Tuesday, September 30, 2008

The Ten Commandments of Blogging


The Evangelical Alliance of Great Britain has published the Ten Commandments of Blogging. These Ten Commandments of Blogging were first published by Ruth Gledhill, The Times Religion Correspondent. Gledhill also has an article discussing these Commandments.

These are the Ten Commandments of Blogging:

1. You shall not put your blog before your integrity.
2. You shall not make an idol of your blog.
3. You shall not misuse your screen name by using your anonymity to sin.
4. Remember the Sabbath day by taking one day off a week from your blog.
5. Honour your fellow-bloggers above yourselves and do not give undue significance to their mistakes.
6. You shall not murder someone else’s honour, reputation or feelings.
7. You shall not use the web to commit or permit adultery in your mind.
8. You shall not steal another person’s content.
9. You shall not give false testimony against your fellow-blogger.
10.You shall not covet your neighbour’s blog ranking. Be content with your own content.

I am well aware of the 8th Commandment for blogging. For this reason, I want to give credit to Ruth Gledhill by saying again that this list as well as Moses’ picture on this post were taken from her blog.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Monday, September 29, 2008

Who Wrote the Dead Sea Scrolls?

Until recently, most scholars would say that the Essenes wrote the documents known as the Dead Sea Scrolls. This view was first proposed by Roland de Vaux, the archaeologist who found the scrolls. However, another theory has been proposed for the authorship of the scrolls.

In an article published in The Wall Street Journal, these two theories are discussed in detail. The article describes the two theories as follows:

There are two competing theories about the scrolls. The first is that they belonged to a single religious sect living nearby the caves, most likely the Essenes. The second theory is that the scrolls are a random collection of texts reflecting the beliefs of many Jewish groups of the period; the caves, under this theory, are a repository for sacred texts from various Jewish communities fleeing the Romans during the Jewish revolt of A.D. 68.

The debate continues. Norman Golb, Professor of History and Civilization at the University of Chicago is a leading proponent of the second theory. The article in The Wall Street Journal provides some of the arguments in defense of the second theory.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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The Search for the Missing Pages of the Aleppo Codex


The Telegraph Journal, in an article published on Saturday, September 27, 2008, describes the search for the missing pages of the Aleppo Codex. The following are a few excerpts from the article:

A quest is under way on four continents to find the missing pages of one of the world's most important holy texts, the 1,000-year-old Hebrew Bible known as the Crown of Aleppo.

Crusaders held it for ransom, fire almost destroyed it and it was reputedly smuggled across Mideast borders hidden in a washing machine. But in 1958, when it finally reached Israel, 196 pages were missing - about 40 per cent of the total - and for some Old Testament scholars they have become a kind of holy grail.

The Codex, on 491 parchment pages about 30 centimetres by 25 centimetres, was transcribed sometime around 930 A.D. by Shlomo Ben Boya'a, a scribe in Tiberias on the banks of the Sea of Galilee. It was edited by a renowned scholar of the time, Aaron Ben-Asher. Its completion marked the end of a centuries-long process that created the final text of the Hebrew Bible.

According to the news report, the Codex is missing entire books, including most of the five books of Moses, the book of Esther, and the book of Daniel.

A study of the Codex will help scholars ascertain the accuracy of the biblical text and the Masoretic use of vowel signs and letters that could slightly alter pronunciation of some words.
According to Rafael Zer, of the Hebrew University Bible Project in Jerusalem, the Codex will be used to create what probably will become the authoritative text of the Old Testament.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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How to Succeed in Business

How to succeed in business? Use the lessons and models found in the Torah!

In a new book, Jewish Wisdom for Business Success (Amacom, 2008), Rabbi Levi Brackman and Sam Jaffe write that the Torah provides models for people to succeed in business. In Chapter 4 of the book, titled “Patriarchal Business Models,” the authors provide an example of how Abraham began successfully building the brand of monotheism. According to the authors, Abraham used a bold marketing technique: he smashed all the idols in his father’s shop. They wrote:

“Abraham’s public relations stunt with his father’s idols succeeded even better than he could have imagined, earning him credibility and a reputation throughout Mesopotamia as an iconoclast and a holy man.”

Now, that is something pastors should consider. Maybe churches today need to smash a lot of idols if they want to promote Christianity in a world filled with idols.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Friday, September 26, 2008

Babylon and the War in Iraq

A recent video released by the National Geographic News shows how the ancient city of Babylon has been damage by American and Polish military forces as a result of the war in Iraq.

Watch the video by visiting the National Geographic News .

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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King Midas and His Beer


The University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology has used some new methods of molecular archaeology to recreate a drink that dates back to the time of King Midas, around 2700 B.C. E.

King Midas was the ruler of the ancient kingdom of Phrygia around 700 B.C.E. According to published reports, his burial chambers contained the remnant of 157 different drinking vessels. The University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology using new developments in molecular archaeology was able to use residue found in these vessels to reproduce the beer that King Midas drank with his friends.

The result of this amazing work is “Midas Touch,” a beer for beer lovers. Read more about Midas’ beer and how the beer was recreated by clicking here.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Jesus as the Messiah

Part 1: The Messiah
Part 2: Messianic Expectation
Part 3: Jesus as the Messiah


In the study of the Messiahship of Jesus, several questions arise: Did Jesus know that he was the Messiah? If he did, when did he, in his lifetime, realize that he was the Messiah? Did Jesus proclaim to his disciples and to others that he was the Messiah? These questions are not easy to answer, and a simple answer to these questions may, perhaps, be a way to get out of the problem. Many scholars agree that the question whether Jesus ever declared openly that he was the Messiah or that he had a Messianic self-consciousness is one of the major problems for understanding Jesus’ life and teachings.

Messianic consciousness presupposes the claim to belong to a realm which extends far beyond the range of ordinary human possibilities. The Messianic claim presupposes that everything the prophets of the Old Testament had predicted about the coming Messiah, the son of David, was finding fulfillment in the person of Jesus. The Messianic hope proclaimed by the prophets includes the eschatological nearness of salvation, the nearness of the Kingdom of God, and the advent of reconciliation and redemption.

The message of the early church was that Jesus was the Messiah. In fact, the assertion that Jesus was the Christ was proclaimed by the church and this assertion became one of the most important characteristics of the Christian message. To deny that Jesus was the Christ is also to deny the focal point of the Christian message.

The Messiahship of Jesus is the foundation of Christianity. Christianity was born not with the birth of the man who was called “Jesus,” but in the moment in which one of his followers was driven to say to him: “You are the Messiah, the Son of the Living God” (Matthew 16:16 NRSV).

If Jesus is the Messiah, how and when did he become conscious of his Messiahship? The answer to this question is not easy, for the gospels do not provide much information as to the manner in which Jesus’ Messianic consciousness arose.

Some scholars affirm that Jesus never made any explicit Messianic claim and that he displayed no direct Messianic consciousness. However, the New Testament clearly indicates that the disciples regarded Jesus as the coming Messiah. They believed that Jesus was the Messiah Israel had been expecting. It is important to understand an important problem in the Messianic claims of the New Testament: some of the passages in the Synoptic gospels in which the disciples recognized Jesus as Messiah reflect the Easter story projected backward into Jesus’ life and ministry. But the fact remains that the New Testament, the proclamation of the apostles, and the traditions of the early church affirm that Jesus was the promised Messiah. In addition, the events related to Jesus’ death reveal that he was crucified as a Messianic pretender.

As one studies the Messiahship of Jesus, two questions must be asked. First, did Jesus declare that he was the Messiah? Second, when did Jesus become aware that he was the Messiah? To answer the first question, several passages must be considered.

When Jesus was arrested and brought before the Sanhedrin, the high priest asked him: “Are you the Messiah, the Son of the Blessed One?” (Mark 14:61). In Matthew, the question appears in the form of a request: “Tell us if you are the Messiah, the Son of God” (Matthew 26:63). When asked whether he was the Messiah, Jesus answered: “I am” (Mark 16:62).

When Jesus was brought before Pilate, Pilate asked him: “Are you the King of the Jews?” Jesus told Pilate: “Yes, it is as you say” (Mark 15:2). Another passage that indicates that Jesus was aware of his Messiahship is Matthew 16:13-20 (cf. Mark 8:27-30), a passage that contains Peter’s confession at Caesarea Philippi. When Jesus asked his disciples, “who do you say I am?” Peter answered: “You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God.” According to Matthew, Jesus commanded his disciples “not to tell anyone that he was the Messiah.”

The restraining order of Jesus to his disciples, asking them not to proclaim to others that he was the Messiah is known in scholarly circles as “The Messianic Secret.” Jesus’ reluctance to be proclaimed as the Messiah of Israel was based on the fact that he did not want people to be led to a false conception of the Messiah, the same conception he had rejected during his temptations in the wilderness.

The second issue that arises in the study of the Messiahship of Jesus is: when did he become conscious of his Messiahship?

Some Christians believe that at the age of twelve, the occasion when Jesus went to Jerusalem to celebrate the Feast of the Passover (Luke 2:41-52), he was aware that he knew that the Father had sent him to save his people from their sins (Matthew 1:21) and that he would inherit the throne of David (Luke 1:32). Others believe that the Messianic consciousness came during his baptism, when the voice from heaven declared that he was God’s son (Luke 3:22). Still others believe that this consciousness came during the Transfiguration (Matthew 17:1-13).

Although no specific occasion can be described as the exact moment when Jesus became aware of his Messiahship, it is clear that, early in the ministry of Jesus, the Synoptic gospels give evidence that Jesus was conscious of his special relationship with God and maybe even of the necessity of' suffering as a way to fulfill his mission.

During his baptism, a voice from heaven said: “You are my Son, whom I love; with you I am well pleased” (Mark 1:11). These words combine different Messianic ideas from the Old Testament. The first part of the statement, “You are my Son” identifies Jesus as the Messianic Son of God (2 Samuel 7:14). The second statement identifies Jesus as the Suffering Servant (Isaiah 42:1).

The temptations in the wilderness are based on the assumption that Jesus was conscious of his Messiahship, for apart from this assumption, the temptations are without meaning. What the gospels attempt to affirm is that after Caesarea Philippi the disciples recognized and acknowledged that Jesus was the Messiah. Up to this point Jesus had been waiting for the disciples to recognize him as the Messiah. Once they accepted him as the promised Messiah, Jesus changed the focus of his ministry and taught them what kind of Messiah he was to be, namely, a suffering Messiah.

The gospels affirm that Jesus was the promised Messiah but he was a different Messiah. Jesus did not fulfill the popular expectation that the Messiah would “restore the kingdom of Israel” (Acts 1:6) during the time of his visitation. His work as the Messiah was not to establish a temporal and political kingdom, but to bring about the good news of the kingdom of God to all the nations of the earth (Matthew 28:16-20).

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Thursday, September 25, 2008

Vampires in the Old Testament

Guillermo del Toro, the film director who directed the Academy Award movie “Pan’s Labyrinth” has agreed to collaborate with crime author Chuck Hogan to write a trilogy of vampire novels. According to a press release published by the Associated Press, the novels will trace the history of vampires back to the Old Testament:

“The trilogy advances in unexpected ways and each book contains unique and surprising revelations about the history, physiology and lore of the vampiric race, tracing its roots all the way back to its Old Testament origins.”

Now, let me name all the vampires of the Old Testament: there is none.

Vampires are mythological creatures who live “by feeding on the blood of the living.” This means that if the authors are using the Old Testament to explain the origin of vampires, they have to remember the biblical prohibition against eating (or drinking) blood: “If anyone of the house of Israel or of the aliens who reside among them eats any blood, I will set my face against that person who eats blood, and will cut that person off from the people” (Leviticus 17:10).

Only someone who does not know the Old Testament can speak of vampires in the Bible.


Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Messianic Expectation

Part 1: The Messiah
Part 2: Messianic Expectation

According to the narratives of the biblical text, David, the second king of Israel, was one of the greatest kings Israel ever had. A leader, both in battle and in politics, a good administrator, organized, and a musician, David became a hero to his people very early in his life. Because of the exceptional qualities ascribed to him in the biblical text, to the biblical writers, David became the model for all the kings who succeeded him, both in Judah and in Israel.

The dynasty of David obtained its religious legitimation by the so-called Nathan prophecy found in 2 Samuel 7 (cf. 2 Samuel 23:l-7) where God made an everlasting covenant with David (2 Samuel 23:5), a covenant in which God promised to establish the throne of his kingdom forever (2 Samuel 7:13). In this covenant between God and David, the dynasty of David was promised eternal existence (2 Samuel 7:16, 29; cf. also Psalm 89:3-4, 29-37; 132:11-12).

Thus, the Messianic expectation in Israel is linked to God’s covenant with David and to a well-developed world of ideas that came with the aggrandizement of David and the idealization of the Davidic kingdom. This Messianic ideal in Israel grew as the monarchy declined. It appears that the beginning of what is known as the Messianic hope in Israel begins to take place in the eighth century, primarily with some of the oracles of the pre-exilic prophets Isaiah and Micah. These two prophets begin to speak of a deliverer in terms which suggest that this deliverer will be an ideal king like David. Passages such as Isaiah 9:l-7; 11:l-9 and Micah 5:2-4 speak of a “shoot will come up from the stump of Jesse” and a ruler who will come from Bethlehem, one “whose origins are from of old, from ancient times.” The ancient time mentioned by Micah is a reference to the times of David.

The Messianic hope that God would send an ideal king, one who would be like David, increased during and after the exile, at a time when the people in Babylon hoped for a return to the promised land and the reestablishment of the Davidic kingdom. However, the lack of detail about a Messianic expectation in the prophetic books indicates that a developed Messianic hope in Israel did not come into full bloom until later in post-exilic times.

Later additions to the prophetic books provide a good overview of the development of the prophetic hope in the exile and the post-exilic period. For instance, an addition to Hosea declares that the Son of David would be the bond of union among the tribes (Hosea 3:4-5). An addition to Amos says that David’s tent, which had fallen down, would be set up again (Amos 9:11). Micah promised that the remnant of Israel would become a strong people and the Lord would reign over them and that Bethlehem would be the birth place of the son of David who would rule in Israel (Micah 5:2-4). Isaiah said that David’s throne would be occupied forever and that the Gentiles would come to the root of Jesse (Isaiah 11:10). Jeremiah (Jeremiah 33:15-16) and Ezekiel (34:23-24) pointed to the reestablishment of the kingdom under one Shepherd and King, who should be David (that is, a son or descendant of David). The book of Daniel speaks about the coming of the Son of Man who should become ruler over nations (Daniel 7:13-14). Haggai and Zechariah speak of a son of David who was destined to be the great temple builder who would rule as the Lord’s “signet ring” (Haggai 2:23) and as the Lord’s servant and he would be known as “the Branch” (Zechariah 3:8).

In the inter-biblical period, at a time when many people began to believe that revelation had ceased, the expectation of a coming Messiah grew. The idea of a coming Messiah is present in the several apocalyptic writings of this time.

William Barclay, in his book, Jesus As They Saw Him (London: SCM Press, 1962), pp. 112-137,
developed a list of events and ideas associated with the coming of the Messiah. This list was drawn from the Old Testament and from the literature of the inter-biblical period:

(1) Elijah will return to be the herald and the forerunner of the Messiah.

(2) The Messianic Age was to begin with what was called the “travail of the Messiah.”

(3) Before the arrival of the Messianic age, there will be a time of terror.

(4) This time of terror will be a time of complete disintegration of society.

(5) The coming of the Messiah will be preceded by a time of cosmic upheaval.

(6) The beginning of the Messianic Age will be a time of judgment.

(7) The Gentiles will have a place in the Kingdom.

(8) The time of the Messiah will be a time for the ingathering of Israel.

(9) In the Messianic Age, Jerusalem would be restored and renewed.

(10) The resurrection of the dead is a regular hope and expectation of the Messianic Age.

At the beginning of the first century, the Messianic hope in Israel was in full bloom. In the Judaism of the time of Jesus, the Messiah expected by Israel was to be someone who would reveal God’s glory. This Messianic hope included the expectation of a deliverer who was to free the people of Israel, who for centuries were ruled and oppressed by foreign conquerors. The Messiah, who would be a man of Israel, would defeat Israel’s enemies and rule over the nations.

Thus, the Messianic expectation in Israel pointed to a coming king, a king who would be raised up from the family of David, reign over the house of Israel, who would rule supreme over the nations, and who would bring the end of time. This was the Messianic expectation of the first century.

This picture of the Messiah is not what the writers of the gospels presented in their writing. The Synoptic gospels’ presentation of Jesus’ life and work, when measured by Messianic expectations of first century Judaism, leaves no doubt that Jesus Christ was not the kind of Messiah people expected.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Wednesday, September 24, 2008

The Messiah

The Hebrew word messiah (מָשִׁ×™ַ×—) means “anointed one.” The word is derived from the verb מָשַׁ×— which means “to anoint.” The word occurs thirty-nine times in the Old Testament. Of these, thirty-seven times the word is translated as "anointed” and twice it is translated as “Messiah” (Daniel 9: 25-26). This latter meaning appears only in the King James Version, the New American Standard Bible, and the Holman Christian Standard Bible. Other versions, however, differ in the translation of Daniel 9:25-26. For instance, the NIV translates the word as “the Anointed One,” the RSV as “an anointed one,” and the New Jerusalem Bible as “an Anointed Prince.”

There are two specific uses for the word messiah in the Old Testament. The word is used to refer to the anointed priest and to the anointed king. The word messiah is used to designate kings Saul and David as “the Lord’s anointed.” Although all the kings of Judah were anointed at the time of their accession to the throne, the word messiah is never used to identify another king of Judah by name. The only exception is found in the prayer of Solomon where, speaking to God, Solomon called himself “your anointed one.”

A reference to an “anointed one” appears in Habakkuk 3:13: “You came to deliver your people, to save your anointed one.” The mention of the anointed one in Habakkuk is a reference to an unidentified anointed king and not to Jesus Christ as some commentators have interpreted. The reference to “the anointed of the Lord” in Lamentations 4:20 could be a reference to Jehoiachin who was considered the legitimate king of Judah (Ezekiel 1:12) or to Zedekiah, the last king of Judah who was deported to Babylon (2 Kings 25:7). The mention of the anointed one in Lamentation is a reference to the theocratic king as spiritus vitalis. The word messiah was also applied to the priest who served in the Tabernacle and the Temple (Leviticus 4:3, 5, 16; 6:22). The reference to the Messiah in Daniel 9:25-26 may be a reference to the high priest. However, these two verses in Daniel have been interpreted in different ways by scholars. Because of its controversial nature, these two verses will not be considered here since I have dealt with Daniel 9:25-26 here, here, and here.

The Hebrew word messiah is also applied to the patriarchs who were regarded as prophets: “Do not touch my anointed ones; do my prophets no harm” (Psalm 105:15; cf. 1 Chronicles 16:22). In 1 Kings 19:16 Elijah is told to anoint Elisha, the son of Shaphat, a man from Abel Meholah, to succeed him as prophet. However, there is no evidence that the patriarchs or the prophets were anointed. Finally, the word messiah is used to describe Cyrus, king of Persia, as the agent YHWH used to deliver Israel from exile: “This is what the LORD says to his anointed, to Cyrus” (Isaiah 45:1).

The form of the title “The Lord’s anointed” is used of Saul (1 Samuel 24: 6, 10) and of David (2 Samuel 19:21). Another form of the title appears as “His anointed” referring to Saul (1 Samuel 12:3, 9), referring to David (2 Samuel 22:51), and to a king who is not identified (Psalms 2:2; 20:6). The form “Mine anointed” is used of a Davidic king (Psalms 132:10). The title “your anointed one” refers to a Davidic king (Psalm 89:38, 51); it refers also to Solomon (2 Chronicles 6:42). The expression “the anointed of the God of Jacob” (KJV; NIV: “the man anointed by the God of Jacob”) is used of David in 2 Samuel 23:1.

The use of the word messiah to describe the king as “the Lord’s anointed” is due to the Israelite conception of the inviolability of the king and the belief that the king was endowed with the Spirit of YHWH (1 Samuel 24:26; 2 Samuel 1:14, 16).

The word messiah is also found in the Qumran literature. In reality, because the Messianic doctrine present in the documents found at Qumran includes many unique features that are closely related to the teachings of the early church, some scholars have suggested that John the Baptist and even Jesus himself borrowed many of their ideas from the people who lived at Qumran. However, such a suggestion has been rejected by most scholars for nowhere at Qumran, at least in the documents that have survived, is there a reference to the unique idea present in New Testament Christology: the pre-existence of the Messiah. One aspect of the eschatological view of the community at Qumran was that the community expected the coming of a Royal Messiah. This Messiah would be the head of the New Israel and the commander of the troops in the Final War against the sons of darkness.

In the New Testament, the transliterated Aramaic form messiah is found only in John 1:41 and 4:25, both times followed by the Greek translation Christos. Elsewhere in the New Testament, when the translation of the Hebrew word messiah is found, that is, “Christ,” the use of the word is a result of the Easter faith.

The form "Christ” became part of the name of Jesus who in the beginning was called “Jesus the Christ” (Matthew 16:20 KJV; cf. John 20:21) and later came to be known simply as Jesus Christ. It must be noted, however, that the word “Christ” is always used by other people to refer to Jesus and not by Jesus to refer to himself. One exception is found in Matthew 16:20 where Jesus “warned his disciples not to tell anyone that he was the Christ.”

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Monday, September 22, 2008

A Call to an Ancient Evangelical Future

The Third Annual Conference on the Call to an Ancient Evangelical Future will be held on the campus of Northern Baptist Seminary on October 9-11, 2008.

The following information has been released to by the Robert E. Webber Center for an Ancient Evangelical Future. This information provides a summary of each lecture to be presented during the conference.

Discovering Your Church’s Missional DNA

Rick Richardson, Director, Masters in Evangelism and Leadership, Wheaton College

Missional is the new code word in the theology and praxis of ecclesiology. But how do we become genuinely missional and not just rhetorically missional? Rick Richardson will help you understand what God is doing in restoring the missional identity of the church, and where your church--with its unique missional DNA--might fit.

The Good, the Bad, and the Ridiculous: The Church Visible

Jenell Parish, Professor of Sociology and Anthropology, Messiah College

We need an authentic common sense approach to connect the AEF Call to "take seriously the visible character of the church" with what can be observed in the everyday life of our congregations. Jenell Parish will help you think about how your congregation incorporates the good, the bad, and the ridiculous. She will help you consider the unique stories of your congregation, and how those stories fit with the larger story of the church.

Can the Church and Capitalism Get Along?

David Fitch, founding pastor, Life on the Vine Christian Community and Professor of Evangelical Theology, Northern Baptist Seminary

Despite the benefits they bring us, capitalism and consumerism distort the church, its fellowship, its spiritual formation, and its mission. How do we shape a community of Christ that is in capitalism, but not of it? David Fitch will offer some basic practices we can adopt to protect our churches from being squeezed into capitalism's mold.

Tracing the Church’s Journey

Howard Snyder, Professor of Wesley Studies, Tyndale Seminary; former Professor of History and Theology of Mission, Asbury Seminary

The twists and turns, the highways and detours, of the church’s journey through 2000 years of history and a slew of cultures clarify our present challenge. Howard Snyder will help you think about how that journey will help your congregation effectively come to grips with its own story and mission in light of "God’s narrative" and the biblical story.

Preserving the Church’s Story

D. H. Williams, Professor of Patristics and Historical Theology, Baylor University

If the church forgets its story, it will be shaped by the world’s stories. We can easily lose our identity and our mission. To prevent such loss, the ancient church developed a systematic approach to Christian education. It aimed to preserve its message by teaching its story. Because many of its members were illiterate, the church’s message had to be preserved in the minds and hearts of its members.

To register for the Conference, click here.

To read “A Call to an Ancient Evangelical Future,” click here.

To read “A Call to an Ancient Evangelical Future” in Spanish, click here.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Thursday, September 11, 2008

Treasures Discovered at Alexander the Great’s Birthplace

The following is a news release published by Reuters:

Archaeologists have unearthed gold jewellery, weapons and pottery at an ancient burial site near Pella in northern Greece, the birthplace of Alexander the Great, the culture ministry said on Thursday.

The excavations at the vast cemetery uncovered 43 graves dating from 650-279 BC which shed light on the early development of the Macedonian kingdom, which had an empire that stretched as far as India under Alexander's conquests.

Among the most interesting discoveries were the graves of 20 warriors dating to the late Archaic period, between 580 and 460 BC, the ministry said in a statement.

Some were buried in bronze helmets alongside iron swords and knives. Their eyes, mouths and chests were covered in gold foil richly decorated with drawings of lions and other animals symbolizing royal power.

"The discovery is rich in historical importance, shedding light on Macedonian culture during the Archaic period," Pavlos Chrysostomou, who headed the eight-year project that investigated a total of 900 graves, told Reuters.

Pavlas said the graves confirmed evidence of an ancient Macedonian society organized along militaristic lines and with overseas trade as early as the second half of the seventh century BC.

Among the excavated graves, the team also found 11 women from the Archaic period, with gold and bronze necklaces, earrings and broaches.

Nine of the graves dated to the late classical or early Hellenistic period, around the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC.

Alexander, whose father Philip II unified the city states of mainland Greece, conquered most of the world known to the ancient Greeks before dying at the age of 32 in Babylon. Educated by the ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle, Alexander was never defeated in battle.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Listening to the Sound of the Epigonion

Photo: Courtesy of Technology Blog

An epigonion is a harp-like instrument played by nymphs and satyrs in Greek myths. The epigonion has not been used in centuries and no one knows the sound it made.

Now, for the first time in centuries, people can hear the sound of an epigonion. The New York Times is reporting that the members of the Ancient Instruments Sound/Timbre Reconstruction Application or ASTRA have used computer to create a model of the Greek epigonion and then used a medieval musical number to simulate the sound of the instrument.

Listen to the sound of the epigonion here.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Wednesday, September 10, 2008

30 Days When the World Did Not End


TimesonLine has an interesting article on date setting for the end of the world. The article provides 30 dates which have been set by groups and by individuals as the day the world would end. The dates range from 2800 B.C. to the 2008 A.D.

Here is date # 1

2,800BC: The oldest surviving prediction of the world's imminent demise was found inscribed upon an Assyrian clay tablet which stated: "Our earth is degenerate in these latter days. There are signs that the world is speedily coming to an end. Bribery and corruption are common."

Here is date # 18:

1967: A banner year for apocalypse: Jim Jones, Sun Myung Moon, and UFO contactee George van Tassel all independently arrived at the conclusion that the Summer of Love would be the end of us all.

The list, of course, is not complete. The list omits the prediction of a Korean pastor who predicted that on October 27, 1993 the Rapture would occur. I remember that date because on October 28 I sent a letter to a Korean pastor in Chicago who had sent me a book informing me of date for the end of the world. In that letter, I told him that the pastor in Korea had misinterpreted the prophecies in the book of Daniel.

You should visit TimesonLine and read all that nonsense.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Olives and Olive Oil in Antiquity

In a recent post tittle “Green Oil,” I discussed the use of olive oil in Psalm 92:10. Archaeology Magazine recently interviewed Anagnostis Agelarakis, a physical anthropologist at Adelphi University about the production of olive oil in antiquity. Agelarakis and his wife produce premium extra virgin olive oil in Crete. In this interview they discuss the production on olive oil in ancient Greece and how olive oil was used in antiquity. The following are excerpts from the interview:

Q: Today, many people consider olive oil a health food. Did the ancient Greeks view it in a nutritional sense or was it valued simply for flavor or other properties?

A: It was not only considered as a health product but something that had in essence a divine power embedded in it--defined in a pragmatic way not in a occult or abstract way. It was a gift of the goddess Athena to the Athenians, therefore, it had the emblematic presence of the goddess.

Q: How was it used for a food product?

A: It was considered a necessary item for daily sustenance. It was used to cook with and also used in the raw form in a salad dressing--a salad dressing of the ancient Greeks involved olive oil, of course extra virgin olive oil, vinegar, sea salt, and some honey and that then was shaken well, and it was drizzled over salads that they were preparing for eating.

Q: Did olive oil have any medicinal uses in ancient Greece?

A: Hippocrates uses olive oil-based ointments for all kinds of uses and for treating trauma, scratches, wounds, and concussions that are not too deeply penetrating; it was considered to have healing power. In essence, it does because it contains the vital antioxidants scalene, flavonoids, and polyphenols at a minimum. Also, it has Omega components such as Omega 9, Vitamin A, Vitamin K, and traces of Vitamin C. It has Vitamin E, as well, which is in itself an antioxidant, so it has the ability to enhance and repair components of our skin. It is very important for our skin; our skin is the largest organ that we have. It also has in it essential amino acids that are absolutely necessary for a good function of the human gut, the alimentary tract, and the human body at large. Basically, it is a wonderful material that is completely natural. Remember, olive oil is the only vital oil from plants that you can eat raw and untreated. Obviously, being untreated of course it has no chemical additives; it hasn't been manipulated in any sort of process that would adulterate it. It is really a gift from nature if not of the gods as the ancients firmly believed.

The article discusses the cultivation of lives and the production of olive oil in antiquity. It also discusses the use of olive oil in religion and sports and as food, medicine, and cosmetic.

The interview is very engaging and informative. If you like olive oil as I do, you will enjoy knowing more about the nutritional and medicinal properties of olive oil.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern BaptistSeminary

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Green Oil

Psalm 92 is a song of thanksgiving in which the psalmist gives thanks to God for deliverance from his enemies. The psalm is the only one designated as “A Song for the Sabbath Day.”

The psalmist praises God for the greatness of his work. He thanks God for defeating his enemies and vindicating him: “My eyes have seen the downfall of my enemies; my ears have heard the doom of my evil assailants” (Psalm 92:11 [H 92:12]).

In thanksgiving to God for his vindication, the psalmist said: “But you have exalted my horn like that of the wild ox; you have poured over me fresh oil” (Psalm 92:10 [H 92:11]).

The expression “fresh oil” has been translated in many different ways: “fine oils, “the best oil,” “rich oil,” and “freshening oil.” The Hebrew word רָ×¢ֲ× ָן (ra‘anan) appears twenty times in the Hebrew Bible. Of these, fourteen times the word is associated with the word “tree,” once with leaves, once with branches, and once with oil. The word is also applied once to a couch, and twice to people.

When the Hebrew word רָ×¢ֲ× ָן appears associated with tree, generally the word is translated “green” and identifies the location where some Israelites practiced fertility religion. The expression “under every green tree” appears in Deuteronomy 12:2; 1 Kings 14:23; 2 Kings 16:4, and several other passages.

In his study of the word רָ×¢ֲ× ָן, D. Winton Thomas (p. 389) said that when the word is used with trees, leaves, or branches, the word should be translated not as “green,” but as “thick with leaves, luxuriant, dense, or spreading.”

In Psalm 92:10, the word רָ×¢ֲ× ָן describes a kind of oil. The Septuagint translates the word as “rich oil.” The Targum translates the expression “with fresh anointing oil of a leafy olive-tree” and the Peshitta translates the expression as “aromatic oil.”

In my article on “Oil,” published in the Holman Bible Dictionary and available free on line, I wrote the following:
In biblical times, domestic oil was prepared from olives. Sometimes oil was combined with perfumes and used as a cosmetic (Esther 2:12). The extraction of oil from olives is abundantly confirmed by archaeological findings of stone presses found at several sites in Palestine. This oil, called "beaten oil," was lighter and considered the best oil. After the beaten oil was extracted, another grade of oil was produced by heating the pulp and pressing it again.

In Psalm 92:10, the expression “fresh oil” should be translated “green oil.” Those who are familiar with olive oil know that there are three kinds of olive oil: “extra virgin olive oil,” “virgin olive oil,” and “olive oil.” The difference is that the extra virgin olive oil has a dark green color and the plain olive oil is almost yellow. The darker green the oil is the better the quality of the oil.

Paul Vossen, a pomologist at the University of California at David wrote:
The ultimate flavor of any variety can be completely changed by either harvesting the fruit green (unripe) or mature (ripe). The subtleties in between those two extremes still can have a big influence on the style of oil produced. Some producers believe that maturity can even have a greater influence on quality than the variety itself.

Green oils have the green herbaceous characteristic and riper fruit has more of an olive fruity flavor, while the oil from very ripe fruit is often buttery, less fruity to flat, and does not keep as well. The greener the fruit the more bitter and pungent the ultimate product and the longer its shelf life. Maturity is often a compromise, but is a key factor in determining the style of oil produced.

The green oil of Psalm 92:10 is the olive oil newly made, the same kind of oil used in the tabernacle, “pure oil of beaten olives” (Exodus 27:20). Green oil was the most pure and the most precious of all the oils used for anointing.

Therefore, when the psalmist says that the Lord poured green oil over his head, he was saying the Lord had greatly blessed him by anointing him with the best and most expensive oil.

REFERENCE:

D. Winton Thomas, “Some observations on the Hebrew Word רָ×¢ֲ× ָן.” Hebräische Wortforschung: Festschrift zum 80. Geburtstag von Walter Baumgartner. Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1967, pp. 387-97.


Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Tuesday, September 09, 2008

The End of My Sabbatical

“A scholar’s wisdom comes of ample leisure; if a man is to be wise he must be relieved of other tasks” (Sirach 38:24).

My sabbatical was spent working on a book on Jeremiah. I spent most of my time reading books and articles on Jeremiah and the task of the ministry. The aim of my book is to provide pastors and seminary students with a study of Jeremiah and how he viewed his ministry. My goal is to demonstrate how Jeremiah can become a paradigm for prophetic ministry today.

During my sabbatical leave I saw the publication of my article “ . . . And Not a Drop to Drink: Water’s Effect on Civilization Development,” in the Biblical Illustrator 34/2 (Winter 2007-08) 10-15. During my sabbatical I also wrote several book reviews, some of which I will make available on my blog after they are published. I wrote an article on the concept of the Servant in the book of Isaiah. The article will be published in 2009. I wrote short biographies on Walter Brueggemann, Norman Gottwald, Julius Wellhausen, and William Foxwell Albright. These four biographies will be published in 2009. I also wrote the introductions for the books of Joel and Micah to be published by Fortress Press in The People’s Bible in October of this year. My book review on Reading the Bible With the Damned by Bob Ekblad was published in The Expository Time. My book review on the Song of Songs by J. Cheryl Exum was published in the Review and Expositor.

As I come to the end of my sabbatical, I remember the words of Jesus ben Sirach, the same words quoted in the opening of this post. Two things drew my attention to Sirach’s words. First, Sirach said that a scholar’s wisdom comes from “ample leisure.” Although a sabbatical is not leisure time, it offers the kind of time a professor needs to develop his or her scholarship. This sabbatical, although uneventful, was very productive.

The other statement of ben Sirach that came to my mind was the declaration that anyone who desires to be wise “must be relieved of other tasks.” These words are true. Anyone who desires to write and publish needs to be relieved of other tasks to concentrate on reading and writing. The sabbatical, so generously given by the seminary, allows professors to be relieved for a time from other tasks so that they might accomplish their scholarly goals.

During my sabbatical leave I discovered some things that will change the way I will spend future sabbaticals. The truth is that, although I was relieved of my tasks at the seminary, some other tasks demanded my time to be completed. Students, friends, family, and church demanded attention and requested things to be done. These distractions, at times, tend to take away time from research and often serve to break concentration. For this reason, I have decided that on my next sabbatical, I will go away from the seminary to a place where there will be no telephone and no one to interrupt my work.

I would like to thank the administration of Northern Baptist Seminary and the Board of Trustees for allowing me to have ample time to do research and write a book designed to help pastors and seminary students. This book will complement my work at the seminary. Since the goal of a seminary is to educate men and women as they prepare to serve Christ in different areas of ministry, my book on Jeremiah serves that purpose because it will hopefully help men and women who are engaged in preaching and teaching the Word of God. Without the seminary’s commitment to provide time for study and research, this book could not have been written.

During my sabbatical I was unable to blog regularly but every time I was able to post, readers responded well. Beginning this week, I am returning to blogging and hope to post at least three times a week. Teaching requires time and hard work. While I am teaching this year, I still need to finish the manuscript of my book, so, I will probably will not be able to post every day.

As I return to the classroom in a few days, I am grateful for this wonderful experience and I am eager to meet the challenges of a new academic year. As for the future, I hope to accomplish several things is the next few months. First, I want to finish writing the book so that I can use the manuscript in my class on Jeremiah next Spring. Second, I have several other book reviews that I want to complete during this coming academic year. Third, I will attend the annual meeting of the SBL in Boston.

I want to express again my gratitude to the seminary and to the Board of Trustees for granting me this sabbatical leave. I also want to express my appreciation to Dean Charles Hambrick-Stowe for his constant support. The commitment of Northern Baptist Seminary in helping the faculty to write and pursue scholarly goals contributes to the faculty’s academic growth and intellectual development. This in turn, helps students know that they are studying with people who are also students of the Word of God.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Phallic Figurines Found in Israel


Photo: Phallus found at Kfar HaHoresh . Photo Courtesy of National Geographic

National Geographic is reporting that prehistoric graves with an unusual abundance of phallic figurines were discovered in Israel. The location of the findings was in a Stone Age site called Kfar HaHoresh near Nazareth. According to the report, the site was occupied to between 8,500 and 6,750 B.C.

The presence of phallic figurines are rare in archaeological sites in Israel.

Read the story by visiting the National Geographic web page.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Monday, September 08, 2008

Understanding Numbers 24:24

A few days ago, a reader asked me to explain Numbers 24:24. The interpretation of this verse is not easy because of the problems of translation and the issues raised by the text. In what follows, I will try to explain how three translations have dealt with the text and then try to explain the message of the text.

Numbers 24:24 is a section of the Balaam cycle. Balaam was the son of Beor. He was a diviner employed by Balak the son of Zippor, king of Moab, to curse Israel. According to the biblical text, Balaam tried to curse Israel but God told Balaam to bless Israel. Unable to curse Israel, Balaam told Balak to entice Israel by engaging Israelite men into having sexual relations with the women of Moab.

There are seven oracles in the Balaam cycle. Numbers 24:23-24 is Balaam’s seventh oracle, an oracle against Asshur and Eber. The three examples below reflect the ways the versions have translated Numbers 24:24:

New Revised Standard Version (NRS): “But ships shall come from Kittim and shall afflict Asshur and Eber; and he also shall perish forever.”

Douay-Rheims American Edition (DRA): “They shall come in galleys from Italy, they shall overcome the Assyrians, and shall waste the Hebrews, and at the last they themselves also shall perish.”

New King James Version (NKJ): “But ships shall come from the coasts of Cyprus, And they shall afflict Asshur and afflict Eber, And so shall Amalek, until he perishes.”

According to the text, Kittim refers to a place from which a group of invaders will come in ships to conquer Asshur and Eber. The name Kittim is probably a reference to a city in Cyprus named Kition. Kittim is also used to designate Cyprus (Isaiah 23:1). The invaders from Kittim have been identified with the Sea Peoples and more specifically, with the Philistines. In the Septuagint of Daniel 11:30 the word Kittim is translated as “Romans.” In 1 Maccabees 1:1, Kittim refers to the Greeks. In the literature of Qumran, Kittim becomes a word to describe the eschatological enemies of God

Asshur has been identified with the Assyrian empire that dominated the Ancient Near East from the ninth to the seventh centuries BCE. Some scholars have identified the word “Asshur” with the Asshurim (NIV: Asshurites), a nomadic group who lived in the Negev (Genesis 25:3, 18; Psalm 83:8). If Asshur is a reference to the Asshurim, then Eber must be one of their neighbors.

The name Eber appears in the genealogy of Shem (Genesis 11:14-17). Some have identified Eber with the inhabitants of Mesopotamia. The Septuagint translates the name Eber as “Hebrews.”

The Douay-Rheims version follows the Septuagint and translates Kittim as Italy and Eber as Hebrews.

The New King James Version (NKJ) adds the word “Amalek” to verse 24. The word “Amalek” does not appear in the Hebrew text. The word comes from verse 20. It seems that the translators of the New King James Version wanted to emphasize that Amalek was one of the nations that would also be destroyed.

Various interpretations have been proposed to solve the difficulties offered by the text. The most probable interpretation and one that has satisfied a number of commentators is that the words of Balaam are an oracle alluding to the conquest of the Moabites (24:17), the Edomites (24:18), the Amalekites (24:20), and the Philistines (24:24).

Thus, Numbers 24:24 says that the invaders from Kittim, that is the Philistines, would conquer the Asshurim and the Hebrews (the Israelites) but the Philistines would also be conquered and destroyed. The defeat of the Philistines was accomplished by David after he established his kingdom.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Sunday, September 07, 2008

Black Rabbi in Obama's Family

Israel National News is reporting the Michelle Obama’s first cousin is a Rabbi. According to the news report, he is the Rabbi of a black Israelite congregation in Chicago. The new report says:

Barack Obama's wife’s cousin is a Rabbi, according to the Jewish magazine Forward. Michelle Obama's first cousin once removed, Capers Funnye, shepherds the flock at a mostly black Israelite synagogue on Chicago’s South Side, the Beth Shalom B’nai Zaken Ethiopian Hebrew synagogue.

Although Rabbi Funnye's congregation refers to itself as Ethiopian Hebrew, it is not connected to the Ethiopian Jews who have come home to Israel en masse in past decades.

Read the story here.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Saturday, September 06, 2008

The Jewish Khazar Kingdom

Photo: A Khazar Fortress


Archaeologists claim they have discovered the remnants of the Jewish Khazar kingdom in southern Russia. The following is an excerpt from the news release:

The Khazars were known to be a semi-nomadic Turkic people who dominated the Pontic steppe and the North Caucasus regions from the 7th to the 10th century CE. The origin of the Khazars and their apparent conversion to Judaism is the subject of major dispute among modern historians.

In the 7th century CE, the Khazars founded an independent khaganate, or kingdom, in the Northern Caucasus along the Caspian Sea. It is believed that during the 8th or 9th century, around the height of their kingdom, the state religion became Judaism at the order of the king. At this point, the Khazar khaganate and its tributaries controlled much of what is today southern Russia, western Kazakhstan, eastern Ukraine, Azerbaijan, large portions of the Caucasus (including Circassia, Dagestan, Chechnya, and parts of Georgia), and the Crimea.
The first Jewish Khazar king was named Bulan, which means "elk", though some sources give him the Hebrew name Sabriel. A later king, Obadiah, strengthened Judaism, inviting rabbis into the kingdom and building synagogues.

References to a Jewish kingdom of Khazars are numerous in rabbinic literature from the Middle Ages and later. Among them is the famous tale by Rabbi Yehuda HaLevy, related in his 12th-century work The Kuzari, which recounted the conversion of the Khazar king to Judaism resulting from a lengthy conversation with an unnamed Jewish "wise man."

Among other Jewish sources supporting the Jewish identity of the Khazars is a letter written by Avraham ibn Daud, a renowned writer, who reported meeting rabbinical students from Khazar in Toledo, Spain in the mid-12th century. The well-renowned Schechter Letter recounts a different version of the conversion of the Khazar king, and mentions Benjamin ben Menachem as a Khazar king. Saadia Gaon, considered by many to be the greatest rabbi of his generation in the 10th century, also spoke favorably of Khazars in his writings.

The belief in a Jewish Khazar kingdom enjoyed wide belief in non-Jewish literature as well, including classical Muslim sources cited in modern times to demonstrate that the homeland of the Jews is in Khazar and not Israel.

I do not know much about the Khazars and their kingdom. This new report has prompted me to read more about these people and their kingdom.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Sarah Palin: Should Christians Support a Woman for the Office of Civil Magistrate?

The nomination of Sarah Palin to become the Vice President candidate in the Republican ticket is causing problems to some Christians who believe that God has “establishes the positional priority of the man over the woman in regards to authority and leadership.”

The question being asked is whether Christians should support a woman running for political office.

Two articles have discussed this question and reached different conclusions.

Click here to read an article that supports women running for political office.

Click here to read an article that does not support women running for political office.

In an upcoming post, I will give my own view on this issue.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Thursday, September 04, 2008

Hezekiah’s Tunnel

The completion of Hezekiah’s Tunnel was an amazing accomplishment. The digging of the tunnel is reported in 2 Chronicles 32:30: “Hezekiah was the one who stopped the water from flowing from the upper outlet of Gihon. He channeled the water directly underground to the west side of the City of David.”

A record of the digging of the tunnel has been preserved in the Siloam Inscription. The inscription, written in biblical Hebrew, has six lines of text. The following is Albright’s translation:

"[.. when] (the tunnel) was driven through. And this was the way in which it was cut through: While [. ..] (were) still [..] axe(s), each man toward his fellow, and while there were still three cubits to be cut through, [there was heard] the voice of a man calling to his fellow, for there was an overlap in the rock on the right [and on the left]. And when the tunnel was driven through, the quarrymen hewed (the rock), each man toward his fellow, axe against axe; and the water flowed from the spring toward the reservoir for 1,200 cubits, and the height of the rock above the head(s) of the quarrymen was 100 cubits." ["The Siloam Inscription", transl. by W. F. Albright in James b. Pritchard ed., Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament (Princeton, 1950), p. 321.]

Hershel Shanks in the September/October issue of the Biblical Archaeology Review has a good article on Hezekiah’s tunnel. The aim of his article is to answer the question: “How did the two teams of tunnelers manage to meet after wandering over a wildly circuitous route?”

Good article.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Wednesday, September 03, 2008

The Walls of Jerusalem


The Jerusalem Post is reporting that the remains of the southern wall of Jerusalem, the wall that was built by the Hasmonean Kings during the Second Temple period have been uncovered on Mount Zion.

According to the report, the wall was destroyed during the Great Revolt against the Romans that began in 66 C.E. The photo below shows the remains of the city walls.




Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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The Death of David Scholer

David Scholer, former Dean of Northern Baptist Seminary, died on August 22. Scholer was 70 years old. David Scholer brought me to Northern Seminary in 1988. He was a New Testament scholar and a wonderful Christian. He was also a great Dean.

The following is the press release about Scholer’s death published by the Associated Baptist Press:


PASADENA, Calif. (ABP) -- David Scholer, noted American Baptist scholar and professor of New Testament at Fuller Theological Seminary, died Aug. 22 after a long struggle with cancer. He was 70.

Scholer was a specialist in several areas of New Testament studies, including Gnosticism and second-century Christianity, but was perhaps best known for his contributions to studies on women in ministry. He taught at the California-based evangelical seminary for 14 years where his course, "Women, the Bible and the Church," was considered a popular elective.

Despite a diagnosis of colo-rectal cancer in 2002, he taught and mentored students until he retired this summer.

"David was a very strong supporter of our American Baptist ministry at Fuller. For several years he has been fighting cancer with a remarkable testimony; never did he allow it to slow him down or diminish the work that God had called him to do," noted David Brown, executive director of the American Baptist Theological Center at Fuller.

"He was deeply loved, deeply respected and will be deeply missed at his home church in Pasadena, at Fuller, in our American Baptist family and in the wider community of faith."

Scholer was ordained into Christian ministry by the American Baptist Churches USA Nov. 27, 1966. He served the denomination in several capacities, including as a member of the ABC-USA General Board from 1989-1992. He was a member of First Baptist Church of Pasadena.

Scholer had published several books on subjects ranging from discipleship to biblical models of women in ministry. He also contributed more than 200 articles and book reviews and a number of edited volumes and publications.

Prior to joining Fuller, Scholer served as professor of New Testament at North Park Theological Seminary, Northern Baptist Theological Seminary and Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. He held both bachelor's and master's degrees from Wheaton College, a bachelor of divinity degree from Gordon Divinity School and his doctor of theology degree from Harvard Divinity School.

Scholer is survived by his wife, Jeannette; two children, Abigail Scholer Strazzabosco and Emily Scholer Hernandez; and three grandchildren.
Funeral services were held at First Baptist Church of Pasadena Aug. 30.

RIP

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Augustine on Abortion

In response to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s statement about the Catholic Church’s stance on abortion made on “Meet the Press” on August 24, the US Conference of Catholic Bishops has published a two-page fact sheet titled “Respect for Unborn Human Life: The Church’s Constant Teaching.

Since Pelosi’s statement quoted Augustine’s view on abortion, the statement issued by the Catholic Bishops discusses Augustine’s interpretation of Exodus 21: 22-23, a difficult passage that has been interpreted by some scholars as allowing abortion at the earlier stages of pregnancy. According to the statement, Augustine’s interpretation was based on the translation found in the Septuagint (the Greek translation of the Old Testament) instead of the original Hebrew reading:

In the 5th century AD this rejection of abortion at every stage was affirmed by the great bishop-theologian St. Augustine. He knew of theories about the human soul not being present until some weeks into pregnancy. Because he used the Greek Septuagint translation of the Old Testament, he also thought the ancient Israelites had imposed a more severe penalty for accidentally causing a miscarriage if the fetus was “fully formed” (Exodus 21: 22-23), language not found in any known Hebrew version of this passage. But he also held that human knowledge of biology was very limited, and he wisely warned against misusing such theories to risk committing homicide. He added that God has the power to make up all human deficiencies or lack of development in the Resurrection, so we cannot assume that the earliest aborted children will be excluded from enjoying eternal life with God.

Exodus 21:22-23 is difficult passage to interpret. The New Revised Standard Version translates the Hebrew text as follows: “When people who are fighting injure a pregnant woman so that there is a miscarriage, and yet no further harm follows, the one responsible shall be fined what the woman's husband demands, paying as much as the judges determine.”

There are several issues in the these two verses that require clarification before the proper interpretation of the text can be reached. For instance, the words “miscarriage” translates the Hebrew “her sons go out.” The text does not say whether the sons (the text is plural) are born alive or dead. Since the person responsible pays a fine, does it mean that no death occurred and that the lex talionis does not apply? Or, if there was a death, that the fetus was not considered a person?

Since I do not have the time today to explore all the issues in the text, I may return to this passage at a later time with a more detailed discussion of this problematic text.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary


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Monday, September 01, 2008

The Jews of China and the Lost Tribes of Israel

According to YnetNews, a group of Chinese Jews living in Kaifeng may be the descendants of Jews who came to China from Persian and Iraqi. Some scholars have identified them with a remnant of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel. Others, believe that their presence in China is a fulfillment of Isaiah 49:12.

The following are excerpts from the article published in YnetNews:

However, a thousand years ago, Kaifeng was the capital of the Chinese empire, the largest, richest and most advanced in the world at the time, with 600,000 residents that made it the most populated city on earth.

Ancient Kaifeng had a Jewish community – a small but thriving one, whose story is unique in the history of the Jewish people. For the 800 years of its existence, Kaifeng's Jews never suffered from persecution or discrimination. The Chinese authorities, as well as the general population, welcomed their Jewish neighbors, viewed them as citizens in every respect and allowed them to observe their religion with complete freedom.

It is not clear when exactly the first Jews came to China or when the Jewish community in Kaifeng was formed. In the prophecy of the redemption in the book of Isaiah it states: "See, they will come from afar – some from the north, some from the west, some from the region of Sinim ("Chinese")" (Isaiah, 49:12); but biblical scholars agree that the verse does not speak of China per se. Some claim that the Jews of Kaifeng are descendents of the Ten Lost Tribes. Others theorize that they came to China in the second century following the downfall of the Jews in the Bar Kokhva revolt (132-135CE).

DNA testing done over the past few years on the descendents of the Kaifeng Jews, proved them distant relatives of Armenian, Iranian and Iraqi Jews. Most of the researchers, as well as the Kaifeng descendents themselves, tend to suggest that the original Jews in China were merchants from Persia that came by way of the Silk Route (in today's southern Turkey) to the city of Xian in central China.

Historical references and archaeological findings have proven that the Persian Jews first arrive in China in the eighth century; and since the long, difficult journey made family life difficult, the solution was to establish a permanent base in China. The location of choice was Kaifeng – China's capital from 927BC to 1127AD.

There has been much speculation about the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel. Several claims have been made about the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel. I have written several posts discussing other claims about the Ten Lost Tribes. If you are interested in knowing more about these claims, check here, here, here, here, and here. I do not give much credence to this claim of the Jews of China in the same way I have been skeptical about previous claims.


Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Biblical Carnival XXXIII

T. Michael Halcomb at pisteuomen has posted the selction of post for Biblical Carnival XXXIII. His selection mentions more than 150 posts. Michael has done an excellent job. Visit Michael’s blog and look at his selection.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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