{"id":2634,"date":"2018-02-13T15:40:15","date_gmt":"2018-02-13T21:40:15","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.nltblog.com\/?p=2634"},"modified":"2021-12-08T09:22:47","modified_gmt":"2021-12-08T09:22:47","slug":"communal-reading-in-the-time-of-jesus-how-did-the-first-christians-learn-the-bible","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wpmu3.northcentralus.cloudapp.azure.com\/nlt\/2018\/02\/13\/communal-reading-in-the-time-of-jesus-how-did-the-first-christians-learn-the-bible\/","title":{"rendered":"Communal Reading In the Time of Jesus: How Did the First Christians Learn the Bible?"},"content":{"rendered":"
So many of us are getting into the Word of God in personal study. This is important, but we often forget the importance of coming together as a\u00a0community and reading God’s Word together like they did in the early church. Communal Bible reading is at the heart of Immerse: The Bible Reading Experience<\/a>. <\/em>Read what Glenn Paauw, Institute for Bible Reading<\/a>, has to say about getting back to our early church roots and reading the Bible in community.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n How did early Christians learn and pass on their traditions about Jesus and his teachings? What did the first communities of Jesus followers do to maintain the authenticity of their understanding of the meaning of his work, and its continuity to new generations? Further, what place did the growing collection of apostolic writings to scattered churches have in first century Christian gatherings?<\/p>\n For some time the academic study of early Christianity has maintained an emphasis on the role of oral tradition and social memory in the initial spread and growth of the new Jesus movement. It was assumed that due to things like the scarcity of both writing materials and professional readers, actual communal reading from sacred texts must have been somewhat rare and limited especially to more urban areas, at least until later in the second century.<\/p>\n But now there is an increasing recognition that early Christianity, like the Judaism from which it was born, was a \u201cbookish\u201d religion through and through. (See our earlier article\u00a0How the First Christians Challenge Us to Be Bible Readers<\/a>.) Larry Hurtado, a New Testament scholar and historian of early Christianity, has been a key voice helping us explore the evidence for this more closely. His books\u00a0Destroyer of the Gods<\/a>\u00a0(2016) and\u00a0The Earliest Christian Artifacts<\/a>(2006) have directly examined this theme. Brian Wright\u2019s new book continues this effort to bring more clarity to our understanding of the place of reading in the earliest church.<\/p>\n Wright\u2019s key point is that communal reading was geographically widespread and that such reading was a way of avoiding any serious alterations in the traditions and teachings of the first Christians.<\/p>\n There are two backgrounds to this: first, the fact that public reading was a common feature of life across much of the Roman Empire. Letters, proclamations, poetry, and the great literary sagas of the time were all frequently read in public places. These did have a kind of performance aspect to them, but the point is that they were not performed from memory, but rather read aloud from written texts.<\/p>\n