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What the Dictionary Taught Me About Bible Study

May 25, 2018 By Peter Krol

I don’t watch many videos online. I almost always skip them when people link to them. But when blogger Mark Ward says, “This video is fantastic,” I pay attention. Mark shares my love for linguistics and for careful, contextual Bible study, so I respect his recommendations on such things.

So I now share with you Anne Curzan’s TED talk entitled, “What Makes a Word ‘Real’?” And I echo Mark’s evaluation. This video is fantastic. Watching it may be your best-invested 17 minutes all week. I believe you’ll find the video to be quite impactful, and I wish I had some way to incentivize your watching of it.

Curzan explains how language changes over time, and she peels back the curtain on the editing of dictionaries. I appreciate her comment that the dictionary is probably the only book we’re trained never to think critically about. But we should. Below the video, I’ll trace some implications for Bible study.

What does Curzan’s presentation tell us about Bible study?

  1. Because languages can change drastically every hundred years, word studies are far less important than book studies when we come to the Scripture. Our chief goal should be to understand how each author uses his language; our goal should not be to tap into the history of the Bible’s vocabulary.
  2. “No dictionary is the final arbiter of what words ‘mean.'” This is no less true of Bible dictionaries and lexicons than it is of modern English ones. The difference, of course, is that biblical languages are now dead and no longer changing. But those languages (particularly Hebrew) changed so much over the time the Bible was written that it’s irrational to think we can look back over their millennia of use and identify the single “true meaning” of any biblical word. Just think of the American Heritage Dictionary’s contradictory entries for the word peruse.
  3. Just like in contemporary word usage, biblical authors felt free to make up new words to suit their purposes (I think of “more than conquerors” in Romans 8:37 as an example). In such cases, they likely were aiming more at emotional impact than technical precision.
  4. We must be careful not to read current theological categories back into the words of Scripture. The Scriptures must stand on their own, in their own context. For example, when the New Testament uses the word “church,” the authors do not always have in mind what we think of as “church” (a local congregation, meeting at least weekly for worship services, with a pastor, a budget, a building, a set of by-laws, and an annual meeting). “Preach” is not always referring to the sermons presented by the ordained minister on Sunday morning.

Words are beautiful things, as long as we notice how they’re used and don’t expect them to carry loads they simply can’t bear. Consider this video your invite to a fruitful understanding of basic linguistics. And please don’t defriend me over it.

Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: Anne Cruzan, Dictionary, Linguistics, Mark Ward, Meaning, TED, Words

Why Context Matters

May 23, 2018 By Peter Krol

At Stand to Reason, Alan Shlemon explains why it matters so much to consider the context of a Bible verse. After giving an example, where a Christian uses Matthew 18:20 to encourage their small group that Jesus is with them, Shlemon draws the following conclusion:

This might seem benign, but it’s dangerous. In this case, the Christian has concluded that the verse tells him Jesus is with them. You might think, What’s the harm in believing that? In this case, the belief is not incorrect—Jesus is with them—but that verse doesn’t support that belief. The believer has ignored the Holy Spirit’s inspired context and then created his own context, thus changing the meaning of Jesus’ teaching. Now Matthew 18:20 isn’t about church discipline but rather about believing Jesus is with you. That’s not Bible reading. That’s not allowing the Holy Spirit to transform you. That’s not listening to God but listening to yourself and baptizing your faulty interpretation with the authority of God’s Word. If a Christian wants a verse that supports the fact that Jesus is present with him, he can always turn to Matthew 28:20.

So we can arrive at true teaching in the wrong way. But that’s not far from using the same methods of Bible reading to reach entirely false teaching. Let’s not ignore the wishes of Holy Spirit, who inspired these sacred writings.

Shlemon is right. Context matters. Let’s continue retraining ourselves and our people to read the Bible for what it is: not a collection of memory verses, but a collection of books.

Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: Alan Shlemon, Context, Interpretation, Matthew, Misinterpretation

4 Simple Language Principles

May 16, 2018 By Peter Krol

Mark Ward writes about “4 Simple Language Principles That Will Improve Your Bible Study.” He’s writing to the Bible student who wants to learn Greek or Hebrew. Or possibly to the person who wants to use original language tools well. You know, the sort of person who can be heard saying things like, “What the Greek word here really means is…”

Ward offers some excellent advice for these folks, and for the rest of us, when he encourages us to learn first how all languages work. Then we’ll be in a better place to understand how Greek and Hebrew work.

His principles are as follows:

  1. Usage determines meaning.
  2. Usage determines meaning—no, I mean it.
  3. Look at every level of meaning, not just the word level
  4. Learn linguistic and literary labels

These principles are so important, especially the first two. Many people tend to think words have specific meaning built into them inherently, like a code. But words only have meaning according to how real people use those words in real communication. Another way to put it is that we assume words get their meaning from the dictionary. But we fail to realize that dictionaries get their word meanings by listening to people use words in conversation (for real: see this TED talk). And therefore, word meanings are constantly changing over time.

Ward’s musings on this topic are worth reflecting on.

Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: Language, Linguistics, Mark Ward, Meaning, Words

Does the New Testament Misquote the Old Testament?

May 9, 2018 By Peter Krol

When you look up Old Testament passages quoted in the New Testament, you may notice that they don’t always line up exactly. For example, look at Isaiah 61:1-2, and then look at Luke’s quote of those verses in Luke 4:18-19:

The Spirit of the Lord GOD is upon me, because the LORD has anointed me to bring good news to the poor; he has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to those who are bound; to proclaim the year of the LORD’s favor. (Is 61:1-2)

The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor. (Luke 4:18-19)

Michael S. Heiser explains the cause for discrepancy in this brief article. In short, the New Testament authors were typically working off a Greek translation of the Hebrew original. So our Old Testaments are translating the Hebrew directly into English. But when the NT quotes the OT, our English New Testaments are translating a Greek translation of the original Hebrew. The more languages involved in the conversion, the more adjustment gets made at each step.

For a helpful example, try the following experiment. Go to Google translate, and translate a normal English phrase (such as, “My shoulder hurts from throwing too much at baseball practice yesterday”) into any other language. Copy the result. Now paste that text and translate it back into English. After just those two steps, going into Danish and back, I got: “My shoulder hurts to throw too much of baseball practice yesterday.” The discrepancies from the original should not surprise us.

(I understand that going from English to Danish to English—two total languages—is not identical to going from Hebrew to Greek to English—three total languages. My point is just to show, to an audience that is likely unilingual, what happens when you have two steps in translation.)

This doesn’t mean we can’t trust translations. It just means we have to be reasonable and sensible about how language works. Remember: The original languages don’t function like a code to be cracked. They were real documents written by real people in ordinary languages. There’s no need for concern when languages function linguistically.

Heiser’s article helpfully explains this example. Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: Quotes, Translation

What To Do When the NT Quotes the OT

May 2, 2018 By Peter Krol

Mike Leake has some great advice for what we should do when we’re reading the New Testament, and it quotes an Old Testament verse. He looks at 2 Cor 4:13, where Paul quotes Psalm 116:10, and he shows how Paul has the entire Psalm in mind as he makes his argument. Leake’s analysis is rich and compelling.

Then he concludes:

But we miss all of this if we think the biblical authors quoted verses the way that we do. So here is a little tip for your Bible reading. Whenever you see that a New Testament passage is a quotation of an Old Testament passage, don’t just go back and read that one verse in the OT. Instead go back and read the entire Psalm, or the entire context of that quote. It’ll help you to understand more fully why the biblical author quoted that verse.

Context matters. This is basic Bible study at its best, and I commend it to you.

Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: 2 Corinthians, Context, Mike Leake, Psalms, Quotes

Sale on Knowable Word

April 27, 2018 By Ryan Higginbottom

If you don’t yet have a copy of the book Knowable Word, written by our own Peter Krol, now is an excellent time to buy one!

The Knowable Word book forms the spine of this website. In everything we write, we seek to help ordinary people learn to study the Bible. Peter wrote this book with that same aim. You will find that the book overlaps in some places with the earliest articles on this web site (especially in the OIA method section), but the book contains some unique material and is valuable as a self-contained entity.

The Kindle version of Knowable Word is on sale right now at Amazon.com for $2.99. I don’t know exactly how long the sale lasts, but it’s been going on for a couple of days.

Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: Knowable Word, Sale

Context Matters: Refrain From Anger

April 27, 2018 By Peter Krol

Context matters. If we learn to read the Bible for what it is—and not as a collection of independently assembled proverbial sayings—we’ll discover that some quotable quotes have much more to them than we thought.

This week, I’m happy to point you to this article by Mark ward, where he walks through his process of re-discovering a familiar verse by considering its context.

Refrain from anger and turn from wrath; do not fret—it leads only to evil. (Psalm 37:8, NIV)

What is the connection between anger and worry (fretting), at least in the mind of this psalmist? You’ll have to read Ward’s article to find out.

Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out, Sample Bible Studies Tagged With: Anger, Anxiety, Context, Mark Ward, Psalms, Worry

5 Reasons to Read the Bible Every Day

April 25, 2018 By Peter Krol

Following up on last week’s Check It Out post to “chain yourself to the Word of God,” I’m eager to share this post by Jimmy Needham with “5 Reasons to Read the Bible Every Day.” According to Needham:

Before you get into God’s word, remember that becoming Bible-literate is not about being smarter, or beefing up your spiritual resume, or lording your knowledge over others. It’s about looking through the pages to the Savior on the other side. Jesus says, “You search the Scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life; and it is they that bear witness about me, yet you refuse to come to me that you may have life” (John 5:39–40). It’s about seeing and savoring Jesus Christ through his word. We don’t worship the font. We worship the Father.

Take this to heart, and Needham’s counsel will change your life. What are his 5 reasons?

  1. You cannot love God, and not listen to him.
  2. Your faith need promises to survive.
  3. We become like what we behold.
  4. You will only find the joy you want in words.
  5. There is work to be done.

The Bible teaches us that God loves the forgotten and the misfit. It shows us the value of shepherding our families. It introduces us to the generosity of other Christians (2 Corinthians 8:1–7), and calls us to be openhanded with what God gives us. It heralds the sanctity of every human life and inspires us to fight for the unborn. It declares that race should not be a barrier to Christian unity, but a beautiful occasion for it. We become equipped for every good work in the Bible.

Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: Bible reading, Joy, Motivation, Obedience

Chain Yourself to the Word of God

April 18, 2018 By Peter Krol

This article by Steve Robinson is addressed to church planters, but there is no reason his words can’t apply to any believer in Christ. Steve talks about the entropy of life, which causes us to lose our bearings and drift from one complex situation to another. Eventually we get so busy that we have no time left for Bible intake. We thereby cut ourselves off from the fount of eternal life and true encouragement.

Again, Robinson is speaking to church planters. But replace “church planter” with “Bible study leader,” “Sunday school teacher,” or even “parent,” and the point does not change:

Church planter: do you want to know the most important thing you can do in your ministry? Chain yourself to the Word of God. I know you have a million and one things to do. I know the needs of your congregation feel unending. But if the Word isn’t your lifeline, you won’t have anything to offer your needy people.

These exhortations are worth considering before you begin to feel the drift. In a time of plenty, how can you lay the tracks in your life that will make it easier for you to keep chugging when you’re going uphill? What habits would you like to form now so that inertia will be in your favor when you face resistance?

Robinson’s article describes glorious motives from Psalm 119 for such questions.

Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: Bible reading, Perseverance, Steve Robinson

Who Decided What Would Be in the Bible?

April 11, 2018 By Peter Krol

On this site, we keep our sights trained on the topic of how to study the English Bible. We’ve chosen not to get too involved in related but ancillary topics, such as translation (how we got our English versions), transmission (how the text was passed from generation to generation), or canonicity (how we ended up with our current set of books in the Bible). These topics are not unimportant; we just prefer to keep things on this site focused on one thing.

But once in a while we like to refer you to another resource that does a good job addressing these fundamental questions.

That’s why I highly encourage you to check out this article by Eric Davis called “Who Decided What Would be in the Bible & When—Canonicity.” Davis writes very clearly for a non-academic audience, and he covers the topic very well.

Davis addresses questions such as:

  • How can we trust the 66 books of the Protestant Bible are the right ones?
  • Wasn’t it just a 4th century council of powerful leaders who decided, according to their private agenda, which books to include and exclude?
  • What should we make of the Apocrypha?
  • What are the presuppositions and ramifications of our conclusions on these matters?

Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: Canon, Eric Davis

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