Biblical criticism: Difference between revisions

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A "redactor" is an editor (from the Latin ''redigere,'' ''re-'' + ''agere'', to collect or bring back).   
A "redactor" is an editor (from the Latin ''redigere,'' ''re-'' + ''agere'', to collect or bring back).   


Who assembled the material in its final form?  What was the editor thinking of when changes were introduced?  What purpose or purposes were served by bringing disparate stories together?  Who decided that the book was canonical (i.e., who decided that it was to be listed as one of the books "inspired by God")?  What influenced their choice of this book to become part of the canon?
Some of the questions raised by redaction criticism:
* Who assembled the material in its final form?   
* What was the editor thinking of when changes were introduced?   
* What purpose or purposes were served by bringing disparate stories together?   
* Who decided that the book was [[canon|canonical]] (i.e., who decided that it was to be listed as one of the books "inspired by God")?   
* What influenced their choice of this book to become part of the [[canon]]?


We can only judge a redactor's contribution to the final form of a story when two or more versions of the same story exist.  For those who accept the Q-hypothesis, Matthew and Luke redacted (edited) the gospel of Mark.  The second ending of the gospel of Mark (16:9-20) looks like a redaction of the Lucan resurrection stories.  John 21 seems to be tacked onto the end of the original gospel of John by another author.  There is a peculiar relationship between Ephesians and Colossians--one might be a second edition of the other.
We can only judge a redactor's contribution to the final form of a story when two or more versions of the same story exist.  For those who accept the Q-hypothesis, Matthew and Luke redacted (edited) the gospel of Mark.  The second ending of the gospel of Mark (16:9-20) looks like a redaction of the Lucan resurrection stories.  John 21 seems to be tacked onto the end of the original gospel of John by another author.  There is a peculiar relationship between Ephesians and Colossians--one might be a second edition of the other.
=== Other forms of criticism ===
The popularity of Biblical criticism has spawned many children: audience criticism, canon criticism, feminist criticism, etc.


[[Category:Scripture Studies]]
[[Category:Scripture Studies]]

Revision as of 17:11, 14 January 2011

Biblical criticism is the result of applying the standards of Critical thinking to questions raised by the Scriptures.

Lower criticism

Textual criticism deals with handwriting analysis, spelling errors, scribal errors, glosses, omissions, doublets, provenance of manuscripts, etc. The goal of textual criticism is to determine the original version of the scriptures.

Higher criticism

Form criticism

All interpretation of language depends on assessing the form of speech or literary genre (French, "kind" or "type") being employed.

  • oral vs. written
  • fiction vs. non-fiction
  • poetry (sung or recited) vs. prose
  • first person vs. third person point-of-view
  • contemporary account vs. history derived from sources
  • Indirect uses of language: irony, sarcasm, puns, humor; metaphor and simile; allusions to other texts; juxtaposition; etc.

Special Biblical Genres

Old Testament
  • cosmic myths
  • history
  • law (early forms of Midrash: Haggadah or Halakah)
  • psalm
  • proverb
  • apocalyptic
  • prophecy
  • Wisdom literature (includes some theological fiction like Jonah, Job, Tobit);
New Testament
  • gospel
  • epistle
  • parenesis (comfort)
  • parable
  • hymns
  • sayings of the Lord
  • miracle stories
  • polemic
  • diatribe
  • hyperbole
  • ridicule

Historical criticism

Historical-critical methods apply the standards of academic history to questions about the development of and material in the Scriptures.

Redaction criticism

A "redactor" is an editor (from the Latin redigere, re- + agere, to collect or bring back).

Some of the questions raised by redaction criticism:

  • Who assembled the material in its final form?
  • What was the editor thinking of when changes were introduced?
  • What purpose or purposes were served by bringing disparate stories together?
  • Who decided that the book was canonical (i.e., who decided that it was to be listed as one of the books "inspired by God")?
  • What influenced their choice of this book to become part of the canon?

We can only judge a redactor's contribution to the final form of a story when two or more versions of the same story exist. For those who accept the Q-hypothesis, Matthew and Luke redacted (edited) the gospel of Mark. The second ending of the gospel of Mark (16:9-20) looks like a redaction of the Lucan resurrection stories. John 21 seems to be tacked onto the end of the original gospel of John by another author. There is a peculiar relationship between Ephesians and Colossians--one might be a second edition of the other.

Other forms of criticism

The popularity of Biblical criticism has spawned many children: audience criticism, canon criticism, feminist criticism, etc.