Christian Scriptures * 2007

 

 

T, F 2:00-3:20                                                                    Dr. Susan Marks                     

PMC 219                                                                            smarks@ncf.edu

Office Hours:  Mon  2:30-3:30 p.m.                                   PME 221; x 4271

Thurs11:00a.m.-Noon                                http://faculty.ncf.edu/marks/      

                        and by appointment

 

 

 

Objectives:

In this course we will approach the earliest texts of Christianity with an eye towards an historical understanding of events and movements, and attention to how these texts found their way to us.  The landscape that emerges will appear unfamiliar to anyone whose ideas of Christianity have been shaped by the works of later centuries.  Each of you will have heard bits and pieces of what the “Dead Sea Scrolls” or “Nag Hamadi Discoveries” reveal about Christian Scriptures.  But this course challenges you to go beyond isolated glimpses and instead look deeply at ancient context.  This course asks for a synthetic consideration of various currents in the ancient world rather than a single new datum cobbled to a substantially anachronistic understanding of older sources.  This course demands that you develop a self-critical eye, not critical of your own beliefs or practices (whether you be a Christian, an atheist, a practitioner of another tradition), but careful that you don’t confuse your own preconceptions with your scholarship.

 

 In order to engage in this exploration we will need tools for reading and situating texts, as well as the courage and patience to consider worlds that are different than our own.  Christian Scriptures includes an incredible variety of texts.  Some texts will feel familiar and others alien.  Each can provide us with essential challenges.  Each can reveal its own history or hide it.  And each can contribute to our overarching goal, as we seek to talk about and make sense of these competing visions within a world that had yet to hear of the “New Testament” or other canonical formations that shape later reception.

 

 

Expectations:

            Regular attendance is required.  In order to facilitate review by both your peers and myself, assignments must be handed in on time.  Class participation counts with successful completion of assignments towards your overall evaluation. Your classmates will come to depend on your comments even as you will come to depend on theirs.  If you are a person who does not readily talk in public, I encourage you to come see me during my office hours, and we can devise other ways for you to have input into class discussions.

 

  

Responsibilities:

1.      Academic integrity.

2.      Active participation. Since participation depends on regular attendance, three absences will achieve an official warning, and more than three absences will be grounds for an unsatisfactory evaluation.  Students should arrive on time, with readings in hand, having done relevant readings before class session as well as any informal writing assignments.

3.      Two papers.  Each student will prepare two written assignments, each involving drafts and revisions (a 6-8 page paper and a final 9-12 page paper).*

4.      A mid-semester exam.

5.      Explorations through informal writing assignments.

 

*An appropriately formatted hard [paper] copy of formal assignments must be handed in on-time, together with all drafts and doodles.  You will be evaluated based on the energy of the original exploration as well as the development in the revision process.

 

 

Required Texts:

Bart Ehrman, The New Testament: A Historical Introduction to the Early Christian Writings, 3rd ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2004).[Ehrman]

David R. Cartlidge and David L. Dungan, eds., Documents for the Study of the Gospels (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1994).[DOCS]

Meeks, ed.  HarperCollins Study Bible (New York:  HarperCollins, 1993).**

Elaine Pagels, The Gnostic Gospels (New York: Vintage, 1979, 1989).[Pagels]

 

Recommended Texts:

Meyers, ed.  Women in Scripture (Grand Rapids: Eerdman’s Publishing Co., 2000).[WIS]

 

**You may substitute another modern translation for the HarperCollins Study Bible (e.g., RSV, NRSV, NJPS, or NIV).  The King James Version is not acceptable as a primary translation, although you are welcome to use it as a secondary text.

 

You will also be reading one of the following “historical” accounts of the life of Jesus by one of the following:  Crossan, Fredrikson, Sanders or Smith (see assignment).  A handful of each are available for purchase, or through ILL.

 

Additional readings will be available and electronic reserve [* = reserve reading]

***Please also check Library Reserve for many additional, related books***

 

 

Websites of Interest:

http://www.earlychristianwritings.com/

http://www.utoronto.ca/religion/synopsis/

http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/rs/rak/kraft.html

 

 

 

Schedule:

Week 1

Fri Aug 31                   Introduction

 

 

Week 2

Tues Sept 4                 Reading the New Testament

Read:   *Gager, Kingdom and Community, 19-49 and notes

DOCS, 1-3

Galatians 1-2

Acts 15

Hand out: Book Review Assignment

 

Fri Sept 7                   Jewish Context

Read:  Josephus, Autobiography 1-2

http://www.ccel.org/j/josephus/works/autobiog.htm

The War Scroll:

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/religion/portrait/scrolltranslation.html

Ehrman, chap 2, pp. 35-45

 

 

Week 3

Tues Sept 11               Greco-Roman Context

                        Read:   DOCS, 151-2, 165-8, 203-38, 284-9

                                    Ehrman, chap 2, pp. 18-35

The Empire's Religions:

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/religion/portrait/empire.html

                                    WIS 507-508 

 

Fri Sept 14                   No Class – Rosh HaShannah

 

 

Week 4

Tues Sept 18               Gospels

Read:   Gospel of Mark

Ehrman, chapters 4,5 and 29

WIS 421-438

 

Fri Sept 21                  Synoptic Gospels

                        Read:  Gospel of Matthew

                        Ehrman, chapters 6, 7

WIS, 17-23, 407-421, 552-5

 

  

Week 5                      

Tues Sept 25               Q and More

                        Read:   Gospel of Luke

                                    Acts

                                    Ehrman, chapters 8, 9

                                    Q passages in Ehrman, p. 88

                                    WIS, 438-453, 457-468

 

Fri Sept 28                  Class will meet in Sukkah?

The Fourth Gospel                

                        Read:   Gospel of John

                        Ehrman, chapter 10

                        WIS, 453-7

                        Due:    Draft of Book Review

[Two copies of paper due]

[Exchange papers with peers]  

 

 

Week 6

Tues Oct 2                   Peer Review

                        Due:     PRF for each paper                 

Read:   Two papers from peers

        

Fri Oct 5                      Other Gospels

Read:   Pagels, Intro and Chapter 3

DOCS, Coptic Gospel of Thomas, 19-29; Gospel of Peter, 76-79;

Infancy Gospel of Thomas, pp. 86-90

                                    Gospel of Mary

http://www.gnosis.org/library/marygosp.htm

                                    Compare Mark 15.42-16.8, Matt 27.57-28.10, Luke 23.50-24.11

and Gospel of Peter 34-57

                        Suggested:  Ehrman, chapter 12

 

 

Week 7

Tues Oct 9                   From Jesus to Christ

                        Due:    Revision of Book Review

                        In Class:  Excerpts from Film:  From Jesus to Christ

Hand out: Mid-Term

 

Fri Oct 12                    Jesus in the Gospels

                        Suggested:  Ehrman, chapter 17

Bring:  Ehrman, WIS and Bible

Due:    Mid-Term Exam

 

   MID-SEMESTER BREAK 

 

 

 Week 8

Tues Oct 23                 Paul

                        Read:   1 Thessalonians

                                    *Article tba

Ehrman, chapters 18-19

                                    WIS, 485-486

                        Hand out: Research Assignment

 

Fri Oct 26                    More Paul

                        Read:   1 & 2 Corinthians

Galatians

Romans

                                    Ehrman, chapters 20-22

                                    WIS, 469-480

 

 

Week 9

Tues Oct 30                 Research Tools -- presentation by Librarian Caroline Reed

 

Fri Nov 2                     Acts of Paul and Thecla

                        Read:   Ehrman, chapter 24

                                    * MacDonald, 13-33, 54-57  58-77, 90-103 (pp. 54-103 optional)

Acts of Paul and Thecla

http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/rs/courses/rs135/thecla.html

 

 

Week 10

Tues Nov 6                 Pastoral Epistles

            Read:  1 and 2 Timothy

Titus

                                    Ephesians

                                    Ehrman, chapter 23

                                    WIS, 487-495

 

Fri Nov 9                    Women in Acts

            Read:  Acts

                                   *Matthews, 51-71

 

 

Week 11-12

Tues Nov 13                Apocalyptic

                        Read:   Revelation

                                    Ehrman, chapter 28

*Marshall, 68-87

WIS, 503

                          Due:  Draft of Research Assignment,

[Two copies of paper due]

[Exchange papers with peers]

 

Fri Nov 16                   Peer Review

                        Read:   Two papers from peers

                         Due:    PRF for each paper                 

 

Tues Nov 20                No Class – Prof. Marks as SBL

 

THANKSGIVING BREAK

 

 

Week 13

Tues Nov 27               Competing Christianities

            Read:  Gospel of Truth

http://www.gnosis.org/naghamm/gostruth.html

                                    Apocryphon of John

                        http://www.gnosis.org/naghamm/apocjn.html

                        Pagels, chapters 1, 4, 5

 

Tues Nov 27 7:30pm-8:30pm                                                                                    

*EVENING*               *Presentations*

 

Fri Nov 30                   Interpreting the texts of Christianity

            Read:   Ehrman, chapter 26 and reread chapter 28                   

Ignatius to the Romans

http://www.earlychristianwritings.com/text/ignatius-romans-roberts.html

Pliny's Letters:

            http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/religion/maps/primary/pliny.html

                                    Muratorian Canon

http://www.earlychristianwritings.com/text/muratorian.html

                                    Shepherd of Hermas

                                    http://www.earlychristianwritings.com/shepherd.html

 

 

Week 14

Tues Dec 4                      Finish Presentations and Conclude

   

Final Papers due Friday, December 7 at 2:00pm