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Biblical Theology for the Pulpit

Biblical Theology for the Pulpit. PALCON 2010-MVNU Michael G. VanZant. Biblical Theological Hermeneutics. Biblical Theology is the attempt to find the horizon, that place where thought meets action, where ancient text and theological meaning relate to life in this world and at this time.

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Biblical Theology for the Pulpit

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  1. Biblical Theology for the Pulpit PALCON 2010-MVNU Michael G. VanZant

  2. Biblical Theological Hermeneutics Biblical Theology is the attempt to find the horizon, that place where thought meets action, where ancient text and theological meaning relate to life in this world and at this time. VanZant

  3. TENSIONS in the IVORY TOWERS Biblical Studies vs. Systematic Theology History vs. Canon (literary)

  4. Bible History Biblical Theology Canon Theology

  5. Biblical Studies • Textual Studies of syntax, grammar, textual criticism • Historical studies, archaeology, sociology • Evaluation and interpretation within the textual and historical context • The Referential aspect: “What does it say?”

  6. Canonization • The TEXT as we have it, the Canon • From a Sumerian word translated “reed” • A STANDARD or MEASURE Key Issue: The Biblical Text as we have it! What you see is what you get!

  7. Theology • Teachings of the Bible within the rubric of Christian Faith • Meaning is sought within traditional, orthodox faith. • Systematic, Dogmatic, or Philosophical theological approaches • Historical church theology, creeds, systems • The Mimetic aspect: “What does it mean?”

  8. Biblical Theology • Relationships • Creation and humanity with God • God’s interactions within this world • Historical context with modern world

  9. Dynamic vs. Unchanging • God, creation, and humanity are in DYNAMIC relationship instituted by God that must be interpreted through each new era in history (growing, shifting, developing) • Yet, God’s nature is UNCHANGING and presents the need for Systematic, sometimes Dogmatic, theological constructions (attributes and characteristics)

  10. Unity vs. Diversity • Christ event brings continuity between Testaments • Both Testaments as a unified whole • Yet, each author and book is diverse in historical context, vocabulary, purpose, etc. • Old Testament and New Testament are distinctive in form and background

  11. East vs. West • Old Testament is Eastern in cultural setting • Stories, poetry, narrative interpretive history • Polytheistic • New Testament is Eastern culture influenced by Hellenism/Western culture • Debate, philosophy, propositional thinking • Structured legalism with little notice of “other gods” • Yahwism vs. Judaism

  12. The Bible in Theology • Defines God through Acts of God within creation • Tells stories of an interactive God who is dynamic and revelatory in various ways and manners • Shows God at work in the lives of PEOPLE • Reveals the attributes and character of God through actions of God (Paul describes God with propositions based on the actions of God through Jesus Christ)

  13. Historical Paradigm • The biblical texts are studied as a progressive movement in writing, terminology, vocabulary, and theological revelation • Questions include: sources used? Oral traditions? Editing? Historical pressures? • Smaller “chunks” (pericopes) of Scripture are analyzed intensely within their historical, grammatical, and compositional context

  14. Literary Paradigm • The TEXT becomes the center of attention • The written words speak apart from historical context • Sacred text can be analyzed like any other text • Connections between text and audience are sought • The Scripture takes on a sense of TIMELESSNESS

  15. Three Forms of Theology • Theology WITHIN the story (What is the theology taught within the textual context?) • Theology THROUGH the stories (What over-arching theology runs throughout the scripture?) • Theology BASED on the stories (What categories, attributes, etc. are seen through scripture that can be systematically analyzed)

  16. Example: Matthew 1:1 “A record of the genealogy of Jesus Christ the son of David, the son of Abraham.” (NIV) How do the terms used relate to historical contexts? What does it SAY to us as written? What does it MEAN? Think through the theology in, through, and based on the verse. What would a biblical theological sermon on this verse look like?

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