Thesis on "Old Testament Textual Analysis"

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[EXCERPT] . . . .

OT Analysis -- Numbers 15: 22-41

TEXT for ANALYSIS: NUMBERS, Chapter 15, Verses 22-41 (New Living Bible Translation

"But suppose you unintentionally fail to carry out all these commands that the Lord has given you through Moses. 23 and suppose your descendants in the future fail to do everything the Lord has commanded through Moses. 24 if the mistake was made unintentionally, and the community was unaware of it, the whole community must present a young bull for a burnt offering as a pleasing aroma to the Lord. It must be offered along with its prescribed grain offering and liquid offering and with one male goat for a sin offering. 25 With it the priest will purify the whole community of Israel, making them right with the Lord, and they will be forgiven. For it was an unintentional sin, and they have corrected it with their offerings to the Lord -- the special gift and the sin offering. 26 the whole community of Israel will be forgiven, including the foreigners living among you, for all the people were involved in the sin.

27 "If one individual commits an unintentional sin, the guilty person must bring a one-year-old female goat for a sin offering. 28 the priest will sacrifice it to purify the guilty person before the Lord, and that person will be forgiven. 29 These same instructions apply both to native-born Israelites and to the foreigners living among you.

30 "But those who brazenly violate the Lord's will, whether native-born Israelites or foreigners, have blasphemed the Lord, and they must be cut off from the community. 31 Since they have treated the Lord's word with contempt and deliberately disobeyed his command, they must b
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e completely cut off and suffer the punishment for their guilt."

Penalty for Breaking the Sabbath

32 One day while the people of Israel were in the wilderness, they discovered a man gathering wood on the Sabbath day. 33 the people who found him doing this took him before Moses, Aaron, and the rest of the community. 34 They held him in custody because they did not know what to do with him. 35 Then the Lord said to Moses, "The man must be put to death! The whole community must stone him outside the camp." 36 So the whole community took the man outside the camp and stoned him to death, just as the Lord had commanded Moses.

Tassels on Clothing

37 Then the Lord said to Moses, 38 "Give the following instructions to the people of Israel: Throughout the generations to come you must make tassels for the hems of your clothing and attach them with a blue cord. 39 When you see the tassels, you will remember and obey all the commands of the Lord instead of following your own desires and defiling yourselves, as you are prone to do. 40 the tassels will help you remember that you must obey all my commands and be holy to your God. 41 I am the Lord your God who brought you out of the land of Egypt that I might be your God. I am the Lord your God!"

Part 1 -- Introduction and Typology - Numbers, in historical context, is part of the original five books of the Jewish Bible, the Torah, known as the Pentateuch. It describes the beginning and end of the forty-year hiatus of wandering through the wilderness, and the trials and tribulations felt during that period. The title of the book is taken from the act of cencuses, or the numbering of people, which took place both prior to and after the period. We term this a census, but in Judaic times, only fighting men over 20 years old were counted, and if the scripture is taken literally, it means there were about 600,000 soldiers, and a population of over 2 million, an amount most biblical scholars believe would be not only unsustainable, but unlikely for the time period. Instead, the translation should refer to "tent grouping" or "family unit" making the total number of soldiers at 36,000 and the total population a bit under 100,000 -- still a large amount for the pre-modern era (Duquid, 2006).

Literally, the passages are translated from the Greek arithmoi (numbers as in counting) and the Hebrew bamidbar (in the wilderness of). It is the fourth book of the… READ MORE

Quoted Instructions for "Old Testament Textual Analysis" Assignment:

NB:Textual Analysis on Numbers 15:22-41

Please use numbered items as below

1. Literary and historical context (one paragraph)

In one paragraph, identify the type (genre) of Biblical book that you are studying, situate your passage in its literary context in the book, briefly describe the historical setting of the passage and, if possible, identify the author of the Biblical book and the date of writing.

*****¢ Discuss the mixture of law and narrative in this passage. Are these sections unrelated to each other, or is there any connection between the two?

2. Analysis of the text (few paragraphs)

In this section you analyze the text to answer the question: *****What is this passage about?***** To answer this, you may find it helpful to make a paragraph-by-paragraph outline of the passage, and you will want to take note of a variety of issues such as:

*****¢ Any repeated words or themes in the passage.

*****¢ How this passage follows from what comes before and how it affects what comes after it (refer to literary context, #1 above). What role does this passage play in the book?

*****¢ Identify any characters involved. Do they have any special God-given role as mediators, rulers, etc.? How does the author present these characters (e.g. as faithful, unfaithful, etc.)?

*****¢ Clarify any obscure, troubling or problematic matters in the text (e.g. exterminating women and children during holy war).

*****¢ A particular issue in this text requiring explanation is what is meant by *****sinning unintentionally***** (ESV translation). Consult some resources (commentaries, etc.) in order to get a better idea of what this means.

3. Connect the passage with the rest of the Bible (one paragraph)

Identify ways in which the message of this passage connects with the rest of the Bible (both Old and New Testaments). Take note of any other places in the Bible that quote or allude to this passage. Identify other passages which discuss similar or overlapping themes. Can you observe a development in the theme or themes found in this passage over the course of Scripture from beginning to end?

4. Hermeneutical reflections (few paragraphs)

Below are 7 Hermeneutical Perspectives. Discuss

this passage in relation to them. Which of the 7

hermeneutical perspectives seem to apply best in the

above tex?

Hermeneutical Perspective #1: Reading the OT as Ancient Near Eastern Literature

*****¢ An extension of the "grammatical-

historical" method

*****¢ Examples:

- "My sister, my bride" (Song of Songs 4:9) and ancient Egyptian love poetry

-"Non-linear" historical narratives (e.g. the book of Judges)

Read/appreciate the OT in its ancient Near Eastern context

Hermeneutical Perspective #2: OT Promise/Prophecy & NT Fulfillment Pattern

Prophecy (Promise): Is 7:14 Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign. Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel.

Fulfillment: Mat 1:21-23 ...All this took place

J51 the

to fulfill what the Lord had spoken by the prophet: 'Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall call his name Immanuel' (which means, God with us).

Consider whether a text establishes a promise, makes a prophecy, or creates some kind of expectation regarding the future.

Hermeneutical Perspective #3: The Use of the OT in the NT

*****¢ The issue of "Scripture interprets

Scripture"

*****¢ In many cases this seems peculiar: 2

examples of how "odd" this can be:

-Hos11:1 & Matt 2:13-15

-Deut30:11-14&Rom10:6-9

Consider whether a verse/passage you are studying is quoted/referred to in the NT and see how the NT "interprets" the text.

Hermeneutical Perspective #4: Clarification & Identification of OT Realities

Examples:

*****¢ Jesus is Yahweh: Exod 3:13-14 & the "I am"

statements in John's Gospel (6:20; 8:58; 13:19;

18:5-6)

*****¢ Jesus saved the Israelites: Jude 5; 1 Cor 10

In reading OT texts, consider whether this perspective can shed light on a passage.

*****¢ Who is "the commander of the Lord's army"

(Josh 5)?

Hermeneutical Perspective #5: God's Covenant with His People

Covenant: "A solemn commitment between two parties, involving promises and obligations, sealed by an oath".

Various OT covenants:

Noah -* Abram -> Moses *****”» ***** *****”» New Covenant

Try to situate the passage in relation to the history of the covenant and its accompanying promises & obligations.

Hermeneutical Perspective #6: "Theocentric" Reading of theOT

*****¢ "Theocentric" (God-centered) vs.

"anthropocentric" (man-centered)

*****¢ "What is God doing to redeem His People?" vs.

"What is this human character doing in this

scene?"

- What is Ruth 1 really about?

- Remember that God isn't always "visible" in a text!

(e.g. Elisha narratives)

*****¢ "What does this passage teach about God's

being or His character?"



Hermeneutical Perspective #7: The Appropriate Use of Typological Interpretation

Definitions of "type/typology":

- "a symbol of something future and distant, or

an example prepared and evidently designed

by God to prefigure that future thing. What is

thus prefigured is called the antitype."

- "the preordained representative relation which

certain persons, events, and institutions of the

Old Testament bear to corresponding

persons, events, and institutions in the New".

Hermeneutical Perspective #7: The Appropriate Use of Typological Interpretation

New Testament terms:

*****¢ typos - "type/figure" (Rom 5.14 Adam as a

"type" of the one to come)

*****¢ s/c/a - "shadow" (Col 2.17)

*****¢ hypodeigma - "copy" (Heb 8.5 earthly temple a

"copy and shadow" of the heavenly)

*****¢ parabole - "figure/parable" (Heb 9.9)

*****¢ antitypon - "the true pattern/figure, i.e. the thing

which the 'type' corresponds to" (Heb 9.24)

5. Application ideas

Identify 1-3 ways in which the passage should be applied today.

How to Reference "Old Testament Textual Analysis" Thesis in a Bibliography

Old Testament Textual Analysis.” A1-TermPaper.com, 2009, https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/ot-analysis-numbers-15/86805. Accessed 29 Sep 2024.

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