Sunday, January 3, 2010

Review of Donald Ross paper

Joel Barnes reviews the paper I mentioned earlier.

Another reading plan...

If the plan I mentioned earlier is too disjointed for you (four different places in the Bible), you can also try following along at Step thru the Scriptures. This plan consists of two separate readings a day, and it too is accompanied by comments.

Grammatical Concepts 101 for Biblical Greek

Grammatical Concepts 101 for Biblical Greek: Learning Biblical Greek Grammatical Concepts Through English Grammar Grammatical Concepts 101 for Biblical Greek: Learning Biblical Greek Grammatical Concepts Through English Grammar by Gary A. Long


My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This book is an excellent supplement to a standard 1st year NT Greek grammar. I no longer have access to a copy of the book, so my comments will be general; this book provides material behind and beyond and in between that of a typical 1st year (and maybe even 2nd year!) grammar.

Behind

A good grammar will enlist linguistics to aid the student in acquiring NT Greek. This book provides additional background to this important topic; it fleshes out and provides context to the brief discussions that are only included in the beginning grammars for pragmatic reasons.

Beyond

This book takes the student beyond most introductory grammars by discussing topics related (or part of?) linguistics such as semantics and discourse analysis. A beginning grammar might be headed towards these topics, but doesn’t usually get there.

In Between

Not only does Long provide material that is normally left out of grammars, he also assists with the material that the grammars do cover (cases, declensions, pronouns, verbs, etc). His definitions are clear and his discussions are tight. From what I can tell, reading his coverage on topics such as verbal aspect provides a more mature orientation than most beginning grammars are able to give.

In short, use this book as a companion to whatever introductory Greek grammar you are studying. It provides background and context that will assist in your journey to understand and use Greek.

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Friday, January 1, 2010

For the Love of God...For Free!

Justin Taylor links to the new For the Love of God blog. You can go there each day to get your reading schedule, and to get Carson's comment. It looks like they will be going through Volume 1 this year.

You can also see my last post.

For the Love of God

For the Love of God: A Daily Companion for Discovering the Treasures of God's Word For the Love of God: A Daily Companion for Discovering the Treasures of God's Word by D.A. Carson


My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Here is a devotional companion that I can stick to! And better yet, it is currently one of two volumes, and word has it that Carson is working on Volumes 3 and 4.

As Carson notes in the preface, many devotional guides will have you read a handful of verses here and some personal gems there. Both the selection of readings and the application comments made on them may well provide encouragement to the Christian, “but they do not provide the framework of what the Bible says—the ‘plotline’ or ‘storyline’—the big picture that makes sense of all the little bits of the Bible” (p.x). Carson continues:

“Wrongly used, such devotional guides may ultimately engender the profoundly wrong-headed view that God exists to sort out my problems; they may foster profoundly mistaken interpretations of Scripture, simply because the handful of passages they treat are no longer placed within the framework of the big picture.”

After exposing the needs of the hour, this devotional seeks to meet them. First, by its reading plan: an average day’s allotment is four chapters, all from four different books of the Bible (a slight modification of the plan devised by the great Scottish minister, Robert M’Cheyne). After a year the reader has read the entire Bible once, and the NT and Psalms twice. Second, by the comments, which generally focus on just one of the four readings for the day. I will review the reading scheme and the comments in turn.

Reading Plan
As previously mentioned, an average day calls for the reading of four chapters from four different parts of Scripture. So on January 1st, for example, one would read Genesis 1, Ezra 1, Matthew 1, and Acts 1. This example of readings illustrates the potential this plan has for meeting Carson’s end, for one realizes that each of these chapters tells the story of a distinct ‘beginning’ (a fitting theme for the first day in a new year) in the Bible (in reverse order, the beginning of the church, of Jesus Christ, of God’s people’s return to Jerusalem, and of the universe). Reading the chapters against each other leads one to discover legitimate links throughout the canon, links which make up the “framework” of Scripture.

Reading consecutively from different sections of Scripture not only helps the Bible ‘stick’ to the reader, but it helps the reader stick to reading Scripture! Reading multiple chapters from the same book of the Bible might be great when you’re in Esther, but what happens to your motivation when you’re faced with three days in a row of 1 Chronicles 1 – 12? Reading across Scripture rather than through it guarantees that what seems (at first, at least) to be leaner sections are supplemented by scriptures whose nourishment is more easily gleaned.


Comments
Like the readings, these too are committed to “helping the reader keep the big picture of the Bible’s ‘story line’ in mind, and to see what relevance this has for our thinking and living” (p.13). Carson’s commitment to showing the big picture edges out concerns of always providing a personal, individual, ‘boost’ to the reader: “although I want the comments to be edifying, this edification is not always of a private, individualized sort. My aim is to show, in however preliminary a way, that reading the whole Bible must stir up thoughtful Christians to thinking theologically and holistically, as well as reverently and humbly” (p.13).

I know of no other devotional whose comments are as faithful to context and yet stirring to the imagination. Carson never (I dare say) makes an application at the expense of context. And for him, unlike many others, context is not restricted to the historical and literary, but also includes the canonical. Thus reflection on Psalm 68:11 (“The Lord announced the word, and great was the company of those who proclaimed it”) begins at the historical contextual level, where “the ‘word’ that the Lord announced is the word of [battle:] victory”, and legitimately winds its way to the canonical level, to Jesus Christ himself:

“The ultimate end of the exile, the ultimate triumph of God, lies in the gospel itself. As in the case of the beautiful feet pounding across the mountains to bring the good news, and as in the case of the company of those who proclaimed the word the Lord announced, so also with us (and how much more so!): the only right response to the word of the glorious victory of God in the cross of Jesus Christ is that there be a great company to proclaim it.”

In this volume Carson frequently comments on the readings that lie in the minor and major prophets. Most of us would admit that at times these books of the Bible can be tough slogging. Carson’s comments not only furthered my understanding of these important books, but they also kept me coming back each day for more!

Tune in a year from now, Lord willing, for a review of Volume 1. And in the meantime, pick up one of the volumes yourself and enjoy!

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