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Biblical criticism

Biblical criticism is the use of critical analysis to understand and explain the Bible. During the eighteenth century, when it began as historical-biblical criticism, it was based on two distinguishing characteristics: (1) the scientific concern to avoid dogma and bias by applying a neutral, non-sectarian, reason-based judgment to the study of the Bible, and (2) the belief that the reconstruction of the historical events behind the texts, as well as the history of how the texts themselves developed, would lead to a correct understanding of the Bible. This sets it apart from earlier, pre-critical methods; from the anti-critical methods of those who oppose criticism-based study; from later post-critical orientation, and from the many different types of criticism which biblical criticism transformed into in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries..

Title page of Richard Simon's Critical History (1685), an early work of biblical criticism

Most scholars believe the German Enlightenment (c. 1650 – c. 1800) led to the creation of biblical criticism, although some assert that its roots reach back to the Reformation. German pietism played a role in its development, as did British deism, with its greatest influences being rationalism and Protestant scholarship. The Enlightenment age, and its skepticism of biblical and church authority, ignited questions concerning the historical basis for the human Jesus separately from traditional theological views concerning his divinity. This quest for the historical Jesus began in biblical criticism's earliest stages, and has remained an interest within biblical criticism, on and off, for over 200 years.

Historical-biblical criticism includes a wide range of approaches and questions within four major methodologies: textual, source, form, and literary criticism. Textual criticism examines biblical manuscripts and their content to identify what the original text probably said. Source criticism searches the text for evidence of their original sources. Form criticism identifies short units of text seeking the setting of their origination. Redaction criticism later developed as a derivative of both source and form criticism. Each of these methods was primarily historical and focused on what went on before the texts were in their present form. Literary criticism, which emerged in the twentieth century, differed from these earlier methods. It focused on the literary structure of the texts as they currently exist, determining, where possible, the author's purpose, and discerning the reader's response to the text through methods such as rhetorical criticism, canonical criticism, and narrative criticism. All together, these various methods of biblical criticism permanently changed how people understood and saw the Bible.

In the late twentieth and early twenty-first century, biblical criticism was influenced by a wide range of additional academic disciplines and theoretical perspectives which led to its transformation. Having long been dominated by white male Protestant academics, the twentieth century saw others such as non-white scholars, women, and those from the Jewish and Catholic traditions become prominent voices in biblical criticism. Globalization brought a broader spectrum of worldviews into the field, and other academic disciplines as diverse as Near Eastern studies, psychology, cultural anthropology and sociology formed new methods of biblical criticism such as social scientific criticism and psychological biblical criticism. Meanwhile, post-modernism and post-critical interpretation began questioning whether biblical criticism had a role and function at all. With these new methods came new goals, as biblical criticism moved from the historical to the literary, and its basic premise changed from neutral judgment to a recognition of the various biases the reader brings to the study of the texts.

Definition

Daniel J. Harrington defines biblical criticism as "the effort at using scientific criteria (historical and literary) and human reason to understand and explain, as objectively as possible, the meaning intended by the biblical writers."[1] The original biblical criticism has been mostly defined by its historical concerns. Critics focused on the historical events behind the text as well as the history of how the texts themselves developed.[2]: 33  So much biblical criticism has been done as history, and not theology, that it is sometimes called the "historical-critical method" or historical-biblical criticism (or sometimes higher criticism) instead of just biblical criticism.[2]: 31  Biblical critics used the same scientific methods and approaches to history as their secular counterparts and emphasized reason and objectivity.[2]: 45  Neutrality was seen as a defining requirement.[3][2]: 27 

By 1990, new perspectives, globalization and input from different academic fields expanded biblical criticism, moving it beyond its original criteria, and changing it into a group of disciplines with different, often conflicting, interests.[4]: 21, 22  Biblical criticism's central concept changed from neutral judgment to beginning from a recognition of the various biases the reader brings to the study of the texts.[4]: 21, 22  Newer forms of biblical criticism are primarily literary: no longer focused on the historical, they attend to the text as it exists now.[4]: 21, 22 

History

Eighteenth century

In the Enlightenment era of the European West, philosophers and theologians such as Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679), Benedict Spinoza (1632–1677), and Richard Simon (1638–1712) began to question the long-established Judeo-Christian tradition that Moses was the author of the first five books of the Bible known as the Pentateuch.[5][6] Spinoza wrote that Moses could not have written the preface to the fifth book, Deuteronomy, since he never crossed the Jordan River into the Promised Land. There were also other problems such as Deuteronomy 31:9 which references Moses in the third person. According to Spinoza: "All these details, the manner of narration, the testimony, and the context of the whole story lead to the plain conclusion that these books were written by another, and not by Moses in person".[7]

 
Jean Astruc, often called the "Father of Biblical criticism", at Centre hospitalier universitaire de Toulouse [fr]

Jean Astruc (1684–1766), a French physician, believed these critics were wrong about Mosaic authorship. According to Old Testament scholar Edward Young (1907–1968), Astruc believed that Moses assembled the first book of the Pentateuch, the book of Genesis, using the hereditary accounts of the Hebrew people.[8] Biblical criticism is often said to have begun when Astruc borrowed methods of textual criticism (used to investigate Greek and Roman texts) and applied them to the Bible in search of those original accounts.[9]: 204, 217  Astruc believed that, through this approach, he had identified the separate sources that were edited together into the book of Genesis. The existence of separate sources explained the inconsistent style and vocabulary of Genesis, discrepancies in the narrative, differing accounts and chronological difficulties, while still allowing for Mosaic authorship.[9]: xvi [10] Astruc's work was the genesis of biblical criticism, and because it has become the template for all who followed, he is often called the "Father of Biblical criticism".[9]: 204, 217, 210 

The questioning of religious authority common to German Pietism contributed to the rise of biblical criticism.[11]: 6  Rationalism also became a significant influence:[12][13]: 8, 224  Swiss theologian Jean Alphonse Turretin (1671–1737) is an example of the "moderate rationalism" of the era. Turretin believed that the Bible was divine revelation, but insisted that revelation must be consistent with nature and in harmony with reason, "For God who is the author of revelation is likewise the author of reason".[14]: 94, 95  What was seen as extreme rationalism followed in the work of Heinrich Paulus (1761–1851) who denied the existence of miracles.

Johann Salomo Semler (1725–1791) had attempted in his work to navigate between divine revelation and extreme rationalism by supporting the view that revelation was "divine disclosure of the truth perceived through the depth of human experience".[14]: 201, 118  He distinguished between "inward" and "outward" religion: for some people, their religion is their highest inner purpose, while for others, religion is a more exterior practice – a tool to accomplish other purposes more important to the individual, such as political or economic goals. Recognition of this distinction now forms part of the modern field of cognitive science of religion.[13]: 43 [15] Semler argued for an end to all doctrinal assumptions, giving historical criticism its nonsectarian character. As a result, Semler is often called the father of historical-critical research.[13]: 43  "Despite the difference in attitudes between the thinkers and the historians [of the German enlightenment], all viewed history as the key ... in their search for understanding".[11]: 214 

Communications scholar James A. Herrick (b. 1954) says that even though most scholars agree that biblical criticism evolved out of the German Enlightenment, there are some historians of biblical criticism that have found "strong direct links" with British deism. Herrick references the German theologian Henning Graf Reventlow (1929–2010) as linking deism with the humanist world view, which has been significant in biblical criticism.[16][17]: 13–15  Matthew Tindal (1657–1733), as part of British deism, asserted that Jesus taught an undogmatic natural religion that the Church later changed into its own dogmatic form. Tindal's view of Christianity as a "mere confirmation of natural religion and his resolute denial of the supernatural" led him to conclude that "revealed religion is superfluous".[18] British deism was also an influence on the philosopher and writer Hermann Samuel Reimarus (1694–1768) in developing his criticism of revelation.[17]: 13 

The biblical scholar Johann David Michaelis (1717–1791) advocated the use of other Semitic languages in addition to Hebrew to understand the Old Testament, and in 1750, wrote the first modern critical introduction to the New Testament.[19][20] Instead of interpreting the Bible historically, Johann Gottfried Eichhorn (1752–1827), Johann Philipp Gabler (1753–1826), and Georg Lorenz Bauer (1755–1806) used the concept of myth as a tool for interpreting the Bible. Rudolf Bultmann later used this approach, and it became particularly influential in the early twentieth century.[14]: 117 117, 149–150, 188–191 

George Ricker Berry says the term "higher criticism", which is sometimes used as an alternate name for historical criticism, was first used by Eichhorn in his three-volume work Einleitung ins Alte Testament (Introduction to the Old Testament) published between 1780 and 1783. The term was originally used to differentiate higher criticism, the term for historical criticism, from lower, which was the term commonly used for textual criticism at the time.[21] The importance of textual criticism means that the term 'lower criticism' is no longer used much in twenty-first century studies.[4]: 108 

A twenty–first century view of biblical criticism's origins, that traces it to the Reformation, is a minority position, but the Reformation is the source of biblical criticism's advocacy of freedom from external authority imposing its views on biblical interpretation.[22]: 297–298 [2]: 189  Long before Richard Simon, the historical context of the biblical texts was important to Joachim Camerarius (1500–1574) who wrote a philological study of figures of speech in the biblical texts using their context to understand them.[23] Hugo Grotius (1583–1645) paved the way for comparative religion studies by analyzing New Testament texts in the light of Classical, Jewish and early Christian writings.[24]: 140 

Historical Jesus: the first quest

The first quest for the historical Jesus is also sometimes referred to as the Old Quest.[25]: 888  It began with the publication of Hermann Samuel Reimarus's work after his death. G. E. Lessing (1729–1781) claimed to have discovered copies of Reimarus's writings in the library at Wolfenbüttel when he was the librarian there.[25]: 862  Reimarus had left permission for his work to be published after his death, and Lessing did so between 1774 and 1778, publishing them as Die Fragmente eines unbekannten Autors (The Fragments of an Unknown Author).[26] Over time, they came to be known as the Wolfenbüttel Fragments. Reimarus distinguished between what Jesus taught and how he is portrayed in the New Testament. According to Reimarus, Jesus was a political Messiah who failed at creating political change and was executed by the Roman state as a dissident. His disciples then stole the body and invented the story of the resurrection for personal gain.[17]

Albert Schweitzer in The Quest of the Historical Jesus, acknowledges that Reimarus's work "is a polemic, not an objective historical study", while also referring to it as "a masterpiece of world literature."[27]: 22, 16  According to Schweitzer, Reimarus was wrong in his assumption that Jesus's end-of-world eschatology was "earthly and political in character" but was right in viewing Jesus as an apocalyptic preacher, as evidenced by his repeated warnings about the destruction of Jerusalem and the end of time. This eschatological approach to understanding Jesus has since become universal in modern biblical criticism.[27]: viii, 23, 195  Schweitzer also comments that, since Reimarus was a historian and not a theologian or a biblical scholar, he "had not the slightest inkling" that source criticism would provide the solution to the problems of literary consistency that Reimarus had raised.[27]: 15 

Reimarus's controversial work garnered a response from Semler in 1779: Beantwortung der Fragmente eines Ungenannten (Answering the Fragments of an Unknown).[28] Schweitzer records that Semler "rose up and slew Reimarus in the name of scientific theology".[27]: 25  Respect for Semler temporarily repressed the dissemination and study of Reimarus's work, but Semler's response had no long-term effect.[27]: 25, 26  Reimarus's writings, on the other hand, did have a long-term effect. They made a lasting change in the practice of biblical criticism by making it clear it could exist independently of theology and faith.[13]: 46 [27]: 23–26  His work also showed biblical criticism could serve its own ends, be governed solely by rational criteria, and reject deference to religious tradition.[13]: 46–48  Reimarus's central question, "How political was Jesus?", continues to be debated by theologians and historians such as Wolfgang Stegemann [de], Gerd Theissen and Craig S. Keener.[29][30][31]

In addition to overseeing the publication of Reimarus's work, Lessing made contributions of his own, arguing that the proper study of biblical texts requires knowing the context in which they were written. This is now the accepted scholarly view.[13]: 49 

Nineteenth century

Professors Richard Soulen and Kendall Soulen write that biblical criticism reached "full flower" in the nineteenth century, becoming the "major transforming fact of biblical studies in the modern period".[4]: 79  The height of biblical criticism's influence is represented by the history of religions school [note 1] a group of German Protestant theologians associated with the University of Göttingen.[4]: 161  In the late nineteenth century, they sought to understand Judaism and Christianity within the overall history of religion.[14]: 222  Other Bible scholars outside the Göttingen school, such as Heinrich Julius Holtzmann (1832–1910), also used biblical criticism. Holtzmann developed the first listing of the chronological order of the New Testament texts based on critical scholarship.[4]: 82 

Many insights in understanding the Bible that began in the nineteenth century continue to be discussed in the twenty-first; in some areas of study, such as linguistic tools, scholars merely appropriate earlier work, while in others they "continue to suppose they can produce something new and better".[14]: xiii  For example, some modern histories of Israel include historical biblical research from the nineteenth century.[32]: 23  In 1835, and again in 1845, theologian Ferdinand Christian Baur postulated the apostles Peter and Paul had an argument that led to a split between them thereby influencing the mode of Christianity that followed.[33][34]: 91–95  This still occasions widespread debate within topics such as Pauline studies, New Testament Studies, early-church studies, Jewish Law, the theology of grace, and the doctrine of justification.[33]: 286–287  Albrecht Ritschl's challenge to orthodox atonement theory continues to influence Christian thought.[14]: 92 

Nineteenth-century biblical critics "thought of themselves as continuing the aims of the Protestant Reformation".[35]: 89  According to Robert M. Grant and David Tracy, "One of the most striking features of the development of biblical interpretation during the nineteenth century was the way in which philosophical presuppositions implicitly guided it".[36]: 91 fn.8  Michael Joseph Brown points out that biblical criticism operated according to principles grounded in a distinctively European rationalism. By the end of the nineteenth century, these principles were recognized by Ernst Troeltsch in an essay, Historical and Dogmatic Method in Theology, where he described three principles of biblical criticism: methodological doubt (a way of searching for certainty by doubting everything); analogy (the idea that we understand the past by relating it to our present); and mutual inter-dependence (every event is related to events that proceeded it).[37]

Biblical criticism's focus on pure reason produced a paradigm shift that profoundly changed Christian theology concerning the Jews. Anders Gerdmar [de] uses the legal meaning of emancipation, as in free to be an adult on their own recognizance, when he says the "process of the emancipation of reason from the Bible ... runs parallel with the emancipation of Christianity from the Jews".[38]: 22  In the previous century, Semler had been the first Enlightenment Protestant to call for the "de-Judaizing" of Christianity. While taking a stand against discrimination in society, Semler also wrote theology that was strongly negative toward the Jews and Judaism.[38]: 25, 27  He saw Christianity as something that 'superseded' all that came before it.[38]: 39, 40  This stark contrast between Judaism and Christianity produced increasingly antisemitic sentiments.[38]: 228  Supersessionism, instead of the more traditional millennialism, became a common theme in Johann Gottfried Herder (1744–1803), Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768–1834), Wilhelm Martin Leberecht de Wette (1780–1849), Ferdinand Christian Baur (1792–1860), David Strauss (1808–1874), Albrecht Ritschl (1822–1889), the history of religions school of the 1890s, and on into the form critics of the twentieth century until World War II.[38]: vii–xiii 

Historical Jesus: the lives of Jesus

The late-nineteenth century saw a renewed interest in the quest for the historical Jesus which primarily involved writing versions of the life of Jesus. Important scholars of this quest included David Strauss (1808–1874), whose Life of Jesus used a mythical interpretation of the gospels to undermine their historicity. The book was culturally significant because it contributed to weakening church authority, and it was theologically significant because it challenged the divinity of Christ.[39] In The Essence of Christianity (1900), Adolf Von Harnack (1851–1930) described Jesus as a reformer.[40] William Wrede (1859–1906) rejected all the theological aspects of Jesus and asserted that the "messianic secret" of Jesus as Messiah emerged only in the early community and did not come from Jesus himself.[41] Ernst Renan (1823–1892) promoted the critical method and was opposed to orthodoxy.[42] Wilhelm Bousset (1865–1920) attained honors in the history of religions school by contrasting what he called the joyful teachings of Jesus's new righteousness and what Bousset saw as the gloomy call to repentance made by John the Baptist.[43] While at Göttingen, Johannes Weiss (1863–1914) wrote his most influential work on the apocalyptic proclamations of Jesus.[44]

In 1896, Martin Kähler (1835–1912) wrote The So-called Historical Jesus and the Historic Biblical Christ. It critiqued the quest's methodology, with a reminder of the limits of historical inquiry, saying it is impossible to separate the historical Jesus from the Jesus of faith, since Jesus is only known through documents about him as Christ the Messiah.[45]: 10 

The Old Quest was not considered closed until Albert Schweitzer (1875–1965) wrote Von Reimarus zu Wrede which was published in English as The Quest of the Historical Jesus in 1910. In it, Schweitzer scathingly critiqued the various books on the life of Jesus that had been written in the late-nineteenth century as reflecting more of the lives of the authors than Jesus.[46] Schweitzer revolutionized New Testament scholarship at the turn of the century by proving to most of that scholarly world that the teachings and actions of Jesus were determined by his eschatological outlook; he thereby finished the quest's pursuit of the apocalyptic Jesus.[35]: 173 [47]: 2–4  Schweitzer concluded that any future research on the historical Jesus was pointless.[45]: 10 

Twentieth century

In the early twentieth century, biblical criticism was shaped by two main factors and the clash between them. First, form criticism arose and turned the focus of biblical criticism from author to genre, and from individual to community. Next, a scholarly effort to reclaim the Bible's theological relevance began.[4]: 20  Karl Barth (1886–1968), Rudolf Bultmann (1884–1976), and others moved away from concern over the historical Jesus and concentrated instead on the kerygma: the message of the New Testament.[4]: 20 [48]

Most scholars agree that Bultmann is one of the "most influential theologians of the twentieth-century", but that he also had a "notorious reputation for his de-mythologizing" which was debated around the world.[49][50] Demythologizing refers to the reinterpretation of the biblical myths (stories) in terms of the existential philosophy of Martin Heidegger (1889–1976).[51] Bultmann claimed myths are "true" anthropologically and existentially but not cosmologically.[52] As a major proponent of form criticism, Bultmann "set the agenda for a subsequent generation of leading NT [New Testament] scholars".[4]: 21 

Around the midcentury point the denominational composition of biblical critics began to change. This was due to a shift in perception of the critical effort as being possible on the basis of premises other than liberal Protestantism.[4]: 21  Redaction criticism also began in the mid-twentieth century. While form criticism had divided the text into small units, redaction emphasized the literary integrity of the larger literary units instead.[53][54]: 443 

The discovery of the Dead Sea scrolls at Qumran in 1948 renewed interest in archaeology's potential contributions to biblical studies, but it also posed challenges to biblical criticism.[55]: 9, 149  For example, the majority of the Dead Sea texts are closely related to the Masoretic Text that the Christian Old Testament is based upon, while other texts bear a closer resemblance to the Septuagint (the ancient Greek version of the Hebrew texts) and still others are closer to the Samaritan Pentateuch.[55]: 241, 149 [56] This has raised the question of whether or not there is such a thing as an "original text". If there is no original text, the entire purpose of textual criticism is called into question.[13]: 82 

New Testament scholar Joachim Jeremias (1900–1979) used linguistics, and Jesus's first-century Jewish environment, to interpret the New Testament.[54]: 495  The biblical theology movement of the 1950s produced debate between Old Testament and New Testament scholars over the unity of the Bible. The rise of redaction criticism closed this debate by bringing about a greater emphasis on diversity.[57] The New quest for the historical Jesus began in 1953 and was so-named in 1959 by James M. Robinson.[25]: 34 

After 1970, biblical criticism began to change radically and pervasively.[4]: vii, 21  New criticism, which developed as an adjunct to literary criticism, was concerned with the particulars of style.[58] New historicism, a literary theory that views history through literature, also developed.[59] Biblical criticism began to apply new literary approaches such as structuralism and rhetorical criticism, which concentrated less on history and more on the texts themselves.[60] In the 1970s, the New Testament scholar E. P. Sanders (b. 1937) advanced the New Perspective on Paul, which has greatly influenced scholarly views on the relationship between Pauline Christianity and Jewish Christianity in the Pauline epistles.[61][62] Sanders also advanced study of the historical Jesus by putting Jesus's life in the context of first-century Second-Temple Judaism.[47]: 13–18  In 1974, the theologian Hans Frei published The Eclipse of Biblical Narrative, which became a landmark work leading to the development of post-critical interpretation.[63] The third period of focused study on the historical Jesus began in 1988.[64]

By 1990, biblical criticism as a primarily historical discipline changed into a group of disciplines with often conflicting interests.[4]: 21, 22  New perspectives from different ethnicities, feminist theology, Catholicism and Judaism offered insights previously overlooked by the majority of white male Protestants who had dominated biblical criticism from its beginnings.[4]: 21 [note 2] Globalization also brought different worldviews, while other academic fields such as Near Eastern studies, sociology, and anthropology became active in expanding biblical criticism as well. These new points of view created awareness that the Bible can be rationally interpreted from many different perspectives.[4]: 22  In turn, this awareness changed biblical criticism's central concept from the criteria of neutral judgment to that of beginning from a recognition of the various biases the reader brings to the study of the texts.[4]: 22 

Historical Jesus: the New quest into the twenty-first century

 
Ernst Hildebrand's 1910 painting Kreuzigung Christi depicts the crucifixion of Jesus. The crucifixion is widely regarded by historians as a historical event.[66][67]

There is no general agreement among scholars on how to periodize the various quests for the historical Jesus. Most scholars agree the first quest began with Reimarus and ended with Schweitzer, that there was a "no-quest" period in the first half of the twentieth century, and that there was a second quest, known as the "New" quest that began in 1953 and lasted until 1988 when a third began.[25]: 697  However, Stanley E. Porter (b. 1956) calls this periodization "untenable and belied by all of the pertinent facts",[25]: 697, 698  arguing that people were searching for the historical Jesus before Reimarus, and that there never has been a period when scholars weren't doing so.[25]: 698, 699 

In 1953, Ernst Käsemann (1906–1998), gave a famous lecture before the Old Marburgers, his former colleagues at the University of Marburg, where he had studied under Bultmann.[68] In this stronghold of support for Bultmann, Käsemann claimed "Bultmann's skepticism about what could be known about the historical Jesus had been too extreme".[45]: 10  Bultmann had claimed that, since the gospel writers wrote theology, their writings could not be considered history, but Käsemann reasoned that one does not necessarily preclude the other.[45]: 10, 11 [69] James M. Robinson named this the New quest in his 1959 essay "The New Quest for the Historical Jesus".[25]: 34  This quest focused largely on the teachings of Jesus as interpreted by existentialist philosophy. Interest waned again by the 1970s.[25]: 668 [45]: 11 

N. T. Wright asserts that the third quest began with the Jesus Seminar in 1988. By then, it became necessary to acknowledge that "the upshot of the first two quests ... was to reveal the frustrating limitations of the historical study of any ancient person".[45]: 12  According to Ben Witherington, probability is all that is possible in this pursuit.[45]: 12  Paul Montgomery in The New York Times writes that "Through the ages scholars and laymen have taken various positions on the life of Jesus, ranging from total acceptance of the Bible to assertions that Jesus of Nazareth is a creature of myth and never lived."[70]

Sanders explains that, because of the desire to know everything about Jesus, including his thoughts and motivations, and because there are such varied conclusions about him, it seems to many scholars that it is impossible to be certain about anything. Yet according to Sanders, "we know quite a lot" about Jesus.[71] While scholars rarely agree about what is known or unknown about the historical Jesus, according to Witherington, scholars do agree that "the historic questions should not be dodged".[45]: 271 

Major methods

Theologian David R. Law writes that biblical scholars usually employ textual, source, form, and redaction criticism together. The Old Testament (the Hebrew Bible), and the New Testament, as distinct bodies of literature, each raise their own problems of interpretation - the two are therefore generally studied separately. For purposes of discussion, these individual methods are separated here and the Bible is addressed as a whole, but this is an artificial approach that is used only for the purpose of description, and is not how biblical criticism is actually practiced.[13]: viii–ix 

Textual criticism

Textual criticism involves examination of the text itself and all associated manuscripts with the aim of determining the original text.[72]: 47  It is one of the largest areas of biblical criticism in terms of the sheer amount of information it addresses. The roughly 900 manuscripts found at Qumran include the oldest extant manuscripts of the Hebrew Bible. They represent every book except Esther, though most books appear only in fragmentary form.[73] The New Testament has been preserved in more manuscripts than any other ancient work, having over 5,800 complete or fragmented Greek manuscripts, 10,000 Latin manuscripts and 9,300 manuscripts in various other ancient languages including Syriac, Slavic, Gothic, Ethiopic, Coptic and Armenian texts. The dates of these manuscripts are generally accepted to range from c.110–125 (the 𝔓52 papyrus) to the introduction of printing in Germany in the fifteenth century. There are also approximately a million direct New Testament quotations in the collected writings of the Church Fathers of the first four centuries. (As a comparison, the next best-sourced ancient text is the Iliad, presumably written by the ancient Greek Homer in the late eighth or early seventh century BCE, which survives in more than 1,900 manuscripts, though many are of a fragmentary nature.[74])

 
The Rylands fragment P52 verso is the oldest existing fragment of New Testament papyrus.[75] It contains phrases from the Book of John.

These texts were all written by hand, by copying from another handwritten text, so they are not alike in the manner of printed works. The differences between them are called variants.[4]: 204  A variant is simply any variation between two texts. Many variants are simple misspellings or mis-copying. For example, a scribe might drop one or more letters, skip a word or line, write one letter for another, transpose letters, and so on. Some variants represent a scribal attempt to simplify or harmonize, by changing a word or a phrase.[76]

The exact number of variants is disputed, but the more texts survive, the more likely there will be variants of some kind.[77] Variants are not evenly distributed throughout any set of texts. Charting the variants in the New Testament shows it is 62.9 percent variant-free.[78] The impact of variants on the reliability of a single text is usually tested by comparing it to a manuscript whose reliability has been long established. Though many new early manuscripts have been discovered since 1881, there are critical editions of the Greek New Testament, such as NA28 and UBS5, that "have gone virtually unchanged" from these discoveries. "It also means that the fourth century 'best texts', the 'Alexandrian' codices Vaticanus and Sinaiticus, have roots extending throughout the entire third century and even into the second".[79]

 
Folio 41v from Codex Alexandrinus. The Alexandrian textual family is based on this codex.[80]

Variants are classified into families. Say scribe 'A' makes a mistake and scribe 'B' does not. Copies of scribe 'A's text with the mistake will thereafter contain that same mistake. Over time the texts descended from 'A' that share the error, and those from 'B' that do not share it, will diverge further, but later texts will still be identifiable as descended from one or the other because of the presence or absence of that original mistake.[81]: 207, 208  The multiple generations of texts that follow, containing the error, are referred to as a "family" of texts. Textual critics study the differences between these families to piece together what the original looked like.[81]: 205  Sorting out the wealth of source material is complex, so textual families were sorted into categories tied to geographical areas. The divisions of the New Testament textual families were Alexandrian (also called the "Neutral text"), Western (Latin translations), and Eastern (used by churches centred on Antioch and Constantinople).[82]: 213 [note 3]

Forerunners of modern textual criticism can be found in both early Rabbinic Judaism and in the early church.[13]: 82  Rabbis addressed variants in the Hebrew texts as early as 100CE. Tradition played a central role in their task of producing a standard version of the Hebrew Bible. The Hebrew text they produced stabilized by the end of the second century, and has come to be known as the Masoretic text, the source of the Christian Old Testament.[13]: 82–84 

Problems of textual criticism

The two main processes of textual criticism are recension and emendation:[81]: 205, 209 

  • Recension is the selection of the most trustworthy evidence on which to base a text.
  • Emendation is the attempt to eliminate the errors which are found even in the best manuscripts.

Jerome McGann says these methods innately introduce a subjective factor into textual criticism despite its attempt at objective rules.[84][85] Alan Cooper discusses this difficulty using the example of Amos 6.12 which reads: "Does one plough with oxen?" The obvious answer is "yes", but the context of the passage seems to demand a "no". Cooper explains that a recombination of the consonants allows it to be read "Does one plough the sea with oxen?" The amendment has a basis in the text, which is believed to be corrupted, but is nevertheless a matter of personal judgment.[86]

This contributes to textual criticism being one of the most contentious areas of biblical criticism, as well as the largest, with scholars such as Arthur Verrall referring to it as the "fine and contentious art".[87][88][89] It uses specialized methodologies, enough specialized terms to create its own lexicon,[90] and is guided by a number of principles. Yet any of these principles—and their conclusions—can be contested. For example, in the late 1700s, textual critic Johann Jacob Griesbach (1745 – 1812) developed fifteen critical principles for determining which texts are likely the oldest and closest to the original.[82]: 213  One of Griesbach's rules is lectio brevior praeferenda: "the shorter reading is to be preferred". This was based on the assumption that scribes were more likely to add to a text than omit from it, making shorter texts more likely to be older.[91]

Latin scholar Albert C. Clark challenged Griesbach's view of shorter texts in 1914.[81]: 212–215  Based on his study of Cicero, Clark argued omission was a more common scribal error than addition, saying "A text is like a traveler who goes from one inn to another losing an article of luggage at each halt".[81]: 213  Clark's claims were criticized by those who supported Griesbach's principles. Clark responded, but disagreement continued. Nearly eighty years later, the theologian and priest James Royse took up the case. After close study of multiple New Testament papyri, he concluded Clark was right, and Griesbach's rule of measure was wrong.[81]: 214  [92] Some twenty-first century scholars have advocated abandoning these older approaches to textual criticism in favor of new computer-assisted methods for determining manuscript relationships in a more reliable way.[83]: 5 

Source criticism

Source criticism is the search for the original sources that form the basis of biblical texts. In Old Testament studies, source criticism is generally focused on identifying sources of a single text. For example, the seventeenth-century French priest Richard Simon (1638–1712) was an early proponent of the theory that Moses could not have been the single source of the entire Pentateuch. According to Simon, parts of the Old Testament were not written by individuals at all, but by scribes recording the[which?] community's oral tradition.[93][94]: 1  The French physician Jean Astruc presumed in 1753 that Moses had written the book of Genesis (the first book of the Pentateuch) using ancient documents; he attempted to identify these original sources and to separate them again.[94]: 2  He did this by identifying repetitions of certain events, such as parts of the flood story that are repeated three times, indicating the possibility of three sources. He discovered that the alternation of two different names for God occurs in Genesis and up to Exodus 3 but not in the rest of the Pentateuch, and he also found apparent anachronisms: statements seemingly from a later time than that in which Genesis was set. This and similar evidence led Astruc to hypothesize that the sources of Genesis were originally separate materials that were later fused into a single unit that became the book of Genesis.[9]: 166–168 [95]: 7, 8 

Examples of source criticism include its two most influential and well-known theories, the first concerning the origins of the Pentateuch in the Old Testament (Wellhausen's hypothesis); and the second tracing the sources of the four gospels of the New Testament (two-source hypothesis).[96]: 147 

Source criticism of the Old Testament: Wellhausen's hypothesis

 

Source criticism's most influential work is Julius Wellhausen's Prolegomena zur Geschichte Israels (Prologue to the History of Israel, 1878) which sought to establish the sources of the first five books of the Old Testament - collectively known as the Pentateuch.[99][95]: 95  Wellhausen correlated the history and development of those five books with the development of the Jewish faith.[95]: 95 [100] The Wellhausen hypothesis (also known as the JEDP theory, or the Documentary hypothesis, or the Graf–Wellhausen hypothesis) proposes that the Pentateuch was combined out of four separate and coherent (unified single) sources (not fragments).

J stands for the Yahwist source, (Jahwist in German), and was considered[by whom?] to be the most primitive in style and therefore the oldest. E (for Elohist) was thought to be a product of the Northern Kingdom before BCE 721; D (for Deuteronomist) was said to be written shortly before it was found in BCE 621 by King Josiah of Judah (2 Chronicles 34:14-30).[97]: 62 [98]: 5  Old Testament scholar Karl Graf (1815–1869) suggested an additional priestly source in 1866; by 1878, Wellhausen had incorporated this source, P, into his theory, which is thereafter sometimes referred to as the Graf–Wellhausen hypothesis. Wellhausen argued that P had been composed during the exile of the 6th century BCE, under the influence of Ezekiel.[54]: 69 [97]: 5  These sources are supposed to have been edited together by a late final Redactor (R) who is only imprecisely understood.[101]

Later scholars added to and refined Wellhausen's theory. For example, the Newer Documentary Thesis inferred more sources, with increasing information about their extent and inter-relationship.[32]: 49–52  The fragmentary theory was a later understanding of Wellhausen produced by form criticism. This theory argues that fragments of documents — rather than continuous, coherent documents — are the sources for the Pentateuch.[32]: 38, 39  Alexander Geddes and Johann Vater proposed that some of these fragments were quite ancient, perhaps from the time of Moses, and were brought together only at a later time.[102]: 32  This accounts for diversity but not structural and chronological consistency.[32]: 38 

One can see the Supplementary hypothesis as yet another evolution of Wellhausen's theory that solidified in the 1970s. Proponents of this view assert three sources for the Pentateuch: the Deuteronomist as the oldest source, the Elohist as the central core document, with a number of fragments or independent sources as the third.[102]: 32  Deuteronomy is seen as a single coherent document with a uniformity of style and language in spite of also having different literary strata.[102]: 92  This observation led to the idea there was such a thing as a Deuteronomist school that had originally edited and kept the document updated. This meant the supplementary model became the literary model most widely agreed upon for Deuteronomy, which then supports its application to the remainder of the Pentateuch as well.[102]: 93 

Critique of Wellhausen

Advocates of Wellhausen's hypothesis contend it accounts well for the differences and duplication found in the Pentateuchal books.[103]: 58, 59  Furthermore, they argue, it provides an explanation for the peculiar character of the material labeled P, which reflects the perspective and concerns of Israel's priests. Wellhausen's theory went virtually unchallenged until the 1970s, when it began to be heavily criticized.[104] By the end of the 1970s and into the 1990s, "one major study after another, like a series of hammer blows, has rejected the main claims of the Documentary theory, and the criteria on the basis of which they were argued".[105]: 95  It has been criticized for its dating of the sources, and for assuming that the original sources were coherent or complete documents. Studies of the literary structure of the Pentateuch have shown J and P used the same structure, and that motifs and themes cross the boundaries of the various sources, which undermines arguments for their separate origins.[98]: 4 [102]: 36 [note 4]

Problems and criticisms of the Documentary hypothesis have been brought on by literary analysts who point out the error of judging ancient Eastern writings as if they were the products of western European Protestants; and by advances in anthropology that undermined Wellhausen's assumptions about how cultures develop; and also by various archaeological findings showing the cultural environment of the early Hebrews was more advanced than Wellhausen thought.[97]: 64 [102]: 39, 80 [107]: 11 [108][note 5] As a result, few biblical scholars of the twenty-first century hold to Wellhausen's Documentary hypothesis in its classical form.[107]: 15  As Nicholson says: "it is in sharp decline—some would say in a state of advanced rigor mortis—and new solutions are being argued and urged in its place".[105]: 96  Yet no replacement has so far been agreed upon: "the work of Wellhausen, for all that it needs revision and development in detail, remains the securest basis for understanding the Pentateuch".[105]: vi 

Source criticism of the New Testament: the synoptic problem

 
The widely accepted two-source hypothesis, showing two sources for both Matthew and Luke
 
B. H. Streeter's four-source hypothesis, showing four sources each for Matthew and Luke with the colors representing the different sources

In New Testament studies, source criticism has taken a slightly different approach from Old Testament studies by focusing on identifying the common sources of multiple texts instead of looking for the multiple sources of a single set of texts. This has revealed that the Gospels are both products of sources and sources themselves.[112] As sources, Matthew, Mark and Luke are partially dependent on each other and partially independent of each other. This is called the synoptic problem, and explaining it is the single greatest dilemma of New Testament source criticism. Any explanation offered must "account for (a) what is common to all the Gospels; (b) what is common to any two of them; (c) what is peculiar to each".[113]: 87  Multiple theories exist to address the dilemma, with none universally agreed upon, but two theories have become predominant: the two-source hypothesis and the four-source hypothesis.[96]: 136–138 

Mark is the shortest of the four gospels with only 661 verses, but 600 of those verses are in Matthew and 350 of them are in Luke. Some of these verses are verbatim. Most scholars agree that this indicates Mark was a source for Matthew and Luke. There is also some verbatim agreement between Matthew and Luke of verses not found in Mark.[113]: 85–87  In 1838, the religious philosopher Christian Hermann Weisse developed a theory about this. He postulated a hypothetical collection of the sayings of Jesus from an additional source called Q, taken from Quelle, which is German for "source".[113]: 86 

If this document existed, it has now been lost, but some of its material can be deduced indirectly. There are five highly detailed arguments in favor of Q's existence: the verbal agreement of Mark and Luke, the order of the parables, the doublets, a discrepancy in the priorities of each gospel, and each one's internal coherence.[114]: 41  Q allowed the two-source hypothesis to emerge as the best supported of the various synoptic solutions.[114]: 12 [115]: fn.6  There is also material unique to each gospel. This indicates additional separate sources for Matthew and for Luke. Biblical scholar B. H. Streeter used this insight to refine and expand the two-source theory into a four-source theory in 1925.[116]: 5 [117]: 157 

Two-source theory critique

While most scholars agree that the two-source theory offers the best explanation for the Synoptic problem, and some say it has been solved, others say it is not solved satisfactorily.[118] Donald Guthrie says no single theory offers a complete solution as there are complex and important difficulties that create challenges to every theory.[96]: 208 [119] One example is Basil Christopher Butler's challenge to the legitimacy of two-source theory, arguing it contains a Lachmann fallacy[120]: 110  that says the two-source theory loses cohesion when it is acknowledged that no source can be established for Mark.[116]: 149  F. C. Grant posits multiple sources for the Gospels.[117]: 158 

Form criticism

Form criticism began in the early twentieth century when theologian Karl Ludwig Schmidt observed that Mark's Gospel is composed of short units. Schmidt asserted these small units were remnants and evidence of the oral tradition that preceded the writing of the gospels.[121]: 242 [122]: 1  Bible scholar Richard Bauckham says this "most significant insight," which established the foundation of form criticism, has never been refuted.[121]: 243  Hermann Gunkel (1862–1932) and Martin Dibelius (1883–1947) built from this insight and pioneered form criticism. By the 1950s and 1960s, Rudolf Bultmann and form criticism were the "center of the theological conversation in both Europe and North America".[123]: xiii 

Form criticism breaks the Bible down into its short units, called pericopes, which are then classified by genre: prose or verse, letters, laws, court archives, war hymns, poems of lament, and so on. Form criticism then theorizes concerning the individual pericope's Sitz im Leben ("setting in life" or "place in life"). Based on their understanding of folklore, form critics believed the early Christian communities formed the sayings and teachings of Jesus themselves, according to their needs (their "situation in life"), and that each form could be identified by the situation in which it had been created and vice versa.[124]: 271 

Critique of form criticism

In the early to mid twentieth century, form critics thought finding oral "laws of development" within the New Testament would prove the form critic's assertions that the texts had evolved within the early Christian communities according to sitz im leben. Since Mark was believed to be the first gospel, the form critics looked for the addition of proper names for anonymous characters, indirect discourse being turned into direct quotation, and the elimination of Aramaic terms and forms, with details becoming more concrete in Matthew, and then more so in Luke.[125] Instead, in the 1970s, New Testament scholar E. P. Sanders wrote that: "There are no hard and fast laws of the development of the Synoptic tradition... On all counts the tradition developed in opposite directions. It became both longer and shorter, both more and less detailed, and both more and less Semitic".[124]: 298 [note 6]

Scholars from the 1970s and into the 1990s, produced an "explosion of studies" on structure, genre, text-type, setting and language that challenged several of form criticism's aspects and assumptions.[127]: 42, 70 [note 7] For example, the period of the twentieth century dominated by form criticism is marked by Bultmann's extreme skepticism concerning what can be known about the historical Jesus and his sayings.[131] Some form critics assumed these same skeptical presuppositions[132] based largely on their understanding of oral transmission and folklore. During the latter half of the twentieth century, field studies of cultures with existing oral traditions directly impacted many of these presuppositions.[124]: 296–298  In 1978, research by linguists Milman Parry and Albert Bates Lord was used to undermine Gunkel's belief that "short narratives evolved into longer cycles".[122]: 10  Within these oral cultures, literacy did not replace memory in a natural evolution. Instead, writing was used to enhance memory in an overlap of written and oral tradition.[122]: 16, 17  Susan Niditch concluded from her orality studies that: "no longer are many scholars convinced ... that the most seemingly oral-traditional or formulaic pieces are earliest in date".[122]: 10, 11  In this manner, compelling evidence developed against the form critical belief that Jesus's sayings were formed by Christian communities. As John Niles indicates, the "older idea of 'an ideal folk community—an undifferentiated company of rustics, each of whom contributes equally to the process of oral tradition,' is no longer tenable".[124]: 265, 298–304  According to Eddy and Boyd, these various conclusions directly undermine assumptions about Sitz im leben: "In light of what we now know of oral traditions, no necessary correlation between [the literary] forms and life situations [sitz im leben] can be confidently drawn".[124]: 296–298 

Form critics assumed the early Church was heavily influenced by the Hellenistic culture that surrounded first-century Palestine, but in the 1970s, Sanders, as well as Gerd Theissen, sparked new rounds of studies that included anthropological and sociological perspectives, reestablishing Judaism as the predominant influence on Jesus, Paul, and the New Testament.[133]: 46  New Testament scholar N. T. Wright says, "The earliest traditions of Jesus reflected in the Gospels are written from the perspective of Second Temple Judaism [and] must be interpreted from the standpoint of Jewish eschatology and apocalypticism".[133]: 47 [134]

According to religion scholar Werner H. Kelber, form critics throughout the mid-twentieth century were so focused on finding each pericope's original form, that they were distracted from any serious consideration of memory as a dynamic force in the construction of the gospels or the early church community tradition.[130]: 276–278  What Kelber refers to as the "astounding myopia" of the form critics has revived interest in memory as an analytical category within biblical criticism.[135][130]: 278 

For some, the many challenges to form criticism mean its future is in doubt.[note 8] Bible scholar Tony Campbell says:

Form criticism had a meteoric rise in the early part of the twentieth century and fell from favor toward its end. For some, the future of form criticism is not an issue: it has none. But if form criticism embodies an essential insight, it will continue.[129]: 15  ... Two concerns ... give it its value: concern for the nature of the text and for its shape and structure. ... If the encrustations can be scraped away, the good stuff may still be there.[136]: 219 [129]: 16 

Redaction criticism

 
Correlations of text in the Synoptic gospels[137]

Redaction is the process of editing multiple sources, often with a similar theme, into a single document. It was derived from a combination of both source and form criticism.[138]: 98  As in source criticism, it is necessary to identify the traditions before determining how the redactor used them.[138]: 98 [13]: 181  Form critics saw the synoptic writers as mere collectors and focused on the Sitz im Leben as the creator of the texts, whereas redaction critics have dealt more positively with the Gospel writers, asserting an understanding of them as theologians of the early church.[138]: 99 [139] Redaction critics reject source and form criticism's description of the Bible texts as mere collections of fragments. Where form critics fracture the biblical elements into smaller and smaller individual pieces, redaction critics attempt to interpret the whole literary unit.[138]: 99 

Norman Perrin defines redaction criticism as "the study of the theological motivation of an author as it is revealed in the collection, arrangement, editing, and modification of traditional material, and in the composition of new material ... redaction criticism directs us to the author as editor."[128]: 14  Redaction criticism developed after World War II in Germany and arrived in England and North America by the 1950s.[138]: 96–97  It focuses on discovering how and why the literary units were originally edited—"redacted"—into their final forms.[24]: 820 

Redaction Critique

Redaction critics assume an extreme skepticism toward the historicity of Jesus and the gospels, just as form critics do, which has been seen by some scholars as a bias. The process of redaction seeks the historical community of the final redactors of the gospels, though there are often no textual clues. Porter and Adams say the redactive method of finding the final editor's theology is flawed.[140]: 335, 336  In the New Testament, redaction critics attempt to discern the original author/evangelist's theology by focusing and relying upon the differences between the gospels, yet it is unclear whether every difference has theological meaning, how much meaning, or whether any given difference is a stylistic or even an accidental change. Further, it is not at all clear whether the difference was made by the evangelist, who could have used the already changed story when writing a gospel.[140]: 336  The evangelist's theology more likely depends on what the gospels have in common as well as their differences.[140]: 336  Harrington says, "over-theologizing, allegorizing, and psychologizing are the major pitfalls encountered" in redaction criticism.[138]: 100 

Followers of other theories concerning the Synoptic problem, such as those who support the Greisbach hypothesis which says Matthew was written first, Luke second, and Mark third, have pointed to weaknesses in the redaction-based arguments for the existence of Q and Markan priority.[141] Mark Goodacre says "Some scholars have used the success of redaction criticism as a means of supporting the existence of Q, but this will always tend toward circularity, particularly given the hypothetical nature of Q which itself is reconstructed by means of redaction criticism".[141]

Literary criticism

In the mid-twentieth century, literary criticism began to develop, shifting scholarly attention from historical and pre-compositional matters to the text itself, thereafter becoming the dominant form of biblical criticism in a relatively short period of about thirty years. It can be said to have begun in 1957 when literary critic Northrop Frye wrote an analysis of the Bible from the perspective of his literary background by using literary criticism to understand the Bible forms.[142][143]: 3–4  Hans Frei proposed that "biblical narratives should be evaluated on their own terms" rather than by taking them apart in the manner we evaluate philosophy or historicity.[54]: 99  Frei was one of several external influences that moved biblical criticism from a historical to a literary focus.[143]: 3 [144] New Testament scholar Paul R. House says the discipline of linguistics, new views of historiography, and the decline of older methods of criticism were also influential in that process.[143]: 3 

By 1974, the two methodologies being used in literary criticism were rhetorical analysis and structuralism.[143]: 4, 11  Rhetorical analysis divides a passage into units, observes how a single unit shifts or breaks, taking special note of poetic devices, meter, parallelism, word play and so on. It then charts the writer's thought progression from one unit to the next, and finally, assembles the data in an attempt to explain the author's intentions behind the piece.[143]: 8, 9  Critics of rhetorical analysis say there is a "lack of a well-developed methodology" and that it has a "tendency to be nothing more than an exercise in stylistics".[143]: 425 

Structuralism looks at the language to discern "layers of meaning" with the goal of uncovering a work's "deep structures" – the premises as well as the purposes of the author.[143]: 102  In 1981 literature scholar Robert Alter also contributed to the development of biblical literary criticism by publishing an influential analysis of biblical themes from a literary perspective. The 1980s saw the rise of formalism, which focuses on plot, structure, character and themes[143]: 164  and the development of reader-response criticism which focuses on the reader rather than the author.[143]: 374, 410 

New Testament scholar Donald Guthrie highlights a flaw in the literary critical approach to the Gospels: the genre of the Gospels has not been fully determined. No conclusive evidence has yet been produced to settle the question of genre, and without genre, no adequate parallels can be found, and without parallels "it must be considered to what extent the principles of literary criticism are applicable".[96]: 19  The validity of using the same critical methods for novels and for the Gospels, without the assurance the Gospels are actually novels, must be questioned.[96]: 20 

Canonical criticism

As a type of literary criticism, canonical criticism has both theological and literary roots. Its origins are found in the Church's views of the biblical writings as sacred, and in the secular literary critics who began to influence biblical scholarship in the 1940s and 1950s. By the mid-twentieth century, the high level of departmentalization in biblical criticism, with its large volume of data and absence of applicable theology, had begun to produce a level of dissatisfaction among both scholars and faith communities.[145]: 4  Brevard S. Childs (1923–2007) proposed an approach to bridge that gap that came to be called canonical criticism. Canonical criticism "signaled a major and enduring shift in biblical studies".[145]: 4  Canonical criticism does not reject historical criticism, but it does reject its claim to "unique validity".[146]: 80  John Barton says that canonical criticism does not simply ask what the text might have originally meant, it asks what it means to the current believing community, and it does so in a manner different from any type of historical criticism.[146]: 89–91 

John H. Hayes and Carl Holladay say "canonical criticism has several distinguishing features": (1) Canonical criticism is synchronic; it sees all biblical writings as standing together in time instead of focusing on the diachronic questions of the historical approach.[147]: 154  (2) Canonical critics approach the books as whole units instead of focusing on pieces. They accept that many texts have been composed over long periods of time, but the canonical critic wishes "to interpret the last edition of a biblical book" and then relate books to each other.[147]: 155  (3) Canonical criticism opposes form criticism's isolation of individual passages from their canonical setting.[147]: 155  (4) Canonical criticism emphasizes the relationship between the text and its reader in an effort to reclaim the relationship between the texts and how they were used in the early believing communities. Canonical critics focus on reader interaction with the biblical writing.[147]: 156  (5) "Canonical criticism is overtly theological in its approach". Critics are interested in what the text means for the community—"the community of faith whose predecessors produced the canon, that was called into existence by the canon, and seeks to live by the canon".[147]: 156 

Rhetorical criticism

Rhetorical criticism is also a type of literary criticism. While James Muilenburg (1896–1974) is often referred to as "the prophet of rhetorical criticism",[148] it is Herbert A. Wichelns who is credited with "creating the modern discipline of rhetorical criticism" with his 1925 essay "The Literary Criticism of Oratory".[149]: 29  In that essay, Wichelns says that rhetorical criticism and other types of literary criticism differ from each other because rhetorical criticism is only concerned with "effect. It regards a speech as a communication to a specific audience, and holds its business to be the analysis and appreciation of the orator's method of imparting his ideas to his hearers".[149]: 29  Rhetorical criticism is a qualitative analysis. This qualitative analysis involves three primary dimensions: (1) analyzing the act of criticism and what it does; (2) analyzing what goes on within the rhetoric being analyzed and what is created by that rhetoric; and (3) understanding the processes involved in all of it.[149]: 6  Sonja K. Foss discusses ten different methods of rhetorical criticism in her book Rhetorical Criticism: Exploration and Practice saying that each method will produce different insights.[149]: ix, 9 

Biblical rhetorical criticism makes use of understanding the "forms, genres, structures, stylistic devices and rhetorical techniques" common to the Near Eastern literature of the different ages when the separate books of biblical literature were written. It attempts to discover and evaluate the rhetorical devices, language, and methods of communication used within the texts by focusing on the use of "repetition, parallelism, strophic structure, motifs, climax, chiasm and numerous other literary devices".[150] Phyllis Trible, a student of Muilenburg, has become one of the leaders of rhetorical criticism and is known for her detailed literary analysis and her feminist critique of biblical interpretation.[151]

Narrative criticism

In the last half of the twentieth century, historical critics began to recognize that being limited to the historical meant the Bible was not being studied in the manner of other ancient writings. In 1974, Hans Frei pointed out that a historical focus neglects the "narrative character" of the gospels. Critics began asking if these texts should be understood on their own terms before being used as evidence of something else.[152]: 2, 3  According to Mark Allen Powell the difficulty in understanding the gospels on their own terms is determining what those terms are: "The problem with treating the gospels 'just like any other book' is that the gospels are not like any other book".[152]: 3  The New Critics, (whose views were absorbed by narrative criticism), rejected the idea that background information holds the key to the meaning of the text, and asserted that meaning and value reside within the text itself.[152]: 4  It is now accepted as "axiomatic in literary circles that the meaning of literature transcends the historical intentions of the author".[152]: 5 

As a form of literary criticism, narrative criticism approaches scripture as story.[152]: 7  Christopher T. Paris says that, "narrative criticism admits the existence of sources and redactions but chooses to focus on the artistic weaving of these materials into a sustained narrative picture".[153]

Narrative criticism was first used to study the New Testament in the 1970s, with the works of David Rhoads, Jack D. Kingsbury, R. Alan Culpepper, and Robert C. Tannehill.[152]: 6  A decade later, this new approach in biblical criticism included the Old Testament as well. The first article labeled narrative criticism was "Narrative Criticism and the Gospel of Mark," published in 1982 by Bible scholar David Rhoads.[154]: 167  Stephen D. Moore has written that "as a term, narrative criticism originated within biblical studies", but its method was borrowed from narratology.[154]: 166  It was also influenced by New Criticism which saw each literary work as a freestanding whole with intrinsic meaning.[154]: 166  Sharon Betsworth says Robert Alter's work is what adapted New Criticism to the Bible.[154]: 166  Scholars such as Robert Alter and Frank Kermode sought to teach readers to "appreciate the Bible itself by training attention on its artfulness—how [the text] orchestrates sound, repetition, dialogue, allusion, and ambiguity to generate meaning and effect".[155]

Legacy

Ken and Richard Soulen say that "biblical criticism has permanently altered the way people understand the Bible".[4]: 22  One way of understanding this change is to see it as a cultural enterprise. Jonathan Sheehan has argued that critical study meant the Bible had to become a primarily cultural instrument. It could no longer be a Catholic Bible or a Lutheran Bible but had to be divested of its scriptural character within specific confessional hermeneutics.[156]: 9  As a result, the Bible is no longer thought of solely as a religious artifact, and its interpretation is no longer restricted to the community of believers.[157]: 129  The Bible's cultural impact is studied in multiple academic fields, producing not only the cultural Bible, but the modern academic Bible as well.[158][156]: 9  Soulen adds that biblical criticism's "leading practitioners ... have set standards of industry, acumen, and insight that remain pace-setting today."[4]: 22 

Biblical criticism not only made study of the Bible secularized and scholarly, it also went in the other direction and made it more democratic. It began to be recognized that: "Literature was written not just for the dons of Oxford and Cambridge, but also for common folk... Opposition to authority, especially ecclesiastical [church authority], was widespread, and religious tolerance was on the increase".[14] Old orthodoxies were questioned and radical views tolerated. Scholars began writing in their common languages making their works available to a larger public.[14]

In this way, biblical criticism also led to conflict. Many like Roy A. Harrisville believe biblical criticism was created by those hostile to the Bible.[159] There are aspects of biblical criticism that have not only been hostile to the Bible, but also to the religions whose scripture it is, in both intent and effect.[2]: 119, 120  So biblical criticism became, in the perception of many, an assault on religion, especially Christianity, through the "autonomy of reason" which it espoused.[160] Part of the legacy of biblical criticism is that, as it rose, it led to the decline of biblical authority.[2]: 137  J. W. Rogerson summarizes:

By 1800 historical criticism in Germany had reached the point where Genesis had been divided into two or more sources, the unity of authorship of Isaiah and Daniel had been disputed, the interdependence of the first three gospels had been demonstrated, and miraculous elements in the OT and NT [Old and New Testaments] had been explained as resulting from the primitive or pre-scientific outlook of the biblical writers.[161]

Jeffrey Burton Russell describes it thus: "Faith was transferred from the words of scripture itself to those of influential biblical critics ... liberal Christianity retreated hastily before the advance of science and biblical criticism. By the end of the eighteenth century, advanced liberals had abandoned the core of Christian beliefs."[162]: 151, 153  This created an "intellectual crisis" in American Christianity of the early twentieth century which led to a backlash against the critical approach. This backlash produced a fierce internal battle for control of local churches, national denominations, divinity schools and seminaries.[163]: 93 

On one hand, Rogerson says that "historical criticism is not inherently inimical to Christian belief".[161] On the other hand, as Michael Fishbane frankly wrote in 1992, "No longer are we sustained within a biblical matrix... The labor of many centuries has expelled us from this edenic womb and its wellsprings of life and knowledge... [The] Bible has lost its ancient authority".[157]: 121  The most profound legacy of the loss of biblical authority is the formation of the modern world itself, according to religion and ethics scholar Jeffrey Stout.[163]: 6 [164] "There are those who regard the desacralization of the Bible as the fortunate condition for the rise of new sensibilities and modes of imagination" that went into developing the modern world.[157]: 121  For many, biblical criticism "released a host of threats" to the Christian faith. For others biblical criticism "proved to be a failure, due principally to the assumption that diachronic, linear research could master any and all of the questions and problems attendant on interpretation".[159] Still others believed that biblical criticism, "shorn of its unwarranted arrogance," could be a reliable source of interpretation.[159]

Fishbane asserts that the significant question for those who continue in any community of Jewish or Christian faith is, after 200 years of biblical criticism: can the text still be seen as sacred? "[T]his question affects our innermost cultural being and traces our relationship to the foundational text of our religious and cultural origins".[157]: 121  He compares biblical criticism to Job, a prophet who destroyed "self-serving visions for the sake of a more honest crossing from the divine textus to the human one".[157]: 129  Or as Rogerson says: biblical criticism has been liberating for those who want their faith "intelligently grounded and intellectually honest".[161]

Fishbane writes:

the traditional sacrality of the Bible is at once simple and symbolic, individual and communal, practical and paradoxical. But times have changed... [In the twenty-first century,] [c]an the notion of a sacred text be retrieved? ... It is arguably one of Judaism's greatest contributions to the history of religions to assert that the divine Reality is communicated to mankind through words... our hermeneutical hope is in the indissoluble link between the divine and human textus... It is at such points that the ancient theophanic power of illimitable divinity may yet breakthrough swollen words... Thus, ... we may say that the Bible itself may help to retrieve the notion of a sacred text.[157]: 126, 129 

By the end of the twentieth century, multiple new points of view changed biblical criticism's central concepts and its goals, leading to the development of a group of new and different biblical-critical disciplines.[4]: 21, 22 

Non-liberal Protestant criticism

One legacy of biblical criticism in American culture is the American fundamentalist movement of the 1920s and 1930s. Fundamentalism began, at least partly, as a response to the biblical criticism of nineteenth century liberalism.[165][166]: 4  Some fundamentalists believed liberal critics had invented an entirely new religion "completely at odds with the Christian faith".[167]: 29  There have also been conservative Protestants who accepted biblical criticism, and this too is part of biblical criticism's legacy. William Robertson Smith (1846–1894) is an example of a nineteenth century evangelical who believed historical criticism was a legitimate outgrowth of the Protestant Reformation's focus on the biblical text. He saw it as a "necessary tool to enable intelligent churchgoers" to understand the Bible, and was a pioneer in establishing the final form of the supplementary hypothesis of the documentary hypothesis.[22]: 298  A similar view was later advocated by the Primitive Methodist biblical scholar A. S. Peake (1865–1929).[22]: 298  Conservative Protestant scholars have continued the tradition of contributing to critical scholarship.[168]: 140–142  Mark Noll says that "in recent years, a steadily growing number of well qualified and widely published scholars have broadened and deepened the impact of evangelical scholarship".[168]: 135  Edwin M. Yamauchi is a recognized expert on Gnosticism; Gordon Fee has done exemplary work in textual criticism; Richard Longenecker is a student of Jewish-Christianity and the theology of Paul. "[It] is safe to conclude that in many measurable features contemporary evangelical scholarship on the scriptures enjoys a considerable good health".[168]: 136, 137, 141 

Catholic criticism

Throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Catholic theology avoided biblical criticism because of its reliance on rationalism, preferring instead to engage in traditional exegesis, based on the works of the Church Fathers.[36]: 90  Notable exceptions to this included Richard Simon, Ignaz von Döllinger and the Bollandist.[169]

The Church showed strong opposition to biblical criticism during that period. Frequent political revolutions, bitter opposition of "liberalism" to the Church, and the expulsion of religious orders from France and Germany, made the church understandably suspicious of the new intellectual currents.[169] In his 1829 encyclical Traditi humilitati, Pope Pius VIII lashed against "those who publish the Bible with new interpretations contrary to the Church's laws", arguing that they were "skillfully distort[ing] the meaning by their own interpretation", in order to "ensure that the reader imbibes their lethal poison instead of the saving water of salvation".[170] In 1864, Pope Pius IX promulgated the encyclical letter Quanta cura ("Condemning Current Errors"), which decried what the Pontiff considered significant errors afflicting the modern age. These he listed in an attachment called Syllabus Errorum ("Syllabus of Errors"), which, among other things, condemned rationalistic interpretations of the Bible.[171] Similarly, the dogmatic constitution Dei Filius ("Son of God"), approved by the First Vatican Council in 1871, rejected biblical criticism, reaffirming that the Bible was written by God and that it was inerrant.[172]

That began to change in the final decades of the nineteenth century when, in 1890, the French Dominican Marie-Joseph Lagrange (1855–1938) established a school in Jerusalem called the École prátique d'études biblique, which became the École Biblique in 1920, to encourage study of the Bible using the historical-critical method.[173]: 300  Two years later, Lagrange funded a journal (Revue Biblique), spoke at various conferences, wrote Bible commentaries that incorporated textual critical work of his own, did pioneering work on biblical genres and forms, and laid the path to overcoming resistance to the historical-critical method among his fellow scholars.[173]: 301 

On 18 November 1893, Pope Leo XIII promulgated the encyclical letter Providentissimus Deus ('The most provident God'). The letter gave the first formal authorization for the use of critical methods in biblical scholarship.[36] "Hence it is most proper that Professors of Sacred Scripture and theologians should master those tongues in which the sacred Books were originally written,[174]: §17  and have a knowledge of natural science.[174]: §18  He recommended that the student of scripture be first given a sound grounding in the interpretations of the Fathers such as Tertullian, Cyprian, Hilary, Ambrose, Leo the Great, Gregory the Great, Augustine and Jerome,[174]: §7  and understand what they interpreted literally, and what allegorically; and note what they lay down as belonging to faith and what is opinion.[174]: §19  Although Providentissimus Deus tried to encourage Catholic biblical studies, it created also problems. In the encyclical, Leo XIII excluded the possibility of restricting the inspiration and inerrancy of the bible to matters of faith and morals.

The situation precipitated after the election of Pope Pius X: a staunch traditionalist, Pius saw biblical criticism as part of a growing destructive modernist tendency in the Church. Thus, he explicitly condemned it in the papal syllabus Lamentabili sane exitu ("With truly lamentable results") and in his papal encyclical Pascendi Dominici gregis ("Feeding the Lord's Flock"), which labelled it as heretical.[175] The École Biblique and the Revue Biblique were shut down and Lagrange was called back to France in 1912.

Following Pius's death, Pope Benedict XV once again condemned rationalistic biblical criticism in his papal encyclical Spiritus Paraclitus ("Paraclete Spirit").[176][36]: 99, 100 , but also took a more moderate line than his predecessor, allowing Lagrange to return to Jerusalem and reopen his school and journal.

In 1943, on the fiftieth anniversary of the Providentissimus Deus, Pope Pius XII issued the papal encyclical Divino Afflante Spiritu ('Inspired by the Holy Spirit') sanctioning historical criticism, opening a new epoch in Catholic critical scholarship. The Jesuit Augustin Bea (1881–1968) had played a vital part in its publication.[22]: 298 [177] The dogmatic constitution Dei verbum ("Word of God"), approved by the Second Vatican Council and promulgated by Pope Paul VI in 1965 furtherly sanctioned biblical criticism.[178]

Raymond E. Brown, Joseph A. Fitzmyer and Roland E. Murphy were the most famous Catholic scholars to apply biblical criticism and the historical-critical method in analyzing the Bible: together, they authored The Jerome Biblical Commentary and The New Jerome Biblical Commentary the later of which is still one of the most used textbooks in Catholic Seminaries of the United States.[179][180] The Jerome Biblical Commentary for the Twenty-First Century, a third fully revised edition, will be published in 2022 and will be edited by John J. Collins, Gina Hens-Piazza, Barbara Reid and Donald Senior.[181]

This tradition is continued by Catholic scholars such as John P. Meier, and Conleth Kearns, who also worked with Reginald C. Fuller and Leonard Johnston preparing A New Catholic Commentary on Holy Scripture.[182][183] Meier is also the author of a multi-volume work on the historical Jesus, A Marginal Jew.[184]

Jewish criticism

Biblical criticism posed unique difficulties for Judaism.[185] Some Jewish scholars, such as rabbinicist Solomon Schechter, did not participate in biblical criticism because they saw criticism of the Pentateuch as a threat to Jewish identity.[186]: 83  The growing anti-semitism in Germany of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the perception that higher criticism was an entirely Protestant Christian pursuit, and the sense that many Bible critics were not impartial academics but were proponents of supersessionism, prompted Schechter to describe "Higher Criticism as Higher Anti-semitism".[186]: 42, 83 

One of the earliest historical-critical Jewish scholars of Pentateuchal studies was M. M. Kalisch, who began work in the nineteenth century.[187]: 213  In the early twentieth century, historical criticism of the Pentateuch became mainstream among Jewish scholars.[187]: 218  In 1905, Rabbi David Zvi Hoffmann wrote an extensive, two-volume, philologically based critique of the Wellhausen theory, which supported Jewish orthodoxy.[188] Bible professor Benjamin D. Sommer says it is "among the most precise and detailed commentaries on the legal texts [Leviticus and Deuteronomy] ever written".[187]: 215  According to Aly Elrefaei, the strongest refutation of Wellhausen's Documentary theory came from Yehezkel Kaufmann in 1937.[189]: 8  Kaufmann was the first Jewish scholar to fully exploit higher criticism to counter Wellhausen's theory. Wellhausen's and Kaufmann's methods were similar yet their conclusions were opposed.[189]: 8  Mordechai Breuer, who branches out beyond most Jewish exegesis and explores the implications of historical criticism for multiple subjects, is an example of a twenty-first century Jewish biblical critical scholar.[187]: 267 

Feminist criticism

Biblical criticism impacted feminism and was impacted by it. In the 1980s, Phyllis Trible and Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza reframed biblical criticism by challenging the supposed disinterest and objectivity it claimed for itself and exposing how ideological-theological stances had played a critical role in interpretation.[190] For example, the patriarchal model of ancient Israel became an aspect of biblical criticism through the anthropology of the nineteenth century.[191]: 9  Feminist scholars of second-wave feminism appropriated it.[191]: 15  Third wave feminists began raising concerns about its accuracy.[191]: 24–25  Carol L. Meyers says feminist archaeology has shown "male dominance was real; but it was fragmentary, not hegemonic" leading to a change in the anthropological description of ancient Israel as heterarchy rather than patriarchy.[191]: 27 

Feminist criticism is an aspect of the feminist theology movement which began in the 1960s and 1970s as part of the feminist movement in the United States.[192]: 1  Three phases of feminist biblical interpretation are connected to the three phases, or 'waves', of the movement.[191]: 11  Feminist theology has since responded to globalization, making itself less specifically Western, thereby moving beyond its original narrative "as a movement defined by the USA".[192]: 2  Feminist criticism embraces the inter-disciplinary approach to biblical criticism, encouraging a reader-response approach to the text that includes an attitude of "dissent" or "resistance".[193]

Postcolonial biblical criticism

In the mid to late 1990s, a global response to the changes in biblical criticism began to coalesce as "Postcolonial biblical criticism".[194]: 4, 5  Fernando F. Segovia and Stephen D. Moore postulate that it emerged from "liberation hermeneutics, or extra-biblical Postcolonial studies, or even from historical biblical criticism, or from all three sources at once".[194]: 5–6  It has a focus on the indigenous and local with an eye toward recovering those aspects of culture that Colonialism had erased or suppressed.[194]: 6  The Postcolonial view is rooted in a consciousness of the geopolitical situation for all people, and is "transhistorical and transcultural".[194]: 11  According to Laura E. Donaldson, postcolonial criticism is oppositional and "multidimensional in nature, keenly attentive to the intricacies of the colonial situation in terms of culture, race, class and gender".[194]: 12, 13 

African-American biblical criticism

Biblical criticism produced profound changes in African-American culture. Vaughn A. Booker writes that, "Such developments included the introduction of the varieties of American metaphysical theology in sermons and songs, liturgical modifications [to accommodate] Holy Spirit possession presences through shouting and dancing, and musical changes". These changes would both "complement and reconfigure conventional African American religious life".[195]

Michael Joseph Brown writes that African Americans responded to the assumption of universality in biblical criticism by challenging it. He says all Bible readings are contextual, in that readers bring with them their own context: perceptions and experiences harvested from social and cultural situations.[37]: 2  African-American biblical criticism is based on liberation theology and black theology, and looks for what is potentially liberating in the texts.[37]: 2 

Queer biblical hermeneutics

According to Episcopalian priest and queer theologian Patrick S. Cheng (Episcopal Divinity School): "Queer biblical hermeneutics is a way of looking at the sacred text through the eyes of queer people. It is important to understand the meaning of these terms in relation to the exegetical process."[196]

Social scientific criticism

Social scientific criticism is part of the wider trend in biblical criticism to reflect interdisciplinary methods and diversity.[197][198] It grew out of form criticism's Sitz im Leben and the sense that historical form criticism had failed to adequately analyze the social and anthropological contexts which form critics claimed had formed the texts. Using the perspectives, theories, models, and research of the social sciences to determine what social norms may have influenced the growth of biblical tradition, it is similar to historical biblical criticism in its goals and methods and has less in common with literary critical approaches. It analyzes the social and cultural dimensions of the text and its environmental context.[199]

New historicism

New historicism emerged as traditional historical biblical criticism changed. Lois Tyson says this new form of historical criticism developed in the 1970s. It "rejects both traditional historicism's marginalization of literature and New Criticism's enshrinement of the literary text in a timeless dimension beyond history".[200]: 288  Literary texts are seen as "cultural artifacts" that reveal context as well as content, and within New Historicism, the "literary text and the historical situation" are equally important".[200]: 288 

Post-modern biblical criticism

Postmodern biblical criticism began after the 1940s and 1950s when the term postmodern came into use to signify a rejection of modern conventions.[201]: 73  Many of these early postmodernist views came from France following World War II. Postmodernism has been associated with Sigmund Freud, radical politics, and arguments against metaphysics and ideology.[201]: 67  It questions anything that claims "objectively secured foundations, universals, metaphysics, or analytical dualism".[201]: 74  Biblical scholar A. K. M. Adam says postmodernism has three general features: 1) it denies any privileged starting point for truth; 2) it is critical of theories that attempt to explain the "totality of reality;" and 3) it attempts to show that all ideals are grounded in ideological, economic or political self-interest.[202]

Post-critical interpretation

Post-critical interpretation, according to Ken and Richard Soulen, "shares postmodernism's suspicion of modern claims to neutral standards of reason, but not its hostility toward theological interpretation".[4]: 22  It begins with the understanding that biblical criticism's focus on historicity produced a distinction between the meaning of what the text says and what it is about (what it historically references). The biblical scholar Hans Frei wrote that what he refers to as the "realistic narratives" of literature, including the Bible, don't allow for such separation.[203]: 119  Subject matter is identical to verbal meaning and is found in plot and nowhere else.[203]: 120  "As Frei puts it, scripture 'simultaneously depicts and renders the reality (if any) of what it talks about'; its subject matter is 'constituted by, or identical with, its narrative".[203]: 120 

Notes

  1. ^ known in German as Kultgeschichtliche Schule or Religionsgeschichtliche Schule.[4]: 161 
  2. ^
    • Fiorenza says, "Christian male theologians have formulated theological concepts in terms of their own cultural experience, insisting on male language relating to God, and on a symbolic universe in which women do not appear... Feminist scholars insist that religious texts and traditions must be reinterpreted so that women and other "non-persons" can achieve full citizenship in religion and society".[65]
    • This "leads naturally to a second indictment against biblical criticism: that it is the preserve of a small coterie of people in the rich Western world, trying to legislate for how the vast mass of humanity ought to read the Bible. ...Not only has such criticism detached the Bible from believing communities, it has also appropriated it for a particular group: namely white, male, Western scholars".[2]: 150 
  3. ^ There is some consensus among twenty-first century textual critics that the various locations traditionally assigned to the text types are incorrect and misleading. Thus, the geographical labels should be used with caution; some scholars prefer to refer to the text types as "textual clusters" instead.[83]: 3–9 
  4. ^ Viviano says: "While source criticism has always had its detractors, the past few decades have witnessed an escalation in the level of dissatisfaction".[32]: 52 
    • Frank Moore Cross published Canaanite Myth and Hebrew Epic in 1973, arguing that P was not an independent coherent document but was instead an editorial expansion of the combined Jahwist/Elohist.[106]: 1–6  That was the beginning of a series of attacks on the documentary hypothesis.
    • Hans Heinrich Schmid followed with The So-called Jahwist (1976), which questioned the date of the Jahwistic source. Martin Rose, in 1981, proposed that Jahwist was a prologue to the history which begins in Joshua, and Van Seters, in Abraham in History and Tradition, proposed a 6th-century BCE date for the Jahwist.[106]: 10–11 
    • In 1989, Rolf Rendtorff used form criticism to show the development of the Pentateuch was opposite to the manner the Documentary hypothesis claimed.[32]: 49  He argued in The Problem of the Process of Transmission in the Pentateuch that neither the Jahwist nor the Elohist had ever existed as coherent sources and had only ever been independent fragmentary stories, poems, etc.[106]: 11 
    • Mid-twentieth century scholars of oral tradition objected to the "book mentality" of source criticism, saying the idea that ancients had "cut and pasted" from their sources reflects the modern world more than the ancient one.[32]: 49 
    • The presence of contradictions and repetitions doesn't necessarily prove separate sources, since they are "to be expected given the cultural background of the Old Testament and the long period of time during which the text was in formation and being passed on orally".[32]: 50 
    • The documentary theory has been undermined by subdivisions of the sources and the addition of other sources, since: "The more sources one finds, the more tenuous the evidence for the existence of continuous documents becomes".[32]: 51 
    • Another problem is posed by dating (see note 4[which?]). "The process of religious development is far more complex and uneven than Wellhausen imagined. Without his evolutionary assumptions, his dating of sources can no longer be accepted ... Several scholars over the past century have disagreed with Wellhausen's dates".[32]: 51 
    • MacKenzie and Kaltner say "scholarly analysis is very much in a state of flux".[103]: 58 
  5. ^ Don Richardson writes that Wellhausen's theory was, in part, a derivative of an anthropological theory popular in the nineteenth century known as Tylor's theory.[109]: 5 
    • Written in 1870, Edward Burnett Tylor's theory was an evolutionary model asserting three stages of development in religion from animism to polytheism to monotheism which followed the cultural stratification that came with monarchy. Lewis M. Hopfe says: "Tylor's theories were widely accepted and regarded as classic for many years".[110]
    • It remained the dominant theory until Wilhelm Schmidt produced a study on "native monotheism" in 1912 titled Ursprung Der Gottesidee (The Origin of the Concept of God) demonstrating the presence of monotheism in undeveloped primitive cultures.[111]: 119, 124 
    • Tylor's theory had, in the meantime, been picked up and used in other fields beyond anthropology. Wellhausen's hypothesis, for example, depends upon the notion that polytheism preceded monotheism in Judaism's development. Hence, "Wellhausen's theology is based upon an anthropological theory which most anthropologists no longer endorse".[111]: 124 
  6. ^ Sanders explains:
    • 1. The form critics did not derive laws of transmission from a study of folk literature as many think.
    • 2. They derived them by two methods: (a) by assuming that purity of form indicates antiquity, and (b) by determining how Matthew and Luke used Mark and Q, and how the later literature used the canonical gospels.
    • 3. The first method is based on a priori considerations.
    • 4. In so far as it depends on the use of Mark and Q by Matthew and Luke, the second is circular and therefore questionable.
    • 5. The two are sometimes in direct conflict, although the form critics did not observe this.
    • 6. In any case, the form critics did not derive the laws from or apply the laws to the Gospels systematically, nor did they carry out a systematic investigation of changes in the post-canonical literature.[126]
  7. ^ Burridge says:
    • "The analogy between the development of the gospel pericopae and folklore needed reconsideration because of developments in folklore studies:
    • it was less easy to assume steady growth of an oral tradition in stages; significant steps were sometimes large and sudden;
    • the length of time needed for the 'laws' of oral transmission to operate, such as the centuries of Old Testament or Homeric transmission, was greater than that taken by the gospels;
    • even the existence of such laws was questioned...
    • Further the transition from individual units of oral tradition into a written document had an important effect on the interpretation of the material.[128]: 13  See also:[129]: 6, 8 [130]: 277 [121]: 247 [127]: 16, 17 
  8. ^
    • Tony Campbell says, "form criticism has a future "if its past is allowed a decent burial";[136]: 237 
    • Martin Rösel writes that form criticism no longer has the high status it had in the past;[129]: 108 
    • Erhard Blum observes problems, and he wonders if one can speak of a current form-critical method at all;[136]: 6 
    • Bob Becking calls the question of the validity of Sitz im Leben "problematic";[129]: 253 
    • Thomas Römer questions the assumption that form reflects any socio-historical reality;[136]: 8 
    • Such is the question asked by Won Lee: "one wonders whether Gunkel's form criticism is still viable today".[129]: 218 

References

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Further reading

  • Clines, David J. A. (1998). "Possibilities and Priorities of Biblical Interpretation in an International Perspective". On the Way to the Postmodern: Old Testament Essays 1967–1998. Vol. 1 (first ed.). Sheffield Academic Press. pp. 46–67. ISBN 978-1-85075-901-0. See Section 6, Future Trends in Biblical Interpretation, overview of some current trends in biblical criticism.
  • Collins, John J. (2005). The Bible after Babel: Historical Criticism in a Postmodern Age Illustrated Edition. Eerdmans. ISBN 978-0-8028-2892-7. See review at Davies, Philip (2006). "Review of John J. Collins, The Bible after Babel: Historical Criticism in a Postmodern Age" (PDF). Society of Biblical Literature. Retrieved 13 October 2020. Reviews a survey of postmodernist biblical criticism.
  • Sweeney, Marvin A.; Zvi, Ehud Ben (2003). The Changing Face of Form Criticism for the Twenty-First Century. Eerdmans. ISBN 978-0-8028-6067-5. See review at Hoffman, Yair (2004). "Review of Marvin A. Sweeney and Ehud Ben Zvi (eds.), The Changing Face of Form-Criticism for the Twenty-First Century" (PDF). Tel-Aviv University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 April 2008. Retrieved 13 October 2020. Discusses contemporary form criticism.

External links

  • Guide to the methodology of textual criticism.

biblical, criticism, this, article, about, academic, treatment, bible, historical, document, criticisms, bible, source, reliable, information, ethical, guidance, criticism, bible, critical, analysis, understand, explain, bible, during, eighteenth, century, whe. This article is about the academic treatment of the Bible as a historical document For criticisms of the Bible as a source of reliable information or ethical guidance see Criticism of the Bible Biblical criticism is the use of critical analysis to understand and explain the Bible During the eighteenth century when it began as historical biblical criticism it was based on two distinguishing characteristics 1 the scientific concern to avoid dogma and bias by applying a neutral non sectarian reason based judgment to the study of the Bible and 2 the belief that the reconstruction of the historical events behind the texts as well as the history of how the texts themselves developed would lead to a correct understanding of the Bible This sets it apart from earlier pre critical methods from the anti critical methods of those who oppose criticism based study from later post critical orientation and from the many different types of criticism which biblical criticism transformed into in the late twentieth and early twenty first centuries Title page of Richard Simon s Critical History 1685 an early work of biblical criticism Most scholars believe the German Enlightenment c 1650 c 1800 led to the creation of biblical criticism although some assert that its roots reach back to the Reformation German pietism played a role in its development as did British deism with its greatest influences being rationalism and Protestant scholarship The Enlightenment age and its skepticism of biblical and church authority ignited questions concerning the historical basis for the human Jesus separately from traditional theological views concerning his divinity This quest for the historical Jesus began in biblical criticism s earliest stages and has remained an interest within biblical criticism on and off for over 200 years Historical biblical criticism includes a wide range of approaches and questions within four major methodologies textual source form and literary criticism Textual criticism examines biblical manuscripts and their content to identify what the original text probably said Source criticism searches the text for evidence of their original sources Form criticism identifies short units of text seeking the setting of their origination Redaction criticism later developed as a derivative of both source and form criticism Each of these methods was primarily historical and focused on what went on before the texts were in their present form Literary criticism which emerged in the twentieth century differed from these earlier methods It focused on the literary structure of the texts as they currently exist determining where possible the author s purpose and discerning the reader s response to the text through methods such as rhetorical criticism canonical criticism and narrative criticism All together these various methods of biblical criticism permanently changed how people understood and saw the Bible In the late twentieth and early twenty first century biblical criticism was influenced by a wide range of additional academic disciplines and theoretical perspectives which led to its transformation Having long been dominated by white male Protestant academics the twentieth century saw others such as non white scholars women and those from the Jewish and Catholic traditions become prominent voices in biblical criticism Globalization brought a broader spectrum of worldviews into the field and other academic disciplines as diverse as Near Eastern studies psychology cultural anthropology and sociology formed new methods of biblical criticism such as social scientific criticism and psychological biblical criticism Meanwhile post modernism and post critical interpretation began questioning whether biblical criticism had a role and function at all With these new methods came new goals as biblical criticism moved from the historical to the literary and its basic premise changed from neutral judgment to a recognition of the various biases the reader brings to the study of the texts Contents 1 Definition 2 History 2 1 Eighteenth century 2 1 1 Historical Jesus the first quest 2 2 Nineteenth century 2 2 1 Historical Jesus the lives of Jesus 2 3 Twentieth century 2 3 1 Historical Jesus the New quest into the twenty first century 3 Major methods 3 1 Textual criticism 3 1 1 Problems of textual criticism 3 2 Source criticism 3 2 1 Source criticism of the Old Testament Wellhausen s hypothesis 3 2 1 1 Critique of Wellhausen 3 2 2 Source criticism of the New Testament the synoptic problem 3 2 2 1 Two source theory critique 3 3 Form criticism 3 3 1 Critique of form criticism 3 4 Redaction criticism 3 4 1 Redaction Critique 3 5 Literary criticism 3 5 1 Canonical criticism 3 5 2 Rhetorical criticism 3 5 3 Narrative criticism 4 Legacy 4 1 Non liberal Protestant criticism 4 2 Catholic criticism 4 3 Jewish criticism 4 4 Feminist criticism 4 5 Postcolonial biblical criticism 4 6 African American biblical criticism 4 7 Queer biblical hermeneutics 4 8 Social scientific criticism 4 9 New historicism 4 10 Post modern biblical criticism 4 11 Post critical interpretation 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksDefinition EditDaniel J Harrington defines biblical criticism as the effort at using scientific criteria historical and literary and human reason to understand and explain as objectively as possible the meaning intended by the biblical writers 1 The original biblical criticism has been mostly defined by its historical concerns Critics focused on the historical events behind the text as well as the history of how the texts themselves developed 2 33 So much biblical criticism has been done as history and not theology that it is sometimes called the historical critical method or historical biblical criticism or sometimes higher criticism instead of just biblical criticism 2 31 Biblical critics used the same scientific methods and approaches to history as their secular counterparts and emphasized reason and objectivity 2 45 Neutrality was seen as a defining requirement 3 2 27 By 1990 new perspectives globalization and input from different academic fields expanded biblical criticism moving it beyond its original criteria and changing it into a group of disciplines with different often conflicting interests 4 21 22 Biblical criticism s central concept changed from neutral judgment to beginning from a recognition of the various biases the reader brings to the study of the texts 4 21 22 Newer forms of biblical criticism are primarily literary no longer focused on the historical they attend to the text as it exists now 4 21 22 History EditEighteenth century Edit See also Historical criticism In the Enlightenment era of the European West philosophers and theologians such as Thomas Hobbes 1588 1679 Benedict Spinoza 1632 1677 and Richard Simon 1638 1712 began to question the long established Judeo Christian tradition that Moses was the author of the first five books of the Bible known as the Pentateuch 5 6 Spinoza wrote that Moses could not have written the preface to the fifth book Deuteronomy since he never crossed the Jordan River into the Promised Land There were also other problems such as Deuteronomy 31 9 which references Moses in the third person According to Spinoza All these details the manner of narration the testimony and the context of the whole story lead to the plain conclusion that these books were written by another and not by Moses in person 7 Jean Astruc often called the Father of Biblical criticism at Centre hospitalier universitaire de Toulouse fr Jean Astruc 1684 1766 a French physician believed these critics were wrong about Mosaic authorship According to Old Testament scholar Edward Young 1907 1968 Astruc believed that Moses assembled the first book of the Pentateuch the book of Genesis using the hereditary accounts of the Hebrew people 8 Biblical criticism is often said to have begun when Astruc borrowed methods of textual criticism used to investigate Greek and Roman texts and applied them to the Bible in search of those original accounts 9 204 217 Astruc believed that through this approach he had identified the separate sources that were edited together into the book of Genesis The existence of separate sources explained the inconsistent style and vocabulary of Genesis discrepancies in the narrative differing accounts and chronological difficulties while still allowing for Mosaic authorship 9 xvi 10 Astruc s work was the genesis of biblical criticism and because it has become the template for all who followed he is often called the Father of Biblical criticism 9 204 217 210 The questioning of religious authority common to German Pietism contributed to the rise of biblical criticism 11 6 Rationalism also became a significant influence 12 13 8 224 Swiss theologian Jean Alphonse Turretin 1671 1737 is an example of the moderate rationalism of the era Turretin believed that the Bible was divine revelation but insisted that revelation must be consistent with nature and in harmony with reason For God who is the author of revelation is likewise the author of reason 14 94 95 What was seen as extreme rationalism followed in the work of Heinrich Paulus 1761 1851 who denied the existence of miracles Johann Salomo Semler 1725 1791 had attempted in his work to navigate between divine revelation and extreme rationalism by supporting the view that revelation was divine disclosure of the truth perceived through the depth of human experience 14 201 118 He distinguished between inward and outward religion for some people their religion is their highest inner purpose while for others religion is a more exterior practice a tool to accomplish other purposes more important to the individual such as political or economic goals Recognition of this distinction now forms part of the modern field of cognitive science of religion 13 43 15 Semler argued for an end to all doctrinal assumptions giving historical criticism its nonsectarian character As a result Semler is often called the father of historical critical research 13 43 Despite the difference in attitudes between the thinkers and the historians of the German enlightenment all viewed history as the key in their search for understanding 11 214 Communications scholar James A Herrick b 1954 says that even though most scholars agree that biblical criticism evolved out of the German Enlightenment there are some historians of biblical criticism that have found strong direct links with British deism Herrick references the German theologian Henning Graf Reventlow 1929 2010 as linking deism with the humanist world view which has been significant in biblical criticism 16 17 13 15 Matthew Tindal 1657 1733 as part of British deism asserted that Jesus taught an undogmatic natural religion that the Church later changed into its own dogmatic form Tindal s view of Christianity as a mere confirmation of natural religion and his resolute denial of the supernatural led him to conclude that revealed religion is superfluous 18 British deism was also an influence on the philosopher and writer Hermann Samuel Reimarus 1694 1768 in developing his criticism of revelation 17 13 The biblical scholar Johann David Michaelis 1717 1791 advocated the use of other Semitic languages in addition to Hebrew to understand the Old Testament and in 1750 wrote the first modern critical introduction to the New Testament 19 20 Instead of interpreting the Bible historically Johann Gottfried Eichhorn 1752 1827 Johann Philipp Gabler 1753 1826 and Georg Lorenz Bauer 1755 1806 used the concept of myth as a tool for interpreting the Bible Rudolf Bultmann later used this approach and it became particularly influential in the early twentieth century 14 117 117 149 150 188 191 George Ricker Berry says the term higher criticism which is sometimes used as an alternate name for historical criticism was first used by Eichhorn in his three volume work Einleitung ins Alte Testament Introduction to the Old Testament published between 1780 and 1783 The term was originally used to differentiate higher criticism the term for historical criticism from lower which was the term commonly used for textual criticism at the time 21 The importance of textual criticism means that the term lower criticism is no longer used much in twenty first century studies 4 108 A twenty first century view of biblical criticism s origins that traces it to the Reformation is a minority position but the Reformation is the source of biblical criticism s advocacy of freedom from external authority imposing its views on biblical interpretation 22 297 298 2 189 Long before Richard Simon the historical context of the biblical texts was important to Joachim Camerarius 1500 1574 who wrote a philological study of figures of speech in the biblical texts using their context to understand them 23 Hugo Grotius 1583 1645 paved the way for comparative religion studies by analyzing New Testament texts in the light of Classical Jewish and early Christian writings 24 140 Historical Jesus the first quest Edit Further information Historical Jesus and Quest for the historical Jesus The first quest for the historical Jesus is also sometimes referred to as the Old Quest 25 888 It began with the publication of Hermann Samuel Reimarus s work after his death G E Lessing 1729 1781 claimed to have discovered copies of Reimarus s writings in the library at Wolfenbuttel when he was the librarian there 25 862 Reimarus had left permission for his work to be published after his death and Lessing did so between 1774 and 1778 publishing them as Die Fragmente eines unbekannten Autors The Fragments of an Unknown Author 26 Over time they came to be known as the Wolfenbuttel Fragments Reimarus distinguished between what Jesus taught and how he is portrayed in the New Testament According to Reimarus Jesus was a political Messiah who failed at creating political change and was executed by the Roman state as a dissident His disciples then stole the body and invented the story of the resurrection for personal gain 17 Albert Schweitzer in The Quest of the Historical Jesus acknowledges that Reimarus s work is a polemic not an objective historical study while also referring to it as a masterpiece of world literature 27 22 16 According to Schweitzer Reimarus was wrong in his assumption that Jesus s end of world eschatology was earthly and political in character but was right in viewing Jesus as an apocalyptic preacher as evidenced by his repeated warnings about the destruction of Jerusalem and the end of time This eschatological approach to understanding Jesus has since become universal in modern biblical criticism 27 viii 23 195 Schweitzer also comments that since Reimarus was a historian and not a theologian or a biblical scholar he had not the slightest inkling that source criticism would provide the solution to the problems of literary consistency that Reimarus had raised 27 15 Reimarus s controversial work garnered a response from Semler in 1779 Beantwortung der Fragmente eines Ungenannten Answering the Fragments of an Unknown 28 Schweitzer records that Semler rose up and slew Reimarus in the name of scientific theology 27 25 Respect for Semler temporarily repressed the dissemination and study of Reimarus s work but Semler s response had no long term effect 27 25 26 Reimarus s writings on the other hand did have a long term effect They made a lasting change in the practice of biblical criticism by making it clear it could exist independently of theology and faith 13 46 27 23 26 His work also showed biblical criticism could serve its own ends be governed solely by rational criteria and reject deference to religious tradition 13 46 48 Reimarus s central question How political was Jesus continues to be debated by theologians and historians such as Wolfgang Stegemann de Gerd Theissen and Craig S Keener 29 30 31 In addition to overseeing the publication of Reimarus s work Lessing made contributions of his own arguing that the proper study of biblical texts requires knowing the context in which they were written This is now the accepted scholarly view 13 49 Nineteenth century Edit Professors Richard Soulen and Kendall Soulen write that biblical criticism reached full flower in the nineteenth century becoming the major transforming fact of biblical studies in the modern period 4 79 The height of biblical criticism s influence is represented by the history of religions school note 1 a group of German Protestant theologians associated with the University of Gottingen 4 161 In the late nineteenth century they sought to understand Judaism and Christianity within the overall history of religion 14 222 Other Bible scholars outside the Gottingen school such as Heinrich Julius Holtzmann 1832 1910 also used biblical criticism Holtzmann developed the first listing of the chronological order of the New Testament texts based on critical scholarship 4 82 Many insights in understanding the Bible that began in the nineteenth century continue to be discussed in the twenty first in some areas of study such as linguistic tools scholars merely appropriate earlier work while in others they continue to suppose they can produce something new and better 14 xiii For example some modern histories of Israel include historical biblical research from the nineteenth century 32 23 In 1835 and again in 1845 theologian Ferdinand Christian Baur postulated the apostles Peter and Paul had an argument that led to a split between them thereby influencing the mode of Christianity that followed 33 34 91 95 This still occasions widespread debate within topics such as Pauline studies New Testament Studies early church studies Jewish Law the theology of grace and the doctrine of justification 33 286 287 Albrecht Ritschl s challenge to orthodox atonement theory continues to influence Christian thought 14 92 Nineteenth century biblical critics thought of themselves as continuing the aims of the Protestant Reformation 35 89 According to Robert M Grant and David Tracy One of the most striking features of the development of biblical interpretation during the nineteenth century was the way in which philosophical presuppositions implicitly guided it 36 91 fn 8 Michael Joseph Brown points out that biblical criticism operated according to principles grounded in a distinctively European rationalism By the end of the nineteenth century these principles were recognized by Ernst Troeltsch in an essay Historical and Dogmatic Method in Theology where he described three principles of biblical criticism methodological doubt a way of searching for certainty by doubting everything analogy the idea that we understand the past by relating it to our present and mutual inter dependence every event is related to events that proceeded it 37 Biblical criticism s focus on pure reason produced a paradigm shift that profoundly changed Christian theology concerning the Jews Anders Gerdmar de uses the legal meaning of emancipation as in free to be an adult on their own recognizance when he says the process of the emancipation of reason from the Bible runs parallel with the emancipation of Christianity from the Jews 38 22 In the previous century Semler had been the first Enlightenment Protestant to call for the de Judaizing of Christianity While taking a stand against discrimination in society Semler also wrote theology that was strongly negative toward the Jews and Judaism 38 25 27 He saw Christianity as something that superseded all that came before it 38 39 40 This stark contrast between Judaism and Christianity produced increasingly antisemitic sentiments 38 228 Supersessionism instead of the more traditional millennialism became a common theme in Johann Gottfried Herder 1744 1803 Friedrich Schleiermacher 1768 1834 Wilhelm Martin Leberecht de Wette 1780 1849 Ferdinand Christian Baur 1792 1860 David Strauss 1808 1874 Albrecht Ritschl 1822 1889 the history of religions school of the 1890s and on into the form critics of the twentieth century until World War II 38 vii xiii Historical Jesus the lives of Jesus Edit The late nineteenth century saw a renewed interest in the quest for the historical Jesus which primarily involved writing versions of the life of Jesus Important scholars of this quest included David Strauss 1808 1874 whose Life of Jesus used a mythical interpretation of the gospels to undermine their historicity The book was culturally significant because it contributed to weakening church authority and it was theologically significant because it challenged the divinity of Christ 39 In The Essence of Christianity 1900 Adolf Von Harnack 1851 1930 described Jesus as a reformer 40 William Wrede 1859 1906 rejected all the theological aspects of Jesus and asserted that the messianic secret of Jesus as Messiah emerged only in the early community and did not come from Jesus himself 41 Ernst Renan 1823 1892 promoted the critical method and was opposed to orthodoxy 42 Wilhelm Bousset 1865 1920 attained honors in the history of religions school by contrasting what he called the joyful teachings of Jesus s new righteousness and what Bousset saw as the gloomy call to repentance made by John the Baptist 43 While at Gottingen Johannes Weiss 1863 1914 wrote his most influential work on the apocalyptic proclamations of Jesus 44 In 1896 Martin Kahler 1835 1912 wrote The So called Historical Jesus and the Historic Biblical Christ It critiqued the quest s methodology with a reminder of the limits of historical inquiry saying it is impossible to separate the historical Jesus from the Jesus of faith since Jesus is only known through documents about him as Christ the Messiah 45 10 The Old Quest was not considered closed until Albert Schweitzer 1875 1965 wrote Von Reimarus zu Wrede which was published in English as The Quest of the Historical Jesus in 1910 In it Schweitzer scathingly critiqued the various books on the life of Jesus that had been written in the late nineteenth century as reflecting more of the lives of the authors than Jesus 46 Schweitzer revolutionized New Testament scholarship at the turn of the century by proving to most of that scholarly world that the teachings and actions of Jesus were determined by his eschatological outlook he thereby finished the quest s pursuit of the apocalyptic Jesus 35 173 47 2 4 Schweitzer concluded that any future research on the historical Jesus was pointless 45 10 Twentieth century Edit In the early twentieth century biblical criticism was shaped by two main factors and the clash between them First form criticism arose and turned the focus of biblical criticism from author to genre and from individual to community Next a scholarly effort to reclaim the Bible s theological relevance began 4 20 Karl Barth 1886 1968 Rudolf Bultmann 1884 1976 and others moved away from concern over the historical Jesus and concentrated instead on the kerygma the message of the New Testament 4 20 48 Most scholars agree that Bultmann is one of the most influential theologians of the twentieth century but that he also had a notorious reputation for his de mythologizing which was debated around the world 49 50 Demythologizing refers to the reinterpretation of the biblical myths stories in terms of the existential philosophy of Martin Heidegger 1889 1976 51 Bultmann claimed myths are true anthropologically and existentially but not cosmologically 52 As a major proponent of form criticism Bultmann set the agenda for a subsequent generation of leading NT New Testament scholars 4 21 Around the midcentury point the denominational composition of biblical critics began to change This was due to a shift in perception of the critical effort as being possible on the basis of premises other than liberal Protestantism 4 21 Redaction criticism also began in the mid twentieth century While form criticism had divided the text into small units redaction emphasized the literary integrity of the larger literary units instead 53 54 443 The discovery of the Dead Sea scrolls at Qumran in 1948 renewed interest in archaeology s potential contributions to biblical studies but it also posed challenges to biblical criticism 55 9 149 For example the majority of the Dead Sea texts are closely related to the Masoretic Text that the Christian Old Testament is based upon while other texts bear a closer resemblance to the Septuagint the ancient Greek version of the Hebrew texts and still others are closer to the Samaritan Pentateuch 55 241 149 56 This has raised the question of whether or not there is such a thing as an original text If there is no original text the entire purpose of textual criticism is called into question 13 82 New Testament scholar Joachim Jeremias 1900 1979 used linguistics and Jesus s first century Jewish environment to interpret the New Testament 54 495 The biblical theology movement of the 1950s produced debate between Old Testament and New Testament scholars over the unity of the Bible The rise of redaction criticism closed this debate by bringing about a greater emphasis on diversity 57 The New quest for the historical Jesus began in 1953 and was so named in 1959 by James M Robinson 25 34 After 1970 biblical criticism began to change radically and pervasively 4 vii 21 New criticism which developed as an adjunct to literary criticism was concerned with the particulars of style 58 New historicism a literary theory that views history through literature also developed 59 Biblical criticism began to apply new literary approaches such as structuralism and rhetorical criticism which concentrated less on history and more on the texts themselves 60 In the 1970s the New Testament scholar E P Sanders b 1937 advanced the New Perspective on Paul which has greatly influenced scholarly views on the relationship between Pauline Christianity and Jewish Christianity in the Pauline epistles 61 62 Sanders also advanced study of the historical Jesus by putting Jesus s life in the context of first century Second Temple Judaism 47 13 18 In 1974 the theologian Hans Frei published The Eclipse of Biblical Narrative which became a landmark work leading to the development of post critical interpretation 63 The third period of focused study on the historical Jesus began in 1988 64 By 1990 biblical criticism as a primarily historical discipline changed into a group of disciplines with often conflicting interests 4 21 22 New perspectives from different ethnicities feminist theology Catholicism and Judaism offered insights previously overlooked by the majority of white male Protestants who had dominated biblical criticism from its beginnings 4 21 note 2 Globalization also brought different worldviews while other academic fields such as Near Eastern studies sociology and anthropology became active in expanding biblical criticism as well These new points of view created awareness that the Bible can be rationally interpreted from many different perspectives 4 22 In turn this awareness changed biblical criticism s central concept from the criteria of neutral judgment to that of beginning from a recognition of the various biases the reader brings to the study of the texts 4 22 Historical Jesus the New quest into the twenty first century Edit Main articles Criterion of multiple attestation Criterion of embarrassment Criterion of dissimilarity and Koine Greek Ernst Hildebrand s 1910 painting Kreuzigung Christi depicts the crucifixion of Jesus The crucifixion is widely regarded by historians as a historical event 66 67 There is no general agreement among scholars on how to periodize the various quests for the historical Jesus Most scholars agree the first quest began with Reimarus and ended with Schweitzer that there was a no quest period in the first half of the twentieth century and that there was a second quest known as the New quest that began in 1953 and lasted until 1988 when a third began 25 697 However Stanley E Porter b 1956 calls this periodization untenable and belied by all of the pertinent facts 25 697 698 arguing that people were searching for the historical Jesus before Reimarus and that there never has been a period when scholars weren t doing so 25 698 699 In 1953 Ernst Kasemann 1906 1998 gave a famous lecture before the Old Marburgers his former colleagues at the University of Marburg where he had studied under Bultmann 68 In this stronghold of support for Bultmann Kasemann claimed Bultmann s skepticism about what could be known about the historical Jesus had been too extreme 45 10 Bultmann had claimed that since the gospel writers wrote theology their writings could not be considered history but Kasemann reasoned that one does not necessarily preclude the other 45 10 11 69 James M Robinson named this the New quest in his 1959 essay The New Quest for the Historical Jesus 25 34 This quest focused largely on the teachings of Jesus as interpreted by existentialist philosophy Interest waned again by the 1970s 25 668 45 11 N T Wright asserts that the third quest began with the Jesus Seminar in 1988 By then it became necessary to acknowledge that the upshot of the first two quests was to reveal the frustrating limitations of the historical study of any ancient person 45 12 According to Ben Witherington probability is all that is possible in this pursuit 45 12 Paul Montgomery in The New York Times writes that Through the ages scholars and laymen have taken various positions on the life of Jesus ranging from total acceptance of the Bible to assertions that Jesus of Nazareth is a creature of myth and never lived 70 Sanders explains that because of the desire to know everything about Jesus including his thoughts and motivations and because there are such varied conclusions about him it seems to many scholars that it is impossible to be certain about anything Yet according to Sanders we know quite a lot about Jesus 71 While scholars rarely agree about what is known or unknown about the historical Jesus according to Witherington scholars do agree that the historic questions should not be dodged 45 271 Major methods EditTheologian David R Law writes that biblical scholars usually employ textual source form and redaction criticism together The Old Testament the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament as distinct bodies of literature each raise their own problems of interpretation the two are therefore generally studied separately For purposes of discussion these individual methods are separated here and the Bible is addressed as a whole but this is an artificial approach that is used only for the purpose of description and is not how biblical criticism is actually practiced 13 viii ix Textual criticism Edit Main article Textual criticismSee also Textual criticism of the New Testament Textual criticism involves examination of the text itself and all associated manuscripts with the aim of determining the original text 72 47 It is one of the largest areas of biblical criticism in terms of the sheer amount of information it addresses The roughly 900 manuscripts found at Qumran include the oldest extant manuscripts of the Hebrew Bible They represent every book except Esther though most books appear only in fragmentary form 73 The New Testament has been preserved in more manuscripts than any other ancient work having over 5 800 complete or fragmented Greek manuscripts 10 000 Latin manuscripts and 9 300 manuscripts in various other ancient languages including Syriac Slavic Gothic Ethiopic Coptic and Armenian texts The dates of these manuscripts are generally accepted to range from c 110 125 the 𝔓52 papyrus to the introduction of printing in Germany in the fifteenth century There are also approximately a million direct New Testament quotations in the collected writings of the Church Fathers of the first four centuries As a comparison the next best sourced ancient text is the Iliad presumably written by the ancient Greek Homer in the late eighth or early seventh century BCE which survives in more than 1 900 manuscripts though many are of a fragmentary nature 74 The Rylands fragment P52 verso is the oldest existing fragment of New Testament papyrus 75 It contains phrases from the Book of John These texts were all written by hand by copying from another handwritten text so they are not alike in the manner of printed works The differences between them are called variants 4 204 A variant is simply any variation between two texts Many variants are simple misspellings or mis copying For example a scribe might drop one or more letters skip a word or line write one letter for another transpose letters and so on Some variants represent a scribal attempt to simplify or harmonize by changing a word or a phrase 76 The exact number of variants is disputed but the more texts survive the more likely there will be variants of some kind 77 Variants are not evenly distributed throughout any set of texts Charting the variants in the New Testament shows it is 62 9 percent variant free 78 The impact of variants on the reliability of a single text is usually tested by comparing it to a manuscript whose reliability has been long established Though many new early manuscripts have been discovered since 1881 there are critical editions of the Greek New Testament such as NA28 and UBS5 that have gone virtually unchanged from these discoveries It also means that the fourth century best texts the Alexandrian codices Vaticanus and Sinaiticus have roots extending throughout the entire third century and even into the second 79 Folio 41v from Codex Alexandrinus The Alexandrian textual family is based on this codex 80 Variants are classified into families Say scribe A makes a mistake and scribe B does not Copies of scribe A s text with the mistake will thereafter contain that same mistake Over time the texts descended from A that share the error and those from B that do not share it will diverge further but later texts will still be identifiable as descended from one or the other because of the presence or absence of that original mistake 81 207 208 The multiple generations of texts that follow containing the error are referred to as a family of texts Textual critics study the differences between these families to piece together what the original looked like 81 205 Sorting out the wealth of source material is complex so textual families were sorted into categories tied to geographical areas The divisions of the New Testament textual families were Alexandrian also called the Neutral text Western Latin translations and Eastern used by churches centred on Antioch and Constantinople 82 213 note 3 Forerunners of modern textual criticism can be found in both early Rabbinic Judaism and in the early church 13 82 Rabbis addressed variants in the Hebrew texts as early as 100CE Tradition played a central role in their task of producing a standard version of the Hebrew Bible The Hebrew text they produced stabilized by the end of the second century and has come to be known as the Masoretic text the source of the Christian Old Testament 13 82 84 Problems of textual criticism Edit The two main processes of textual criticism are recension and emendation 81 205 209 Recension is the selection of the most trustworthy evidence on which to base a text Emendation is the attempt to eliminate the errors which are found even in the best manuscripts Jerome McGann says these methods innately introduce a subjective factor into textual criticism despite its attempt at objective rules 84 85 Alan Cooper discusses this difficulty using the example of Amos 6 12 which reads Does one plough with oxen The obvious answer is yes but the context of the passage seems to demand a no Cooper explains that a recombination of the consonants allows it to be read Does one plough the sea with oxen The amendment has a basis in the text which is believed to be corrupted but is nevertheless a matter of personal judgment 86 This contributes to textual criticism being one of the most contentious areas of biblical criticism as well as the largest with scholars such as Arthur Verrall referring to it as the fine and contentious art 87 88 89 It uses specialized methodologies enough specialized terms to create its own lexicon 90 and is guided by a number of principles Yet any of these principles and their conclusions can be contested For example in the late 1700s textual critic Johann Jacob Griesbach 1745 1812 developed fifteen critical principles for determining which texts are likely the oldest and closest to the original 82 213 One of Griesbach s rules is lectio brevior praeferenda the shorter reading is to be preferred This was based on the assumption that scribes were more likely to add to a text than omit from it making shorter texts more likely to be older 91 Latin scholar Albert C Clark challenged Griesbach s view of shorter texts in 1914 81 212 215 Based on his study of Cicero Clark argued omission was a more common scribal error than addition saying A text is like a traveler who goes from one inn to another losing an article of luggage at each halt 81 213 Clark s claims were criticized by those who supported Griesbach s principles Clark responded but disagreement continued Nearly eighty years later the theologian and priest James Royse took up the case After close study of multiple New Testament papyri he concluded Clark was right and Griesbach s rule of measure was wrong 81 214 92 Some twenty first century scholars have advocated abandoning these older approaches to textual criticism in favor of new computer assisted methods for determining manuscript relationships in a more reliable way 83 5 Source criticism Edit Main article Source criticism See also Pentateuchal criticism Source criticism is the search for the original sources that form the basis of biblical texts In Old Testament studies source criticism is generally focused on identifying sources of a single text For example the seventeenth century French priest Richard Simon 1638 1712 was an early proponent of the theory that Moses could not have been the single source of the entire Pentateuch According to Simon parts of the Old Testament were not written by individuals at all but by scribes recording the which community s oral tradition 93 94 1 The French physician Jean Astruc presumed in 1753 that Moses had written the book of Genesis the first book of the Pentateuch using ancient documents he attempted to identify these original sources and to separate them again 94 2 He did this by identifying repetitions of certain events such as parts of the flood story that are repeated three times indicating the possibility of three sources He discovered that the alternation of two different names for God occurs in Genesis and up to Exodus 3 but not in the rest of the Pentateuch and he also found apparent anachronisms statements seemingly from a later time than that in which Genesis was set This and similar evidence led Astruc to hypothesize that the sources of Genesis were originally separate materials that were later fused into a single unit that became the book of Genesis 9 166 168 95 7 8 Examples of source criticism include its two most influential and well known theories the first concerning the origins of the Pentateuch in the Old Testament Wellhausen s hypothesis and the second tracing the sources of the four gospels of the New Testament two source hypothesis 96 147 Source criticism of the Old Testament Wellhausen s hypothesis Edit Main articles Documentary hypothesis and Supplementary hypothesis Diagram showing the authors and editors of the Pentateuch Torah according to the Documentary hypothesisJ Yahwist 10th 9th century BCE E Elohist 9th century BCE Dtr1 early 7th century BCE Deuteronomist historianDtr2 later 6th century BCE Deuteronomist historianP Priestly 6th 5th century BCE D DeuteronomistR redactorDH Deuteronomistic history books of Joshua Judges Samuel Kings 97 62 98 5 Source criticism s most influential work is Julius Wellhausen s Prolegomena zur Geschichte Israels Prologue to the History of Israel 1878 which sought to establish the sources of the first five books of the Old Testament collectively known as the Pentateuch 99 95 95 Wellhausen correlated the history and development of those five books with the development of the Jewish faith 95 95 100 The Wellhausen hypothesis also known as the JEDP theory or the Documentary hypothesis or the Graf Wellhausen hypothesis proposes that the Pentateuch was combined out of four separate and coherent unified single sources not fragments J stands for the Yahwist source Jahwist in German and was considered by whom to be the most primitive in style and therefore the oldest E for Elohist was thought to be a product of the Northern Kingdom before BCE 721 D for Deuteronomist was said to be written shortly before it was found in BCE 621 by King Josiah of Judah 2 Chronicles 34 14 30 97 62 98 5 Old Testament scholar Karl Graf 1815 1869 suggested an additional priestly source in 1866 by 1878 Wellhausen had incorporated this source P into his theory which is thereafter sometimes referred to as the Graf Wellhausen hypothesis Wellhausen argued that P had been composed during the exile of the 6th century BCE under the influence of Ezekiel 54 69 97 5 These sources are supposed to have been edited together by a late final Redactor R who is only imprecisely understood 101 Later scholars added to and refined Wellhausen s theory For example the Newer Documentary Thesis inferred more sources with increasing information about their extent and inter relationship 32 49 52 The fragmentary theory was a later understanding of Wellhausen produced by form criticism This theory argues that fragments of documents rather than continuous coherent documents are the sources for the Pentateuch 32 38 39 Alexander Geddes and Johann Vater proposed that some of these fragments were quite ancient perhaps from the time of Moses and were brought together only at a later time 102 32 This accounts for diversity but not structural and chronological consistency 32 38 One can see the Supplementary hypothesis as yet another evolution of Wellhausen s theory that solidified in the 1970s Proponents of this view assert three sources for the Pentateuch the Deuteronomist as the oldest source the Elohist as the central core document with a number of fragments or independent sources as the third 102 32 Deuteronomy is seen as a single coherent document with a uniformity of style and language in spite of also having different literary strata 102 92 This observation led to the idea there was such a thing as a Deuteronomist school that had originally edited and kept the document updated This meant the supplementary model became the literary model most widely agreed upon for Deuteronomy which then supports its application to the remainder of the Pentateuch as well 102 93 Critique of Wellhausen Edit Advocates of Wellhausen s hypothesis contend it accounts well for the differences and duplication found in the Pentateuchal books 103 58 59 Furthermore they argue it provides an explanation for the peculiar character of the material labeled P which reflects the perspective and concerns of Israel s priests Wellhausen s theory went virtually unchallenged until the 1970s when it began to be heavily criticized 104 By the end of the 1970s and into the 1990s one major study after another like a series of hammer blows has rejected the main claims of the Documentary theory and the criteria on the basis of which they were argued 105 95 It has been criticized for its dating of the sources and for assuming that the original sources were coherent or complete documents Studies of the literary structure of the Pentateuch have shown J and P used the same structure and that motifs and themes cross the boundaries of the various sources which undermines arguments for their separate origins 98 4 102 36 note 4 Problems and criticisms of the Documentary hypothesis have been brought on by literary analysts who point out the error of judging ancient Eastern writings as if they were the products of western European Protestants and by advances in anthropology that undermined Wellhausen s assumptions about how cultures develop and also by various archaeological findings showing the cultural environment of the early Hebrews was more advanced than Wellhausen thought 97 64 102 39 80 107 11 108 note 5 As a result few biblical scholars of the twenty first century hold to Wellhausen s Documentary hypothesis in its classical form 107 15 As Nicholson says it is in sharp decline some would say in a state of advanced rigor mortis and new solutions are being argued and urged in its place 105 96 Yet no replacement has so far been agreed upon the work of Wellhausen for all that it needs revision and development in detail remains the securest basis for understanding the Pentateuch 105 vi Source criticism of the New Testament the synoptic problem Edit The widely accepted two source hypothesis showing two sources for both Matthew and Luke B H Streeter s four source hypothesis showing four sources each for Matthew and Luke with the colors representing the different sources In New Testament studies source criticism has taken a slightly different approach from Old Testament studies by focusing on identifying the common sources of multiple texts instead of looking for the multiple sources of a single set of texts This has revealed that the Gospels are both products of sources and sources themselves 112 As sources Matthew Mark and Luke are partially dependent on each other and partially independent of each other This is called the synoptic problem and explaining it is the single greatest dilemma of New Testament source criticism Any explanation offered must account for a what is common to all the Gospels b what is common to any two of them c what is peculiar to each 113 87 Multiple theories exist to address the dilemma with none universally agreed upon but two theories have become predominant the two source hypothesis and the four source hypothesis 96 136 138 Mark is the shortest of the four gospels with only 661 verses but 600 of those verses are in Matthew and 350 of them are in Luke Some of these verses are verbatim Most scholars agree that this indicates Mark was a source for Matthew and Luke There is also some verbatim agreement between Matthew and Luke of verses not found in Mark 113 85 87 In 1838 the religious philosopher Christian Hermann Weisse developed a theory about this He postulated a hypothetical collection of the sayings of Jesus from an additional source called Q taken from Quelle which is German for source 113 86 If this document existed it has now been lost but some of its material can be deduced indirectly There are five highly detailed arguments in favor of Q s existence the verbal agreement of Mark and Luke the order of the parables the doublets a discrepancy in the priorities of each gospel and each one s internal coherence 114 41 Q allowed the two source hypothesis to emerge as the best supported of the various synoptic solutions 114 12 115 fn 6 There is also material unique to each gospel This indicates additional separate sources for Matthew and for Luke Biblical scholar B H Streeter used this insight to refine and expand the two source theory into a four source theory in 1925 116 5 117 157 Two source theory critique Edit While most scholars agree that the two source theory offers the best explanation for the Synoptic problem and some say it has been solved others say it is not solved satisfactorily 118 Donald Guthrie says no single theory offers a complete solution as there are complex and important difficulties that create challenges to every theory 96 208 119 One example is Basil Christopher Butler s challenge to the legitimacy of two source theory arguing it contains a Lachmann fallacy 120 110 that says the two source theory loses cohesion when it is acknowledged that no source can be established for Mark 116 149 F C Grant posits multiple sources for the Gospels 117 158 Form criticism Edit Main articles Form criticism and Sitz im Leben Form criticism began in the early twentieth century when theologian Karl Ludwig Schmidt observed that Mark s Gospel is composed of short units Schmidt asserted these small units were remnants and evidence of the oral tradition that preceded the writing of the gospels 121 242 122 1 Bible scholar Richard Bauckham says this most significant insight which established the foundation of form criticism has never been refuted 121 243 Hermann Gunkel 1862 1932 and Martin Dibelius 1883 1947 built from this insight and pioneered form criticism By the 1950s and 1960s Rudolf Bultmann and form criticism were the center of the theological conversation in both Europe and North America 123 xiii Form criticism breaks the Bible down into its short units called pericopes which are then classified by genre prose or verse letters laws court archives war hymns poems of lament and so on Form criticism then theorizes concerning the individual pericope s Sitz im Leben setting in life or place in life Based on their understanding of folklore form critics believed the early Christian communities formed the sayings and teachings of Jesus themselves according to their needs their situation in life and that each form could be identified by the situation in which it had been created and vice versa 124 271 Critique of form criticism Edit In the early to mid twentieth century form critics thought finding oral laws of development within the New Testament would prove the form critic s assertions that the texts had evolved within the early Christian communities according to sitz im leben Since Mark was believed to be the first gospel the form critics looked for the addition of proper names for anonymous characters indirect discourse being turned into direct quotation and the elimination of Aramaic terms and forms with details becoming more concrete in Matthew and then more so in Luke 125 Instead in the 1970s New Testament scholar E P Sanders wrote that There are no hard and fast laws of the development of the Synoptic tradition On all counts the tradition developed in opposite directions It became both longer and shorter both more and less detailed and both more and less Semitic 124 298 note 6 Scholars from the 1970s and into the 1990s produced an explosion of studies on structure genre text type setting and language that challenged several of form criticism s aspects and assumptions 127 42 70 note 7 For example the period of the twentieth century dominated by form criticism is marked by Bultmann s extreme skepticism concerning what can be known about the historical Jesus and his sayings 131 Some form critics assumed these same skeptical presuppositions 132 based largely on their understanding of oral transmission and folklore During the latter half of the twentieth century field studies of cultures with existing oral traditions directly impacted many of these presuppositions 124 296 298 In 1978 research by linguists Milman Parry and Albert Bates Lord was used to undermine Gunkel s belief that short narratives evolved into longer cycles 122 10 Within these oral cultures literacy did not replace memory in a natural evolution Instead writing was used to enhance memory in an overlap of written and oral tradition 122 16 17 Susan Niditch concluded from her orality studies that no longer are many scholars convinced that the most seemingly oral traditional or formulaic pieces are earliest in date 122 10 11 In this manner compelling evidence developed against the form critical belief that Jesus s sayings were formed by Christian communities As John Niles indicates the older idea of an ideal folk community an undifferentiated company of rustics each of whom contributes equally to the process of oral tradition is no longer tenable 124 265 298 304 According to Eddy and Boyd these various conclusions directly undermine assumptions about Sitz im leben In light of what we now know of oral traditions no necessary correlation between the literary forms and life situations sitz im leben can be confidently drawn 124 296 298 Form critics assumed the early Church was heavily influenced by the Hellenistic culture that surrounded first century Palestine but in the 1970s Sanders as well as Gerd Theissen sparked new rounds of studies that included anthropological and sociological perspectives reestablishing Judaism as the predominant influence on Jesus Paul and the New Testament 133 46 New Testament scholar N T Wright says The earliest traditions of Jesus reflected in the Gospels are written from the perspective of Second Temple Judaism and must be interpreted from the standpoint of Jewish eschatology and apocalypticism 133 47 134 According to religion scholar Werner H Kelber form critics throughout the mid twentieth century were so focused on finding each pericope s original form that they were distracted from any serious consideration of memory as a dynamic force in the construction of the gospels or the early church community tradition 130 276 278 What Kelber refers to as the astounding myopia of the form critics has revived interest in memory as an analytical category within biblical criticism 135 130 278 For some the many challenges to form criticism mean its future is in doubt note 8 Bible scholar Tony Campbell says Form criticism had a meteoric rise in the early part of the twentieth century and fell from favor toward its end For some the future of form criticism is not an issue it has none But if form criticism embodies an essential insight it will continue 129 15 Two concerns give it its value concern for the nature of the text and for its shape and structure If the encrustations can be scraped away the good stuff may still be there 136 219 129 16 Redaction criticism Edit Correlations of text in the Synoptic gospels 137 Redaction is the process of editing multiple sources often with a similar theme into a single document It was derived from a combination of both source and form criticism 138 98 As in source criticism it is necessary to identify the traditions before determining how the redactor used them 138 98 13 181 Form critics saw the synoptic writers as mere collectors and focused on the Sitz im Leben as the creator of the texts whereas redaction critics have dealt more positively with the Gospel writers asserting an understanding of them as theologians of the early church 138 99 139 Redaction critics reject source and form criticism s description of the Bible texts as mere collections of fragments Where form critics fracture the biblical elements into smaller and smaller individual pieces redaction critics attempt to interpret the whole literary unit 138 99 Norman Perrin defines redaction criticism as the study of the theological motivation of an author as it is revealed in the collection arrangement editing and modification of traditional material and in the composition of new material redaction criticism directs us to the author as editor 128 14 Redaction criticism developed after World War II in Germany and arrived in England and North America by the 1950s 138 96 97 It focuses on discovering how and why the literary units were originally edited redacted into their final forms 24 820 Redaction Critique Edit Redaction critics assume an extreme skepticism toward the historicity of Jesus and the gospels just as form critics do which has been seen by some scholars as a bias The process of redaction seeks the historical community of the final redactors of the gospels though there are often no textual clues Porter and Adams say the redactive method of finding the final editor s theology is flawed 140 335 336 In the New Testament redaction critics attempt to discern the original author evangelist s theology by focusing and relying upon the differences between the gospels yet it is unclear whether every difference has theological meaning how much meaning or whether any given difference is a stylistic or even an accidental change Further it is not at all clear whether the difference was made by the evangelist who could have used the already changed story when writing a gospel 140 336 The evangelist s theology more likely depends on what the gospels have in common as well as their differences 140 336 Harrington says over theologizing allegorizing and psychologizing are the major pitfalls encountered in redaction criticism 138 100 Followers of other theories concerning the Synoptic problem such as those who support the Greisbach hypothesis which says Matthew was written first Luke second and Mark third have pointed to weaknesses in the redaction based arguments for the existence of Q and Markan priority 141 Mark Goodacre says Some scholars have used the success of redaction criticism as a means of supporting the existence of Q but this will always tend toward circularity particularly given the hypothetical nature of Q which itself is reconstructed by means of redaction criticism 141 Literary criticism Edit Main article Literary criticism In the mid twentieth century literary criticism began to develop shifting scholarly attention from historical and pre compositional matters to the text itself thereafter becoming the dominant form of biblical criticism in a relatively short period of about thirty years It can be said to have begun in 1957 when literary critic Northrop Frye wrote an analysis of the Bible from the perspective of his literary background by using literary criticism to understand the Bible forms 142 143 3 4 Hans Frei proposed that biblical narratives should be evaluated on their own terms rather than by taking them apart in the manner we evaluate philosophy or historicity 54 99 Frei was one of several external influences that moved biblical criticism from a historical to a literary focus 143 3 144 New Testament scholar Paul R House says the discipline of linguistics new views of historiography and the decline of older methods of criticism were also influential in that process 143 3 By 1974 the two methodologies being used in literary criticism were rhetorical analysis and structuralism 143 4 11 Rhetorical analysis divides a passage into units observes how a single unit shifts or breaks taking special note of poetic devices meter parallelism word play and so on It then charts the writer s thought progression from one unit to the next and finally assembles the data in an attempt to explain the author s intentions behind the piece 143 8 9 Critics of rhetorical analysis say there is a lack of a well developed methodology and that it has a tendency to be nothing more than an exercise in stylistics 143 425 Structuralism looks at the language to discern layers of meaning with the goal of uncovering a work s deep structures the premises as well as the purposes of the author 143 102 In 1981 literature scholar Robert Alter also contributed to the development of biblical literary criticism by publishing an influential analysis of biblical themes from a literary perspective The 1980s saw the rise of formalism which focuses on plot structure character and themes 143 164 and the development of reader response criticism which focuses on the reader rather than the author 143 374 410 New Testament scholar Donald Guthrie highlights a flaw in the literary critical approach to the Gospels the genre of the Gospels has not been fully determined No conclusive evidence has yet been produced to settle the question of genre and without genre no adequate parallels can be found and without parallels it must be considered to what extent the principles of literary criticism are applicable 96 19 The validity of using the same critical methods for novels and for the Gospels without the assurance the Gospels are actually novels must be questioned 96 20 Canonical criticism Edit Main article Canonical criticism As a type of literary criticism canonical criticism has both theological and literary roots Its origins are found in the Church s views of the biblical writings as sacred and in the secular literary critics who began to influence biblical scholarship in the 1940s and 1950s By the mid twentieth century the high level of departmentalization in biblical criticism with its large volume of data and absence of applicable theology had begun to produce a level of dissatisfaction among both scholars and faith communities 145 4 Brevard S Childs 1923 2007 proposed an approach to bridge that gap that came to be called canonical criticism Canonical criticism signaled a major and enduring shift in biblical studies 145 4 Canonical criticism does not reject historical criticism but it does reject its claim to unique validity 146 80 John Barton says that canonical criticism does not simply ask what the text might have originally meant it asks what it means to the current believing community and it does so in a manner different from any type of historical criticism 146 89 91 John H Hayes and Carl Holladay say canonical criticism has several distinguishing features 1 Canonical criticism is synchronic it sees all biblical writings as standing together in time instead of focusing on the diachronic questions of the historical approach 147 154 2 Canonical critics approach the books as whole units instead of focusing on pieces They accept that many texts have been composed over long periods of time but the canonical critic wishes to interpret the last edition of a biblical book and then relate books to each other 147 155 3 Canonical criticism opposes form criticism s isolation of individual passages from their canonical setting 147 155 4 Canonical criticism emphasizes the relationship between the text and its reader in an effort to reclaim the relationship between the texts and how they were used in the early believing communities Canonical critics focus on reader interaction with the biblical writing 147 156 5 Canonical criticism is overtly theological in its approach Critics are interested in what the text means for the community the community of faith whose predecessors produced the canon that was called into existence by the canon and seeks to live by the canon 147 156 Rhetorical criticism Edit Main article Rhetorical criticism Rhetorical criticism is also a type of literary criticism While James Muilenburg 1896 1974 is often referred to as the prophet of rhetorical criticism 148 it is Herbert A Wichelns who is credited with creating the modern discipline of rhetorical criticism with his 1925 essay The Literary Criticism of Oratory 149 29 In that essay Wichelns says that rhetorical criticism and other types of literary criticism differ from each other because rhetorical criticism is only concerned with effect It regards a speech as a communication to a specific audience and holds its business to be the analysis and appreciation of the orator s method of imparting his ideas to his hearers 149 29 Rhetorical criticism is a qualitative analysis This qualitative analysis involves three primary dimensions 1 analyzing the act of criticism and what it does 2 analyzing what goes on within the rhetoric being analyzed and what is created by that rhetoric and 3 understanding the processes involved in all of it 149 6 Sonja K Foss discusses ten different methods of rhetorical criticism in her book Rhetorical Criticism Exploration and Practice saying that each method will produce different insights 149 ix 9 Biblical rhetorical criticism makes use of understanding the forms genres structures stylistic devices and rhetorical techniques common to the Near Eastern literature of the different ages when the separate books of biblical literature were written It attempts to discover and evaluate the rhetorical devices language and methods of communication used within the texts by focusing on the use of repetition parallelism strophic structure motifs climax chiasm and numerous other literary devices 150 Phyllis Trible a student of Muilenburg has become one of the leaders of rhetorical criticism and is known for her detailed literary analysis and her feminist critique of biblical interpretation 151 Narrative criticism Edit Main article Narrative criticism In the last half of the twentieth century historical critics began to recognize that being limited to the historical meant the Bible was not being studied in the manner of other ancient writings In 1974 Hans Frei pointed out that a historical focus neglects the narrative character of the gospels Critics began asking if these texts should be understood on their own terms before being used as evidence of something else 152 2 3 According to Mark Allen Powell the difficulty in understanding the gospels on their own terms is determining what those terms are The problem with treating the gospels just like any other book is that the gospels are not like any other book 152 3 The New Critics whose views were absorbed by narrative criticism rejected the idea that background information holds the key to the meaning of the text and asserted that meaning and value reside within the text itself 152 4 It is now accepted as axiomatic in literary circles that the meaning of literature transcends the historical intentions of the author 152 5 As a form of literary criticism narrative criticism approaches scripture as story 152 7 Christopher T Paris says that narrative criticism admits the existence of sources and redactions but chooses to focus on the artistic weaving of these materials into a sustained narrative picture 153 Narrative criticism was first used to study the New Testament in the 1970s with the works of David Rhoads Jack D Kingsbury R Alan Culpepper and Robert C Tannehill 152 6 A decade later this new approach in biblical criticism included the Old Testament as well The first article labeled narrative criticism was Narrative Criticism and the Gospel of Mark published in 1982 by Bible scholar David Rhoads 154 167 Stephen D Moore has written that as a term narrative criticism originated within biblical studies but its method was borrowed from narratology 154 166 It was also influenced by New Criticism which saw each literary work as a freestanding whole with intrinsic meaning 154 166 Sharon Betsworth says Robert Alter s work is what adapted New Criticism to the Bible 154 166 Scholars such as Robert Alter and Frank Kermode sought to teach readers to appreciate the Bible itself by training attention on its artfulness how the text orchestrates sound repetition dialogue allusion and ambiguity to generate meaning and effect 155 Legacy EditSee also Social criticism Postmodernism Feminist literary criticism and Psychological biblical criticism Ken and Richard Soulen say that biblical criticism has permanently altered the way people understand the Bible 4 22 One way of understanding this change is to see it as a cultural enterprise Jonathan Sheehan has argued that critical study meant the Bible had to become a primarily cultural instrument It could no longer be a Catholic Bible or a Lutheran Bible but had to be divested of its scriptural character within specific confessional hermeneutics 156 9 As a result the Bible is no longer thought of solely as a religious artifact and its interpretation is no longer restricted to the community of believers 157 129 The Bible s cultural impact is studied in multiple academic fields producing not only the cultural Bible but the modern academic Bible as well 158 156 9 Soulen adds that biblical criticism s leading practitioners have set standards of industry acumen and insight that remain pace setting today 4 22 Biblical criticism not only made study of the Bible secularized and scholarly it also went in the other direction and made it more democratic It began to be recognized that Literature was written not just for the dons of Oxford and Cambridge but also for common folk Opposition to authority especially ecclesiastical church authority was widespread and religious tolerance was on the increase 14 Old orthodoxies were questioned and radical views tolerated Scholars began writing in their common languages making their works available to a larger public 14 In this way biblical criticism also led to conflict Many like Roy A Harrisville believe biblical criticism was created by those hostile to the Bible 159 There are aspects of biblical criticism that have not only been hostile to the Bible but also to the religions whose scripture it is in both intent and effect 2 119 120 So biblical criticism became in the perception of many an assault on religion especially Christianity through the autonomy of reason which it espoused 160 Part of the legacy of biblical criticism is that as it rose it led to the decline of biblical authority 2 137 J W Rogerson summarizes By 1800 historical criticism in Germany had reached the point where Genesis had been divided into two or more sources the unity of authorship of Isaiah and Daniel had been disputed the interdependence of the first three gospels had been demonstrated and miraculous elements in the OT and NT Old and New Testaments had been explained as resulting from the primitive or pre scientific outlook of the biblical writers 161 Jeffrey Burton Russell describes it thus Faith was transferred from the words of scripture itself to those of influential biblical critics liberal Christianity retreated hastily before the advance of science and biblical criticism By the end of the eighteenth century advanced liberals had abandoned the core of Christian beliefs 162 151 153 This created an intellectual crisis in American Christianity of the early twentieth century which led to a backlash against the critical approach This backlash produced a fierce internal battle for control of local churches national denominations divinity schools and seminaries 163 93 On one hand Rogerson says that historical criticism is not inherently inimical to Christian belief 161 On the other hand as Michael Fishbane frankly wrote in 1992 No longer are we sustained within a biblical matrix The labor of many centuries has expelled us from this edenic womb and its wellsprings of life and knowledge The Bible has lost its ancient authority 157 121 The most profound legacy of the loss of biblical authority is the formation of the modern world itself according to religion and ethics scholar Jeffrey Stout 163 6 164 There are those who regard the desacralization of the Bible as the fortunate condition for the rise of new sensibilities and modes of imagination that went into developing the modern world 157 121 For many biblical criticism released a host of threats to the Christian faith For others biblical criticism proved to be a failure due principally to the assumption that diachronic linear research could master any and all of the questions and problems attendant on interpretation 159 Still others believed that biblical criticism shorn of its unwarranted arrogance could be a reliable source of interpretation 159 Fishbane asserts that the significant question for those who continue in any community of Jewish or Christian faith is after 200 years of biblical criticism can the text still be seen as sacred T his question affects our innermost cultural being and traces our relationship to the foundational text of our religious and cultural origins 157 121 He compares biblical criticism to Job a prophet who destroyed self serving visions for the sake of a more honest crossing from the divine textus to the human one 157 129 Or as Rogerson says biblical criticism has been liberating for those who want their faith intelligently grounded and intellectually honest 161 Fishbane writes the traditional sacrality of the Bible is at once simple and symbolic individual and communal practical and paradoxical But times have changed In the twenty first century c an the notion of a sacred text be retrieved It is arguably one of Judaism s greatest contributions to the history of religions to assert that the divine Reality is communicated to mankind through words our hermeneutical hope is in the indissoluble link between the divine and human textus It is at such points that the ancient theophanic power of illimitable divinity may yet breakthrough swollen words Thus we may say that the Bible itself may help to retrieve the notion of a sacred text 157 126 129 By the end of the twentieth century multiple new points of view changed biblical criticism s central concepts and its goals leading to the development of a group of new and different biblical critical disciplines 4 21 22 Non liberal Protestant criticism Edit One legacy of biblical criticism in American culture is the American fundamentalist movement of the 1920s and 1930s Fundamentalism began at least partly as a response to the biblical criticism of nineteenth century liberalism 165 166 4 Some fundamentalists believed liberal critics had invented an entirely new religion completely at odds with the Christian faith 167 29 There have also been conservative Protestants who accepted biblical criticism and this too is part of biblical criticism s legacy William Robertson Smith 1846 1894 is an example of a nineteenth century evangelical who believed historical criticism was a legitimate outgrowth of the Protestant Reformation s focus on the biblical text He saw it as a necessary tool to enable intelligent churchgoers to understand the Bible and was a pioneer in establishing the final form of the supplementary hypothesis of the documentary hypothesis 22 298 A similar view was later advocated by the Primitive Methodist biblical scholar A S Peake 1865 1929 22 298 Conservative Protestant scholars have continued the tradition of contributing to critical scholarship 168 140 142 Mark Noll says that in recent years a steadily growing number of well qualified and widely published scholars have broadened and deepened the impact of evangelical scholarship 168 135 Edwin M Yamauchi is a recognized expert on Gnosticism Gordon Fee has done exemplary work in textual criticism Richard Longenecker is a student of Jewish Christianity and the theology of Paul It is safe to conclude that in many measurable features contemporary evangelical scholarship on the scriptures enjoys a considerable good health 168 136 137 141 Catholic criticism Edit Throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries Catholic theology avoided biblical criticism because of its reliance on rationalism preferring instead to engage in traditional exegesis based on the works of the Church Fathers 36 90 Notable exceptions to this included Richard Simon Ignaz von Dollinger and the Bollandist 169 The Church showed strong opposition to biblical criticism during that period Frequent political revolutions bitter opposition of liberalism to the Church and the expulsion of religious orders from France and Germany made the church understandably suspicious of the new intellectual currents 169 In his 1829 encyclical Traditi humilitati Pope Pius VIII lashed against those who publish the Bible with new interpretations contrary to the Church s laws arguing that they were skillfully distort ing the meaning by their own interpretation in order to ensure that the reader imbibes their lethal poison instead of the saving water of salvation 170 In 1864 Pope Pius IX promulgated the encyclical letter Quanta cura Condemning Current Errors which decried what the Pontiff considered significant errors afflicting the modern age These he listed in an attachment called Syllabus Errorum Syllabus of Errors which among other things condemned rationalistic interpretations of the Bible 171 Similarly the dogmatic constitution Dei Filius Son of God approved by the First Vatican Council in 1871 rejected biblical criticism reaffirming that the Bible was written by God and that it was inerrant 172 That began to change in the final decades of the nineteenth century when in 1890 the French Dominican Marie Joseph Lagrange 1855 1938 established a school in Jerusalem called the Ecole pratique d etudes biblique which became the Ecole Biblique in 1920 to encourage study of the Bible using the historical critical method 173 300 Two years later Lagrange funded a journal Revue Biblique spoke at various conferences wrote Bible commentaries that incorporated textual critical work of his own did pioneering work on biblical genres and forms and laid the path to overcoming resistance to the historical critical method among his fellow scholars 173 301 On 18 November 1893 Pope Leo XIII promulgated the encyclical letter Providentissimus Deus The most provident God The letter gave the first formal authorization for the use of critical methods in biblical scholarship 36 Hence it is most proper that Professors of Sacred Scripture and theologians should master those tongues in which the sacred Books were originally written 174 17 and have a knowledge of natural science 174 18 He recommended that the student of scripture be first given a sound grounding in the interpretations of the Fathers such as Tertullian Cyprian Hilary Ambrose Leo the Great Gregory the Great Augustine and Jerome 174 7 and understand what they interpreted literally and what allegorically and note what they lay down as belonging to faith and what is opinion 174 19 Although Providentissimus Deus tried to encourage Catholic biblical studies it created also problems In the encyclical Leo XIII excluded the possibility of restricting the inspiration and inerrancy of the bible to matters of faith and morals The situation precipitated after the election of Pope Pius X a staunch traditionalist Pius saw biblical criticism as part of a growing destructive modernist tendency in the Church Thus he explicitly condemned it in the papal syllabus Lamentabili sane exitu With truly lamentable results and in his papal encyclical Pascendi Dominici gregis Feeding the Lord s Flock which labelled it as heretical 175 The Ecole Biblique and the Revue Biblique were shut down and Lagrange was called back to France in 1912 Following Pius s death Pope Benedict XV once again condemned rationalistic biblical criticism in his papal encyclical Spiritus Paraclitus Paraclete Spirit 176 36 99 100 but also took a more moderate line than his predecessor allowing Lagrange to return to Jerusalem and reopen his school and journal In 1943 on the fiftieth anniversary of the Providentissimus Deus Pope Pius XII issued the papal encyclical Divino Afflante Spiritu Inspired by the Holy Spirit sanctioning historical criticism opening a new epoch in Catholic critical scholarship The Jesuit Augustin Bea 1881 1968 had played a vital part in its publication 22 298 177 The dogmatic constitution Dei verbum Word of God approved by the Second Vatican Council and promulgated by Pope Paul VI in 1965 furtherly sanctioned biblical criticism 178 Raymond E Brown Joseph A Fitzmyer and Roland E Murphy were the most famous Catholic scholars to apply biblical criticism and the historical critical method in analyzing the Bible together they authored The Jerome Biblical Commentary and The New Jerome Biblical Commentary the later of which is still one of the most used textbooks in Catholic Seminaries of the United States 179 180 The Jerome Biblical Commentary for the Twenty First Century a third fully revised edition will be published in 2022 and will be edited by John J Collins Gina Hens Piazza Barbara Reid and Donald Senior 181 This tradition is continued by Catholic scholars such as John P Meier and Conleth Kearns who also worked with Reginald C Fuller and Leonard Johnston preparing A New Catholic Commentary on Holy Scripture 182 183 Meier is also the author of a multi volume work on the historical Jesus A Marginal Jew 184 Jewish criticism Edit Biblical criticism posed unique difficulties for Judaism 185 Some Jewish scholars such as rabbinicist Solomon Schechter did not participate in biblical criticism because they saw criticism of the Pentateuch as a threat to Jewish identity 186 83 The growing anti semitism in Germany of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries the perception that higher criticism was an entirely Protestant Christian pursuit and the sense that many Bible critics were not impartial academics but were proponents of supersessionism prompted Schechter to describe Higher Criticism as Higher Anti semitism 186 42 83 One of the earliest historical critical Jewish scholars of Pentateuchal studies was M M Kalisch who began work in the nineteenth century 187 213 In the early twentieth century historical criticism of the Pentateuch became mainstream among Jewish scholars 187 218 In 1905 Rabbi David Zvi Hoffmann wrote an extensive two volume philologically based critique of the Wellhausen theory which supported Jewish orthodoxy 188 Bible professor Benjamin D Sommer says it is among the most precise and detailed commentaries on the legal texts Leviticus and Deuteronomy ever written 187 215 According to Aly Elrefaei the strongest refutation of Wellhausen s Documentary theory came from Yehezkel Kaufmann in 1937 189 8 Kaufmann was the first Jewish scholar to fully exploit higher criticism to counter Wellhausen s theory Wellhausen s and Kaufmann s methods were similar yet their conclusions were opposed 189 8 Mordechai Breuer who branches out beyond most Jewish exegesis and explores the implications of historical criticism for multiple subjects is an example of a twenty first century Jewish biblical critical scholar 187 267 Feminist criticism Edit Biblical criticism impacted feminism and was impacted by it In the 1980s Phyllis Trible and Elisabeth Schussler Fiorenza reframed biblical criticism by challenging the supposed disinterest and objectivity it claimed for itself and exposing how ideological theological stances had played a critical role in interpretation 190 For example the patriarchal model of ancient Israel became an aspect of biblical criticism through the anthropology of the nineteenth century 191 9 Feminist scholars of second wave feminism appropriated it 191 15 Third wave feminists began raising concerns about its accuracy 191 24 25 Carol L Meyers says feminist archaeology has shown male dominance was real but it was fragmentary not hegemonic leading to a change in the anthropological description of ancient Israel as heterarchy rather than patriarchy 191 27 Feminist criticism is an aspect of the feminist theology movement which began in the 1960s and 1970s as part of the feminist movement in the United States 192 1 Three phases of feminist biblical interpretation are connected to the three phases or waves of the movement 191 11 Feminist theology has since responded to globalization making itself less specifically Western thereby moving beyond its original narrative as a movement defined by the USA 192 2 Feminist criticism embraces the inter disciplinary approach to biblical criticism encouraging a reader response approach to the text that includes an attitude of dissent or resistance 193 Postcolonial biblical criticism Edit In the mid to late 1990s a global response to the changes in biblical criticism began to coalesce as Postcolonial biblical criticism 194 4 5 Fernando F Segovia and Stephen D Moore postulate that it emerged from liberation hermeneutics or extra biblical Postcolonial studies or even from historical biblical criticism or from all three sources at once 194 5 6 It has a focus on the indigenous and local with an eye toward recovering those aspects of culture that Colonialism had erased or suppressed 194 6 The Postcolonial view is rooted in a consciousness of the geopolitical situation for all people and is transhistorical and transcultural 194 11 According to Laura E Donaldson postcolonial criticism is oppositional and multidimensional in nature keenly attentive to the intricacies of the colonial situation in terms of culture race class and gender 194 12 13 African American biblical criticism Edit Biblical criticism produced profound changes in African American culture Vaughn A Booker writes that Such developments included the introduction of the varieties of American metaphysical theology in sermons and songs liturgical modifications to accommodate Holy Spirit possession presences through shouting and dancing and musical changes These changes would both complement and reconfigure conventional African American religious life 195 Michael Joseph Brown writes that African Americans responded to the assumption of universality in biblical criticism by challenging it He says all Bible readings are contextual in that readers bring with them their own context perceptions and experiences harvested from social and cultural situations 37 2 African American biblical criticism is based on liberation theology and black theology and looks for what is potentially liberating in the texts 37 2 Queer biblical hermeneutics Edit According to Episcopalian priest and queer theologian Patrick S Cheng Episcopal Divinity School Queer biblical hermeneutics is a way of looking at the sacred text through the eyes of queer people It is important to understand the meaning of these terms in relation to the exegetical process 196 Social scientific criticism Edit Social scientific criticism is part of the wider trend in biblical criticism to reflect interdisciplinary methods and diversity 197 198 It grew out of form criticism s Sitz im Leben and the sense that historical form criticism had failed to adequately analyze the social and anthropological contexts which form critics claimed had formed the texts Using the perspectives theories models and research of the social sciences to determine what social norms may have influenced the growth of biblical tradition it is similar to historical biblical criticism in its goals and methods and has less in common with literary critical approaches It analyzes the social and cultural dimensions of the text and its environmental context 199 New historicism Edit New historicism emerged as traditional historical biblical criticism changed Lois Tyson says this new form of historical criticism developed in the 1970s It rejects both traditional historicism s marginalization of literature and New Criticism s enshrinement of the literary text in a timeless dimension beyond history 200 288 Literary texts are seen as cultural artifacts that reveal context as well as content and within New Historicism the literary text and the historical situation are equally important 200 288 Post modern biblical criticism Edit Postmodern biblical criticism began after the 1940s and 1950s when the term postmodern came into use to signify a rejection of modern conventions 201 73 Many of these early postmodernist views came from France following World War II Postmodernism has been associated with Sigmund Freud radical politics and arguments against metaphysics and ideology 201 67 It questions anything that claims objectively secured foundations universals metaphysics or analytical dualism 201 74 Biblical scholar A K M Adam says postmodernism has three general features 1 it denies any privileged starting point for truth 2 it is critical of theories that attempt to explain the totality of reality and 3 it attempts to show that all ideals are grounded in ideological economic or political self interest 202 Post critical interpretation Edit Post critical interpretation according to Ken and Richard Soulen shares postmodernism s suspicion of modern claims to neutral standards of reason but not its hostility toward theological interpretation 4 22 It begins with the understanding that biblical criticism s focus on historicity produced a distinction between the meaning of what the text says and what it is about what it historically references The biblical scholar Hans Frei wrote that what he refers to as the realistic narratives of literature including the Bible don t allow for such separation 203 119 Subject matter is identical to verbal meaning and is found in plot and nowhere else 203 120 As Frei puts it scripture simultaneously depicts and renders the reality if any of what it talks about its subject matter is constituted by or identical with its narrative 203 120 Notes Edit known in German as Kultgeschichtliche Schule or Religionsgeschichtliche Schule 4 161 Fiorenza says Christian male theologians have formulated theological concepts in terms of their own cultural experience insisting on male language relating to God and on a symbolic universe in which women do not appear Feminist scholars insist that religious texts and traditions must be reinterpreted so that women and other non persons can achieve full citizenship in religion and society 65 This leads naturally to a second indictment against biblical criticism that it is the preserve of a small coterie of people in the rich Western world trying to legislate for how the vast mass of humanity ought to read the Bible Not only has such criticism detached the Bible from believing communities it has also appropriated it for a particular group namely white male Western scholars 2 150 There is some consensus among twenty first century textual critics that the various locations traditionally assigned to the text types are incorrect and misleading Thus the geographical labels should be used with caution some scholars prefer to refer to the text types as textual clusters instead 83 3 9 Viviano says While source criticism has always had its detractors the past few decades have witnessed an escalation in the level of dissatisfaction 32 52 Frank Moore Cross published Canaanite Myth and Hebrew Epic in 1973 arguing that P was not an independent coherent document but was instead an editorial expansion of the combined Jahwist Elohist 106 1 6 That was the beginning of a series of attacks on the documentary hypothesis Hans Heinrich Schmid followed with The So called Jahwist 1976 which questioned the date of the Jahwistic source Martin Rose in 1981 proposed that Jahwist was a prologue to the history which begins in Joshua and Van Seters in Abraham in History and Tradition proposed a 6th century BCE date for the Jahwist 106 10 11 In 1989 Rolf Rendtorff used form criticism to show the development of the Pentateuch was opposite to the manner the Documentary hypothesis claimed 32 49 He argued in The Problem of the Process of Transmission in the Pentateuch that neither the Jahwist nor the Elohist had ever existed as coherent sources and had only ever been independent fragmentary stories poems etc 106 11 Mid twentieth century scholars of oral tradition objected to the book mentality of source criticism saying the idea that ancients had cut and pasted from their sources reflects the modern world more than the ancient one 32 49 The presence of contradictions and repetitions doesn t necessarily prove separate sources since they are to be expected given the cultural background of the Old Testament and the long period of time during which the text was in formation and being passed on orally 32 50 The documentary theory has been undermined by subdivisions of the sources and the addition of other sources since The more sources one finds the more tenuous the evidence for the existence of continuous documents becomes 32 51 Another problem is posed by dating see note 4 which The process of religious development is far more complex and uneven than Wellhausen imagined Without his evolutionary assumptions his dating of sources can no longer be accepted Several scholars over the past century have disagreed with Wellhausen s dates 32 51 MacKenzie and Kaltner say scholarly analysis is very much in a state of flux 103 58 Don Richardson writes that Wellhausen s theory was in part a derivative of an anthropological theory popular in the nineteenth century known as Tylor s theory 109 5 Written in 1870 Edward Burnett Tylor s theory was an evolutionary model asserting three stages of development in religion from animism to polytheism to monotheism which followed the cultural stratification that came with monarchy Lewis M Hopfe says Tylor s theories were widely accepted and regarded as classic for many years 110 It remained the dominant theory until Wilhelm Schmidt produced a study on native monotheism in 1912 titled Ursprung Der Gottesidee The Origin of the Concept of God demonstrating the presence of monotheism in undeveloped primitive cultures 111 119 124 Tylor s theory had in the meantime been picked up and used in other fields beyond anthropology Wellhausen s hypothesis for example depends upon the notion that polytheism preceded monotheism in Judaism s development Hence Wellhausen s theology is based upon an anthropological theory which most anthropologists no longer endorse 111 124 Sanders explains 1 The form critics did not derive laws of transmission from a study of folk literature as many think 2 They derived them by two methods a by assuming that purity of form indicates antiquity and b by determining how Matthew and Luke used Mark and Q and how the later literature used the canonical gospels 3 The first method is based on a priori considerations 4 In so far as it depends on the use of Mark and Q by Matthew and Luke the second is circular and therefore questionable 5 The two are sometimes in direct conflict although the form critics did not observe this 6 In any case the form critics did not derive the laws from or apply the laws to the Gospels systematically nor did they carry out a systematic investigation of changes in the post canonical literature 126 Burridge says The analogy between the development of the gospel pericopae and folklore needed reconsideration because of developments in folklore studies it was less easy to assume steady growth of an oral tradition in stages significant steps were sometimes large and sudden the length of time needed for the laws of oral transmission to operate such as the centuries of Old Testament or Homeric transmission was greater than that taken by the gospels even the existence of such laws was questioned Further the transition from individual units of oral tradition into a written document had an important effect on the interpretation of the material 128 13 See also 129 6 8 130 277 121 247 127 16 17 Tony Campbell says form criticism has a future if its past is allowed a decent burial 136 237 Martin Rosel writes that form criticism no longer has the high status it had in the past 129 108 Erhard Blum observes problems and he wonders if one can speak of a current form critical method at all 136 6 Bob Becking calls the question of the validity of Sitz im Leben problematic 129 253 Thomas Romer questions the assumption that form reflects any socio historical reality 136 8 Such is the question asked by Won Lee one wonders whether Gunkel s form criticism is still viable today 129 218 References Edit Harrington Daniel J Biblical Criticism Oxford Bibliographies Oxford University Press Retrieved 15 November 2020 a b c d e f g h Barton John 2007 The Nature of Biblical Criticism Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 22587 2 Fitzmyer Joseph A 1995 The Biblical Commission s Document The Interpretation of the Bible in the Church Text and Commentary Editrice Pontificio Istituto Biblico pp 37 44 ISBN 978 88 7653 605 2 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Soulen Richard N Soulen R Kendall 2001 Handbook of Biblical Criticism Third ed Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 22314 4 Walther League 1924 The Walther League Messenger University of Wisconsin p 332 Popkin R H 2013 The Books of Nature and Scripture Recent Essays on Natural Philosophy Theology and Biblical Criticism in the Netherlands of Spinoza s Time and the British Isles of Newton s Time Springer Netherlands p 5 ISBN 978 94 017 3249 9 de Spinoza Benedictus 1900 The Chief Works of Benedict de Spinoza Introduction Tractatus theologico politicus Tractatus politicus Translated by Robert Harvey Monro Elwes G Bell and sons p 123 124 Young Edward Joseph 1989 1964 An Introduction to the Old Testament Eerdmans pp 119 120 ISBN 978 0 8028 0339 9 a b c d Nahkola Aulikki 2007 The Memoires of Moses and the Genesis of Method in Biblical Criticism Astruc s Contribution In Jarick John ed Sacred Conjectures The Context and Legacy of Robert Lowth and Jean Astruc T amp T Clark ISBN 978 0 567 02932 4 Grieve Alexander James 1920 Peake Arthur Samuel Grieve Alexander James eds A Commentary on the Bible Harvard University p 133 a b Reill Peter Hanns 1975 The German Enlightenment and the Rise of Historicism University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 02594 3 Thielman Frank S 2011 Theology of the New Testament A Canonical and Synthetic Approach Zondervan pp 20 22 ISBN 978 0 310 86433 2 a b c d e f g h i j k Law David R 2012 The Historical Critical Method A Guide for the Perplexed T amp T Clark ISBN 978 0 56740 012 3 a b c d e f g h Baird William 1992 History of New Testament Research Volume One From Deism to Tubingen Fortress Press ISBN 978 1 4514 2017 3 Psiquiatr Bras Moreira Almeida Alexander Neto Francisco Lotufo Koenig Harold G 10 August 2006 Religiousness and mental health a review Brazilian Journal of Psychiatry 28 3 242 250 doi 10 1590 S1516 44462006005000006 Herrick James A 1997 Characteristics of British Deism The Radical Rhetoric of the English Deists The Discourse of Skepticism 1680 1750 Studies in rhetoric communication University of South Carolina Press p 40 ISBN 978 1 57003 166 3 We cannot overestimate Reventlow concludes the influence exercised by Deistic thought and by the principles of the Humanist world view which the Deists made the criterion of their biblical criticism on the historical critical exegesis of the nineteenth century Reventlow The Authority of the Bible p 412 a b c Groetsch Ulrich 2015 Hermann Samuel Reimarus 1694 1768 Classicist Hebraist Enlightenment Radical in Disguise Brill pp 239 240 ISBN 978 90 04 27299 6 Lucci Diego Wigelsworth Jeffrey R 2015 God does not act arbitrarily or interpose unnecessarily providential deism and the denial of miracles in Wollaston Tindal Chubb and Morgan Intellectual History Review 25 2 176 177 doi 10 1080 17496977 2014 992628 S2CID 170989245 Michaelis Johann David 1802 Introduction to the New Testament Vol II part II Second ed F and C Rivington Rogerson J W 2007 Johann David Michaelis In McKim Donald K ed Dictionary of Major Biblical Interpreters InterVarsity Press p 737 ISBN 978 0 8308 2927 9 Berry George Ricker 1938 Biblical Criticism and Archaeology Journal of Bible and Religion 6 3 131 171 JSTOR 1457569 a b c d Rogerson J W 2000 Higher Criticism In Hastings Adrian Mason Alistair Pyper Hugh eds The Oxford Companion to Christian Thought Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 860024 4 Baier Thomas ed 2017 Camerarius Polyhistor Wissensvermittlung im deutschen Humanismus in German Narr Francke Attempto Verlag ISBN 978 3 8233 0037 3 a b Muller Richard 1998 Biblical Interpretation in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries In McKim Donald K ed Historical Handbook of Major Biblical Interpreters InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 8308 1452 7 a b c d e f g h Holmen Tom 2011 Handbook for the Study of the Historical Jesus Brill ISBN 978 90 04 16372 0 Spalding Almut 2015 Spalding Almut Spalding Paul S eds The Account Books of the Reimarus Family of Hamburg 1728 1780 Brill p 58 ISBN 978 90 04 30079 8 a b c d e f Schweitzer Albert 2001 Bowden John ed The Quest of the Historical Jesus Fortress Press ISBN 978 1 4514 0354 1 Brown Colin 2010 Wilkens Steve Padgett Alan G Brown Colin eds Christianity and Western Thought From the Ancient World to the Age of Enlightenment InterVarsity Press p 305 ISBN 978 0 8308 3951 3 Stegemann Wolfgang 2002 Malina Bruce J Stegemann Wolfgang Theissen Gerd eds The Social Setting of Jesus and the Gospels Fortress Press p 225 ISBN 978 1 4514 2043 2 Theissen Gerd Merz Annette The Historical Jesus A Comprehensive Guide Fortress Press p 443 ISBN 978 1 4514 0863 8 Keener Craig S 2012 The Historical Jesus of the Gospels Eerdmans pp 174 320 ISBN 978 0 8028 6888 6 a b c d e f g h i j Viviano Pauline A 1999 Source Criticism In Haynes Stephen R McKenzie Steven L eds To Each Its Own Meaning An Introduction to Biblical Criticisms and Their Application Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 25784 2 a b Hengel Martin 2010 2006 Saint Peter The Underestimated Apostle Translated by Thomas Trapp Eerdmans pp viii 58 ISBN 978 0 8028 2718 0 Hafemann S J 1998 Baur F C In McKim Donald K ed Historical Handbook of Major Biblical Interpreters InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 8308 1452 7 a b Soulen Richard N Soulen R Kendall 2011 Handbook of Biblical Criticism Fourth ed Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 23534 5 a b c d Prior Joseph G 1999 The Historical Critical Method in Catholic Exegesis Gregorian University Press ISBN 978 88 7652 825 5 a b c Brown Michael Joseph 2004 Blackening of the Bible The Aims of African American Biblical Scholarship Bloomsbury Academic pp 3 4 ISBN 978 1 56338 363 2 a b c d e Gerdmar Anders 2009 Roots of Theological Anti Semitism German Biblical Interpretation and the Jews from Herder and Semler to Kittel and Bultmann Brill ISBN 978 90 04 16851 0 Morgan R 1998 Strauss David Friedrich In McKim Donald K ed Historical Handbook of Major Biblical Interpreters InterVarsity Press pp 364 365 ISBN 978 0 8308 1452 7 Holmberg Bengt 2011 Futures for the Jesus Quest In Holmen Tom Porter Stanley eds Handbook for the Study of the Historical Jesus Brill p 888 ISBN 978 9 00416 372 0 Dunn James D G 2003 Jesus Remembered Christianity in the Making Volume 1 Eerdmans p 625 ISBN 9780802839312 Wardman Harold W 28 September 2020 Ernest Renan Encyclopaedia Britannica Online ed Backhaus Knut 2011 Echoes from the wilderness The historical John the Baptist In Porter Stanley Holmen Tom eds Handbook for the Study of the Historical Jesus Brill p 1750 ISBN 978 90 04 16372 0 Dawes Gregory W 2000 Dawes Gregory W ed The Historical Jesus Quest Landmarks in the Search for the Jesus of History Westminster John Knox Press pp 172 173 ISBN 978 0 664 22262 8 a b c d e f g h Witherington III Ben 1997 The Jesus Quest The Third Search for the Jew of Nazareth InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 8308 1544 9 McGuckin J A 2000 Quest of the Historical Jesus In Hastings Adrian Mason Alistair Pyper Hugh eds The Oxford Companion to Christian Thought Oxford University Press p 587 ISBN 978 0 19 860024 4 a b Casey Maurice 2010 Jesus of Nazareth An Independent Historian s Account of His Life and Teaching T amp T Clark ISBN 978 0 567 64517 3 James William Stacy 1998 Karl Barth In McKim Donald K ed Historical Handbook of Major Biblical Interpreters InterVarsity Press p 433 ISBN 978 0 83081 452 7 Labron Tim 2011 Bultmann Unlocked Bloomsbury Academic p 4 ISBN 978 0 567 03153 2 Hammann Konrad 2012 Rudolf Bultmann a Biography Polebridge Press ISBN 978 1 59815 118 3 Chan Mark L Y 2009 Hermeneutics In Martinez Juan F Chan Simon Karkkainen Veli Matti William A William A eds Global Dictionary of Theology A Resource for the Worldwide Church InterVarsity Press pp 381 382 ISBN 978 0 8308 7811 6 Miles Watson Jonathan Asimos Vivian eds 2019 The Bloomsbury Reader in the Study of Myth Bloomsbury Publishing p 280 ISBN 978 1 350 08226 7 Perrin Norman 2002 What is Redaction Criticism Wipf amp Stock p vi ISBN 978 1 57910 545 7 a b c d McKim Donald K ed 1998 Historical Handbook of Major Biblical Interpreters IVP Academic ISBN 978 0 8308 1452 7 a b Charlesworth James H 2006 The Dead Sea Scrolls Their Discovery and Challenge to Biblical Studies In Charlesworth James H ed The Bible and the Dead Sea Scrolls Scripture and the scrolls Baylor University Press ISBN 978 1 932792 19 5 VanderKam James Flint Peter 2005 The Meaning of the Dead Sea Scrolls Their Significance For Understanding the Bible Judaism Jesus and Christianity Bloomsbury Academic p 143 ISBN 978 0 567 08468 2 Sheppard G T Thiselton A C 2007 Biblical Interpretation in Europe in the Twentieth Century In McKim Donald K ed Dictionary of Major Biblical Interpreters IVP Academic p 82 ISBN 978 0 8308 2927 9 Ward Graham 2000 Hastings Adrian Mason Alistair Bennett Cecily Pyper Hugh Lawrie Ingrid eds The Oxford Companion to Christian Thought Oxford University Press p 13 ISBN 978 0 19 860024 4 Berlin Adele 2008 Literary Approaches to Biblical Literature In Greenspahn Frederick E ed The Hebrew Bible New Insights and Scholarship New York University Press pp 60 61 ISBN 978 0 8147 3188 8 Buhler Pierre 2000 Hermeneutics In Hastings Adrian Mason Alistair Pyper Hugh eds The Oxford Companion to Christian Thought Oxford University Press p 296 ISBN 978 0 19 860024 4 O Brien P T 2002 Justification in Paul and Some Crucial Issues of the Last Two Decades In Carson D A ed Right With God Justification in the Bible and the World Wipf amp Stock pp 69 92 260 ISBN 978 1 59244 044 3 Beckstrom Edward A 2013 Beyond Christian Folk Religion Re grafting into Our Roots Romans 11 17 23 Resource Publications pp xviii xxi ISBN 978 1 62032 884 2 Ochs Peter 1993 An Introduction to Post critical Interpretation In Ochs Peter ed The Return to Scripture in Judaism and Christianity Essays in Postcritical Scriptural Interpretation Wipf amp Stock p 13 ISBN 978 1 55635 815 9 Miller Robert J 1999 The Jesus Seminar and Its Critics Polebridge Press ISBN 978 0 944344 78 1 Fiorenza Elisabeth Schussler 2014 Between Movement and Academy Feminist Biblical Studies in the Twentieth Century In Fiorenza Elisabeth Schussler ed Feminist Biblical Studies in the Twentieth Century Scholarship and Movement Society of Biblical Literature p 15 ISBN 978 1 58983 583 2 Dunn James 2003 Jesus Remembered Christianity in the Making Vol 1 Eerdmans p 339 ISBN 978 0 8028 3931 2 Verhoeven Paul van Sheers Rob 2010 Jesus of Nazareth Seven Stories Press p 39 ISBN 978 1 58322 905 7 Anderson Paul N Foreword to The Testament of Jesus A Study of the Gospel of John in the Light of Chapter 17 Digital Commons George Fox University George Fox University Retrieved 19 November 2020 Strawn Brent A 2008 Docetism Kasemann and Christology Can Historical Criticism Help Christological Orthodoxy and Other Theology After All Journal of Theological Interpretation 2 2 161 180 doi 10 2307 26421399 JSTOR 26421399 Retrieved 19 November 2020 Montgomery Paul L 4 January 1964 Scholars Differ On Life Of Jesus Research Is Complicated by Conflicting Gospel Data The New York Times Sanders E P 1993 The Historical Figure of Jesus Penguin Books p 5 ISBN 978 0 14014 499 4 McKenzie Steven L Kaltner John 2007 The Old Testament Its Background Growth amp Content Wipf amp Stock ISBN 978 1 62564 264 6 Bruce F F June 2006 Second Thoughts on the Dead Sea Scrolls Wipf amp Stock p 31 ISBN 978 1 59752 700 2 Bird Graeme D 2010 Textual Criticism as Applied to Classical and Biblical Texts Multitextuality in the HomericIliad The Witness of the Ptolemaic Papyri Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 05323 6 Hurtado Larry W P52 P Rylands Gk 457 and the Nomina Sacra Method and Probability Edinburgh Research Archive University of Edinburgh Retrieved 15 November 2020 Wegner Paul D 2004 The Journey from Texts to Translations The Origin and Development of the Bible Baker Publishing Group pp 178 180 ISBN 978 0 8010 2799 4 Rezetko Robert Young Ian 2014 Historical Linguistics and Biblical Hebrew Steps Toward an Integrated Approach SBL Press p 164 ISBN 978 1 62837 046 1 Aland Kurt Aland Barbara 1987 The Text of the New Testament An Introduction to the Critical Editions and to the Theory and Practice of Modern Textual Criticism Eerdmans p 29 ISBN 978 0 8028 3620 5 Andrews Edward D 2019 400 000 Scribal Errors in the Greek New Testament Manuscripts What Assurance Do We Have that We Can Trust the Bible Christian Publishing House p 56 ISBN 978 1 949586 92 3 Gregory C R 1907 Canon and Text of the New Testament Vol 1 T amp T Clark p 340 a b c d e f Metzger B M Ehrman Bart 2005 The Text of the New Testament Fourth ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 516667 5 a b Wegner Paul D 2006 A Student s Guide to Textual Criticism of the Bible Its History Methods and Results IVP Academic ISBN 978 0 8308 2731 2 a b Wasserman Tommy Gurry Peter J 2017 Introduction A New Approach to Textual Criticism An Introduction to the Coherence Based Genealogical Method SBL Press ISBN 978 3 438 05174 5 McGann Jerome J 2014 A Critique of Modern Textual Criticism University of Virginia Press p 107 ISBN 978 0 8139 3377 1 Tov Emanu el 2001 Textual criticism of the Hebrew Bible Fortress Press p 310 ISBN 978 90 232 3715 0 Cooper Alan December 1988 The Absurdity of Amos 6 12a Journal of Biblical Literature 107 4 725 727 doi 10 2307 3267633 JSTOR 3267633 Mackail J W 1913 Commemorative address In Duff James Bayfield Matthew Albert eds Collected Literary Essays Classical and Modern Cambridge University Press p cv Guting Eberhard W 2020 Textual Criticism and the New Testament Text Theory Practice and Editorial Technique SBL Press p 222 ISBN 978 0 88414 353 6 Tarrant Richard 2016 Texts Editors and Readers Methods and Problems in Latin Textual Criticism Cambridge University Press pp 68 85 86 ISBN 978 0 521 76657 9 Lexicon of Scholarly Editing European Research Council Archived from the original on 4 October 2018 Retrieved 15 June 2018 McCarter Peter Kyle 1986 Textual Criticism Recovering the Text of the Hebrew Bible Fortress Press p 73 ISBN 978 1 4514 1539 1 Miller J David January 2006 The Long and Short of Lectio Brevior Potior The Bible Translator 57 1 11 doi 10 1177 026009350605700102 S2CID 170320665 Muller R A 2007 Biblical Interpretation in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries The Post reformation Era In McKim Donald K ed Dictionary of Major Biblical Interpreters IVP Academic p 915 ISBN 978 0 8308 2927 9 a b Campbell Antony F O Brien Mark A 1993 Sources of the Pentateuch Texts Introductions Annotations Fortress Press ISBN 978 1 4514 1367 0 a b c Smend Rudolf 2007 From Astruc to Zimmerli Old Testament Scholarship in Three Centuries Mohr Siebeck ISBN 978 3 16 149338 6 a b c d e Guthrie Donald 1990 New Testament Introduction Master Reference Revised ed InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 8308 1402 2 a b c d Orchard Bernard ed 1953 A Catholic Commentary on Holy Scripture Reprint ed University of California a b c Campbell Anthony F O Brien Mark A 1993 Sources of the Pentateuch Texts Introductions Annotations Fortress Press ISBN 978 0 80062 701 0 Clifford Hywell 2011 8 In Mein Andrew Hagedorn Anselm C eds Aspects of Amos Exegesis and Interpretation Bloomsbury Academic p 141 ISBN 978 0 567 24537 3 Baden Joel S 2012 The Composition of the Pentateuch Renewing the Documentary Hypothesis Yale University Press p 20 ISBN 978 0 300 15263 0 Wajdenbaum Philippe 2019 Argonauts of the Desert Structural Analysis of the Hebrew Bible Paperback ed Routledge p 23 ISBN 978 0 367 87216 8 a b c d e f Van Seters John 2015 The Pentateuch A Social Science Commentary Second ed Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 0 56765 879 1 a b Kaltner John McKenzie Steven Linn 2007 The Old Testament Its Background Growth and Content Wipf amp Stock ISBN 978 1 62564 264 6 Arnold Bill T 2008 Genesis Cambridge University Press p 13 ISBN 978 1 316 02556 7 a b c Nicholson Ernest 2002 The Pentateuch in the Twentieth Century The Legacy of Julius Wellhausen Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 925783 6 a b c Campbell Antony F O Brien Mark A 1993 Sources of the Pentateuch texts introductions annotations Fortress Press ISBN 9780800627010 a b Thompson Thomas L 2000 Early History of the Israelite People From the Written amp Archaeological Sources Brill ISBN 978 90 04 11943 7 Knohl Israel 2007 The Sanctuary of Silence The Priestly Torah and the Holiness School Eisenbrauns p 41 ISBN 9781575061313 Gonzalez Wippler Migene 1988 The Complete Book of Spells Ceremonies and Magic Llewellyn Publications ISBN 978 0 87542 286 2 Hopfe Lewis M 1998 Religions of the World Prentice Hall p 7 ISBN 978 0 13 627928 0 a b Richardson Don 2006 Eternity in Their Hearts Baker Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 7642 1558 2 Wenham David 1979 Source Criticism In Marshall I Howard ed New Testament Interpretation Essays on Principles and Methods Revised ed The Paternoster Press p 139 ISBN 978 0 85364 424 8 a b c Scroggie William Graham 1995 A Guide to the Gospels Kregel Publications ISBN 978 0 8254 3744 1 a b Fleddermann Harry T 2005 Q A Reconstruction and Commentary Peeters Publishers ISBN 978 90 429 1656 2 Marshall I Howard ed 1977 New Testament Interpretation Essays on Principles and Methods Wipf amp Stock p 148 ISBN 978 1 59752 696 8 a b Neville David J 1994 Arguments from Order in Synoptic Source Criticism A History and Critique Mercer University Press ISBN 978 0 86554 399 7 a b Elwell Walter A Yarbrough Robert W 2013 Encountering the New Testament A Historical and Theological Survey 3rd ed Baker Academic ISBN 978 0 8010 3964 5 Crook Z A 2000 The Synoptic Parables of the Mustard Seed and the Leaven a Test Case for the Two Document Two Gospel and Farrer Goulder Hypotheses Journal for the Study of the New Testament 22 78 23 doi 10 1177 0142064X0002207802 S2CID 161898687 Goodacre Mark 2002 The Case Against Q Studies in Markan Priority and the Synoptic Problem Trinity Press International pp 4 13 ISBN 978 1 56338 334 2 Soulen Richard N Soulen R Kendall 2011 Lachman Karl The Lachman Fallacy Handbook of Biblical Criticism Fourth ed Westminster John Knox Press p 110 ISBN 978 0 664 23534 5 a b c Bauckham Richard 2006 Jesus and the Eyewitnesses Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 6390 4 a b c d Miller II Robert D 2011 Oral Tradition in Ancient Israel Cascade Books ISBN 978 1 61097 271 0 Congdon David W 2015 Rudolf Bultmann A Companion to His Theology Wipf amp Stock ISBN 978 1 4982 7359 6 a b c d e Eddy Paul Rhodes Boyd Gregory A 2007 The Jesus Legend Baker Academic ISBN 978 0 8010 3114 4 Meier John P 2006 Criteria How Do We Decide What Comes From Jesus In James D G Dunn McKnight Scot eds The Historical Jesus in Recent Research Eisenbrauns p 141 ISBN 978 1 57506 100 9 Sanders E P 1969 Tendencies of the Synoptic Tradition Cambridge University Press p 26 ISBN 978 0 521 07318 9 a b Knierim Rolf 2000 Old Testament Form Criticism Reconsidered In Kim Wonil Ellens Deborah L Floyd Michael Sweeney Marvin A eds Reading the Hebrew Bible for a New Millennium Form Concept and Theological Perspective Vol 2 Trinity Press ISBN 978 1 56338 326 7 a b Burridge Richard A 2004 What Are the Gospels A Comparison with Graeco Roman Biography Second ed Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 0971 1 a b c d e f Sweeney Marvin Alan Zvi Ehud Ben 2003 Introduction In Sweeney Marvin Alan Zvi Ehud Ben eds The Changing Face of Form Criticism for the Twenty first Century Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 6067 5 a b c Kelber Werner H 2013 Imprints Voiceprints and Footprints of Memory Collected Essays of Werner H Kelber Society of Biblical Literature ISBN 978 1 58983 894 9 Strauss Mark L 2011 Four Portraits One Jesus A Survey of Jesus and the Gospels Zondervan pp 356 534 ISBN 978 0 310 86615 2 Keener Craig S 2012 The Historical Jesus of the Gospels Eerdmans p 154 ISBN 978 0 8028 6888 6 a b Wood Laurence W 2005 Theology as History and Hermeneutics A Post Critical Conversation with Contemporary Theology Emeth Press ISBN 978 0 9755435 5 9 Powell Mark Allan 1999 Introduction In Powell Mark Allan ed The New Testament Today Westminster John Knox Press p 24 ISBN 978 0 664 25824 5 Luomanen Petri 2014 How Religions Remember Memory Theories in Biblical Studies and in the Cognitive Study of Religion In Czachesz Istvan Uro Risto eds Mind Morality and Magic Cognitive Science Approaches in Biblical Studies Routledge p 24 ISBN 978 1 84465 733 9 a b c d Campbell Antony F 2014 Opening the Bible Selected Writings of Antony Campbell SJ ATF Press ISBN 978 1 922239 80 8 Honore A M 1968 A Statistical Study of the Synoptic Problem Novum Testamentum 10 2 3 95 147 doi 10 2307 1560364 JSTOR 1560364 a b c d e f Harrington Daniel J 1990 1979 Interpreting the New Testament A Practical Guide The Liturgical Press ISBN 978 0 8146 5124 7 Browning W R F ed 2004 Redaction Criticism A Dictionary of the Bible Oxford University Press Retrieved 25 June 2018 a b c Lee Jae Hyun 2016 Gunther Bornkamm and Redaction Criticism In Porter Stanley E Adams Sean A eds Pillars in the History of Biblical Interpretation Prevailing Methods Before 1980 Vol 1 Wipf amp Stock ISBN 978 1 4982 8761 6 a b Goodacre Mark 2002 The Case Against Q Studies in Markan Priority and the Synoptic Problem Bloomsbury Academic pp 21 117 ISBN 978 1 56338 334 2 Wolfreys Julian ed 2006 Modern North American Criticism and Theory A Critical Guide Edinburgh University Press p 19 ISBN 978 0 7486 2678 6 a b c d e f g h i House Paul R ed 1992 Beyond Form Criticism Essays in Old Testament Literary Criticism Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 0 931464 65 2 Horsley Richard Thatcher Tom 2013 ohn Jesus and the Renewal of Israel Eerdmans p 60 ISBN 978 0 8028 6872 5 a b Toniste Kulli 2016 The Ending of the Canon A Canonical and Intertextual Reading of Revelation 21 22 Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 0 567 65795 4 a b Barton John 1996 Reading the Old Testament Method in Biblical Study Second ed Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 25724 8 a b c d e Hayes John H Holladay Carl R 2007 Biblical Exegesis A Beginner s Handbook Third ed Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 22775 3 Williamson H G M 1990 Review of Hearing and Speaking the Word Selections from the Works of James Muilenberg Journal of Semitic Studies 35 1 145 doi 10 1093 jss XXXV 1 145 a b c d Foss Sonja K 2009 Rhetorical Criticism Exploration and Practice Waveland Press ISBN 978 1 57766 586 1 Watson D F 1988 Rhetorical Criticism In Bromiley Geoffrey W Harrison Everett F Harrison Roland K LaSor William Sanford Wilson Gerald H Smith Jr Edgar W eds The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia Vol 4 Q Z Eerdmans pp 181 182 ISBN 978 0 8028 3784 4 Willey P T 1998 Phyllis Trible In McKim Donald K ed Historical Handbook of Major Biblical Interpreters InterVarsity Press p 615 ISBN 978 0 8308 1452 7 a b c d e f Powell Mark Allan 1990 What is Narrative Criticism Augsburg Fortress ISBN 978 0 80060 473 8 Paris Christopher T 2014 Narrative Obtrusion in the Hebrew Bible Emerging Scholars Fortress Press p 9 ISBN 978 1 4514 8211 9 a b c d Betsworth Sharon 2020 Chapter 9 In Garroway Kristine Henriksen Martens John W eds Children and Methods Listening To and Learning From Children in the Biblical World Brill ISBN 978 90 04 42340 4 Weitzman Steven 2007 Before and After The Art of Biblical Narrative Prooftexts 27 2 191 doi 10 2979 pft 2007 27 2 191 S2CID 144375695 a b Legaspi Michael C 2010 The Death of Scripture and the Rise of Biblical Studies Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 539435 1 a b c d e f Fishbane Michael 1992 The Garments of Torah Essays in Biblical Hermeneutics Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 11408 2 Davies Philip R 20 September 2014 Biblical Studies Fifty Years of a Multi Discipline pdf Currents in Biblical Research 13 34 66 doi 10 1177 1476993X13508083 S2CID 147421901 a b c Harrisville Roy A 2014 Pandora s Box Opened An Examination and Defense of Historical Critical Method and Its Master Practitioners Eerdmans p vii ISBN 978 0 8028 6980 7 Roberts Tyler 2013 Encountering Religion Responsibility and Criticism After Secularism Columbia University Press p 13 ISBN 978 0 231 53549 6 a b c Rogerson J W 2000 Higher criticism In Mason Alistair Hastings Adrian Hastings Ed Pyper Hugh eds The Oxford Companion to Christian Thought Oxford University Press p 298 ISBN 978 0 19 860024 4 Russell Jeffrey Burton 1990 Mephistopheles The Devil in the Modern World Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 9718 6 a b Davaney Sheila Greeve 2006 Historicism The Once and Future Challenge for Theology Fortress Press ISBN 978 1 4514 1831 6 Stout Jeffrey 1981 The Flight from Authority Religion Morality and the Quest for Autonomy Routledge p 41 ISBN 978 0 268 00954 0 Davis Edward B May 2005 Science and Religious Fundamentalism in the 1920s American Scientist 93 3 255 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 601 4257 doi 10 1511 2005 53 966 Bendroth Margaret 27 February 2017 Christian Fundamentalism in America Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Religion Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199340378 013 419 ISBN 978 0 19 934037 8 Retrieved 5 October 2018 Watt David Harrington 2014 Fundamentalists of the 1920s and 1930s In Wood Simon A Watt David Harrington eds Fundamentalism Perspectives on a Contested History University of South Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 61117 354 3 a b c Noll Mark A 2004 Between Faith and Criticism Evangelicals Scholarship and the Bible in America Regent College Publishing ISBN 978 1 57383 098 0 a b Donahue John R 8 September 1993 Biblical Scholarship 50 years After Divino Afflante Spiritu America Pope Pius VIII 24 May 1829 Traditi Humilitati Papal Encyclicals Pope Pius IX 8 December 1864 Quanta Cura Papal Encyclicals First Vatican Council Description Doctrine amp Legacy Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica a b Royal Robert 2015 A Deeper Vision The Catholic Intellectual Tradition in the Twentieth Century Ignatius Press ISBN 978 1 58617 990 8 a b c d Pope Leo XIII 18 November 1893 Providentissimus Deus Citta del Vaticano Libreria Editrice Vaticana Talar C J T 2007 Introduction Pascendi dominici gregis The Vatican Condemnation of Modernism U S Catholic Historian 25 1 1 12 doi 10 1353 cht 2007 0029 ISSN 1947 8224 S2CID 159818682 Collins John Joseph 2011 The Catholic Study Bible The New American Bible Oxford University Press p 65 ISBN 978 0 19 529775 1 Bea Augustin 2011 Sacred Scripture and the Errors of the New Exegesis In Hahn Scott Scott David eds For the Sake of Our Salvation The Truth and Humility of God s Word Emmaus Road Publishing p 231 ISBN 978 1 93101 868 5 Dei verbum www vatican va Retrieved 21 April 2021 Brown Raymond Edward Fitzmyer Joseph A Murphy Roland Edmund 1990 The New Jerome Biblical Commentary Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 614934 7 Obituary The Rev Raymond E Brown The Independent 23 October 2011 Retrieved 21 May 2021 bloomsbury com The Jerome Biblical Commentary for the Twenty First Century Bloomsbury Retrieved 21 November 2021 Norton Gerard 2011 Conleth J Kearns An Appreciation In Kearns Conleth ed The Expanded Text of Ecclesiasticus Its Teaching on the Future Life as a Clue to Its Origin Walter de Gruyter p 5 ISBN 978 3 11 025259 0 Fuller Reginald C ed 1975 A New Catholic Commentary on Holy Scripture Revised and updated ed Nelson ISBN 978 0 17 122010 0 Meier John P A Marginal Jew Rethinking the Historical Jesus Anchor Yale Bible Reference Library 1991 Vol 1 The Roots of the Problem and the Person Description and reviews ISBN 0 385 26425 9 1994 Vol 2 Mentor Message and Miracles Description and reviews ISBN 0 385 46992 6 2001 Vol 3 Companions and Competitors Description and reviews ISBN 0 385 46993 4 2009 Vol 4 Law and Love Description pre publication comments and scrollable preview ISBN 0 300 14096 7 2016 Vol 5 Probing the Authenticity of the Parables Description reviews and scrollable preview ISBN 9780300211900 Cohen Naomi W May 1984 The Challenges of Darwinism and Biblical Criticism to American Judaism Modern Judaism 4 2 121 157 doi 10 1093 mj 4 2 121 JSTOR 1396458 a b Levenson Jon D 1993 The Hebrew Bible the Old Testament and Historical Criticism Jews and Christians in Biblical Studies Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 25407 0 a b c d Schwartz Baruch J 2012 The Pentateuch as Scripture and the Challenge of Biblical Criticism In Sommer Benjamin D ed Jewish Concepts of Scripture A Comparative Introduction New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 4062 0 Haber Susan 2008 They Shall Purify Themselves Essays on Purity in Early Judaism Society of Biblical Literature p 10 ISBN 978 1 58983 355 5 a b Elrefaei Aly 2016 Wellhausen and Kaufmann Ancient Israel and Its Religious History in the Works of Julius Wellhausen and Yehezkel Kaufmann Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 045433 8 Fiorenza Elisabeth Schussler 2014 Between Movement and Academy Feminist Biblical Studies in the Twentieth Century In Fiorenza Elisabeth Schussler ed Feminist Biblical Studies in the 20th Century Scholarship and Movement Society of Biblical Literature pp 56 57 ISBN 978 1 58983 922 9 a b c d e Meyers Carol L 2014 Was Ancient Israel a Patriarchal Society Journal of Biblical Literature 133 1 8 27 doi 10 15699 jbibllite 133 1 8 JSTOR 10 15699 jbibllite 133 1 8 a b Briggs Sheila 2012 What is Feminist Theology In Fulkerson Mary McClintock Briggs Sheila eds The Oxford Handbook of Feminist Theology Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 927388 1 Davies Eryl W 2013 Biblical Criticism A Guide for the Perplexed Bloomsbury Academic p 49 ISBN 978 0 567 03793 0 a b c d e Segovia Fernando F Moore Stephen D eds 2007 Postcolonial Biblical Criticism Interdisciplinary Intersections reprint revised ed A amp C Black ISBN 978 0 567 04530 0 Booker Vaughn A 2020 Lift Every Voice and Swing Black Musicians and Religious Culture in the Jazz Century New York University Press pp 266 267 ISBN 978 1 4798 9948 7 Cheng Patrick S 2011 Radical Love An Introduction to Queer Theology New York NY Seabury Books ISBN 978 1596271326 Porter Stanley E 1997 A Handbook to the Exegesis of the New Testament Brill p 277 ISBN 978 90 04 09921 0 Horrell David G 1999 Social Scientific Interpretation of the New Testament Retrospect and Prospect In Horrell David G ed Social Scientific Approaches to New Testament Interpretation T amp T Clark pp 3 4 8 ISBN 978 0 56708 658 7 Elliott John Hall 1993 Via Dan Otto ed What is Social Scientific Criticism Fortress Press p 70 ISBN 978 0 80062 678 5 a b Tyson Lois 1999 Critical Theory Today A User friendly Guide Garland ISBN 978 0 8153 2879 7 a b c Sheppard G T Thiselton A C 2007 Biblical Interpretation in Europe in the Twentieth Century In McKim Donald K ed Dictionary of Major Biblical Interpreters IVP Academic ISBN 978 0 8308 2927 9 Adam Andrew Keith Malcolm 1995 What is Postmodern Biblical Criticism Augsburg Fortress p vii ISBN 978 0 8006 2879 6 a b c Comstock Gary 1986 Truth or Meaning Ricoeur versus Frei on Biblical Narrative The Journal of Religion 66 2 117 140 doi 10 1086 487357 JSTOR 1202583 S2CID 222268349 Further reading EditClines David J A 1998 Possibilities and Priorities of Biblical Interpretation in an International Perspective On the Way to the Postmodern Old Testament Essays 1967 1998 Vol 1 first ed Sheffield Academic Press pp 46 67 ISBN 978 1 85075 901 0 See Section 6 Future Trends in Biblical Interpretation overview of some current trends in biblical criticism Collins John J 2005 The Bible after Babel Historical Criticism in a Postmodern Age Illustrated Edition Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 2892 7 See review at Davies Philip 2006 Review of John J Collins The Bible after Babel Historical Criticism in a Postmodern Age PDF Society of Biblical Literature Retrieved 13 October 2020 Reviews a survey of postmodernist biblical criticism Sweeney Marvin A Zvi Ehud Ben 2003 The Changing Face of Form Criticism for the Twenty First Century Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 6067 5 See review at Hoffman Yair 2004 Review of Marvin A Sweeney and Ehud Ben Zvi eds The Changing Face of Form Criticism for the Twenty First Century PDF Tel Aviv University Archived from the original PDF on 7 April 2008 Retrieved 13 October 2020 Discusses contemporary form criticism External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Biblical criticism Wikimedia Commons has media related to Biblical criticism Allen P Ross Beeson Divinity School Samford University The Study of Textual Criticism Guide to the methodology of textual criticism Portal Bible Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Biblical criticism amp oldid 1145066615, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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