In his book, A Survey of Old Testament Introduction,
Dr. Gleason L. Archer presents a conservative discussion pf Old Testament canonicity,
historicity, information about the Semitic languages, known textual problems, the
“specific difficulties” presented by each book, archaeological evidences, how
the Hebrew/Aramaic manuscripts were prepared and transmitted to new
generations, and the challenges which can be presented by higher criticism.
Gleason sees the Old Testament as the preparation and
the New Testament as the completion of the Christian message. He points out
that “It made a great deal of difference that Greek was precise in expressing time
values, and that Hebrew laid chief emphasis upon mode of action rather than
upon tense.”
The survey takes each book verse by verse and discusses historical, textual, and modern questions. The text assumes some level of knowledge about archaeology, the Hebrew language, the history of the Middle East, various approaches to biblical criticism, and tends to become a little technical on some points. It is obviously intended for beginning college or seminary level students but is not above the understanding of the interested layman. Pastors and academics will definitely find it useful.
As with most books such as this, what you get from the
book depends on what you bring with you. You may not agree with everything the
author says. Luke (see below) advises you to think for yourself.
Information you will need to search for this book:
___________________________________________________________________
A general caution: books may give you wonderful new
insights and explanations of subjects, but you should never base your Christian
beliefs on any one book or the teachings of one person, no matter who they are.
All teachings must be consistent with scripture. Read as the Bereans did, with
discernment. “… for they received the word with great eagerness, examining the
Scriptures daily to see whether these things were so.” Acts
17:11 NASB
Any doctrines must be consistent with the historical
full body of Christian thought. Doctrines or teachings inconsistent with
scripture in any way must be rejected. You would not eat cheese which had a
fuzzy fungus growing on it.
No comments:
Post a Comment