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Tag Archives: Richard B. Hays

Free Articles From Novum Testamentum

17 Saturday Mar 2018

Posted by thecruciformpen in Biblical Studies, Resources

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Acts, Ecclesiology, Ernst Käsemann, Eschatology, Free Stuff, Paul's Epistles, Richard B. Hays, Richard Bauckham, Romans

Novum Testamentum

The periodical Novum Testamentum, published by Brill, is celebrating its 60th volume this year. As a promotion they are allowing free downloads of selected articles during 2018.

Here are links for a few from the first batch made available (until May 16th):

  • Unity and Diversity in New Testament Ecclesiology – Ernst Käsemann (Volume 6, Issue 4)
  • The Eschatological Earthquake in the Apocalypse of John – Richard Bauckham (Volume 19, Issue 3)
  • “Have We Found Abraham to be Our Forefather According to the Flesh?” A Reconsideration of Rom 4:1 – Richard B. Hays (Volume 27, Issue 1)
  • PTEBT 703 and the Genre of 1 Timothy: The Curious Career of a Ptolemaic Papyrus in Pauline Scholarship – Margaret M. Mitchell (Volume 44, Issue 4)
  • The Significance of the Distribution of Self-designations in Acts – Paul Trebilco (Volume 54, Issue 1)

To receive notice of other free downloads and other news related to Brill Biblical Studies & Early Christianity sign-up for their e-newsletter here.

What To Read…

29 Thursday Jan 2015

Posted by thecruciformpen in People to Know

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D. A. Carson, Georges Florovsky, Jürgen Moltman, John D. Zizioulas, John Goldingay, John Webster, Karl Barth, N. T. Wright, Richard B. Hays, T. F. Torrance, Tradition, Walter Brueggemann

I am currently reading N. T. Wright’s Surprised by Hope: Rethinking Heaven, the Resurrection, and the Mission of the Church. And I must say it is one of the most enjoyable reads in long while. I don’t remember the last time I’ve had so many “aha” moments about passages and concepts so familiar. Over and over again I found my assumptions delightfully challenged and reshaped.

This leads me to an important principle: It is beneficial (and enriching) to read authors from outside of our own traditions.

Lately, I have made a practice of intentionally reading people who write from within a different tradition than my own. And I have found it valuable for the following reasons:

  • it broadens my perspective of the church
  • it helps me to understand /relate to people within those traditions
  • it has potential to reveal blind spots within my own tradition
  • it removes unhelpful caricatures that flourish through “hearsay”
  • it teaches me how to disagree agreeably, if you know what I mean
  • it deepens my respect for the diversity of the body and reminds me that I don’t have to agree with everything someone says to be encouraged / edified by their work

The list could go on.

Here is a sample of some of the writers that I have read recently and the traditions they write from:

  • N.T. Wright – Anglican Communion (Church of England)
  • Karl Barth – Swiss Reformed (Confessing Church in Germany)
  • Walter Brueggemann – United Church of Christ
  • Richard B. Hays – United Methodist
  • T. F. Torrance – Church of Scotland
  • D. A. Carson – Evangelicalism [my own tradition]
  • John Webster – Anglican Communion (Church of England)
  • John Goldingay – Episcopal
  • Jürgen Moltmann – German Reformed

I have not read very much from the Orthodox tradition but I am eager to read something by Georges Florovsky or his pupil John D. Zizioulas, from within that tradition.

Some Reflections on Richard B. Hays’ New Book

03 Saturday Jan 2015

Posted by thecruciformpen in Reviews

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Gospels, Richard B. Hays

reading backwards

Richard B. Hays’ new book, Reading Backwards: Figural Christology and the Fourfold Gospel Witness, is a short read but there is a lot to digest in its 109 pages. Each of the four Gospels is given a chapter. In this post I will limit my reflections to his chapter on the Gospel of Mark.

By way of review about the book in general, in the preface Hays states clearly that the book is an

account of the narrative representation of the identity of Jesus in the canonical Gospels, with particular attention to the ways in which the four Evangelists reread Israel’s Scripture, as well as the ways in which Israel’s Scripture prefigures and illuminates the central character in the Gospel stories.

For Hays, the concept of ‘mystery’ is essential for understanding how Mark crafts his narrative around the person of Jesus. He points out that Mark is generally more cryptic and allusive than Matthew (who much more often states explicitly “This took place to fulfill what had been spoken through the prophet , saying…”). Mark’s strategy of indirect reference and subtle allusions to the Old Testament cautions us against speaking too quickly about the mysterious identity of the Carpenter from Nazareth. In other words, there is something crudely wrong with stating so blatantly and matter-of-factly that “Jesus is the God of Israel.” Such a brash declaration fails to do justice to the transcendence and profoundness of the truth contained in the affirmation. And some might even say that kind of statement oversimplifies an incredibly complex identity; Hays quotes Rowan Williams, “There is a kind of truth which, when it is said, becomes untrue” (31). The point is that the identity of Jesus cannot be boiled down into such an unqualified two-dimensional statement. Instead, Mark chooses to drop dynamic hints about the identity of Jesus by way of careful selection of stories (and careful telling of those stories), hints that leave the reader to silently ponder who this Jesus was, drawing his categories from the Old Testament.

Here is how Hays concludes his interpretation of Mark’s figural Christology (an interpretation which he notes is not far from the way Mark’s Gospel is read in the Orthodox tradition):

So, if we seek to read Scripture through Mark’s eyes, what will we find? We will find ourselves drawn into the contemplation of a paradoxical revelation that shatters our categories and exceeds our understanding. We will learn to stand before the mystery in silence, to acknowledge the limitation of our understanding, and to wonder. The ‘meaning’ if Mark’s portrayal of the identity of Jesus cannot be rightly stated in flat propositional language; instead, it can be disclosed only gradually in the form of narrative, through hints and allusions that project the story of Jesus onto the background of Israel’s story. As Mark superimposes the two stories on one another, remarkable new patterns emerge, patterns that lead us into a truth too overwhelming to be approached in any other way.

I do have some questions about how Hays establishes an Old Testament allusion. As one example, at times Hays seems to rest his reading of the OT allusion on the repetition of a couple key phrases (and perhaps also thematic similarity?). I want to ask, is the repetition of phrases enough to establish an admittedly cryptic allusion? It would be nice if more evidence could be adduced to demonstrate the presence of an allusion.

Notwithstanding my unanswered questions, I deeply appreciate this kind of reading of Mark’s gospel. As a footnote, I think it provides a convincing explanation of the shorter (in my opinion, genuine) ending of Mark. If the shorter ending is original, then Mark ends his gospel with this authorial comment: “Trembling and bewildered, the women went out and fled from the tomb. They said nothing to anyone, because they were afraid” (Mark 16:8). This mysterious concluding statement has generated a history of complex textual emendations and additions by scribes in the centuries to follow Mark’s writing. Why would Mark end his gospel in such an unexpected way? Well, if Hays’ reading is correct then it should not be so unexpected after all. Mark has been preparing his readers for this kind of reaction all along. As Hays puts it,

readers who listen carefully to the resonances of Israel’s Scripture in Mark’s Gospel and then see how the story drives toward the passion narrative may find themselves, like the women in Mark’s artful dramatic ending, reduced, at least for a time, to silence…The fear of the women is, of course, a response to the message of the resurrection of Jesus the Crucified One. I would suggest that a similar response of reticent fear and trembling is equally appropriate when we read the story of the crucifixion, if we have rightly followed Mark’s narrative clues about the identity of the one on the cross.

To this I simply offer a hearty AMEN and AMEN!

Lectures by Richard B. Hays

16 Tuesday Dec 2014

Posted by thecruciformpen in Resources

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Biblical Theology, Gospels, Lectures, Richard B. Hays

043910_hays_richard_hirez

A friend of mine pointed me to the following lectures by Richard B. Hays. If you are considering buying his newest book Reading Backwards: Figural Christology and the Fourfold Gospel Witness these lectures cover the same material:

  1. Can the Gospels Teach Us How to Read the Old Testament?
  2. Torah Reconfigured: Reading Scripture with Matthew
  3. Turning the World Upside Down: Reading Scripture with Luke
  4. The Temple of His Body: Reading Scripture with John
  5. Opening Our Minds to Understand the Scriptures

Here is a quote from his Reading Backwards (page 4) that summarizes nicely is thesis in these lectures:

I want to suggest to you that we learn to read Scripture rightly only if our minds and imaginations are opened by seeing the scriptural text–and therefore the world–through the Evangelists’ eyes. In order to explore that hermeneutical possibility, we must give close consideration to the revisionary figural ways that the four Gospel writers actually read Israel’s Scripture…Here is a preliminary preview of what we will find as we pursue our exploration: the Gospels teach us how to read the OT, and–as the same time–the OT teaches us how to read the Gospels. Or, to put it a little differently, we learn to read the OT by reading backwards from the Gospels, and–at the same time–we learn how to read the Gospels by reading forwards from the OT.

Learning How to Read Backwards…

14 Sunday Dec 2014

Posted by thecruciformpen in People to Know

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Richard B. Hays

I just received Richard B. Hays’ new book, Reading Backwards: Figural Christology and the Fourfold Gospel Witness. 

reading backwards

The book is basically what he delivered as the Hulsean Lectures in the Faculty of Divinity at Cambridge University 2013-2014. Excited to read it! Review to come soon!

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