In his book "How to read the Bible," James Kugel states that ancient interpreters of the bible shared the same set of expectations about the biblical text. He states that even today we read the bible assuming basically the same 4 things and that those assumptions lead to faulty interpretations......
The four assumptions are:
It was assumed that the bible is fundamentally cryptic, that when it says A, it might often mean B...
It was assumed that the bible is a book of lessons directed to readers in their own time. The bible might talk about the past, but it is not fundamentally history.
It was assumed that the bible contains no contradictions or mistakes, that it is perfectly harmonious...
It was assumed that the entire bible is essentially a divinely given text, a book in which God speaks directly or through his prophets...
Kugel goes on to suggest that once biblical interpretation started along the path of these four assumptions it developed a logic, and a momentum of its own. He states that these assumptions color the way people read the bible.....
Kugel also states this
who decided what the bible should consist of? Not Moses, not Isaiah, not anyone we know by name in fact. The very idea of a bible, along with its present table of contents, is essentially an editorial decision......
here is a link to the book online (well most of the book), and you can get a feel for what he is talking about. The four assumptions are explained around page 16, but reading the info before would be helpful....
http://books.google.com/books?id=ms...q=kugel online how to read the bible&f=false
Kugel states:
Many modern day Jews and Christians continue to look to the bible as a guidebook for daily life (assumption 2), they do not read it as if it were just a relic from the ancient past...... Without saying so, quite a few readers also generally assume that the bible has some sort of coherent message to communicate and that it does not contradict itself or make mistakes (assumption 3).......
thoughts?
The four assumptions are:
It was assumed that the bible is fundamentally cryptic, that when it says A, it might often mean B...
It was assumed that the bible is a book of lessons directed to readers in their own time. The bible might talk about the past, but it is not fundamentally history.
It was assumed that the bible contains no contradictions or mistakes, that it is perfectly harmonious...
It was assumed that the entire bible is essentially a divinely given text, a book in which God speaks directly or through his prophets...
Kugel goes on to suggest that once biblical interpretation started along the path of these four assumptions it developed a logic, and a momentum of its own. He states that these assumptions color the way people read the bible.....
Kugel also states this
who decided what the bible should consist of? Not Moses, not Isaiah, not anyone we know by name in fact. The very idea of a bible, along with its present table of contents, is essentially an editorial decision......
here is a link to the book online (well most of the book), and you can get a feel for what he is talking about. The four assumptions are explained around page 16, but reading the info before would be helpful....
http://books.google.com/books?id=ms...q=kugel online how to read the bible&f=false
Kugel states:
Many modern day Jews and Christians continue to look to the bible as a guidebook for daily life (assumption 2), they do not read it as if it were just a relic from the ancient past...... Without saying so, quite a few readers also generally assume that the bible has some sort of coherent message to communicate and that it does not contradict itself or make mistakes (assumption 3).......
thoughts?