be familiar with the phrases "drive it like you stole it" and "drive it 'til the tires fall off." I took the latter a bit too literally and last week while I was driving home my tire exploded off of my truck. Everyone's alright. Unfortunately, my truck's been in the shop for the last week which has hindered my ability to go to the coffee shop which is where I write most of my blog posts. I should get my truck back today and the blogging will pick up shortly.

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

The Lack of Posting

I apologize for the lack of posting. I was busy with the conference over the weekend and this week has been pretty hectic. The main pain has been a paper I presented in class today titled "Fetishism as a means for Alienation and Exploitation of the Proletariat." Woo hoo.

I plan on posting my review for the second chapter of Downing's "The Bible and Flying Saucers" soon.

Saturday, April 14, 2007

Last Twelve Verses in Mark Conference : The Fat Lady Sang.

I just got out of the conference and I suppose I should write some initial thoughts. If you'd like a blow-by-blow account of the meeting, Alan Knox was kind enough to blog through the entire session.

All of the speakers did a fantastic job. It was interesting to find that even though one may not agree with vss 9-20 being original, there's a myriad of other theories to which one can adhere. For instance, Dr. Black and Dr. Robinson both agreed that the long ending (L.E.) is the original, but for different reasons. Dr. Robinson's appeal was primarily to internal evidence, showing how Markan 9-20 really is, giving a brief account of manuscript evidence, etc. However, Dr. Black, contrary to Robinson, holds to Matthaen priority and nearly all of his argument rests on patristic evidence. Dr. Black holds to the idea that there was initially a version of Mark, penned by Mark under the guidance of Peter, that did not include 9-20. After Peter's death, Mark added 9-20 as an homage to Peter. Thus, there were copies of Mark's gospel circulating that ended at verse 8.


Dr. Keith Elliot was brilliant. Is it just me or is there something about British theologians being the kindest people alive?! I chatted with him a bit last night after he spoke (he was the 3rd and final speaker Friday night, which was pretty amazing considering his "body time" was about 2am) and he treated me like a friend. Dr. Elliot made the case that 9-20 is not original, but that Mark did not originally end at 16:8 either. He believes that the ending was lost. He discussed the various scribes in Sinaiticus and how "D"s writing actually gets bigger (or is more spaced out) towards the end, as if he were aiming to fill up space that had originally been left for...more verses, perhaps? Wallace had dismissed the gap in Vaticanus as being something that happens in Vaticanus anyway, but Elliot had a quick response that the other three gaps (after Nehemiah, Daniel, and Tobit) are all Old Testament. Also, after Nehemiah in Vaticanus comes the Psalter, which is written in 2 columns and not 3, so it makes sense for there to be a gap. The gap after Daniel was explained easily, as it is the end of the OT in Vaticanus.

Dr. Bock and Dr. Wallace both agreed that 16:8 was the original ending. Wallace did a great job explaining the cumulative weight of evidence against 9-20 being original. He made some interesting points, noting that Smith's "Secret Mark" is actually more Markan than 9-20.

Dr. Bock had the task of wrapping everything up today. He was the last speaker and his job was basically to see where we are currently. He talked a lot about presuppositions and interpretations. He noted that all the scholars agreed on most of the facts (patristic witnesses, manuscript evidence, etc), but their interpretations were different due to the "models" in which they operated.


Some thoughts of my own:
Not enough evidence was brought forth to show that books end in a post-positive γαρ. With my little Greek knowledge, this seems somewhat awkward. Wallace mentioned that there are ancient writings that have open-ended conclusions, but didn't mention any. Bock mentioned that in the Gospels there are some "open-ended" conclusions. The end of Acts, for example. What happens to Paul? What happens to the Jews?

I didn't think sufficient evidence had been brought forth to show why anyone would omit 9-20. Either Black's or Elliot's theory seems to work better here.

It's interesting that scholars can look at 9-20 and there's a debate over how Markan or not it is. Everyone had pretty convincing arguments, Dr. Robinson's being the most in depth (concerning the vocabulary, style, etc). I suppose the only thing left for me to do is see what I think about it on my own. Sheesh. This is what conferences are for... to answer questions, not create them!

Overall, the conference was really great. Dr. Bock's lecture in the end had some good advice: don't subscribe to a brittle fundamentalism. Understand that we all have the facts (dots) and your interpretations may differ from others (how you connect those dots). I like this kind of thinking (when it's appropriate). As Dr. Bock said, if we take out 9-20, we lose nothing. Almost everything (aside from poison and snakes, which I admit is a bit unattractive and seems to be uncharacteristic of Jesus' words...but what do I know?) is included elsewhere in the New Testament.

Friday, April 13, 2007

Yet Another Blog Added To The Blogroll : Kata Ta Biblia

While waiting for the conference to kick off I realized that yet another one of my favorite blogs isn't on my blogroll. Patrick George McCullough is its author and its name is Kata Ta Biblia (according to the Bible, in Greek). Certainly check it out. I really like Patrick's blog and his love of all things Anabaptist.

Last Twelve Verses in Mark Conference Tonight!


In approximately 15 minutes I'm going to head on over and check in for the conference we're having on campus concerning the last twelve verses in Mark. I'm excited. The fact that I'm not well-versed (all my puns are intended) in this area makes it exciting. I've done a bit of reading on the matter, but I'm open to suggestions and the gentlemen presenting at this conference are scholars of first-rate caliber.


Conference website here.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

New to the blogroll: Assembling of the Church

I've added another blog favorite of mine. Alan Knox is a Ph.D student at Southeastern and also serves in the college, teaching NT Greek. As you can probably tell, his blog is primarily focused on the issue of the Church and more precisely : what is the church? It's certainly interesting, so check it out here or on the blogroll.