Daily Gleanings (10 June 2019)
Daily Gleanings from Michael Kruger on early Christian scribal culture and from Jake Mailhot on the eschatology of the classic Christian creeds.
Daily Gleanings from Michael Kruger on early Christian scribal culture and from Jake Mailhot on the eschatology of the classic Christian creeds.
Daily Gleanings from John Meade about his edition of Hexaplaric fragments for Job 22–42 and Brill about open access articles for 50th anniversary of JSJ.
Daily Gleanings about criteria for determining authenticity and Brill’s “Dictionary of Ancient Greek.”
Daily Gleanings from Benj Giffone on technology and worship and Collin Cornell on Brevard Childs and Julius Wellhausen.
Daily Gleanings about Paul, the Law, and PDF versions of the “SBL Handbook of Style.”
I’ve been grateful to be able to materially update two prior posts with additional content:
Daily Gleanings from Larry Hurtado about early Christian investment in manuscripts and “extant” evidence.
Daily Gleanings with Craig Keener on Acts and Romans from the 2019 Stone-Campbell Journal conference.
Daily Gleanings from Roger Pearse about the translation of the King James Version and AWOL about Brill’s “Digital Biblical Studies” series.
Daily Gleanings from Freedom about the new Pause extension for Chrome and from Michael Kruger about contemporary cultural influences on the New Perspective.
Daily Gleanings on “Paul, a New Covenant Jew” and from J. T. Ellison on productivity as a writer.
University College London has posted on YouTube their 1971 documentary Greek Papyri: The Rediscovery of the Ancient World.
HT: Tommy Wasserman
Sean Hadley, one of our current PhD students in Humanities, positively reviews Robbie Castleman, Darian Lockett, and Stephen Presley’s edited volume Explorations in Interdisciplinary Reading: Theological, Exegetical, and Reception Historical Perspectives (Pickwick, 2017). Along the way, Sean provides some kind comments about my contribution in the volume.
...On theLAB, Dougald Mclaurin discusses how faculty can “work with librarians to help students write better papers.”
Similarly, see also these prior discussions about how to use your school’s library or other libraries near you.
From Brill:
With the publication of Keeping Watch in Babylon, Brill is happy to have published the 100th volume of the series Culture and History of the Ancient Near East.
...
Freedom discusses how to use their “block all except” whitelisting feature to block out distractions and interruptions.
For more discussion of Freedom, see these prior posts.
John Meade surveys ch. 4 of Ronald Hendel and Jan Joosten’s How Old Is the Hebrew Bible?(YUP, 2018) and promises a follow-up post “attempting to engage the authors on one of their examples from chapter 4 with a view to showing how they think diachony and TC work together.”
...IBR has a new research group on “Linguistics and the Biblical Text.”
HT: William Ross, Mike Aubrey
The University of London’s Department of History provides an open list of “justifications. addenda, and corrigenda” for A Concise Dictionary of Akkadian (Harrassowitz, 1999).
...Mike Aubrey points to a full set of video recordings of lectures from the recent SEBTS conference on linguistics and NT Greek. I’ve included this playlist below as well. The “hamburger” button in the upper left-hand corner will expand the playlist contents with a list of speakers and their topics.
Larry Hurtado reviews Michael Dormandy’s recent TC essay, “How the Books Became the Bible: The Evidence for Canon Formation From Work-Combination in Manuscripts.”
...Daily Gleanings about the “Text and Canon Institute” and improving performance by minimizing distractions.
Daily Gleanings about digitizing medieval manuscripts and plans for the NA29 and UBS6.
Daily Gleanings about perfectionism, to-do lists, and the “spirits in prison” in 1 Peter.
Daily Gleanings about Codex Robertsonianus and the application of “YHWH texts” to Jesus.
I’ve been posting a couple times a day to different social media channels with helpful links and commentary I’ve found. This is changing (at least for now).