Associated Canadian Theological Schools of Trinity Western University. BIB 500: Introduction to Biblical Studies

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Associated Canadian Theological Schools of Trinity Western University BIB 500: Introduction to Biblical Studies Jonathan Numada, Ph.D. Summer 2018 E-mail: jonathan.numada@twu.ca Phone: 289 441-2093 2 credit hours Semester Dates: June 1 to Aug 15, 2018 Course Dates: July 9 to July 13, 2018 Course Hours: 8:30am to 12:30pm Room: Langley, Fosmark, JH1 I. Course Description This course provides a general survey of biblical literature. Particular attention is given to the historical context, genres, major themes, and canonicity of biblical documents. An introduction to historically significant issues and methodologies will be provided to empower the student to better use secondary literature (such as commentaries or Bible dictionaries) for completing their assignments in future courses. II. Objectives Upon completion of the course, students will be able to: a. Cognitive: i. Demonstrate general familiarity with order of composition, chronology, literary genres, and canonical setting of the books of the Bible. ii. Show knowledge of the historical and cultural settings of the Old and New Testaments and related literature. iii. Demonstrate general familiarity with some major issues of debate in biblical studies, and show an ability to critically evaluate and interpret the implications of these issues for the life of the Church. b. Affective: i. Appreciate how historical and critical study of the Bible can help to better understand its message. ii. Affirm and model a growing confidence in one s own ability to interpret Scripture for others. c. Practical: i. More fully use information in commentaries and other literature in the preparation of education materials for ministry activities. ii. Synthesize literary, historical, and theological information so that it can be applied to help meet the spiritual needs of churches today.

BIB 500 Introduction to Biblical Studies 2 III. IV. A Note on Essay Assignments Assignments must follow Turabian or SBL formatting (APA is acceptable for students in counseling programs). Essay assignments should be double-spaced and written in English using Times New Roman 12-point font. Citations should take the form of footnotes using 10- point font. Essays must begin with a separate title page, with the bibliography placed after the essay and beginning on its own new page. Late Assignment Policy The instructor will accept late assignments. Late assignments lacking a valid reason for being late (i.e., a family emergency such as a child s major illness) will be penalized -5% for each day late. Weekends count as 1 day. In the event that an extension is needed, please contact the instructor immediately via email. V. Course Textbooks A modern English translation of the Bible, such as NIV, NASB, CEB, or NRSV. Arnold, Bill T., and Bryan Beyer. Encountering the Old Testament: A Christian Survey. Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 2008. Elwell, Walter, and Robert Yarbrough. Encountering the New Testament: A Historical and Theological Survey. Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 2005. Fee, Gordon D., and Douglas Stuart. How to Read the Bible for All its Worth. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2003. VI. Course Assignments Assignment 1: Book Review Due: July 21, 2018 (20% of Final Grade). Write a 6-page book review (12-point font; double-spaced) of Fee and Stuart. Include: a. Bibliographic data at the top of the page (no title page necessary). b. The author s professional and theological background. c. Summarize the content of the book in your own words. d. Explain the most interesting or important points in the book. e. Discuss any parts of the book you disapprove of and explain why. f. Summarize how this is useful to you or how it might be useful to others. Assignment 2: Illustrated Annotated Chronology Due: July 28, 2018 (25% of Final Grade). Your Choice: a. New Testament, or b. Old Testament

BIB 500 Introduction to Biblical Studies 3 Using the course textbooks and class discussions, create a timeline for one of the Testaments. Mark the time periods clearly. Mark the most important events and time spans of the most important biblical personalities. Mark the timespan or dates of the most important non-biblical events or personalities that help in understanding the Bible. Mark the date ranges for the composition of biblical documents, and their big ideas. If there are any controversies over information you include, use endnotes that explain why you made the decisions that you did. After the endnotes, include a bibliography of the books that you used. If you like, include graphic art that is appropriate for your ministry group (cartoons for children; small photos or diagrams for adults, etc.). Try to create the timeline as a single electronic file. It can be a DOCX, PDF, or PPT file. If creating your timeline in electronic format is too difficult, it is OK to send the document as a high-resolution photograph on a PDF if the instructor can read it. Assignment 3: Exegetical Research Paper (Old Testament) Due: August 11, 2018 (20% of Final Grade). Write a 5-page research paper (12-point font; double-spaced) on an item from the Old Testament. You may choose either a passage of interest, or a specific issue or interpretive problem that is important to you. This paper must include a clear hypothesis and thesis statement. It must include explicit and clear documentation using Scripture references (chapter and verse), citation footnotes, and explanatory footnotes. Bibliographies must include at least 1 dictionary (Bible encyclopedia) article; 1 journal article; 1 commentary or monograph. Title page and bibliography are not included in the 5 pages. The student must follow Turabian formatting style, cite sources of information using footnotes, and list works consulted in a bibliography. Assignment 4: Exegetical Research Paper (New Testament) Due: August 18, 2018 (20% of Final Grade). Write a 5-page research paper (12-point font; double-spaced) on an item from the New Testament. You may choose either a passage of interest, or a specific issue or interpretive problem that is important to you. This paper must include a clear hypothesis and thesis statement. It must include explicit and clear documentation using Scripture references (chapter and verse), citation footnotes, and explanatory footnotes. Bibliographies must include at least 1 dictionary (Bible encyclopedia) article; 1 journal article; 1 commentary or monograph. Title page and bibliography are not included in the 5 pages.

BIB 500 Introduction to Biblical Studies 4 The student must follow Turabian formatting style, cite sources of information using footnotes, and list works consulted in a bibliography. Assignment 5: Reading Log Due: August 18, 2018 (15% of Final Grade) 1. Complete the attached reading statement and email it to the instructor. 2. The readings from Fee and Stuart are expected to have been read in time for class that day so the student can participate more fully in class discussions. Grading Scale Letter Grade Percentage Grade Point A+ 97 100 4.30 A 93 96 4.00 A- 90 92 3.70 B+ 87 89 3.30 B 83 86 3.00 B- 80 82 2.70 C+ 77 79 2.30 C 73 76 2.00 C- 70 72 1.70 F Below 70 0.00

BIB 500 Introduction to Biblical Studies 5 VII. Course Outline Day 1 Monday, July 9 TOPIC READING GROUP LEARNING Session 1 Introduction to the class What is Biblical Studies? Fee ch. 1 Fee ch. 2 Categorizing a Question Session 2 Example Issues in Lower Criticism Example Issues in Higher Criticism Analyzing the Creation Story Session 3 Promise and Covenant in Old Testament Theology Day 2 Tuesday, July 10 Session 4 Reading Genesis Exodus and Numbers Session 5 Deuteronomy and its Influence o Latter Prophets o Book of the 12 Session 6 Ancient Israelite Culture and Religion Former Prophets Chronicles Fee ch. 9 Using Commentaries, Bible Dictionaries, and Monographs Fee ch. 10 Fee ch. 5 Understanding the Chronicler Day 3 Wednesday, July 11 Session 7 Wisdom Literature Fee ch. 11, 12 Reading the Writings Session 8

BIB 500 Introduction to Biblical Studies 6 The Greco-Roman World The Jewish People in the Intertestamental Period Session 9 What is New Testament Theology? Day 4 Thursday, July 12 Session 10 The NT and OT Intertextuality Jewish Christianity Session 11 Introduction to the Gospels Approaches to the Historical Jesus Day 5 Friday, July 13 Session 12 Pauline Epistles The New Perspective on Paul Session 13 General Epistles Apocalyptic Literature and the Book of Revelation Charleton Heston s Moses, Moses! Reading 1 Maccabees Fee ch. 3, 4 2 Peter and Jude Views of the Atonement The Vine and the Fig Tree Psalms in the NT Fee ch. 7, 8 Jesus and His Family Fee ch. 6 What are works of the Law? Fee ch. 13 Gog and Magog

BIB 500 Introduction to Biblical Studies 7 READING STATEMENT I have read % of Encountering the Old Testament: A Christian Survey. Percentage Read Date Completed Introduction % Part 1 % Part 2 % Part 3 % Part 4 % I have read % of Encountering the New Testament: A Historical and Theological Survey. Percentage Read Date Completed Introduction % Part 1 % Part 2 % Part 3 % Part 4 % I have read % of How to Read the Bible for All It s Worth. Percentage Read Date Completed Percentage Read Date Completed Chapter 1 % Chapter 8 % Chapter 2 % Chapter 9 % Chapter 3 % Chapter 10 % Chapter 4 % Chapter 11 % Chapter 5 % Chapter 12 % Chapter 6 % Chapter 13 % Chapter 7 % Name: Date Signed: Signature:

BIB 500 Introduction to Biblical Studies 8 Supplement: Important Academic Notes from ACTS Web Support Student Portal https://students.twu.ca All students at TWU have a TWUPass username and password. This is determined at the time of an online application or can be managed through the computing services help desk or the link on the student portal. Your student email account is also available through this student portal and is vital for communication about grades, account statements, lost passwords, sign-up instructions, etc. If you do not know your account or password, there is a link at the login area called I forgot my password. When you click on that link, you will be walked through the process of retrieving your account information. Campus Closure In the event of deteriorating weather conditions or other emergency situations, every effort will be made to communicate information regarding the cancellation of classes to the following radio stations CKNW (980 AM), CKWX (1130 AM), STAR FM (107.1 FM), PRAISE (106.5 FM) and KARI (550 AM). As well, an announcement will be placed on the University s campus closure notification message box (604.513.2147) and on the front page of the University s website (http://www.twu.ca also see http://www.twu.ca/conditions for more details). An initial announcement regarding the status of the campus and cancellation of classes is made at 6:00 AM and covers all classes beginning before 1:00PM. A second announcement is made at 11:00AM that covers all classes which begin between 1:00PM and 5:00PM. A third announcement is made at 3:00PM and covers those classes which begin after 5:00PM. Paper Formatting Students need to adhere to Turabian Notes (Bibliography) format except for in counselling courses, for which APA format is used and for CanIL courses. Students are strongly encouraged to use EndNote Basic/Web (available through the library home page www.twu.ca/library - lower left) as their bibliographical manager and as a tool for formatting bibliographies. It is free. The link to EndNote from the library home page provides detailed instructions. Students will need to be aware of the need to clean up most bibliographies generated by this program. Students are encouraged to view the documents on the following websites for format samples: http://www.press.uchicago.edu/books/turabian/turabian_citationguide.html or www.dianahacker.com/resdoc/. Note that in EndNote Basic/Web the available formatting styles are those of Turabian bibliography, and APA 6th. For Turabian, note that there are two formats Notes (or Bibliography Style) and Reference List (a short format citation style). ACTS uses the Notes (Bibliography) format, not Reference List. Counselling students are expected to purchase the APA Publications Manual. More information

BIB 500 Introduction to Biblical Studies 9 found at the following website. http://www.apastyle.org/pubmanual.html. For free online programs that will enable you to create properly formatted bibliography citations, go to: http://www.calvin.edu/library/knightcite/ ("Chicago stands for "Turabian") or http://www.sourceaid.com/citationbuilder/ CANIL students can locate this on the CANIL intranet, under the student side. CanIL students can locate this on the CanIL intranet, under the student side. Please check with your professor to see which one he/she recommends you use!! Course Evaluations Course evaluations are an important aspect of improving teaching outcomes and for students and faculty professional development. Therefore, completion of course evaluations are considered a course expectation. Professors will schedule time to fill out the online course evaluation (20-30 minutes) during their last scheduled class of the semester, for students to complete on their personal laptop or a collegium computer. Students who are absent or otherwise unable to complete the online course evaluation in the last class, will be expected to make every effort to do so by the last day of exams. Information about how to access online evaluation forms will be provided to the faculty and students prior to the last week of classes by the ACTS Administration. Research Ethics Please note that all research projects involving human participants undertaken by members of the TWU university community (including projects done by ACTS students to satisfy course or degree requirements) MUST be approved by the Trinity Western University Research Ethics Board. Information and forms may be found at: http://www.twu.ca/research/research/research-ethics/default.html Those needing additional clarification may contact the ACTS Academic Dean's office. Please allow at least three (3) weeks from the date of submission for a review of the application. Academic Integrity and Avoiding Plagiarism at TWU As Christian scholars pursuing higher education, academic integrity is a core value of the entire TWU community. Students are invited into this scholarly culture and required to abide by the principles of sound academic scholarship at TWU. This includes, but is not limited to, avoiding all forms of plagiarism and cheating in scholarly work. TWU has a strict policy on plagiarism (see academic calendar 2008-09, pp. 37-38). Further details on this subject are contained in the ACTS Student Handbook in section 4.12.

BIB 500 Introduction to Biblical Studies 10 The handbook is available online on the ACTS webpage (www.acts.twu.ca) at the following link: http://acts.twu.ca/community/student-handbook-2011-12.pdf. Learning what constitutes plagiarism and avoiding it is the student s responsibility. An excellent resource describing plagiarism and how to avoid it has been prepared by TWU Librarian William Badke and is freely available for download (PPT file) or used as flash (self-running) tutorials of varying lengths from: http://acts.twu.ca/library/plagiarism.ppt http://acts.twu.ca/library/plagiarism.swf (14 minute flash tutorial) http://acts.twu.ca/library/plagiarism_short.swf (8 minute flash tutorial) Equity of Access Students with a disability who need assistance are encouraged to contact the Equity of Access Office upon admission to TWU to discuss their specific needs. All disabilities must be recently documented by an appropriately certified professional and include the educational impact of the disability along with recommended accommodations. Within the first two weeks of the semester, students must meet with their professors to agree on accommodations appropriate to each class. Students should follow the steps detailed by the Equity of Access Office outlined on the TWU website at: http://twu.ca/life/wellness/learningresources/disabilities-and-equity-of-access/steps-toattaining-disability-services.html.