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Anything New To Say? |
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Another group of essays on
Amos and Hosea? After 2700 years, what can there possibly be left to say? It all
depends, of course, on what counts as “new” discoveries worthy of publication.
Once upon a time I was a
pharmaceutical chemist. It has been a while! That became crystal clear when I
bought the current edition of the CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics
for my stepson to use in his chemistry classes this year at St. Olaf. Mine was
the 37th edition and the size of a large Bible; his is the 88th edition and the
size of a small suitcase. Apparently, new things have come to light since I was
last in a chemistry lab!
Can new things come to light
in Bible and theology as well? I recall writing a paper as a first-year
seminarian in which I bemoaned the fact that, whereas only a few months earlier
I had been doing quite sophisticated scientific research, now (as a new
seminarian) I felt like I was being fed canned learning. As a chemist I had been
seeking the truth; now, I thought, I was consigned to receiving
the truth. That experience has given me a strong sense of solidarity with other
second-career students whose introduction to seminary seems similar.
Don’t get me wrong, a certain
amount of receiving learning is a good and necessary thing. Pastors and
theologians need to know many things: the tradition and the teachings of the
faith, the Bible and the history of the church, the practices of ministry and
the culture in which we live. Not to know these things is to cheat congregations
of the teaching and leadership they deserve and quite likely to lead them into
heresy. But we don’t teach and learn the tradition simply so students and
pastors can parrot it back. Had I understood the task that way, I could not have
remained in seminary. Truth couldnt be merely something written in the books or
back there in the past; it had to be also something out there to be sought.
Happily, the teacher for whom
I wrote the essay had a similar view. Never fear, Art Becker wrote on my paper,
there is plenty of room in the theological enterprise for new research and new
learning. His was a welcome voice; it helped me stay in seminary, and it has
proven to be true—not least in the area of biblical studies. There are, in fact,
new things to be learned, new methods to be employed, and new encounters to be
experienced.
But there is also a different
path to “new” discoveries. As believers, we don’t read the Bible the same way we
read newspapers and magazines—or even scientific treatises or critical biblical
commentaries. Those things we read “extensively” in order to learn what they
have to say, incorporate the new learnings into our thought patterns, and then
move on to the next item. But, as historians of reading point out, such
extensive reading is a relatively recent phenomenon. Earlier in the history of
reading, people read fewer texts but read them “intensively”—“over and over
again, usually aloud and in groups, so that a narrow range of traditional
literature became deeply impressed on their consciousness.”1
This, says Sven Birkerts, is
vertical reading rather than horizontal reading, “inscribing the words deeply on
the slate of the attention.” “This is ferocious reading—prison or ‘desert
island’ reading”—“not unlike what students of scripture practice upon their
texts.”2 And from this kind of reading, altogether “new” discoveries
emerge: not providing new data (though that may sometimes happen), not even
seeing what no one has ever seen before (though that, too, might happen), but
seeing things in a new light, in a new place, in a new way, with new
connections, by a new person, and for a new audience—and such discoveries are
always worth publishing and worth reading. As Birkerts notes, these new readings
derive not from new facts, but from new wisdom, new resonance, and they require
deep time to develop: “No deep time, no resonance; no resonance, no wisdom. The
only remaining oases [of deep time] are churches (for those who still worship)
and the offices of therapists.”3 A gift we dare not squander!
So, two kinds of discovery:
the discoveries of scholarship and research that still beckon, because,
surprisingly, horizontal reading and research come up with new things to learn
and report; and the discoveries of depth and wisdom that still lie open,
because, equally surprisingly, vertical reading produces new insights from
ancient texts despite the generations that lie between them and us. The
discoveries of research make us say, “Aha!” and readjust our thinking; the
discoveries of wisdom make us mute and readjust our lives. Both have their place
in biblical scholarship, and both continue to produce new essays on old books.
What a privilege to be involved in such an enterprise!
F.J.G.
1Robert Darnton,
“First Steps towards a History of Reading,” Australian Journal of French
Studies 23 (1986) 5–30; cited in Sven Birkerts, The Gutenberg Elegies:
The Fate of Reading in an Electronic Age (New York: Fawcett Columbine, 1994)
71.
2Birkerts, Gutenberg Elegies, 72.
3Ibid., 75–76.
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