My New Site and Blog: Archaic Christianity

21 November 2007

I have decided to split blogs and move my biblical studies related work to a new site, ArchaicChristianity.com. The blog is now basically functional and I have some book reviews up. I will continue to blog technical and personal thoughts here on this blog. When my biblical studies work crosses into the world of technology, you will probably see posts in both locations. If there is anything particularly important, I may crosspost that as well. But, in general, I think it is time for me to split my work.

If you have any questions, thoughts, or suggestions, please drop me a note.

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Constantine's Bible

17 September 2007

This weekend I read an interesting book. Here's the summary from my book review:

Dungan has written a very interesting book in his Constantine's Bible: Politics and the Making of the New Testament. The point of the book can be summarized as follows: the idea of a canon comes from the Greeks, the early church used these ideas and came to a rough consensus, then Constantine jumped in and squashed all innovation and/or ability for the church to discuss this intelligently without fear of getting killed by said emperor. Now for a little more detail.

Read more...

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Hot Cup Of Akkadian Joe

01 September 2007

James, you're a horrible influence on my checkbook. I read your post on Eisenbraun's Akkadian mug and couldn't resist. Oh, I did for a while. I held out. Frugal-Eric told me "But you don't even know Akkadian yet! And you don't REALLY need to learn it." But the Not-So-Frugal-Eric said "You've already bought that Akkadian grammar. Sure you haven't started learning the language yet, but if you do, you'll have a coffee mug to help. And it's cool in that really geeky way that everything you do is geeky." The battle was fierce, but eventually Not-So-Frugal-Eric won and I bought the mug. I hang my head in shame...

But now I am over it. The mug is actually quite nice. I picked up a mug with Greek on it at SBL a few years ago, so this brings my total ancient language mug collection count up to two. But this mug is much better than the other one, which is plastic and of low quality. But not this one. It has a comfortable handle, is a good size, and made of quality stuff. I dig it...

Me With Enuma Elish Mug

The text of the mug is the first bit of the Enuma Elish. You can find the text of the Enuma Elish here. The Enuma Elish is an ancient babylonian story of the creation of the world. For more information, check out the article on Wikipedia.

If you find yourself insanely jealous of my purchase, you can get your own Akkadian mug here. The purchasing experience was pretty good. The delivery was exceptional. I paid for basic shipping and got it first class. Showed up the day after I got the email saying it was shipped! Thanks, Eisenbrauns!

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Review of Archaeology Exhibit at Fair Park

08 June 2007

So around 4:00 on Tuesday my wife and I hit an exhibit showing at Fair Park here in Dallas. The exhibit is called "From Abraham To Jesus", though the Exhibit website calls it "Ancient Treasures of the Holy Land". It had materials from about 3000 BC to 30 AD.

Most of the exhibited items were real, though a few were admitted to be replicas of the real thing. Most of the earlier materials were crude pots and such, but that is to be expected. The Egyptian artifacts went back to roughly 3000 BC, though the biblical artifacts don't start till later (obviously, since Abraham wasn't till later). Artifacts came from Egypt, Canaan, Greece, Cyprus, Babylonia, Assyria, and maybe that's it.

There were a few highlights for me. The first one came when we went from the so-so quality middle-eastern pottery to the very well done Greek pottery. The contrast was obvious. Man those Greeks new what they were doing...

My second highlight was the ossuaries. Ossuaries are essentially ancient bone boxes. After someone died, they would be laid in a tomb for a while until their flesh completely rotted. Then to make room for more family members, their bones were moved to small stone boxes. These are the ossuaries. I would say that the ones they had on display (I believe there were three) were about 3 1/2 foot long, 1 1/2 foot wide, and 2 foot tall (that is guestimating).

The last ossuary was the most interesting of the three. It had writing on the top in two languages, and writing on the side in one. Before I talked to the curator about it I took a gander and recognized one of the inscriptions on the top easily. It was "ΑΛΕΧΑΝΔΡΟΥ;" (hope that unicode comes out for you). Roughly translated, that means "Of Alexander." At first I thought that meant "The Son Of Alexander", because that is exactly how you would see that written in many Greek texts. The other text on the top was clearly either Aramaic or Hebrew, but I couldn't make out much of it. The text on the side looked like uncial Greek, but I didn't make it out at first.

Then the curator chatted with us. It was his opinion that this was the ossuary of none other than the son of Simon the Cyrenian mentioned in Matt 27:32, Mark 15:21, and Luke 23:26. Mark 15:21 mentions that he had two sons, and one of their names was Alexander. I couldn't make out the Aramaic/Hebrew, but he said it was "son of Simon", and with that little bit of information it was easy to go "Oh, that text on the side is ΣΙΜΟΝ", or "Simon" (Sorry, don't have a convenient uncial unicode font:) ). I really have no clue if he is correct, but it was nice to look at it anyway. I try my best to be skeptical of these amazing finds these days since some are turning out to be wrong and/or forgeries. He named a couple familiar scholar names that supposedly agreed, so it is not too easy for me to dismiss. Regardless, I enjoyed the talk we had quite a bit.

The coolest thing there were two scraps from the one and only dead sea scrolls. I've never seen 2200 year old writings in the flesh. Have you? I own some 500 year old paper, but that doesn't really compare. On one of the fragments I could barely make out any glyphs at all. On the other I could make out quite a bit. The light was dim, so that made both of them quite difficult to look at. I was surprised at how small the writing was. Those scribes must have had good eyesight.

My only complaint about the exhibit was the audio tour. The did the audio explanations in story form, a grandfather archaeologist talking to his young granddaughter. Personally, I found it really cheezy. Kids might like it, but it irked me after a while and I just couldn't listen any longer. If you're an adult, I would recommend just reading the exhibit displays and looking at the goods.

I believe the tickets were around $16 for adults. There were discounts for students. I bet there were discounts for children. Given my interest in the subject matter, I thought it was well worth it. I expected more artifacts than they had, but I still have to give it a thumbs up.

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More Books and Reviews

31 January 2007

I finished the last books of January a few days ago. First was J. R. R. Tolkien's The Two Towers. As virtually everyone knows, it seems, that is a great book. The other I finished was another superb book, though not as many know it. Richard Hays' Echoes of Scripture in the Letters of Paul is an excellent treatment of, you guessed it, how Paul uses the Hebrew Scriptures. See the review here, if you are interested.

Though I read both of these a while ago, I also posted a review of Linear B and Related Scripts and of John Stewart's America (The Book).

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CNN's "After Jesus"

19 December 2006
Tomorrow, Wed Dec 20th 2006, CNN will be airing a special called "After Jesus: The First Christians". More info here. Looks interesting. We'll see how it turns out.

Thanks to Scot McKnight for the heads up.
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