New Testament Background and Culture

Lynden O. Williams
Lynden O. Williams MVP Posts: 9,020
edited November 2024 in English Forum

What five (5) books do you consider indispensable for someone seeking to get an understanding on New Testament Background and culture?

I have Platinum, plus a lot of other stuff. I am focusing primarily on Logos software. If a must have is not in Logos, then list it please.

Thank you for your assistance. 

Mission: To serve God as He desires.

Comments

  • Philana Crouch
    Philana Crouch Member Posts: 2,151 ✭✭✭

    Hi Lynden,

    Here are some of my favorites:

    Honor, Patronage, Kinship and Purity by David A. deSilva

    The Essential IVP Reference Collection Version 3

    Christian Origins and the Question of God Series (3 vols.) by N. T. Wright

    I haven't finished the N.T. Wright books but I think he provides good background information. 

  • Lynden O. Williams
    Lynden O. Williams MVP Posts: 9,020

    Mission: To serve God as He desires.

  • Lynden O. Williams
    Lynden O. Williams MVP Posts: 9,020
  • Pam Larson
    Pam Larson Member Posts: 683 ✭✭

    I second Wright, especially The New Testament and the People of God, and IVP Bible Background Commentary. Others I've found helpful (all in Logos):

    Thiede, Carsten Peter. The Cosmopolitan World of Jesus: New Findings from Archaeology. London: SPCK, 2004.

    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.

    Mare, W. Harold. New Testament Background Commentary: A New Dictionary of Words, Phrases and Situations in Bible Order. Ross-shire, UK: Mentor, 2004.

    Beale, G. K., and D. A. Carson. Commentary on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament. Grand Rapids, MI; Nottingham, UK: Baker Academic; Apollos, 2007.

     

  • Alan Macgregor
    Alan Macgregor Member Posts: 2,438 ✭✭✭

    Lynden

    I would add Palestine in the Time of Jesus which gives insight into the social structures operating in Palestinian society in Jesus' day.

    Every blessing

    Alan

    iMac Retina 5K, 27": 3.6GHz 8-Core Intel Core i9; 16GB RAM;MacOS 10.15.5; 1TB SSD; Logos 8

    MacBook Air 13.3": 1.8GHz; 4GB RAM; MacOS 10.13.6; 256GB SSD; Logos 8

    iPad Pro 32GB WiFi iOS 13.5.1

    iPhone 8+ 64GB iOS 13.5.1

  • Ken McGuire
    Ken McGuire Member Posts: 2,075 ✭✭✭

    Many good books have been mentioned, but if I may suggest Wayne Meeks - The First Urban Christians, the social world of the Apostle Paul.

    The Gospel is not ... a "new law," on the contrary, ... a "new life." - William Julius Mann

    L8 Anglican, Lutheran and Orthodox Silver, Reformed Starter, Academic Essentials

    L7 Lutheran Gold, Anglican Bronze

  • Philana Crouch
    Philana Crouch Member Posts: 2,151 ✭✭✭

    Here is a short excerpt from the book Honor, Patronage, Kinship & Purity : Unlocking New Testament Culture it was one of my textbooks from undergrad. 

    [quote]




    “My words were taken out of context!” We frequently hear some prominent individual saying these words to object that a journalist has misrepresented his or her speech. Perhaps you have used this familiar expression to correct a false impression that has been created by a third party. This person may have used your exact words but removed them from the close connection with an event, a place or a series of other words that would have allowed them to convey your true meaning. Your words convey a very different meaning if a listener repeated them without also relating the social setting in which you said them or without explaining the events that evoked them. The potential for misunderstanding increases exponentially if that listener is communicating with someone from another culture, with different customs and even a different language. The reporter would need to explain what significations your words would have in your cultural context or else risk serious misunderstanding. If we would concern ourselves that our words not be taken out of context, or that we not report someone else’s words out of context, we should be far more careful with the words of Jesus, Paul or James—or, as so many Christians take these words to be, the words of God.

    Biblical scholars have grown increasingly aware of the importance of looking at texts not only in their historical or literary or social contexts but also in their cultural contexts. “Culture” includes those values, ways of relating and ways of looking at the world that its members share and that provide the framework for all communication. The readers of the New Testament shared certain values, such as honor, and codes of forming and maintaining relationships, such as patronage and kinship, and ways of ordering the world, expressed frequently in terms of purity. If we are to hear the texts correctly, we must apply ourselves to understand the culture out of which and to which they spoke. We need to recognize the cultural cues the authors have woven into their strategies and instructions. This enterprise prevents potential misreading of the texts. Modern readers, too, are fully enculturated into a set of values, ways of relating and so forth. Without taking some care to recover the culture of the first-century Greco-Roman writers and addressees, we will simply read the texts from the perspective of our cultural norms and codes. Negatively, then, this task is essential as a check against our impositions of our own cultural, theological and social contexts onto the text.

    David Arthur deSilva, Honor, Patronage, Kinship & Purity : Unlocking New Testament Culture (Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity Press, 2000), 16-18.



     

  • Michael Kinch
    Michael Kinch Member Posts: 1,217 ✭✭✭

    Lynden you might find "The Promise and the Blessing" by Michael Harbin helpful.  It is not available in Logos though I have found the print version very helpful.  I would like to see it in Logos.  Here is a description from christian book.

    Product Description

    Michael A. Harbin has written a book to fill the need for a single text that gives overviews of both Old and New Testaments in a unifying manner. This book shows how the entire Bible fits into a historical continuum. It traces the writing of the Bible as part of the history of the Israelite people and the nation of Israel, showing how the New Testament naturally flows out of the Old Testament, not only theologically, but historically. As such, it follows an historical order rather, than a strict canonical one.

    Demonstrating the historical unity between the two testaments, the book traces God's working in history to provide salvation. It begins with God's creation of the cosmos and the initial problem of the fall of man. It then traces God's solution to that problem as he selects first a man, Abraham, his line, and then the nation of Israel to provide the Messiah. Finally, it focuses on identifying the Messiah in the person of Jesus Christ and how the message of the gospel was promulgated to the world.

    Product Information

    Format: Hardcover
    Number of Pages: 640
    Vendor: Zondervan
    Publication Date: 2003
  • Simon’s Brother
    Simon’s Brother Member Posts: 6,831 ✭✭✭

    Thanks Philana somehow I seem to have missed the deSilva title looks good.  I'll have to check that one out further.

  • Philana Crouch
    Philana Crouch Member Posts: 2,151 ✭✭✭

    Thanks Philana somehow I seem to have missed the deSilva title looks good.  I'll have to check that one out further.

    It's a very good book. Also the IVP Dictionaries (OT and NT have articles on Honor and Shame).

  • Lynden O. Williams
    Lynden O. Williams MVP Posts: 9,020

    Mission: To serve God as He desires.

  • Lynden O. Williams
    Lynden O. Williams MVP Posts: 9,020

    Many good books mentioned above. For another reference text, consider

    http://www.logos.com/product/9934/the-eerdmans-dictionary-of-early-judaism

     

    Thanks Dennis, looks very promising.

    Mission: To serve God as He desires.

  • David Salazar
    David Salazar Member Posts: 205 ✭✭

    Lynden

    I would add Palestine in the Time of Jesus which gives insight into the social structures operating in Palestinian society in Jesus' day.

    Every blessing

    Alan

    At the Seminary at Andrews University, the book mentioned above was one of our textbooks.  Can't remember what particular NT class because it was an intensive week as part of a NT Study Tour of Israel, Greece and Turkey.

     

  • Room4more
    Room4more Member Posts: 1,730 ✭✭✭


    What five (5) books do you consider indispensable for someone seeking to get an understanding on New Testament Background and culture?

    I have Platinum, plus a lot of other stuff. I am focusing primarily on Logos software. If a must have is not in Logos, then list it please.

    Thank you for your assistance. 


    I would do a search for books concerning the Manners and Customs, since they would be era specific. Logos lists a few…..

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