Old Testament Textual Criticism: A Practical Introduction

by Ellis R. Brotzman

Paperback, 1993

Status

Available

Call number

221.4

Publication

Baker Academic (1993), Edition: 10.2.1993, 208 pages

Description

Sheds light on the origin and nature of Hebrew texts and versions, helping scholars, students, and pastors more fully understand the Old Testament.

User reviews

LibraryThing member waltzmn
Old Testament Textual Criticism is a subject at once complicated and simple. Simple, because it comes down, in a very real sense, to just one question: "How do you feel about the Septuagint (the Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible)?"

We have many copies of the Hebrew Bible in the original
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language. We have many translations -- Septuagint, Old Latin, Vulgate, Peshitta Syriac, and so forth. But, for the most part, the Hebrew manuscripts are late, and they all agree. Do they agree because the text has never changed, or do they differ because they are late and all come from a particular strand of the tradition? Both views have their supporters. And if the latter view is correct, then the Septuagint is the key to textual criticism, because it is the one substantial independent witness.

So every manual of Old Testament criticism wrestles with this decision. Or, in some cases, doesn't wrestle with it enough.

This book, in my view, is one that doesn't wrestle with it enough. Not only does it follow the Hebrew too blindly, it doesn't even give the question enough attention. The result is a terrible oversimplification.

There is no final answer on this question. But research continues, and this book feels as if it could have been written two hundred years ago. Maybe when the revised edition comes along....
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LibraryThing member deusvitae
As advertised, a practical introduction to Old Testament textual criticism.

The authors assume a basic level of familiarity with Hebrew and Greek and seek to set forth a basic primer on the tools, resources, and work of textual criticism of the Old Testament. The reader is introduced to what textual
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criticism is, how it works, the terminology involved, modern editions of the text, the history of the transmission of the text, the types of variants and their likely origins, the Hebrew texts themselves, and ancient translations of Hebrew texts and how those ancient texts can attest to their original Hebrew antecedent (their vorlagen). The authors conclude with an exercise in exploring the text critical issues in the book of Ruth. Additional resources are continually cited; appendices are included to provide assistance in understanding all the Latin terms in BHS, the philosophy of textual reconstruction, and other resources.

The book is modern, clear, and a very good introduction; it does well at clarifying things that might seem very complex and strange to the new student. From it one can profitably turn to other books on textual criticism.

Highly recommended for those with some familiarity in Hebrew and Greek and are interested in OT textual criticism.

**--galley received as part of early review program
**--reviewer went to college with one of the authors (Tully)
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LibraryThing member RicardusTheologus
Very lucid and easy to understand. Explains all of the technical language and difficulties of doing the textual criticism of the Old Testament.

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1994

Physical description

208 p.; 5.5 inches

ISBN

0801010659 / 9780801010651
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