Summer 2016/Pasadena

OT517

Bunn

OT517: OLD TESTAMENT BOOK STUDY: Genesis (4 Units: 160 hours). Daniel D. Bunn Jr.


DESCRIPTION: This course involves reading Genesis section by section and studying in more detail a chapter or two from each section with the aid of a commentary, chapters, and articles. It considers major themes and motifs that run through the book, and the nature of the book’s unity.

LEARNING OUTCOMES: Having successfully completed this course, students will have demonstrated that they (1) have read the book carefully and are familiar with its contents and themes; (2) can interpret passages within it in their own right and in their socio-historical, literary, and canonical contexts; (3) have identified central issues in the critical study of it; (4) can articulate its primary theological and ethical concerns; (5) can use English-based tools for interpreting it; (6) can recognize hermeneutical issues arising from the diverse contexts of contemporary readers; and (7) can interpret it faithfully and creatively in the context of their congregation, of the contemporary world and of their own lives.

COURSE FORMAT: This class meets daily for four-hour sessions for two weeks for a total of 40 instructional hours in the classroom, for lecture and discussion. After the in-class portion, the class will consist for the remainder of the quarter of independent work on assignments.

REQUIRED READING: Approximately 1,080 pages required

The Bible—CEB, NSRV, or TNIV translation [ca. 50 pp. assigned].

Fretheim, Terence E., “Genesis,” pp. 321–673 in The New Interpreter’s Bible: Genesis to Leviticus (Volume 1). ISBN: 978-0687278145, Pub. Price $57.11 [ca. 350 pp. assigned]. [Available for free via Ministry Matters on Fuller’s library page:http://www.ministrymatters.com.naomi.fuller.edu:2048/library/#/tnib/f4ccdf0dc048754f1455601b73efe455/introduction.html.]

Hendel, Ronald, ed. Reading Genesis: Ten Methods. Cambridge University Press, 2010. ISBN: 978-0521732390, Pub. Price $29.99 [ca. 246 pp.].

Moberly, R. W. L. The Theology of the Book of Genesis. Cambridge University Press, 2009. ISBN: 978-0521685382, Pub. Price $29.99 [298 pp.]

The following material, available on eReserves [ca. 140 pp.]:

Dora R. Mbuwayesango, “How Local Divine Powers were Suppressed: A Case of Mwari of the Shona,” pp. 259–68 in R. S. Sugirtharajah, The Postcolonial Biblical Reader [10 pp.].

Jean-Pierre Ruiz, “Abram and Sarai Cross the Border: A Reading of Genesis 12:10–20,” in Readings from the Edges.

Randy Woodley, “Early Dialogue in the Community of Creation,” pp. 92–108 in Steve Heinrichs, Buffalo Shout, Salmon Cry [16 pp.].

Ched Myers, “From Garden to Tower: Genesis 1–11 as a Critique of Civilization and an Invitation to Indigenous Re-Visioning,” pp. 109–126 in Steve Heinrichs, Buffalo Shout, Salmon Cry [17 pp.].

John Walters, “Who Was Hagar?”, pp. 187–205 in Cain Hope Felder, Stony the Road We Trod [19 pp.].

Lai Ling Elizabeth Ngan, “Neither Here nor There: Boundary and Identity in the Hagar Story,” pp. 70–83 in Mary F. Foskett and Jeffrey Kah-Jin Kuan, eds., Ways of Being, Ways of Reading [14 pp.].

Donna E. Allen, “Rituals of Resistance to Strengthen Intergenerational Relations,” ch. 4 in Dale P. Andrews and Robert London Smith Jr., eds., Black Practical Theology.

Chapters related to Genesis, pp. 27–55, in Carol A. Newsom and Sharon H. Rings, eds., Women’s Bible Commentary [30 pp.].

ASSIGNMENTS AND ASSESSMENT:

  1. Approximately 1,080 pp. of assigned readings in the Old Testament and secondary literature (5%) [This assignment relates to learning outcomes 1, 2, 3, and 4.] [65 hours].

  1. Weekly postings (during the weeks following the face-to-face meetings) on Moodle with participation in online discussion in connection with the assigned reading (5%). [This assignment relates to learning outcomes 1, 2, 3, and 4.] [5 hours].

  1. Class attendance during the two-week in-class period. Barring extreme circumstances, if students are unable to participate in all of the in-class meetings, then they will not be able to pass the class. [This assignment relates to learning outcomes 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6.] [40 hours].

  1. One 750- to 1000-word critical review of Moberly, The Theology of the Book of Genesis (25%) [This assignment relates to learning outcome 3] [15 hours].
  1. One 1300- to 1600-word interpretive working paper on one of the designated texts (25%). This paper will become the basis for the final exegesis paper (Assignment #6) [This assignment relates to learning outcomes 1, 2, and 4] [10 hours].
  1. A 2,500- to 3000-word exegesis paper, which will cover the same passage as Assignment #5 (this assignment will be designated as a “signature assignment”; 40%). [This assignment relates to learning outcomes 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7.] [25 hours].

PREREQUISITES: BI500 or NE502; OT500 or OT501 or OT502.

RELATIONSHIP TO CURRICULUM: Counts as a biblical elective for the 120 MDiv, 80 MAT, and 80 MATM Programs (Fall 2015). Meets the OTBK requirement for the MAT Program (Winter 2010).

FINAL EXAMINATION: None.


NOTE: This ECD is a reliable guide to the course design but is subject to modification. Textbook prices are set by publishers and are subject to change.

For your convenience, order these texts online through the Archives Bookshop.