Recommendation for favorite or best resource for learning customs of New Testament times

Juanita
Juanita Member Posts: 1,339 ✭✭✭
edited November 2024 in English Forum

I will be teaching on this topic to high school students and am looking for a resource that is descriptive and engaging to students of this age group.  I welcome your ideas.

Thanks!

EDIT:  Ideally this would be a resource I have or can get through Logos.  If not, any other recommendations, too.

 

 

Comments

  • Brother Mark
    Brother Mark Member Posts: 945 ✭✭

    Edershiem's "Sketches of Jewish Social Life in the Days of Christ" is very good, but not excitingly conducive to keeping younger students eager to plunge in.  Then again, my assumption is that you are interested in Jewish customs in the New Testament era....  Perhaps you want Grecko-Roman customs? Something more Old Testament perhaps?

     

    EDIT: Logos offers a Edershiem collection HERE that includes the title above.

    "I read dead people..."

  • Juanita
    Juanita Member Posts: 1,339 ✭✭✭

    Hi Mark,

    Thanks for your response.  I do have Edersheim and agree it is not the most interesting reading material.  Yes, I am interested in Jewish customs in the New Testament era so from the beginning of the first century and inclusive of that century.  My objective is to motivate them to think of how life would be for them if they lived in that era of time.  I may have to write my own booklet.  [:D]

    Maybe I should look at home schooling material. ??

  • Rosie Perera
    Rosie Perera Member Posts: 26,194 ✭✭✭✭✭

    One that is presented in an engaging manner and might be interesting to high school students is A Time Travel to the World of Jesus.

    Here's an example of one of the 26 "windows" through which the book introduces what first century life was like:


    WINDOW
    7

    I do not know you, but make yourself at
    home

    Jack and Joy were impressed. They
    had not been in Judea long, and already their friend, Joachim, was doing his
    best to make them feel at home.

    They were even
    more impressed one night, after a knock on the door. At first they thought the
    visitors were friends of Joachim, because Joachim invited them in and gave them
    lodging. Their son was ill and Joachim called the doctor over, and payed him
    into the bargain. But during the conversation it sounded to Joy as if Joachim
    did not really know the people. She was right. Later she asked Joachim who they
    were, and he told her that he had never laid eyes on them before, but that they
    knew one of the families who had lived in his neighbourhood years ago.

    It really seemed
    as if the trouble Joachim went to for strangers
    was to him the most natural thing in the world.

    Was it?

    MEANING OF THE WINDOW

    Hospitality and boarding houses!

    Hospitality played a large role
    in the ancient world, and did not only revolve around family and friends, for
    whom you had to care anyway. Hospitality meant to receive strangers also and to
    accept responsibility for them while they were under your roof (Mt 25:35; the
    Greek word for hospitality that is
    used in Rom 12:13, Heb 13:2 or 1 Pet 4:9, implies, among other things,
    hospitality towards strangers). After his stay a stranger could leave either as
    a friend or as an enemy (cf Acts 28:7–10 where Paul leaves the island of
    Publius as a friend). But while the stranger stayed with host, he was embedded
    into the host’s group. The host had to cater to the guest’s needs in every way,
    as Joachim did when the boy was ill. Sometimes the host even had to defend his
    guest’s life with his own. The early Christians were bidden to show this kind
    of hospitality. In Romans 12:13 Paul lists hospitality along with the aid that
    believers owe their brothers. Peter mentions hospitality in connection with
    love (1 Pet 4:8–9).

    This is
    understandable. There was no system of hotels or boarding houses where people
    could stay (in The New Testament we read of an inn only in Lk 10:34). In Mark 14:14, Luke 2:7 and 22:11 a word is
    used that we can translate as room or
    guest room. If we keep in mind how
    many journeys we read of in the New Testament, the few references to inns are
    probably a sign that there were not so many of them. The inns were mostly of
    dubious character, and more care went into tending donkeys and camels, than
    into lodging people. An interesting apocryphal account of Paul’s night in such
    an inn tells of a great many bedbugs in the mattress. When the bedbugs
    discovered that Paul was their bedfellow, they all left. It goes without saying
    that Paul was not disturbed again that night!

    Travellers
    depended on friends, or even strangers, for lodging. (In our own history, when
    people still went on horseback, they often, at dusk, asked for lodging at a
    farmhouse on their way).

    But you could
    not simply travel, like a tramp, from one house to another. There were rules for guests as well as for hosts,
    and the rules were a safeguard against abuse. A Christian document of the first
    century, Didache, states, for
    example, that a stranger who calls himself a fellow-Christian and a preacher is
    a false prophet if he stays with you for longer than three days. In 2 John the
    elder says that no hospitality should be extended towards people who can harm
    the group. Believers should not show hospitality towards people who preach a
    false gospel (2 Jn 10–11). (Think, too, of Paul’s argument in favour of an
    apostle’s right to be cared for by the congregation as long as he stays with
    them.)

    We cannot go
    into these rules any further. What is important, is that the early Christians
    made good use of this system of hospitality when it came to Christian missions.
    Christian travellers or itinerant preachers could journey from one Christian
    group to another in the ancient world and always be certain that a local group
    would welcome and house them (cf Acts 14:28; 16:15,40; 17:7; 18:1–3, 26–27;
    21:16; note also the implication in Acts 15:3–4).

    Elders had to
    show hospitality to be good elders (1 Tim 3:2; Titus 1:8; see also 1 Tim 5:10).
    This is, of course, the core of the problem in the Johannine congregation in 3
    John. Diotrephes (who was probably some kind of elder or leader) refused to
    receive brothers sent by the elder. Gaius, however, does receive them, and so
    the elder praises him. John is very critical of Diotrephes and regards his
    refusal to receive the brothers as a break with the elder’s group, and
    therefore a break with the truth.[1]

     







    [1]
    Bruce Malina and Stephan Joubert, A Time
    Travel to the World of Jesus
    (Halfway House: Orion, 1997).



  • Juanita
    Juanita Member Posts: 1,339 ✭✭✭


    One that is presented in an engaging manner and might be interesting to high school students is A Time Travel to the World of Jesus.

    Rosie, that is right on!  I have it and am perusing it.  Perfectamundo.     [:P]

    Thanks!

  • Allen Browne
    Allen Browne Member Posts: 1,894 ✭✭✭

    I will be teaching on this topic to high school students and am looking for a resource that is descriptive and engaging to students of this age group.

    Most current commentaries now include the socio-rhetorical background for specific texts you are studying.

    To look up a specific term, consider this (which I think is part of the IVP Reference library):

    • Porter, Stanley E. and Craig A. Evans. Dictionary of New Testament Background: A Compendium of Contemporary Biblical Scholarship. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2000.

    For more general resources, search Logos site for "second temple". That should give the Judaistic background. Example:

    • Helyer, Larry R. Exploring Jewish Literature of the Second Temple Period : A Guide for New Testament Students. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2002.

    The Greco-Roman background also matters, e.g.:

    • Jeffers, James S. The Greco-Roman World of the New Testament Era : Exploring the Background of Early Christianity. Downers Grove, IL.: InterVarsity Press, 1999.

    Other suggestions:

    • Packer, J.I., Merrill Chapin Tenney and William White, Jr. Nelson's Illustrated Manners and Customs of the Bible. Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 1997.

    • deSilva, David Arthur. An Introduction to the New Testament : Contexts, Methods and Ministry Formation. Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity Press, 2004.

    • Vos, Howard Frederic. Nelson's New Illustrated Bible Manners & Customs : How the People of the Bible Really Lived. Nashville, TN: T. Nelson Publishers, 1999.

    • du Toit, A. B., J. L. de Villiers, I. J. du Plessis et al. Vol. 2, The New Testament Milieu. Guide to the New Testament. Halfway House: Orion Publishers, 1998.

    All those are available in Logos. Some (like the IVP and the Nelson resources) may be available in collections.

  • Juanita
    Juanita Member Posts: 1,339 ✭✭✭

    Allen,

    Thanks for the list.  A lot of helpful resources.