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GLOBAL INTERPRETATIONS OF CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES

GLOBAL INTERPRETATIONS OF CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES. RLST 206 & DIV/REL 3845 Jan 31 2011. Today. a) 3:10 Contemporary Models for the Interpretation of Scriptures: “ LIBERATION HERMENEUTICS” b) 4:00 Group Discussion (two examples of Liberation Hermeneutics): 1 Timothy Leader:

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GLOBAL INTERPRETATIONS OF CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES

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  1. GLOBAL INTERPRETATIONS OF CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES RLST 206 & DIV/REL 3845 Jan 31 2011

  2. Today • a) 3:10 Contemporary Models for the Interpretation of Scriptures: “LIBERATION HERMENEUTICS” • b) 4:00 Group Discussion (two examples of Liberation Hermeneutics): • 1 Timothy Leader: • Exodus Leader: • c) 4:50 Lecture:Classical Models for the Interpretation of Scriptures: Pharisaic Judaism Apocalyptic Judaism,

  3. Any Interpretation of Scripture includes 3 choices Contextual --- Textual --- Religious/Hermeneutic Cultural

  4. 4 Types of Contextual Interpretations • (a) Inculturation = priority on Cultural Context of the interpretation/ers • (b) Liberation = priority on Concrete Life- Contexts of the interpretation/ers, from economic to ecological • (c) Inter(con)textual = priority onboth Cultural and Concrete Life-Contexts of the interpretation/ers • (d) Sacramental/Liturgical = Religious Context of the interpretation/ers

  5. Text, Religious experience, Life Context • Any interpretation of a Scriptural text involves: • Choosing to focus on one aspect of the TEXT as most significant • Especially in a long text as Exodus but also 1 Timothy • In terms of the reader’s religious experience (or lack of it) • & of the reader’s specific LIFE CONTEXT • The needs in it that concern the reader/believer

  6. A Correct Interpretation Must Be Legitimate, Plausible, AND Valid • Textual Choice is LEGITIMATE • if, and only if, you can show it is grounded in the text • You cannot contradict the text; deny what is in the text • Theological/hermeneutical choice is PLAUSIBLE • if, and only if, it makes sense according to certain convictions/religious experiences/religious views • Including a certain view of the role of Scripture = • Contextual Choice is VALID (=valuable) • if, and only if, it is helpful rather than hurtful;

  7. Despite common views, most Interpretations by believers are Legitimate, and Plausible • Because believers have much at stake; • Because they live by their interpretations that clarify that • a Biblical Text • They make sure that their interpretation • is grounded in the biblical text = legitimate • and make sense from their theological-religious perspective =plausible • The question: are they valid? WORD-TO-LIVE-BY

  8. Czech refugees who resisted the communists: “When your life depends on it… you read very carefully, even between the lines.”

  9. Despite common views, most Interpretations by believers are Legitimate and Plausible • As long as we do not recognize that other people’s interpretations • Interpretations by Aborigine, African, African-American, Asian (Chinese, Filipino, Indian, Indonesian, Malaysian), Feminist, Gay and Lesbian, Latin-American, Native American, Eastern Orthodox CHRISTIAN BELIEVERS • As well as interpretations by ordinary CHRISTIAN BELIEVERS in Western churches, including Fundamentalist, Charismatic and Prosperity Gospel Christian movements • are as LEGITIMATE and PLAUSIBLE as those by biblical scholars • It is IMPOSSIBLE to discuss with them the validity of our respective choices of interpretations

  10. Not readily recognizing other people’s interpretations as Legitimate can be a basis to

  11. Not readily recognizing other people’s interpretations as Plausible can be a basis to

  12. Respecting the interpretations of others = Reading with them When, dumb as we are, we finally understand the legitimacy and plausibility of other people’s interpretations… we truly READ WITH THEM Only then are we in a position to Discuss with them the VALIDITY for specific contexts of our respective interpretations.

  13. Why study Global Interpretations of Christian Scriptures? • Because by ourselves, we cannot recognize that we have made of the Bible an American icon (Idol?) • Because by ourselves, • we arrogantly claim to know what the Bible means, • Or claim as arrogantly that we have the critical tools to do it • We need to read with others, We have something to learn from them precisely because their readings are different. • The Contributors of the Global Bible Commentary invite us to read with them

  14. Why study Global Interpretations of Scriptures? Kasane, Botswana, 1999

  15. After each mini-sermon, everyone is praying aloud

  16. Pray For Me, So that I May…

  17. Pray For Me, So that I May Better Understand the Scriptures

  18. Oh, I forgot • Quiz

  19. Liberation Interpretations = Explicit Contextual/validity claim • Focus: Interpretive Contextual Choices • Ethical/moral test: Loving Neighbor • How is this text helpful in a specific life-context? • Yet, involves a particular Theological-hermeneutical choices: • Plausibility claim based on plurality of roles of Scripture; • Choosing the Role of Scripture as corrective lenses • Then other theological concepts.

  20. The Contextual Problem? Concrete issues (place of women in churches; poverty) Root-problem. Lack of/Wrong Knowledge; Will; Ability Faith/Vision or Ideology At first, it is difficult to distinguish (lack of/wrong) KNOWLEDGE vs. IDEOLOGY Liberation Interpretations… What is the problem? What is Sin?

  21. Sins include Sins of omissions … not knowing that one sinned, because one did not KNOW what we needed to do. Deliberate sins: WILLful transgression of God’s will; WILLful acts against other people around us Sin is often primarily systemic: IDEOLOGICAL = we participate in a sinful system, in a sinful community; in a sinful society, without noticing it, because we share in the ideology of this society And this sinful ideology can be based on a wrong faith = an IDOLATRY Liberation Interpretations… Theologically: What is Sin?

  22. Bartolomé deLas Casas, (1484-1566)

  23. Bartolomé deLas Casas, (1484-1566) • Las Casas traveled to Hispaniola (1502), witnessing much Spanish brutality against the “Indians.” • He wrote in 1561, "There were 60,000 people living on this island (when I arrived in 1508), including the Indians; so that from 1494 to 1508, over 3,000,000 people had perished from war, slavery, and the mines. Who in future generations will believe this?" • Some think that las Casas, who in general was a meticulous writer, may have exaggerated the Taíno death-toll. Yet a consensus estimate is nevertheless about 1,000,000. By 1531, Taíno [Arawak] population was down to 600. • From 1,000,000 to 600 in 40 years (1492-1531)

  24. From 1,000,000 to 600 Tainos in 40 years • Why? The Spaniards brought foreign diseases, like smallpox, against which the Taínos had no immunity. • The Taínos were enslaved by the Spaniards and worked to death in the mines and plantations (Revolts against forced labor, merciless killing) • The encomienda system (forced labor and tribute, in return for protection and instruction in the Christian faith). • Las Casas recognized the sin of oppressing the “Indians” and even the systemic evil of colonizing Taínos. BUT failed in his analysis and actions.

  25. What is the problem? What is Sin? • the systemic evil of colonizing • the sin of oppressing the “Indians” = using others for our own benefits • Not necessarily personal benefits; benefits for one’s family, country, society • Economic Problem … we need to keep up our life-standard… whatever the cost to other peoples • Power Problem … we can do it, because we are more powerful • ROOT PROBLEM: IDEOLOGICAL problem: We are superior to others • Better culture or education • Others do not know better; cannot do more than being servants; • Others are barbarians • Better Race – other people are “inferior”; are not really human; do not have a soul;

  26. Systemic evil of colonizing as Ideological Problem • Not a self-conscious issue • It is simply the way things are • The normalway of life • = a way of behaving • Normal way of behaving = as everybody does • E.g., Peer pressure • People are caught into the evil system = need to be liberated from it • Not from evil individuals • But from an evil system….. • From Concrete brutal oppression and exploitation • Victimization • From the convictions that drive them to exploit others

  27. Ideology • “Ideology is a ‘Representation’ of the Imaginary Relationship of Individuals to their Real Conditions of Existence” Louis Althusser, Essays on Ideology (London: Verson, 1984), • A representation that is shared by a group or society • A representation that provides the framework for life in particular contexts for individuals, groups. and entire society • And which appears to be simply the normal or natural condition of existence. • A representation that empowers people to control their lives in concrete situations

  28. Bartolomé deLas Casas, (1484-1566)

  29. How does one challenge systemic evil?……. Bartolomé deLas Casas • Tried to challenge this ideological power • By preaching against the “cruelty” and “depravity of Spaniards” • As if it was a problem of the WILL (evil Individuals) • Or as if it was a problem of KNOWLEDGE (people do not know the facts). Huge debate: are “Indians” human beings with a soul? • By writing books denouncing Spaniards’ cruelty: • The Devastation of the Indies; The Only Wayof Drawing All Peoples to the True Religion (about peaceful evangelization of the Indians); In Defense of the Indians; History of the Indies. • By trying to create a counter-colony– a “benign colony” (Venezuela, 1519-22) to rescue the “Indians” from the Spanish settlers. • But to protect “Indians” he did not oppose bringing slaves from Africa = not seeing the “ideological problem”

  30. How does one challenge systemic evil?……. With the help of Scripture • Not by looking for a moral teaching – Scripture as Lamp to my Feet • as if the problem was not knowing what is good to do. • Not by looking for incentives 1) [-] as warning against bad behavior -- Scripture as Law Rule of the Community; Canon (obey “or else”!) or 2) [+] as “good news” of God’s love • As if the problem was not willing to do good

  31. Liberation Interpretations: Theological-Hermeneutical Choice • Scripture asCORRECTIVE GLASSES • as PROPHECY= Helping us see what others cannot or will not see … including fulfillments of promises • Notlamp to my feet (in the usual sense of looking for guidance for my life; individual moral teaching) • NotLaw/Rule of the Community/Canon or Good News • NotCovenant/Family album (establishing our identity as members of the Chosen People of God and how to relate to others) • = Looking at our Life-Context (= what is in front of us; others around us, etc) through the scriptural text = Seeing our context with new eyes • Looking for stars in the four cardinal points (Elsa Tamez)

  32. Liberation Interpretations: Theological-Hermeneutical Choice • With Scripture, “search for stars in the four cardinal points. Search for them in the house, in the street, in institutions and organizations, within [your]self, and in the other.” (Elsa Tamez, 6, in Dietrich & Luz, ed. The Bible in a World Context) • For Tamez Scripture is no longer a “moral teaching” providing a sense of direction (= “lamp to my feet”), but is a “lantern” = Scripture ascorrective glasses • Then she struggles with the metaphor “lantern” when text does not give light … so I prefer a different metaphor • This means rejecting/bracketing out Scripture as • Lamp to my Feet, Law/Rule of the Community, and also as Good News

  33. Roles of Scripture when moral teaching (Knowledge and Will USELESS Scripture as -Lamp to my Feet -Rule of the Community Canon or Law {Moral teaching: K & W = knowledge and will} -Good News {K & W) Relevant Scripture as -LANTERN -CORRECTIVE GLASSES {Faith/Vision of what God does against evil powers/systems}

  34. Costa Rica

  35. Elsa Tamez, Costa Rica

  36. Elsa Tamez, on 1 Timothy & James

  37. Elsa Tamez, Liberation Interpretation • What are… • Her Contextual Choices? • And its validity (loving neighbor) • Her Theological-Hermeneutical Choices? • And its plausibility (loving God) • Her Textual Choices? • And its legitimacy (faithfulness to the text)

  38. Costa Rica Economy (CIA World Factbook) Pop: 4,133,884 (July 2007 est.) • white (including mestizo) 94%, black 3%, Amerindian 1%, Chinese 1%, other 1% • Costa Rica's basically stable economy depends on tourism, agriculture, and electronics exports. • Poverty has remained at roughly 20% for nearly 20 years, • the strong social safety net that had been put into place by the government has eroded due to increased financial constraints on government expenditures. • GDP - per capita $13,500 (2007 est.) • USA GDP - per capita:- $36,300 (2001 est.) • Population below poverty line: 18% (2004 est.) • USA 13%

  39. Group 2: EXODUS by Jorge Pixley (Nicaragua) • Presenter of GBC : Matthew Calderwood • Leader (his own vs. GBC): Arlonzo Williams • Respondent : Basye Holland • Mark Wells • Jordan Nelson • Annie Wong • Wendy Aluoch • Ben Pflederer

  40. Group 1: 1 TIMOTHY by Elsa Tamez (Costa Rica) • Presenter of GBC : Anna Leigh Keith • Leader (her own vs. GBC): Lakendra Scott • Anna McReynolds • Iris Ankrom • Taylor Schomp • Erin Higgins • Chance Dillon • Adesewa Adelekun

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