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WRITERS' SCHOOL

Opening in Fall 2010

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It is not difficult to get a Bible or to read its pages.  What is difficult is to rightly understand, appreciate and apply the Bible to one's own life and circumstances.  If anyone suggests that the Bible is simple and can be understood by anyone, it is the Bible itself that tells us they're wrong.  St. Peter himself tells us that Scriptures are commonly misunderstood and twisted, see 2 Peter 3:15-16.  In Acts 8, Philip meets a man reading Scripture and asks him, "Do you understand what you're reading?", to which the man answers, "How can I unless someone instructs me?"   Thus, the Bible itself warns us that its interpretation is difficult work--a fact that led St. Augustine to suggest that God intended such for our benefit:

"the Holy Spirit has, with admirable wisdom and care for our welfare, so arranged the Holy Scriptures as by the plainer passages to satisfy our hunger, and by the more obscure to stimulate our appetite."

Moreover, as we move further and further from the time of the Bible, it's interpretation grows still more difficult.  If people living with the apostles' could misunderstand Scripture, how much more those of us 2,000 years removed from the biblical era?

It is for this reason that God did not leave the world with the Bible alone, but with the Christian Church.  Through the Church, God provides not only His written word, but the sacred tradition by which its meaning is rightly discerned.  In Ephesians, St. Paul explained this:

"God gave some as apostles, others as prophets, others as evangelists, others as pastors and teachers, to equip the holy ones for the work of ministry, for building up the body of Christ."

Therefore, we may safely and reasonably say that for Bible study to be true, it must be Catholic Bible study. 

CATHOLIC BIBLE STUDY


The famous Catholic bishop St. Augustine wrote the book on biblical studies over 1,500 years ago, titled On Christian Doctrine.  The CLAA's Biblical Studies program is founded upon that book.  St. Augustine explained what is needed for men to rightly read and understand the Bible.  His answer was twofold:  an understanding of the classical liberal arts and a pure heart.

The authors of Scripture were not seeking careers as professional writers or tenured university professors. St. Paul explains the aim of the biblical writings:

"The aim of this instruction is love from a pure heart, a good conscience, and a sincere faith.

Thus, the Bible is not a book to be handled by academics as if it were a book of histories or poetry, but by God-fearing people who desire to grow in holiness.

One of the confusing things we face is the reality that many non-Catholic Christians, who interpret Scripture wrongly are relatively good people--sometimes very excellent people.  Nevertheless, even when errors in interpretation can promote decent behavior, we are to pursue correct interpretation.  The reason is that when we falsely interpret one place of Scripture, that error can influence our understanding of other passages and lead us into more serious errors--even puzzling confusion that leads to us begin questioning the Bible.  Normally, when we see popular arguments suggesting that there are contradictions in the Bible, these arguments are based on some error in interpretation that has in the end caused different passages of Scripture to have no clear meaning.  The problem is not the Bible's, but the interpreter's.  St. Paul warned of these errors:

"Some people have...turned to meaningless talk,  wanting to be teachers of the law, but without understanding either what they are saying or what they assert with such assurance."

Thus, our challenge is studying the Bible with the right motives: to know, love and serve God. Our goal is not to store up Bible trivia.  We seek three specific benefits:  (1) to learn the rules of Biblical interpretation, (2) to gain experience in applying those rules to our reading of the Scriptures, and (3) to develop the skills needed to articulate the meaning of Scripture to others.

FIVE YEAR PROGRAM


This program is currently in development and details of each course will be available soon.  Year One opens in the Fall of 2010!

Notes:

1. Each course in the CLAA's Biblical Studies program costs $125.00.  This includes free access to all course lessons, quizzes, exams and student support services. 

2. Each student is required to have a copy of the New American Bible for use with the course. Editions of the Bible recommended for use can be purchased directly from the CLAA at the time of enrollment.   

3. This program assumes no prior knowledge of the Bible and is intended to be studied alongside the CLAA's classical liberal arts courses by students of any age.

CLASSICAL BIBLE STUDY


As said above, St. Augustine argued in the 4th/5th century that the classical liberal arts curriculum was a necessary part of Christian studies, most of all because of its usefulness in Biblical interpretation. 

St. Augustine explains that every subject area of the classical curriculum plays  a role in Biblical interpretation.  For example, the doctor asserts that:

"The science of reasoning (i.e., Dialectic) is of very great service in searching into and unravelling all sorts of questions that come up in Scripture."

Thus, there is no excuse for anyone who desires to understand Scripture to neglect the study of the classical liberal arts and there are many benefits to be enjoyed by those already studying them.  Throughout history, the masters of Scripture were  masters of the classical liberal arts and the advantages had by those who study them are as true today as it has been before.  Only CLAA students receive the system of education that St. Augustine argues is key to rightly understanding Scripture.  It is our goal in our Biblical Studies program to show the children how to put all of their learning to use for their enjoyment of the Word of God.

YOUR INSTRUCTOR


Nathan Schmiedicke, Ph.D.

The CLAA's Biblical Studies program is taught by Dr. Nathan Schmiedicke.  Dr. Schmiedicke was born the fifth of eleven children and raised on a small family farm in Michigan. He attended Catholic school through eighth grade and was home-schooled through High school. After graduating with honors from Thomas Aquinas College (CA) he married his college sweetheart, and began graduate school at Marquette University (Milwaukee). He completed his PhD in Biblical Theology in 2007 and began teaching Theology, Scripture, and languages at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary in Philadelphia, PA and classics at nearby Villanova University. Nathan and Wendy have four boys, and one more on the way in March.


The law of the Lord is unspotted, converting souls: the testimony of the Lord is faithful, giving wisdom to little ones.


Psalm 19

 
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