Fall 2000
REL 611 The Idea of Scripture
Mondays 1:00-3:30 p.m. in HL 504

Instructor: JIM WATTS (Ph.D.)
Office: 505 HL; Phone: 443-5713; E-mail: jwwatts@syr.edu

According to the traditions themselves as well as their academic interpreters, a distinguishing feature of Western religious traditions is their attitudes towards and uses of scripture. This seminar will explore the various forms and uses of scripture in Judaism, Christianity and Islam, starting with the idea of scripture in modern cultures and tracing it back through early modern, medieval and late antique cultures. The seminar will end by exploring the religious, literary, and political factors that affected the development and canonization of scripture in ancient Judaism and early Christianity, and shaped the idea of authoritative scripture in all three Western religious traditions.

Course Requirements:
Students are expected to discuss in class all the required readings (listed below after Assignment) and as much additional literature (listed as Background) necessary to understand the developments under discussion.  In addition, each student will (1) prepare and present a report on one additional book or set of essays (listed after Report), and (2) write a substantive and original research paper on a subject related to the course topic, presenting the class with a preliminary summary during one of the last three class meetings.

Texts:
John Barton, Holy Writings, Sacred Text: the Canon in Early Christianity (Westminster John Knox, 1997)
David J. A. Clines, The Bible and the Modern World (Sheffield, 1997)
Moshe Halbertal, People of the Book: Canon, Meaning, and Authority (Harvard, 1997)
John F.A. Sawyer, Sacred Languages and Sacred Texts (Routledge, 1999)
    Most of the articles, except those preceded by an minus (-) in the list below, are available as a course reader at Marshall Square copy center, one copy of which has been placed in the Religion Department lounge. Most are also available on reserve in Bird Library, except those preceded by an asterix (*) in the list below.
    For further resources relevant to the topic of this course, consult the Supplementary readings, the other articles in the collections cited below and also the annotated bibliography in Canonization and Decanonization 435-506.

Topics and Readings (for full citations, see bibliography below):
 

Day Topic Texts:
Aug 28 Introduction
Sep 4 Labor Day No Class
Sep 11 Scripture in the Modern World Assignment: Clines, Bible and the Modern World (all)
Denny, "Recitation of the Quran" 
*Greenberg, "On the Political Use of the Bible in Modern Israel"
Halbertal, People of the Book 129-34
Hill, "Charles Augustus Briggs, Modernism and the Rise ..."
Phy, "The Bible and American Popular Culture"
Report: Biderman, Scripture and Knowledge
Sep 18 Scripture in Modern Scholarship Assignment: J.Z. Smith, "Sacred Persistence"
J.Z. Smith, “Canons, Catalogues and Classics” 
W.C. Smith, "The Study of Religion and the Study of the Bible"
Sheppard, “Canon”
Halbertal, People of the Book 1-10
Hettema, “The Canon: Authority and Fascination”
Wimbush, "Introduction: And the Students Shall Teach Them"
Background: -Neil, "Criticism and Theological Use," CHB 3:238-293
Report: Kort, Take, Read
Supplementary: Frei, The Eclipse of Biblical Narrative
Sep 25 Reformation and Early Modernity: Assignment: Greenspahn, "Biblical Scholars"
Halbertal, People of the Book 90-128, 137-144
Kugel, "The Bible in the University,"
Levenson, "Theological Consensus or Historicist Evasion?"
Background: -Bainton, "Bible in the Reformation," CHB 3:1-37
-Crehan, "Bible in the Roman Catholic Church," CHB 3:199-237
Report: Legendre, “La totémisation de la société"
Supplementary: Reventlow, The Authority of the Bible
Oct 2 Middle Ages Assignment: Al-Azmeh, “The Muslim Canon"
W.C. Smith, "Scripture as Form and Concept"
*Morey, Book and Verse 1-47
*Pulcini, Exegesis as Polemical Discourse 13-56
-Rosenthal, "... Bible in Medieval Judaism," CHB 2:252-279
Background: -Dijk, "Bible in Liturgical Use," CHB 2:220-251
-Smalley, "Bible in the Medieval Schools," CHB 2:197-219
-Articles under "Vernacular Scriptures," CHB 2:338-491
Report: Griffiths, Religious Reading
Supplementary: Wheeler, Applying the Canon in Islam
Oct  9 Yom Kippur No Class
Oct 16 Late Antiquity: Christianity Assignment: Barton, Holy Writings, Sacred Text (all)
Childs, “The Problem of the Christian Bible”
*D.M. Smith, "When did the Gospels become Scripture?"
*Van der Horst, "Sortes: Sacred Books ..."
Luke 1-2; 2 Timothy 3:14-17
Background: *Spatharakis, “Early Christian Illustrated Gospel” 
*Dael, “Biblical Cycles on Church Walls”
-Lamb, "...Bible in the Liturgy," CHB 1:563-586
Supplementary: Campenhausen, Formation 
Oct 23 Late Antiquity: Judaism Assignment: *Alexander, "Homer, the Prophet..."
Halbertal, People of the Book 45-89
*Rutgers, "Importance of Scripture" 287-303
Zevit, “The Second-Third Century Canonization"
Background: -Vermes, "Bible and Midrash," CHB 1:199-231
Supplementary: Neusner & Green, Writing with Scripture
Oct 30 Hellenism and Second Temple Judaism Assignment: Halbertal, People of the Book 11-44
Sawyer, Sacred Languages and Sacred Texts (all)
Oxtoby, "`Telling in Their Own Tongue'"
Letter of Aristeas
Background: -Roberts, "Books in the Greaco-Roman," CHB 1:48-66
Nov 6 The Origins of Scripture: Books Assignment: Kooij, "The Canonization of Ancient Books"
Lang, "The 'Writings': A Hellenistic Literary Canon"
Lust, "Quotation formulae and Canon in Qumran"
*Ulrich, "The Bible in the Making"
Background: Exodus 24, Deuteronomy 31
Supplementary: Davies, Scribes and Schools
Nov 13 Ancient Near Eastern Textual Traditions
Paper presentations
Assignment: *Lambert, "Ancestors, Authors, and Canonicity"
*Rothberg-Halton, "Canonicity in Cuneiform Texts"?
*Lieberman, "Canonical and Official Cuneiform Texts"
Background: -Wiseman, "Books in the Ancient Near East" CHB 1:30-48
Supplementary: Hallo, The Context of Scripture
Nov 20 AAR/SBL in Nashville No Class
If you are in Nashville, check out:
"The Meaning of the Bible in Jewish, Christian, and Islamic Traditions"
S125 Sunday, 19 November 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm Mississippi Blrm
"Persia and Torah" ??
Nov 27 The Origins of Scripture: Icons
Paper presentations
Assignment: *Cornelius, "The Many Faces of God:
*Mettinger, "Israelite Aniconism"
*Toorn, “The Iconic Book"
Dec 4 The Origins of Scripture: Politics
Paper presentations
Assignment: Borg, “Canon and Social Control”
*Levinson, Deuteronomy vii-viii, 3-22, 144-157
Watts, Reading Law 131-161
2 Kings 22-23, Nehemiah 8
Background: *Frei, "Persian Imperial Authorization"

Course Bibliography: