{"id":14891,"date":"2016-08-18T01:41:35","date_gmt":"2016-08-18T06:41:35","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/moreand-more-scripture-lives-a-personal-account-by-a-noted-classics-scholar\/"},"modified":"2016-08-18T01:41:35","modified_gmt":"2016-08-18T06:41:35","slug":"moreand-more-scripture-lives-a-personal-account-by-a-noted-classics-scholar","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/moreand-more-scripture-lives-a-personal-account-by-a-noted-classics-scholar\/","title":{"rendered":"MORE\nAND MORE, SCRIPTURE LIVES! \nA PERSONAL ACCOUNT BY A NOTED CLASSICS SCHOLAR"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=MsoNormal align=center style='text-align:center;line-height:normal'><b>E.M. Blaiklock<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><i>[E.M. Blaiklock taught Latin, Greek, and ancient and biblical history at the University of Auckland, New Zealand, for more than forty years. He is well known for his books on classics, history, and the New Testament, and also as an essayist and journalist. This article was given in November of 1972 as the presidential address to the New Zealand Scripture Union.]<\/i><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>It is thirty years since, in strong reaction against Bultmann and his school, A.G. Olmstead insisted that the narratives of John could be the oldest part of the gospel tradition, going back to Aramaic narratives earlier than A.D. 40. A long sequence of small archaeological discoveries have all, since the Second World War, pressed toward that same conclusion. To list a few of them: First, John, much more frequently than the Synoptists, uses the term \u201crabbi\u201d. This was thought to indicate a second-century origin for the Gospel, when the term \u201crabbi\u201d began to be used in the synagogues. However, in 1930 E.L. Sukenik discovered an ossuary in an ancient tomb that was certainly much earlier than the second century. These earthenware or stone containers for the bones of the dead bore names and titles, and Sukenik\u2019s find bore the title of Rabbi Theodotion.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>This was two years before the Nazareth Decree was published, that strange slab of stone from Nazareth bearing a decree of Claudius that throws vivid light on the story of the empty tomb. And in 1935 G.H. Roberts found a fragment of papyrus in the collection in Manchester\u2019s John Rylands Library that may be dated to before A.D. 130. It contained a portion of John\u2019s text. In 1935 two other scholars published a larger papyrus fragment of slightly later date containing a harmony of the Gospels, including passages from John. Books, in those days, were not rapidly multiplied or rapidly worn <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'><i>BSP<\/i> 6:1 (Winter 1977) p. 2<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;line-height:normal'>out, so tattered remnants from a thousand miles away from Ephesus, where the book was written, and dating to something near a generation of John\u2019s last activities, support with great strength the authority and historical worth of the Gospel.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Ossuary inscriptions also bear the common names of John\u2019s Gospel, which was irresponsibly dismissed as fictional \u2014 not only Mary but also Martha, Elizabeth, Salome, Johanna, and others. The name Lazarus, a form for Eleazar, is common. Topographical allusions have similarly been under strong attack, on the allegation that the writer did not know Palestine. Father Vincent has uncovered and identified Gabbatha, or The Pavement, a fine Roman stone floor under the Ecce Homo Arch, 2,500 square meters of it1 It was the <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=center style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:center; line-height:normal'><b><i>Roman pavement beneath the Ecce Homo Arch in Jerusalem<\/i><\/b><b>.<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'><i>BSP<\/i> 6:1 (Winter 1977) p. 3<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;line-height:normal'>court of the Tower of Antonia, headquarters of the Jerusalem garrison, a rocky elevation above the surrounding terrain, very properly called Gabbatha, \u201can elevation\u201d. The importance of this identification is that it takes the tradition back to a date before the Great Rebellion of A.D. 66 to 70. When the city fell, the Pavement was lost under fallen masonry. Other names and places \u2014 Aenon and Sychar, for two examples out of many \u2014 have been similarly identified, and in like fashion point to a pre-rebellion tradition.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Recent archaeology has destroyed much nonsense and will destroy more. And I use the word nonsense deliberately, for theories and speculations find currency in biblical scholarship that would not be tolerated for a moment in any other branch of literary or historical criticism. Alfred Loisy, the French modernist scholar, suggested that John, or whoever wrote John (Loisy held the theory of mid-second-century origin) added five colonnades to the pool of John 5 simply to remind the reader of the five books of the Law, the Pentateuch, which Jesus came to fulfill. Israeli excavations have quite recently shown that before A.D. 70 there was, in fact, a large rectangular pool with a colonnade on each of the four sides, and one across the middle.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=center style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:center; line-height:normal'><b>An Illustration From Athens<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>In May, 1972, I chanced upon a sculptured panel of stone in the Athens Archaeological Museum. It depicted the myth of the worship of the Earth Mother, Demeter, the ruins of whose temple stand at Eleusis, now an industrial suburb of Athens. Kore, daughter of Demeter, had been carried off by Pluto, god of the underworld, to be his bride, and in desperate search for her daughter, the legend said, Demeter was hospitably received by the king of Eleusis. She was entertained by him until Zeus, the chief god, forced a compromise by which Kore stayed in the underworld for six months and returned to earth to her mother for the remaining six months of the year. Hence, winter and summer, the reflection of the Earth Mother\u2019s grief and withdrawal, bounty and joy.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Hence, too, a religion, not ignoble, whereby each year specially prepared and purified initiates were received into the cult, and were said to share Kore\u2019s resurrection and be \u201cborn again.\u201d This was the sort of myth that C.S. Lewis thought had some premonitory significance of future truth. The exact nature of the ceremonies of initiation that took place at the Eleusis temple is a mystery, for the \u201cborn again\u201d were not allowed to divulge what took place, but we know that the climax, when the great spiritual renewal was thought <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'><i>BSP<\/i> 6:1 (Winter 1977) p. 4<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;line-height:normal'>to take place, was marked by the uplifting of an ear of corn, the symbol of death and resurrection.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>The ritual arose from the fact that, according to the legend, when Demeter left the king\u2019s house, in return for the hospitality she had received she gave to the little prince Triptolemos a grain of wheat. She told him it had to be planted and to die, and if it died would bear much fruit. This is how corn came to man, and since Demeter was also called Ceres, we perpetuate the old story whenever we eat cereals.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>But in the Archaeological Museum I came much nearer to reality before the sculptured panel. It showed Demeter presenting the grain of wheat to the prince. I did not lack a text when I spoke next day to the Athens Evangelical Church: \u201cAnd there were certain Greeks among those who came up to worship at the festival, and they came to Philip and asked him, saying: \u2018Sir, we would see Jesus.\u2019 And Jesus said: \u2018Truly, I tell you, except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die, it remains a corn of wheat. If it dies, it brings forth much fruit\u2019,\u201d (John 12:20ff.). The Lord was telling the visitors that they had an inkling of truth in one of their own cults. How Paul picked up the thread (1 Cor. 15:35\u201338), obviously aware of Christ\u2019s saying, which John was not to write down for another forty years, is another story. He was writing to Corinth, and the road to Corinth from Athens, which he trod, runs through Eleusis.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=center style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:center; line-height:normal'><b>A Letter to Laodicea<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>The month of May, 1972, was indeed for me a month of new awareness, especially about John and Paul. Round the seven churches of Asia, and in John\u2019s own Ephesus, I saw illustration of what I knew, that the Word of God is alive and relevant, continually opening new vistas of understanding. Laodicea, Hierapolis, and Colossae, lying in a triangle in the great, wide, green Lycus valley, seemed alive with the words of the apostles. \u201cAnd when this letter is read among you, have it also read in the church of Laodicea,\u201d writes Paul to Colossae (Col. 4:16), and the words echo strangely up the ten-mile-wide valley plain between the two walls of hills. I stood on a pile of stones in a wide mass of crops \u2014 oats, wheat, and barley \u2014 and read aloud the letter Joh&#324; wrote to Laodicea. The ground is scattered with worn stone, and rough with the buried remains of the most affluent town in Asia Minor, so rich that it refused relief from the Roman senate after the great earthquake. It was \u201crich and increased with goods and had need of nothing\u201d (Rev. 3:14\u201318). And on the ridge a few miles away one could see the cliff of silica terraces <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'><i>BSP<\/i> 6:1 (Winter 1977) p. 5<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;line-height:normal'>running in gleaming pools of thermal water from the springs of the spa which is Hierapolis. The people of both rich and easy-going towns, where the spirit of the town had invaded the church, knew what John meant when he said: \u201cYou are neither cold nor hot, and because you are lukewarm I will spit you from my mouth.\u201d That soda-laden water, in view of Laodicea, invites precisely that rejection.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=center style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:center; line-height:normal'><b>A Visit to Patmos<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>We went down to Ephesus where Paul\u2019s and John\u2019s paths tangled, took ship, and crossed to Patmos, where all the words of Revelation were vividly real. The conviction came to me that John was in protective custody, sent out of Ephesus for his safety, as the authorities sent Paul, and that the aged bishop in exile had the run of the island. From the top one can look down on the little white town and the two harbors that almost cut the island in two. The sun was sloping and turning the sea to a flat sheet of gold. It was John\u2019s sea of glass, the sea that is never absent from sight or sound. \u201cHis voice was as the sound of many waters&#8230;.\u201d My granddaughter and I climbed down, cutting through scree and thicket, a Byzantine churchyard, steps and lanes, pursued all the time <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=center style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:center; line-height:normal'><b><i>Harbor on the Isle of Patmos<\/i><\/b><b>.<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'><i>BSP<\/i> 6:1 (Winter 1977) p. 6<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;line-height:normal'>by a vast uplifted mass of cumulus, shot with lightning and rumbling with thunder. One could imagine John writing, as great gouts of rain fell like bullets: \u201cRound the throne was a rainbow like an emerald and from the throne came stabs of lightning and voices of thunder.\u201d (Rev. 4:5, 6).<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=center style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:center; line-height:normal'><b>Paul in Corinth<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Paul, that great and vastly intelligent man, has become especially real and new to me. In Corinth I sat where Gallio, the governor of Achaia, sat, on the stone platform in the ruined Corinth marketplace, and read aloud in Greek and English the speech of that very noble gentleman, Seneca\u2019s respected and admired brother: \u201cIf it were a matter of wrongdoing or crime, Jews, I should have reason to listen to you. But since it is a matter of quibbling about words and names, and your own law, see to it yourselves. I refuse to adjudicate on these matters\u201d (Acts 18:12\u201317). It was one of the few occasions in his life when Paul had not been able to say a word, but I think he never forgot the scene. Down at the other end of the marketplace still stands part of the temple of Apollo that survived the Roman <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=center style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:center; line-height:normal'><b><i>Temple of Apollo at Corinth<\/i><\/b><b>.<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'><i>BSP<\/i> 6:1 (Winter 1977) p. 7<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;line-height:normal'>sack of the city in 146 B.C. I can imagine Paul had the picture vividly in his mind when he wrote to that unruly congregation a year or two later. \u201cYou are the temples of the Holy Spirit, for God has said, I will live in you&#8230;.\u201d There stands the ruin, windswept, clean, with the sky and the purple gulf showing through the eight Doric columns.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=center style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:center; line-height:normal'><b>Shipwrecked on Malta<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>I have followed Paul through Acts and the Epistles, and back to Acts, and on to the pastoral letters, getting to know his ardent nature, his burdens for the church, his anxieties, his tenderness, his love, his friendships, his strife and pain. I have been with him in the home and on the road, in the pulpit and on shipboard. I once sailed along the length of Crete, below the southern coast, where the Alexandrian grainship sought to edge westward out of the wild wind blowing from the steppes of Europe as the rising air above the hot Sahara sucked in the chill of the Black Sea. It was in A.D. 59 perhaps, about the beginning of November, when sailing was considered dangerous. The ship-owner was anxious to get his cargo to Rome, and risked it. The western end of Crete rises mountainously into a clump of snow-capped peaks, and those high valleys and slopes take the northerlies, twist and funnel them and hurl their strength down on to the sea. This is what happened in November, over 1900 years ago. The lumbering galley was caught and hurled blindly west, the captain fighting not to be driven into the great oblong bay on the north African coast where a thousand wrecks in the shallow waters now make a paradise for underwater archaeologists. They jettisoned the cargo and put ropes round the hull to bind the straining timbers. It is a superbly told story; Paul\u2019s gifts of leadership and dauntless courage stand out.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>They were flung ashore on Malta and one almost breathes with relief, for Colossians, Philippians, Ephesians, Philemon, and Titus had not been written yet. They were the work of the years in protective custody in Rome, and the period of release and freedom that followed. Add also the first letter to Timothy. The second letter came in Paul\u2019s second imprisonment, a darker and harsher experience that ended in death. It was about A.D. 67, and Paul was taken in Troas, so hastily that he left his books and cloak behind him \u2014 or perhaps he was arrested in the street and did not wish to incriminate his host by returning to fetch them.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'><i>BSP<\/i> 6:1 (Winter 1977) p. 8<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=center style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:center; line-height:normal'><b>The Urgency of 2 Timothy<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Another deep and illuminating recent experience has been the study and exposition of the second letter to Timothy. I have caught the urgency of that book, its uncompromising stand for an unpolluted Gospel, its stern insistence that there is no other task for the Church. \u201cPreach the gospel, when opportunity comes, or when you have to make the opportunity&#8230;.All Scripture is inspired by God and is useful for teaching the faith and correcting false ideas. It straightens out a man\u2019s life, and trains him for upright living\u201d (2 Tim. 4:2, 3:16, 17).<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>I have felt that inspiration. Listen to earlier words in that third chapter and feel it too. \u201cTimothy, grasp the fact in the last days there will be difficult times. Men will be utterly selfish, greedy for money, braggarts, contemptuous, profane of speech, rebels against their parents, without gratitude or religion or natural affection, implacable, slanderous, uncontrolled, untamable, hating the good, traitors, reckless, swollen with conceit, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God, with a form of religion which denies religion worth and reality.\u201d Rome of A.D. 67 or the Western world of today? But into this devil\u2019s brew of moral breakdown with faith unconquerable, Paul sent the Gospel and the Word. He had left Timothy a timid and not very robust young man, in Ephesus, in charge of the little band of Christians there. John had not yet arrived, it seems. With sublime optimism Paul thus attacked the evil world.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=center style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:center; line-height:normal'><b>The Ring of Truth<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>The <i>Times<\/i> of London recently carried the obituary of a distinguished classical scholar, Dr. E.V. Rieu. I had known him as a translator for many years, for he was the scholar who rendered Homer into very modern English for the \u201cPenguin Classics.\u201d Rieu was sixty, and a lifelong agnostic when the same firm invited him to translate the Gospels. His son remarked: \u201cIt will be interesting to see what father makes of the four Gospels. It will be even more interesting to see what the four Gospels make of father.\u201d The answer was soon forthcoming. A year later Dr. Rieu, convinced and converted, joined the Church of England.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>In a radio interview with J.B. Phillips, Rieu confessed that he had undertaken the task of translation because of \u201can intense desire to satisfy himself as to the authenticity and spiritual content of the Gospels.\u201d He was determined to approach the documents as if they were newly discovered Greek manuscripts. \u201cDid you not get the <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'><i>BSP<\/i> 6:1 (Winter 1977) p. 9<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;line-height:normal'>feeling,\u201d asked Canon Phillips, \u201cthat the whole material was extraordinarily alive?\u201d The classical scholar agreed. \u201cI got the deepest feeling,\u201d he replied. \u201cMy work changed me. I came to the conclusion that these words bear the seal of the Son of Man and God. And they\u2019re the Magna Carta of the human spirit.\u201d \u201cI found it particularly thrilling,\u201d Phillips concluded, \u201cto hear a man who is a scholar of the first rank, as well as a man of wisdom and experience, openly admitting that these words written long ago were alive with power. They bore to him as to me, the ring of truth\u201d (J.B. Phillips, <i>The Ring of Truth<\/i>).<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>And that, of course, is what the writer to the Hebrews (4:12) said nineteen centuries ago. Let me give it to you in the Living Bible rendering, an appropriate version for such a word: \u201cFor whatever God says to us is full of living power. It is sharper than the sharpest sword, cutting swift and deep into our innermost thoughts and desires&#8230;exposing us for what we really are.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;line-height:normal'>(Reprinted from the September 28, 1973 issue of <i>Christianity Today<\/i>.)<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=center style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:center; line-height:normal'><b><i>\u201cI don\u2019t know about you, but I\u2019m digging a foxhole!\u201d<\/i><\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'><i>BSP<\/i> 6:1 (Winter 1977) p. 10<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=center style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:center; line-height:normal'><b><i>Proposed high place at Beersheba, just to the left of the city gate and across the street from the \u201cgovernors\u201d house<\/i><\/b><b>.<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=center style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:center; line-height:normal'><b><i>Courtyard steps as seen today, looking west<\/i><\/b><b>.<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'><i>BSP<\/i> 6:1 (Winter 1977) p. 11<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>E.M. Blaiklock [E.M. Blaiklock taught Latin, Greek, and ancient and biblical history at the University of Auckland, New Zealand, for more than forty years. He is well known for his books on classics, history, and the New Testament, and also as an essayist and journalist. This article was given in November of 1972 as the &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/moreand-more-scripture-lives-a-personal-account-by-a-noted-classics-scholar\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;MORE<br \/>\nAND MORE, SCRIPTURE LIVES!<br \/>\nA PERSONAL ACCOUNT BY A NOTED CLASSICS SCHOLAR&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-14891","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-sermons"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/14891","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=14891"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/14891\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=14891"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=14891"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=14891"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}