Reviews

Uma História da Bíblia: O Livro e as Suas Fés by John Barton

frazzle's review against another edition

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5.0

Very sound introduction, from an academic perspective, to all major facets of biblical studies. Found myself nodding along to nearly all of it.

hunterswanigan's review against another edition

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challenging informative slow-paced

4.0

cloudy_lemonade's review against another edition

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Enjoyed it. For me more of a reference.

sarahkomas's review against another edition

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challenging informative reflective slow-paced

4.5

Really interesting varied perspectives, took me right out of my bubble

archytas's review against another edition

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3.0

The reviews for this book have been uniformly, firmly, positive, which is a shame, in some ways, because my expectations were far higher than the book met and now I have to try to work out whether that is the book fault or mine. In the positive column, the History of the Bible is very readable, broad in scope with thorough coverage of all periods, and careful to canvass a wide range of points of view, while having a distinct and stated point-of-view of its own. On the critical side, it's approachability is a undermined by the length (Amazon's expected reading time is 17 hours, high for 600 pages), some key things are covered scantly and/or later than would be useful, and there is a high ratio of negative (Debunking) arguments to positive (this is what might have happened), which is always, if worthy, a little less interesting to read.
The latter two issues have left me wanting to know more, and I did use the excellent biographical section at the end to add several books to my wishlist. Stimulating appetite is definitely part of the point of a generalist book on a topic. However, I did still find it frustrating that the issues around the construction of the Septuagint - to what extent it innovated and why - were not covered in detail until the final substantive chapter of the book, and then still as an afterthought. Barton is at his most influential in explaining how analyses had led to conclusions around when each section of our current Bible was written, and how the part might have been transmitted. He is weaker, however, when looking at how narratives were edited and compiled into the canon. For example, given that Barton regards the Septuagint as representative of Jewish canon "When the Septuagint diverges seriously from the Hebrew we know, it is, therefore, a reasonable hypothesis that a Hebrew text existed that corresponded to the Greek….", some earlier discussion about some of the challenges to that view would have enriched the early part of the book, allowing for a better understanding of the myriad of possibilities for how the Tanakh developed, and how exile affected it. Similarly while Barton points out that most alternate gospels are, well, gnostic, written later than the synoptic gospels, and weren't necessarily widely circulating, he doesn't really articulate a vision for how come three gospels, designed to be standalone, came to be centralised and were the only three that lasted and became authoritative. I will freely point out I have no expertise in this space (and no horse in the race either), but I came away confused on lots of elements of this process.
The book is very Anglican*, which is to be expected really, and many of its strengths and weaknesses are also those of the CoE (great scholarship, extreme inclusivity, and a tendency towards the longwinded). It reminded me that there are intellectual ways of reconciling things I find irreconcilable. Barton summarises his way of reconciling the history with faith in recent tenets with:
"I want to suggest a metaphor that can help to illuminate the relation between the Bible and what Christians believe and do. We could conceive of the Christian faith and the Bible as two intersecting circles. There are matters in the Bible that scarcely bear on Christian faith at all, and which make trouble if Christians assume they must do so: the curses in the Psalms, Joshua’s battles with the Canaanites, Paul’s more intemperate outbursts against his converts and against Judaism as he knew it, the vindictive prophecies in Revelation, many of the laws in Leviticus. Similarly, there are matters in Christian faith that are only very faintly, or even not at all, represented in the Bible: the doctrine of the Trinity, the way the Church is to be organized, the creation of the world out of nothing, the meaning of Christ’s death, the idea that after his death he descended to the underworld."

As an atheist raised in the Anglican church, with many Anglican friends, I found it a reminder of how much the Church has to give. I still want to read something else, though.

*No I don't mean Episcopalian. There is an Englishness in the mix here.

lonesomereader's review against another edition

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4.0

I don’t often read much nonfiction so I always look forward to following the Wolfson History Prize each year for guidance of what biographical or historical books I should catch up on. Last year I read Matthew Sturgis’ excellent biography of Oscar Wilde but this year I thought I’d challenge myself a bit more by reading priest and Oxford scholar John Barton’s much-acclaimed “A History of the Bible”. Firstly, I must declare that although I was raised with regular Sunday trips to a Lutheran church I am an atheist so my interest in the Bible comes from a purely secular point of view. To be honest, I’ve never had much interest in reading the Bible or thought deeply about its origins. However, its historical, social and cultural significance is of such magnitude that it feels like I should learn more about it. Barton’s intricately researched and well balanced account embraces the enormous challenge of tracing the history and many permutations of the text which makes up the Bible as used in the Judaic and Christian faiths. It was absolutely fascinating learning about its complex and lengthy history.

Read my full review of A History of the Bible: The Book and Its Faiths by John Barton on LonesomeReader

nomad_scry's review against another edition

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4.0

I'd never considered just how the Christian reinterpretation of the Old Testament must be baffling to Jews.

mysterybuff's review against another edition

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4.0

I've always been fascinated by the Bible - ever since I was given a picture Bible of the Old and New Testament for my first communion. I had even toyed with becoming a biblical scholar when I was in college.

This book discusses the most common (and some not so common) theories about who wrote the different books in the Bible, who wrote them and when. Then it goes into the varies ways the different faiths and critics dissect and analyze it. I had no idea of the difference between Jewish interpretation of the Hebrew Bible and the Christian interpretations of the Old Testament.

This is not a book to read if you are not in the mood for a detailed analysis of different ways to interpret the Bible. If you are a literal reader or a fundamentalist, then this is not the book for you. Or maybe it is exactly the book for you.

But if you have a general interest in the world's most popular book of all time, then I highly recommend this book.
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