This week I am reminded again that these narratives are not historical accounts of individuals, rather the characters symbolize a group of people, the Israelites, in the present world of the authors, as they reflect back upon tradition, and their original audience. These stories of the patriarchs are all familiar stories to me. I love these stories filled with drama, adventure, love and deceit. God gave Abram a threefold promise: God will give Abraham abundant land, many descendants to form a great people, and blessing. Yet God does not forget the unloved, outsider, and foreigner, as we see with Hagar and Leah as well as many others. I thought I had a good understanding of how God acted through these people.
Suddenly with new information about ancient cultures and stretching my mind around times frames of when these stories were written as opposed to their oral tradition, my head is spinning with question and wonder. I have to re-frame my lens in how I understand these stories. I am learning to think critically, by applying the social dynamics, traditions, myths, and norms of the time, but at the same time I wonder if I'm picking at things that are not important to understanding the message of God. How do you "know" God? That is what Yahweh wanted--for Pharaoh, the Egyptians, and the Israelites, to "know that I am God." As I reflect on God's activity with Abraham , Sarah and their son; Isaac , Rebekah and their sons; Jacob , Rachel and Leah and their sons; Joseph's story, and the exodus story I do indeed see that God does accomplish God's purpose through people, as God plans, for there is no time with God.
These writers put together stories that tell of God's activity among God's people. The drama, adventures, love, and deceit, set in the ancient culture, get our attention and help us to "know" God. God's love for us. I tell my students that whenever they have questions about how that could happen in the Bible, they should ask themselves the question, What does this story tell me about God's love for God's people? Yet I understand that the purpose of this course is to get me to thing more critically and question what is the writer's message to his audience, in the context of the ancient culture. So I wonder, do I find the message more clearly in this close study of the expressed meaning of the text? Or is understanding the expressed meaning of the author a confirming of the message of God that I already hold?
As I shared with my colleagues this week, my understanding of the OT stories has been shaken up, but not in a frightening way, as a shaking of my faith, but in such a way that I am realizing that there is so much more than just reading these stories.
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
The God of Faithfulness
This week as I read, discussed, and reflected on Genesis 1-11 I discovered the story of God's ever faithfulness to God's people. The Yahwehist's primeval history is told about how humans acted toward God "in the beginning" and God's patient response. By comparing these scripture stories with ancient myths about creation, Cain and Abel, the great flood, and the tower of Babel I have come to realize God's faithfulness to the human race, despite their turning away from God through selfishness, jealousy, pride and frequent rejection. The biblical stories show God graciously providing for the needs of the very ones who had turned away from him by providing clothing for the first humans who are ashamed of their nakedness, protecting Cain from people seeking revenge, and safeguarding Noah and his family from the flood. God always gives the promise of hope, restores humanity, gives promises for the future, and bestows blessings on the people for their fidelity. Through these myths and symbols my image of the OT punishing God has changed. It is beginning to reconcile with my image of the New Testament God as seen through the life of Jesus.
The Priestly view tells about the goodness of God's creation in the first creation story (very good). Through this myth we learn of the greatness of God and in the other creation story of the first humans we learn of the closeness of God. It reminds me of the story Old Turtle, in which all the creatures of the world tried to describe who God was and they described God as great, powerful, majestic, and way up in the sky, as well as gentle, nearby, quiet, and small. Old Turtle helps them to realize that God is all of these.
I look forward to continuing this journey through the Old Testament so I can continue to focus and fine tune my imagination of God. For it is in understanding the expressed meaning of the writers of these works that I can begin to give meaning to who God is to me in my experience.
The Priestly view tells about the goodness of God's creation in the first creation story (very good). Through this myth we learn of the greatness of God and in the other creation story of the first humans we learn of the closeness of God. It reminds me of the story Old Turtle, in which all the creatures of the world tried to describe who God was and they described God as great, powerful, majestic, and way up in the sky, as well as gentle, nearby, quiet, and small. Old Turtle helps them to realize that God is all of these.
I look forward to continuing this journey through the Old Testament so I can continue to focus and fine tune my imagination of God. For it is in understanding the expressed meaning of the writers of these works that I can begin to give meaning to who God is to me in my experience.
Friday, September 11, 2009
Welome to my blog
Welcome to my blog. In the upcoming weeks I will be blogging about theological reflections of God in the Bible. These reflections will critically and contextually deal with biblical texts as I learn to discern a biblical theology of God and learn to address the problems of patriarchy, violence, and ecology that the Bible poses for contemporary readers. I look forward to your feedback.
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