kata ta biblia

a blog exploring Christian origins, biblical studies, social/cultural history, method, education and the journey through academia

Category: books

In the Mail: Peter Brown's The Body and Society

Another thank you is due. I extend my enormous gratitude to Columbia University Press for sending to me the twentieth anniversary edition of Peter Brown’s work on marriage and sexual practices in early Christianity, The Body and Society: Men, Women, and Sexual Renunciation in Early Christianity (or see the book at CUP’s website). Here is the back cover blurb:

First published in 1988, Peter Brown’s The Body and Society was a groundbreaking study of the marriage and sexual practices of early Christians in the ancient Mediterranean and Near East. Brown focuses on the practice of permanent sexual renunciation–continence, celibacy, and lifelong virginity–in Christian circles from the first to the fifth centuries A.D. and traces early Christians’ preoccupations with sexuality and the body in the work of the period’s great writers.

The Body and Society questions how theological views on sexuality and the human body both mirrored and shaped relationships between men and women, Roman aristocracy and slaves, and the married and the celibate. Brown discusses Tertullian, Valentinus, Clement of Alexandria, Origen, Constantine, the Desert Fathers, Jerome, Ambrose, and Augustine, among others, and considers asceticism and society in the Eastern Empire, martyrdom and prophecy, gnostic spiritual guidance, promiscuity among the men and women of the church, monks and marriage in Egypt, the ascetic life of women in fourth-century Jerusalem, and the body and society in the early Middle Ages. In his new introduction, Brown reflects on his work’s reception in the scholarly community.

Brown’s book is a required text for Scott Bartchy’s seminar this fall, “Spirituality and Sexuality in the Early Christian Movement.” I have requested other textbooks for the fall so that I can assess the books’ value not only in and of themselves but also for their usefulness in these kinds of courses. More thanks may be coming . . .

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My Amazon Store

I was inspired by Nick Norelli’s aStore and thought it might be a good idea to put together this online bookstore powered by Amazon. It’s a bit like coming up with a shoppable bibliography. So, you can check out the beginnings of my own store, the kata ta biblia bookstore, but don’t read too much into things (e.g., don’t assume that just because one book comes before another book that I like it or agree with it more–even if that may be true in some cases!). I’m trying to make it a mix of both academic and accessible books and I’m including things that I think people would be interested in purchasing.

Nick’s store has very different emphases than mine. He’s a more theological fellow and his books reflect that. I’m big on social history, so I’m working on developing that area more. Even when we have similar categories of books, many of our books are very different. Of course, he doesn’t have a category for Anabaptism.

It’s a work in progress. Let me know if there are things you think should be included in any given category or categories you think are missing. And, of course, feel free to buy a book while you’re looking at my store ;)

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In the Mail: Malina's The New Testament World

Many thanks to Westminster John Knox Press for sending over a review copy of Bruce Malina’s unique New Testament introduction, The New Testament World: Insights from Cultural Anthropology! This is a standard text for Scott Bartchy for many of his classes at UCLA. I actually haven’t read the book yet, so I thought it’d be a good opportunity to review it while I also get to see how it’s used in a class for undergrads this fall.

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Latin American Journey: Insights for Christian Education in North America by Robert W. Pazmiño

I would like to draw your attention to one more book on Christian education, this one from the perspective of a North American Hispanic man (my last post highlighted a Christian education book by an African American woman). Robert Pazmiño is a professor of religious education at Andover Newton Theological School, who felt inspired to learn more about his Latin American roots with his family. He journeys to Costa Rica and his ancestral homeland of Ecuador. The resulting book is a way of applying his lessons learned on that journey to his profession in equipping Christian educators.

In the first two chapters, Pazmiño reviews Latin American liberation theology, particularly those ideas related to pedagogy. He discusses the threats (“destroyers”) to life as God intended and calls to action as proclaimed by folks like Gutierrez, Boff, Guillermo Cook, and Orlando Costas. His discussion of education and its relationship to liberation theology appropriately centers on the work of Paulo Freire.

Pazmiño takes the rest of the book to flesh out what those theories look like in North American Christian education. He outlines how lessons from liberation theology help us in leading transformative Christian education. He also provides the reader with a tremendous resource for wrestling with multicultural challenges in North America. Any educator in the church would be wise to tackle this book along with Wimberly’s (see last post) in order to consider out-of-the-box ways of approaching educational ministry. As for me, I will be looking for ways to adapt these insights into the academic classroom in my search for creative pedagogy.

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Soul Stories: African American Christian Education by Anne E. Streaty Wimberly

Continuing the theme of education from my last several posts, I’d like to take a moment to review a book that explores a particular angle on pedagogy for the African American community. Anne E. Streaty Wimberly’s book, Soul Stories, pays attention to the importance of connecting narratives, what she calls “story-linking.” Specifically, Wimberly suggests that one way to help people move towards ethical living in Christian education is by examining the relationships between an individual’s story with biblical narratives and also with the stories from their African American heritage.

The first phase of the story-linking process is somewhat autobiographical and introspective. The student/participant considers her identity, her social contexts, her relationships, key events in her life, and the basic meanings that she assigns her life. In the second phase, the leader/teacher guides participants through biblical passages, engaging them in ways that help participants “enter into a partnership” with the biblical characters. They also begin to envision God’s action today in light of the passage and their ongoing response to God. As a biblical scholar in training, this second phase makes me the most nervous, but I also recognize that it is perhaps the most important.

Phase three is what makes this approach somewhat different than the typical “Bible study” of a traditional Caucasian church (I can’t speak to what Christian education actually looks like in African American churches). This is where participants engage in exemplars of the past, both widely known and local heroes of faith in action, with whom they can identify. Finally, phase four is when the leader helps the participants to gather all of these stories and develop them into a way of discerning God’s call for ethical decision making today.

As you might notice, the process need not be limited to African American communities, though the way Wimberly engages her own African American heritage is insightful and instructive for other communities. Every person has a heritage that they can draw from which to draw in this process. There will surely be challenges in discerning meaning in biblical stories, as there would be with any study of the Bible at the lay level. One potential danger is that participants will simply mine biblical texts for images of themselves, rather than being challenged and convicted by them. There would certainly be hurdles in multicultural situations, but such hurdles may make the story-linking even more beneficial. The process may take some creativity for those who do not know much about their heritage. In the end, though, it’s a process seriously worth considering for all sorts of educational contexts and Wimberly’s book is a helpful jumpstart.

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Considering Intrapersonal Learning

One of the classes I’m taking this quarter is “The Congregation as Learning Community” where we discuss issues related to education in Christian congregations (as you might expect). In this past week, our primary assignment was to present on a book in small groups. Each group was given not only a book (ours was Practicing Our Faith edited by Dorothy C. Bass), but also a learning method to drive our presentation (ours was “intrapersonal”). This presented a challenge: how does one “present” anything conducive to intrapersonal learning. Should we integrate intrapersonal reflection within the classroom setting itself?

Fortunately, my partner and I had a topic that worked well here. The idea of Bass’ book is that we need to “practice our faith” in tangible ways in everyday activities. So, we started our 20 minute presentation with a meditation exercise where people found another place in the room (“body” learning) to pray and reflect on the calm images of nature that we were projecting on the screen (“visual” learning). After a couple minutes, we asked them to slowly and quietly return to their seats (“body” again).

Then we asked them to consider the shift in imagery when we showed them video of busy images taken from the streets of Tokyo (“visual” again). The point was: this book helps us to unite our intrapersonal reflections and experiences with our interpersonal practices and activities. I think the reflection time in that moment was appropriate and, as parenthetically mentioned, was appropriately combined with other learning methods (body and visual).

The issue for me is the fact that “intrapersonal” reflection is directly related to the topic here. My question is how easily one might allow for intrapersonal moments within other class settings. This course is intended for congregational learning, where times of prayer and meditation may be more appropriate than a college classroom. I’m not sure I will use similar techniques when I teach Christian origins.

The exercise is nevertheless a reminder that educators should move beyond the old standard lecture style and consider new ways of reaching multiple learning modes within a single classroom session. How do we impart information while also promoting critical engagement with the course materials?

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Chris Heard is stirring up trouble…

I can’t tell if it’s an exposé of Jim West or Andrew Keen, but it’s a very interesting post nonetheless.

Update (Same Day): The trouble continues. You can find Jim West’s announcement of Chris Heard’s Biblical Studies list removal here (if you’re on the list).

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Oh, how times have changed . . .

I was just reading a book review from 1973 for a republication of an important work scholarship on the life of Jesus. The following quote gave me a chuckle.

. . . its usefulness is somewhat limited by its exorbitant price ($5.95 for a 166 page paperback!)

Exorbitant! Wow.

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Page 123: About Adolf von Harnack

Jim Getz tagged me in a meme the other day. The idea is . . .

  • Pick up the nearest book of 123 pages or more (no cheating!)
  • Find page 123
  • Find the first five sentences
  • Post the next three sentences
  • Tag five people

My nearest book is History of New Testament Research (vol. 2) by William Baird, which certainly does have 123 pages in it. Page 123 is in the middle of a section on “The Zenith of Liberalism: Adolf von Harnack (1851-1930),” in a chapter entitled, “The Triumph of Liberalism on the Continent.” Here are sentences 6-8 on the page:

The appointment had been contested by officials of the Prussian church who were shocked by Harnack’s skepticism concerning the miracles and the virgin birth. The appointment was supported by Bismarck and finally confirmed by Kaiser Wilhelm II. During his tenure at Berlin, Harnack taught a host of students, including Adolf Jülicher and Karl Barth, and Americans such as S. J. Case and E. J. Goodspeed.

An interesting set of sentences, I have to admit. It could have been much more boring: a list of titles, for example.

Like my friend, Chris, I am wary of the last bit of this meme: to tag five people. But I will nevertheless tag Matt and I don’t know who else hasn’t been tagged. If you haven’t been tagged and you’d like to be: have at it.

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Crossley, Politics, and NT Scholarship

Considering how much we’re talking about the political and philosophical presuppositions of New Testament scholarship in Hagner’s “History of NT Scholarship seminar,” biblioblogger James Crossley‘s new book on politics and New Testament scholarship looks awesome, for lack of a better word. He says it could be out by SBL Boston.

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