I wanted to respond to a question raised by Steve Cook in a comment on a previous post. Steve asked,

[W]hen you say that you tend to focus on the “historical setting” of biblical texts, do you mean the first, primitive setting—peeling back the layers to get at the onion-core? If so, why prioritize the core? How do you know you want dive down to a pre-scriptural level?

This, of course, is one of the problems of the historical critical method. It focused too much on the layers and not enough on the final form of the text. And since Steve and I both studied with Brevard Childs (Steve more than me), it is a problem we are both aware of.

When I talk about the historical setting of the text, I do mean the original historical context in which the text first arose. Obviously, this is not always something that we can discern. And when you get back to the oral stage, it becomes even more tricky. But I think the best understandings of the text come when we place it within this setting or at least acknowledge that we don’t know the setting.

This is, however, only a first step. Both as a philologist and a theologian (when I wear that hat), I am ultimately concerned with the final form of the text. This is the form that the faith community canonized and it is this form that is authoritative (whatever we decide that means). But I think our understanding of the final form is enriched by acknowledging and studying the earlier layers of the text. It provides us with a more textured — pun intended — reading of the final form.

It also provides us with a process that is analagous to how we use the text. Obviously, the original message of Hosea, for instance, was accepted as authoritative. But other material has been added to form the book of Hosea. This shows us how the text was received and used for another generation. I think this is similar to what we do when we receive the text and use it within the church (whether in theology, ethics, or perhaps most importantly preaching). This main difference, however, is that our use of the text does not become authoritative for later generations.

Next post in the series: Theology in the Layers