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PROPHETS I
The Old
Testament is divided into the Law, the Prophets, and the
Writings. Our Lord Himself makes use of this basic division in
Luke 24:44. He explains to the Apostles that His suffering,
death and resurrection are the fulfillment of “the law of Moses,
and the prophets, and the psalms,” which are from the writings.
The first
problem in discussing “The prophets” in this quote, however, is
to clarify which books/people of the Old Testament are being
referred to. The tradition our Lord refers to when he calls so
much of the Old Testament “the Prophets” distinguished between
“the former prophets” and “the latter prophets” or, more simply,
the first and the last prophets. When we hear “the prophets” we
usually think of Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel and the rest, but our
Lord, and the Jewish tradition he refers to when he says “the
prophets” includes “the first prophets.” So who are they?
THE FORMER PROPHETS
The former
or first prophets are those books that in Catholic Bibles are often
called historical books = Joshua through 2 Kings, also known as the
Deuteronomistic history. The book of Deuteronomy concludes the
Pentateuch and introduces the major theme of covenant faithfulness
versus unfaithfulness and the consequences of each. These are the focus
of this next large section of the Old Testament. It relates the history
of how the Israelites first gained (through faithfulness to God), and
then eventually lost (through unfaithfulness), the Promised Land.
There are
three reasons why this section of Scripture is part of “the prophets.”
The first is that the traditional author and editor of this section of
Scripture was a prophet--Jeremiah. The second is that it relates the
history of important people who were part of the prophetic tradition:
Samuel, David, Nathan, Elijah and Elisha. Although not strictly
prophetical works, this course will also cover the book of Ruth and 1
and 2 Chronicles, since Ruth prepares for the story of David and
Chronicles records (from a later time period) much of the same history
as is recorded in 1 and 2 Kings. The third reason is the one Our Lord
refers to in Luke 24:44--the people and events of these books of
Scripture were prophetic in that they pointed forward to their
fulfillment in Him. Christ recapitulates all of Israelite history in
Himself by doing perfectly what before was done imperfectly or badly.
There are two major challenges when learning this part of
Scripture.
Aside from
the difficulties already mentioned in the Pentateuch Course Description
this section has its own unique challenges, which are the history and
theology that it relates. The history can sometimes be complicated and
the theology unclear because it is wrapped up in a historical cloth.
Many
modern Bible studies want to “get behind” the Bible to the “real
history” of these years, but in doing so, they reveal their inability to
understand what this biblical history is really trying to
accomplish—theology—to reveal God and His will for man. The author makes
it plain that the history he records is not just for the sake of
recording a history, but rather, for the sake of teaching about God and
His ways with His People. He even tells readers who are interested in a
merely political history to go and read a different book! (For example,
see 1 Kings 15:31, 2 Kings 15:2, etc.)
The
classical approach that this Bible study uses avoids the extremes of
getting lost in the history and of forgetting the theology. Students
spend an average of 5 lessons on each book in this section of Scripture
and will therefore have adequate time to read and reflect on its
meaning. Students memorize a structural outline of the books themselves
and a timeline of the events they record, all with a view to
understanding the theological message of this section of Scripture and
its application to Christian living. There will be a special focus on
David, his many trials, and his eventual rise to kingship because of his
trust in God. Just as Abraham’s and Moses’ faithfulness to God are what
hold the people of God together in the Torah, so David’s love and trust
in God is the key to this section of Israel’s history. Understanding
David’s life is also essential for the next course in this series—the
Psalms. |
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YOUR
INSTRUCTOR
Nathan
Schmiedicke, Ph.D.
Dr. Nathan Schmiedicke
is the director of the CLAA Biblical Studies program. 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.
Dr. Schmiedicke is a Senior Fellow with the
St. Paul Center for
Biblical Theology. Nathan and Wendy have five boys.
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