Wednesday, April 08, 2009

It’s that time: the most recent Mohr-Siebeck catalog arrived in the post* the other day.  So time for some old-school, true-to-the-name “biblio-blogging”!

If I had unlimited income, and unlimited reading time, I could be very interested in the following:

Nicholas de Lange, Julia G. Krivoruchko, and Cameron Boyd-Taylor, eds., Jewish Reception of Greek Bible Versions: Studies in Their Use in Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages. (Series: Texts and Studies in Medieval and early Modern Judaism, 23)

Jonathan Marshall, Jesus, Patrons and Benefactors: Roman Palestine and the Gospel of Luke.

Susan E. Docherty, The Use of the Old Testament in Hebrews: A Case Study in Early Jewish Bible Interpretation.

Volker Rabens, The Holy Spirit and Ethics in Paul: Transformation and Empowering for Religious-Ethical Life.

In other Mohr-Siebeck news: Apparently they’ve got a lot of stuff on Google Books, and you can search Mohr books via Google book search on Mohr’s (newly redesigned!) home page. Right column, look for ubiquitous Google icon.


* Whenever stuff from Europe comes by mail, I feel like I need to say “post” instead of “mail”.

Post Author: rico
Wednesday, April 08, 2009 5:33:35 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 

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 Sunday, March 29, 2009

Here’s the paper I presented at BibleTech:2009:

Stylometry and the Septuagint: Applying Anthony Kenny’s Stylometric Study to the LXX

In 1986, Anthony Kenny wrote a book called A Stylometric Study of the New Testament which gives details for compiling and comparing book-by-book stylometric statistics for the Greek New Testament given a morphologically tagged corpus. This exploratory study proposes to apply Kenny's method to the LXX, using the Logos Bible Software LXX Morphology, to analyze style.

While Kenny's primary application of his method was in the area of authorship studies, this paper is more interested in the general style of the LXX, and not at all interested in authorship theories or assigning a 'hand' to different passages. For better or worse, this paper treats the LXX as a corpus, and has little interest in its relationship with the underlying Hebrew text.

Once the analysis has been detailed, some points of interest (known only when the analysis is complete as the nature of the study is exploratory) will be further explored. Areas in which the work could be further developed will also be reviewed.

If you actually read it, and then actually have feedback, then please let me know what you think.

In a nutshell, after looking at book-level and chapter-level distributions of part of speech, case/number/gender, tense/voice/mood; I have a worked example of future tense in Leviticus (and then in the Pentateuch). My conclusion: In the Pentateuch, anyway, future tense verbs appear in concentrated groups. The application is when you read or work through these works, then, you should pay attention to the clustering of the future tense to determine what is going on (law-giving, prophetic stuff, whatever). And, if you run across an isolated instance of the future tense, you should pay double attention to that because it is not normal.

At some point in the future, the audio from the talk will be on the BibleTech website.

Post Author: rico
Sunday, March 29, 2009 10:22:57 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 

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 Saturday, March 28, 2009

It's Saturday, day 2 of BibleTech:2009. My paper (Stylometry and the LXX) is on at 3:00 this afternoon (Room 1 if you're here). I'll post the actual paper later (probably Sunday).

Yesterday was excellent. Intelligent people doing some pretty awesome stuff. The highlights:

The best parts, though, are the in-between times. At BibleTech, the meals are included, so you can get in conversation with folks who you run into (everyone here is doing impressive stuff, not just the people presenting) and learn more about their projects.

Gotta go before the laptop battery dies.

Post Author: rico
Saturday, March 28, 2009 7:27:46 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 

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 Thursday, March 26, 2009

Here she is, helping Mommy make cookies (of which I was the prime beneficiary!)

DSC02751

And again:

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How cute is that? And the cookies were incredibly yummy, thank you very much.

Post Author: rico
Thursday, March 26, 2009 3:24:31 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 

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BibleTech:2009 starts tomorrow (Friday) AM, and I’m ready. My paper is written, I have a reading copy (yes, I’ll be reading it) and I have PowerPoint ready to go too. My presentation is Saturday afternoon from 3:00-3:45 in Room 1. The title of the paper is “Stylometry in the Septuagint: Applying Anthony Kenny’s Stylometric Study to the LXX”. I’ll post a copy of the paper to may academic papers page sometime after the conference. Check the schedule page for more info.

Some folks will be live-blogging the conference, others will be twittering to their heart’s content, I’m sure, but I won’t be doing any of that. Perhaps a post on Friday evening sometime, but maybe not even that. Or maybe a post on Sunday after the whole thing is done; we’ll see.

Looking forward to it! If you’ll be there, make sure to catch up with me during a meal — I’d love to talk more about you with whatever sorts of Bible-techie stuff you’re working on or considering!

Post Author: rico
Thursday, March 26, 2009 12:46:18 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 

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We’ve been working on Books.Logos.com for a long time, and a beta form of the site has finally been made live. Here’s the text from the site:

We have more than 8,000 classic works from seminary libraries, and we're still scanning more. During the beta period you can search and view all of the books for free.

Use the search box in the upper left to search the entire library. When you've selected a book, you can use the search box on the right side to search within just that book.

Use author:Wilkinson to find all the books by Wilkinson, or title:canon to find books with "canon" in the title. You can even search for Bible references!

Books are still being uploaded to the server; there’s a whole lot of data and it takes awhile. One of the best features of the site is the ability to search by Bible reference (try that, Google). Just type your ref in the search box and hit enter. No special code, it’ll figure out if it is a Bible reference.

The default display is black and white images (they’re smaller and faster), but you may need to view color images for some books or scripts. There’s a little icon by the page indicator to switch to color.

One particular favorite that I’ve run across is Edward William Grinfield’s Scholia Hellenistica in Novum Testamentum: Philone ed Josepho Patribus Apostolicis allisq. Ecclesiae Antiquae Scriptoribus Necnon Libris Apocryphis Maxime Depromta. Huh? It indexes cross references between the NT and several non-NT books (Philo, Josephus, Fathers). Pretty cool.

Check it out, remember it is still in development, and make sure to leave some feedback at the specified email address (books@logos.com).

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Post Author: rico
Thursday, March 26, 2009 8:41:30 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 

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 Sunday, March 15, 2009

J. Harold Greenlee, The Text of the New Testament (amazon.com). Hendrickson 2008. 130pp. ISBN 1598562401.

Thanks to Hendrickson Academic for sending along the review copy (amazon.com).

This is a slim volume (130 pp.) that gives a very basic, very general background to the practice of textual criticism as applied to the Greek New Testament.

First off, it is probably best to say what this book is not: It is not, from all I can tell, intended to compete with the similarly-named volumes from Metzger (now Ehrman/Holmes) or Aland & Aland (tr. Erroll Rhodes). Those are both more academic and comprehensive introductions to textual criticism. Greenlee is geared toward a completely different audience. In this, I think Greenlee’s book is unfortunately named because it will, I believe, be misjudged by textual critics. Actually, it already has been. It was reviewed by the Review of Biblical Literature by none other than Keith Elliott, and was not reviewed positively. After this, it was discussed on the Evangelical Textual Criticism blog (here for a comment by Greenlee on Elliott’s review, also here and here for Elliott’s response to Greenlee; check the comments of all posts too).

Despite all of that, to understand Greenlee’s book, one must understand the audience he intends to hit. He is not aiming at an academic audience. This much is obvious in the second paragraph of the book blurb (from Amazon.com, emphasis is mine):

Geared to the lay person who is uninformed or confused about textual criticism, Greenlee begins this volume by explaining the production of ancient manuscripts. He then traces the history of the development of the New Testament text. Readers are next introduced to the basic principles of textual criticism, the concept of variant readings, and how to determine which variant has the greatest likelihood of being the original reading. To illustrate the basic principles, several sample New Testament texts are examined. The book concludes by putting textual criticism in perspective as involving only a minute portion of the entire New Testament text, the bulk of which is indisputably attested by the manuscripts.

This is important to understanding what Greenlee is up to in this book. I’d highly recommend that any pastor/teacher keep Greenlee’s Text of the New Testament (amazon.com) on his short list (near the top, if not at the top) of books to recommend to parishioners who ask questions like: “Why is the KJV New Testament different in spots, and does it matter?” or “Why are there all of these footnotes about ‘other manuscripts’, and what do they mean?” Greenlee’s book is short, to the point, and is pretty much the anti-Ehrman. It will build up, not destroy, the faith of the one asking the questions. (For the record, I’d also put Comfort’s New Testament Text and Translation Commentary (amazon.com) on that pastor/teacher’s short list of books to recommend).

If Greenlee intended to write a book to make textual critics happy, to compete with standards like Metzger and Aland & Aland, then he surely failed, and Elliott’s review is spot-on. But Greenlee didn’t do that. He wrote a book for the average person, sitting in the pew, with some basic questions about the text. Greenlee paints in broad strokes and gives general answers to the questions, which is what his desired audience needs.

Academics and textual critics can continue to nitpick Greenlee’s book, but don’t pay attention to them. If you need something on textual criticism for a basic layperson audience, Greenlee is your go-to book.

A side note: Greenlee is no slouch; check out the range of topics he has authored on over the years.

Post Author: rico
Sunday, March 15, 2009 6:52:44 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 

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 Wednesday, March 11, 2009

In the “what have I been doing lately” column:

First, I’ve been doing a lot of blogging at PastoralEpistles.com. I’ve done a lot of work translating and evaluating 2Ti 1.1-2.7 (at present) and will continue to work on it until I’ve worked through the whole letter. You may want to check out the posts.

Second, I’ve been doing a lot of reading in Peter Lampe’s From Paul to Valentinus: Christians at Rome in the First Two Centuries (amazon.com). This is an awesome book, I can’t recommend it highly enough. I’ve learned more about the cultural milieu of early Christians, and more about Christians in early Rome, than I knew was possible. Just the few pages on Priscilla and Aquila are worth it.

Third, my friend Bobby Koduvalil at Hendrickson Academic set me up with a few books. First is J. Harold Greenlee’s The Text of the New Testament: From Manuscript to Modern Edition. This is a thin volume and from what I can tell is geared toward the guy who realizes that his NASB New Testament is inexplicably different from his KJV New Testament and wants to figure out why. It is most certainly not an academic introduction to textual criticism, it is an introduction geared toward the laity. As such, it will make most text-critics cringe. But that’s good. From what I’ve read so far, Greenlee hits his audience, and most of what he says is defensible in that context. Introduction, TOC and Sample Chapter are all online at Hendrickson’s web site, hit the book page and scroll to the bottom for links to those bad boys. Second is Steve Mason’s Josephus, Judea, and Christian Origins: Methods and Categories, which is a compilation of several other articles Mason has written over the years, organized and somewhat edited into a new volume. Mason is a top-notch scholar and a nice guy to boot, and I’m really looking forward to reading this one — though it’ll be after Lampe (amazon.com) & Greenlee. I’ll blog about both of these books as I read more.

Fourth, in the past month I’ve installed the following Logos Bible Software and have already received benefit from most of it:

Fifth, since it has been lighter later, I’ve been able to take a few walks with our nearly-two-year-old daughter Ella after getting home from work. It’s still cold, but we brave it for a little while. She like to pick up a rock right when we start, and hold onto it the whole way. She also likes to keep me informed of when she sees birds, dogs, cats, dirt, trucks, cars, and busses. All in all, a hoot of a time.

Post Author: rico
Wednesday, March 11, 2009 7:19:32 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 

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