Thoughts on a New BDB
Over the last few days there has been some chatter about the likelihood of a new Brown Driver Briggs lexicon (BDB) and the usefulness of the old one (see here, here, here and here). The two, of course, are intertwined. But the real issue is the different folk for whom the volume is useful and their differing needs in a lexicon.
The BDB is useful for introductory students to Hebrew. The cheap Hendricks version of the BDB is more than sufficient for any novice and easily fits within their price range. Additionally, the gravitas that the venerated volume exerts has insured that many program chairs, professors and presbyters insist that students purchase this publication.
This became all too clear to me when I attempted to bring down the overall book cost (and weight) for an introductory course by requiring the little Langenscheidt pocket dictionary instead. I was informed that it was not “scholarly” enough and that many of my Presbyterian students were required by their denomination to purchase the other volume.
However, as far as scholarly usefulness is concerned, the BDB is a dinosaur. It was compiled and edited while Assyriological lexicography was in its infancy and before the great discoveries of Ugarit, Emar, Ebla, the Dead Sea Scrolls and the like. While many of these discoveries merely confirmed the definitions and classifications already in use, the lack of resources makes the BDB less than helpful for contemporary scholars.
It occurred to me that over the entire project of my dissertation I have not used the BDB in the way it was intended. I have never needed a definition or a sematic range of a word and gone to the BDB for help. I have always used the Hebrew and Aramaic Lexicon of the Old Testament (HALOT) for that purpose. The only times I have used BDB were when I wanted to know what scholars thought “back in the day;” that is to say when I wanted to hunt down outdated lexicographical alternatives.
For this reason a new BDB would help the scholarly community immensely. While HALOT is robust and the best that we currently have, even it was completed before the entirety of the full publication of the Dead Sea Scrolls, Chicago Assyrian Dictionary, the Dictionary of the Ugaritic Language. Having the husband and wife team of John Huehnergard and Jo Ann Hackett working on the project would insure that the work would be a skillful piece of scholarship that would undoubtedly become the new standard for the scholarly community.
But, it will also cost at least as much as HALOT did when it hit the market. Most of us in the guild will pick the volume up on the first Eisenbrauns’ sale or in the book room of the SBL national conference; but our students won’t be able to afford it. (They can’t even afford the current price of HALOT!) Further, the aura around the old BDB is such that it will still be required despite its increasingly more apparent short comings. Thus the old standard BDB will remain.
The Ark of the Covenant: Real or Fake?
Last week I posted on the apparent news that the Patriarch of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, Abuna Pauolos, was going to reveal the Ark of Covenant to the world. In the comments on that post, jacob commented “Who cares about a fake ‘Ark of the Covenant.’ ” This is a good question. An even better question to my mind would be what exactly would indicate that the Ark was real or fake? Read more…
Biblical Studies Carnival 43 up and much, much more
Pat McCullough has posted the Apocalypse of Eve. This astounding document from the 2nd century CE appears to be uncanny prediction of the Biblical Studies Carnival 43.
While some minimalists will no doubt malign the authenticity of this document from the early church, it nonetheless provides us with an historical picture of what the author(s) thought were (to be) the highlights in biblioblogosphere during June ’09.
Additionally, the Biblioblog Top 50 for June is also up. Congratulations to Mandy and Calvin whose blog The Floppy Hat broke the top 10, coming in at No. 5!
Ark of the Covenant to be revealed TODAY!
Update: Richard Bartholomew reports why the ark is a no-show. Bummer.
Seriously folks, you can’t make this stuff up. IsraelNN.com (among others) reports:
Holy Ark Announcement Due on Friday
An Ethiopian church leader says Friday, June 26, marks the right time to unveil the Biblical Ark of the Covenant, which he says has been hidden in his church for centuries.
Abuna Pauolos, Patriarch of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, was in Rome this week to meet with Pope Benedict XVI. While there, he told reporters that the time had come to reveal before the world the Holy Ark. He said that the holy container has been in the custody of his church for hundreds of years. Read more…
Most Influential Books
Earlier this week I was tagged by Adam on Ken Brown‘s most influential book meme challenge. With all that’s been going on in my life the past few weeks (teaching, moving, writing, applying for jobs), I haven’t kept up with reading blogs. At the moment there are some 400 posts sitting in my RSS reader. As such, I just realized today that I was even tagged! Read more…
Gilgamesh and Modern Fantasy Lit
Michael L. Westmoreland-White at Levelers has been running a series of posts on SciFi and Fantasy lit. He has this to say on the influence of Gilgamesh on these genres:
The Epic of Gilgamesh. An epic poem from ancient Sumeria, this is one of the earliest works of fiction. We don’t know when the first version was written in Sumerian, but the standard Akkadian version was compiled from older legends sometime around 1,300 B.C.E. It tells of the exploits of a legendary King Gilgamesh, blessed by the gods with supernatural strength but who is bored with ruling his kingdom, and his friend, Enkidu the Wild Man (who is even stronger than Gilgamesh) and their quests and battles with incredible monsters. The story influenced Homer’s The Oddysey, was outlined in brief in a Star Trek: The Next Generation episode (”Darmok”), and has even influenced some role playing video games. For non-scholars only interested in reading the work for entertainment, the most accessible English translation is N. K. Sanders, The Epic of Gilgamesh (Penguin Epics, 2006) which reprints the prose edition of the Penguin Classics, 1960. The “Sword and Sorcery” subgenre of fantasy is particularly indepted to the Gilgamesh stories.
Beyond these influences, I tell my classes that popular movies such as Fight Club, Top Gun, and Stepbrothers are all modern retelling of this ancient text. However, I have been known to lie to students.
Martin Mueller’s Iliad online
I’m a bit annoyed to discover that Scibd no longer hosts Charles Penglase’s Greek Myths and Mesopotamia: Parallels and Influence in the Homeric Hymns and Hesiod. Bummer.
However, today I found Martin Mueller’s introduction to the The Iliad at the Perseus Project; so I guess it all works out. (One can, of course, buy the book for $30, if they prefer.)
God Texts the Ten Commandments
From McSweeny’s:
1. no1 b4 me. srsly.
2. dnt wrshp pix/idols
3. no omg’s
4. no wrk on w/end (sat 4 now; sun l8r)
5. pos ok – ur m&d r cool
6. dnt kill ppl
7. :-X only w/ m8
8. dnt steal
9. dnt lie re: bf
10. dnt ogle ur bf’s m8. or ox. or dnkey. myob.
M, pls rite on tabs & giv 2 ppl.
ttyl, JHWH.
ps. wwjd?
Biblioblog Top 50 is #13?
I was just perusing the top 50 biblioblogs for May and noticed that the blog itself came in at number 13. Is it just me, or does it seem odd that the blog The Biblioblog Top 50 is calculated into the biblioblog top 50? Maybe I’m just not enough of a fan of recursive systems (I never liked WINE when I ran Linux, either).
Biblical Studies Carnival XLII
Welcome to Biblical Studies Carnival 42, your hitchhiker’s guide to the biblioblogging universe. In many of the more relaxed corners of the blogosphere, the ‘Biblical Studies Carnival’ has already supplanted the great Wikipedia as the standard repository of all knowledge and wisdom, for though it has many omissions and contains much that is apocryphal, or at least wildly inaccurate, it scores over the older, more populist work in two important respects. First, it has better grammar; and second, this month it has the words ‘DON’T PANIC’ inscribed in large friendly letters on its cover. Read more…


