A performance critical analysis of the Lukan Parable of the Banquet (Luke 14:15–24)

2018 ◽  
Vol 115 (2) ◽  
pp. 243-253
Author(s):  
David Seal

Most public communication in the ancient world was oral. Given that the first-century world of the Bible can be labeled as a period where people preferred the spoken word over the written word, and Jesus’ parables were shared by word of mouth, it seems crucial to analyze the oral traits found in the written text of the parables. Biblical performance criticism is a methodology which analyzes texts that were intended primarily for oral delivery. Utilizing performance criticism, this article will investigate the so-called banquet parable recounted in Luke 14:15–24, with the intent to discover its oral conventions. Finally, where important oral conventions are identified, we will offer a conceivable script or suggest dramatic elements that can be utilized to re-enact the parable to a modern audience.

2021 ◽  
Vol 77 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hlulani M. Mdingi

The introduction of the Bible in Africa operated on two major frontiers, firstly, the oral tradition of the missionary who possessed both the Gospel message by word and in the written text (gadget). Conversion occurred through oral ‘manipulation’ that includes an oral negation of the native’s history and worldviews. Secondly, the rise of missionary schools opened the door to the reading of the Bible. However, the black experience has revealed that the reading of the Bible by blacks, slaves and the oppressed gave rise to a new world of interpretation and, in some respects, quietened the oral, historical, political and spiritual disturbance of the missionary voice as the vanguard of the colonial master. It is not the gadget or the written word that is in dispute, even in the digital era, but what the Bible says about oppression, poverty, injustice, dehumanisation, equitable distribution of wealth and politics. Through the paradigms of liberative thought, namely, the hermeneutics of the oppressed, this study firstly will acknowledge the creative and existential interpretation of the Bible for particular goals. While laying out a brief history on Eurocentrism as superseding the Gospel. Secondly, the study seeks to look into Western Christian thought as expansion of the Western Empire. Therefore, arguing that shifts and progress under the guise of development maintain western values. Lastly, the study seeks to argue that despite any platform of biblical transmission, orally, the printing press and the electronic platform, the hermeneutical and epistemological pedagogy of the liberationist lens of the Bible persist; liberation transcends technology.Contribution: This research will contribute in the dialogue between faith and technology within the paradigm of liberation theology. The study seeks to centre the pertinent theme of justice and liberation in the Bible as a critical witness that is relevant for the meaning and relevance of the Bible.


1975 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-68
Author(s):  
Uffe Hansen

The Word of God, Celebrated by GrundtvigBy Uffe HansenThis essay is a series o f interpretations o f not so well-known poems by Grundtvig on the theological foundations common to all Lutheran churches. Throughout his ministry (1810-72) Grundtvig was aware that the expression, the Word o f God, was an ambiguous one. In his hymns therefore he endeavoured to discover how it is to be understood and how it works. These brief interpretations fall into five chapters: the Word as Subject, the Word o f Life, the Word o f the Church, the Written Word, and the Living Voice.In a hymn which originally appeared in Krønike-Rim (Chronicle Rhymes) in 1829, the Church’s foundation is the Creative Word, which has sanctified baptism and the Eucharist (Sang-Værk 1.1). A further investigation of this thought is to be found in a number o f didactic poems which appeared in manuscript form in Grundtvig’s own handwriting in, amongst others, Dansk Ravnegalder in 1860, for which some verses are borrowed for the hymn Vanæret vor Drot kom i sin Grav (Our King Dishonoured was Laid to Rest), no. 236 in the Danish Hymn Book. At the resurrection it was the Creative Word  of Goc( that lived again. At Whitsun the Word o f God created His Church, in which Jesus is present as one in all, though invisible for the world. Grundtvig’s particular understanding o f the Word as that which characterizes man had a considerable influence on his thoughts about the Word o f God, as in the poem Ordets Kvaede (The Song of the Word) Sang-Værk (Hymn Work) 5-161. Only words that come from the heart and go to the heart can animate us and bring us the true and necessary enlightenment (Grundtvig also strongly opposes the thought that we have words in order to hide our thoughts - Talleyrand - but agrees with Edward Young’s use o f the word in his poem The Love o f Fame). When a person is touched by the Word of God, he may speak the truth about the invisible, but he will lie when he speaks only from his own inner emotional upheaval, which is not created by God. These lies will be annihilated by the Word o f God at the end o f the world. There is a kinship between the Word  of God and the Word o f Man; it is the mother o f thoughts and may be regarded as a picture of the Christ-child. The world cannot know itself unless it recognizes this kinship, according to Grundtvig.The most important task o f the Word is to bring life from God to man, not merely the Christian life, but the word for all things spiritual which are hidden from the eyes o f the world. When Grundtvig says it is only at baptism and the Eucharist that we hear the Word of God speaking to us, it must not be understood to mean a limitation on the scope of the Word of'God, but that in other places it is brought together with the human Word and its participation. In all discussion about God a conversation takes place between people about something that only God knows, but which a person can believe when he meets it and answers yes to His word - as at baptism and the Eucharist. In the poem Livets Ord (The Word o f Life) Sang-Værk 5-229, the Bible is called a letter from heaven, but not the book o f life. All human life is only a loan from the Creator’s breath; but this will first be revealed in eternity.The hymn Op til Guds Huus vi gaae (We are Going up to God’s House) is about the Word o f the Church. Originally this hymn described not only the Word o f God to man at baptism, but also (in a verse omitted in the Danish Hymn Book) the Word o f G od at the Eucharist. The verse in question says that at the Eucharist God kisses man in such a way as to give him a heavenly child mind. In Grundtvig’s hymns the kiss is not the lover’s kiss to his bride, but the Father’s kiss to His child. Grundtvig finds the same paternal love expressed in the Lord’s Prayer: only sons and daughters o f God can say this prayer, in a child-father relationship with God. The Word o f God in church is also the blessing. All speech in church must rest on the Church’s ancient words, which are few, as Jesus wished them to be. And whoever presents them cannot rule over them, but has them only, as it were, on loan; whereas whoever hears them receives them as a gift to be converted into deeds.In 1856 Grundtvig wrote a poem about the Bible and Christianity which expresses what was for him the curious thought that the Spirit o f God is sovereign in the orally transmitted word, because it is not »stolen« from the written word. The Bible is like a tree with many mysterious leaves that can inspire the poet - like birds who build their nests in the tree. It is not from the tree that they receive the very spirit they are singing from.When Grundtvig makes the spoken word sovereign over the written, it is because it was with the spoken word that God created Time - as the poem Havamal puts it - Poetical Works IX - 293. In 1863 Grundtvig wrote the poem Røsten (The Voice) on the same subject; an interpretation by Uffe Hansen is to be found in Grundtvig Studies 1958, pp36-46. In this poem man’s hymn o f thanksgiving is the »Heart’s Echo« o f God’s living voice which created the world.


1982 ◽  
Vol 18 ◽  
pp. 309-317 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony Fletcher

Their sense of national identity is not something that men have been in the habit of directly recording. Its strength or weakness, in relation to commitment to international causes or to localist sentiment, can often only be inferred by examining political and religious attitudes and personal behaviour. So far as the early modern period is concerned, the subject is hazardous because groups and individuals must have varied enormously in the extent to which national identity meant something to them or influenced their lives. The temptation to generalise must be resisted. It is all too easy to suppose that national identity became well established in England in the Tudor century, when a national culture, based on widespread literacy among gentry, yeomen and townsmen, flowered as it had never done before, when the bible was first generally available in English, when John Foxe produced his celebrated Acts and Monuments, better known as the Book of Martyrs. Recent work reassessing the significance of Foxe’s account of the English reformation and other Elizabethan polemical writings provdes a convenient starting point for this brief investigation of some of the connections between religious zeal and national consciousness between 1558 and 1642.


2017 ◽  
Vol 129 (4) ◽  
pp. 149-157
Author(s):  
Cherryl Hunt

Ordinary Christians’ responses to a dramatized reading of the New Testament, together with reflection on research in the area of performance criticism, suggests that understanding of the Bible and spiritual encounter with its texts may be promoted by the reading aloud of, and listening to, substantial portions of the Bible in an unfamiliar format; this might be found in a dramatized presentation and/or a previously unencountered translation. This practice should form part of any programme designed to promote biblical engagement within churches.


Author(s):  
Benjamin Slotznick

Point-and-Chat®, most simply, is the first software for Instant Messaging with a built-in screen reader, designed to be used in conjunction with Augmentative/Alternative Communication (AAC) devices. For many AAC users, especially those who have difficulty reading and writing, an AAC device is the primary or only way they can communicate with other people. This communication is primarily one-on-one and face-to-face. The goal of Point-and-Chat® is to take the skills that an AAC user has in producing the spoken word and provide scaffolding that will enable the AAC user to use those skills to communicate with the written word. The primary impediment to effective use of Point-and-Chat® by AAC users appears to be a lack of appropriate text-chat vocabularies for poor readers, including vocabulary strategies to re-establish conversations when the conversational thread has been lost.


2021 ◽  
pp. 121-142
Author(s):  
Margaret M. Coady

The chapter provides a critical analysis of past understandings of the characteristics of professions. Many of these characteristics have lost meaning in the twenty-first century. High status has been diminished partly by professionals’ betrayal of the values they expound, but partly also by social factors such as rapid communication of information and changed understanding of the nature of knowledge, both of which have led to general scepticism about expertise. Professionals’ previous relative autonomy is challenged by government intervention and by the fact that more professionals are employed in large organizations where managers are the power centres. The chapter argues for a ‘new professionalism’ and takes two principles from the Code of Ethics of the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatry to demonstrate how carefully deliberated codes of ethics can enunciate the particular values which the professions contribute in a well-functioning society.


2019 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
pp. 403-422
Author(s):  
Ari Finkelstein

AbstractFor nearly three decades scholars of the first-century Jewish historian, Flavius Josephus, have debated this author’s methodologies and goals in writing his Jewish Antiquities. While source-critics view Josephus as a compiler, new historians have chosen to read Antiquities as primarily a literary work which reveals social, political, and intellectual history. A series of recent publications place these methodologies side by side but rarely coordinate them, which leaves out important insights of each group. At stake is how we moderns read Jewish history of the first century CE. I explore how parallel accounts of Herod’s trial while he was Tetrarch of the Galilee in Jewish War and in Antiquities can be justified by employing source-critical analysis as a first step to explain the changes made to the text of Antiquities before turning to new historians’ methodologies. We can better understand the function of Herod’s trial in Antiquities through this process.


Author(s):  
Susan L. Trollinger ◽  
William Vance Trollinger

Biblical creationism emerged in the late nineteenth century among conservative Protestants who were unable to square a plain, commonsensical, “literal” reading of the Bible with Charles Darwin’s theory of organic evolution. As this chapter details, over time a variety of increasingly literal “creationisms” have emerged. For the first century after Origin of Species (1859), old Earth creationism—which accepted mainstream geology—held sway. But with the 1961 publication of The Genesis Flood—Noah’s flood explains the geological strata—young Earth creationism took center stage. Waiting in the wings, however, is a geocentric creationism that rejects mainstream biology, geology, and cosmology.


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