Crack The Book

The World's #1 Bestseller Week 10: The Bible


Listen Later

I'm reading and talking about Ted Gioia's "Immersive Humanities Course," 52 weeks of World Classics.

Reading a familiar text in a bigger reading list like this offers its own special challenges. I start with a little insight about what to do when that happens.

I think the best way to talk about these very familiar books is to take them one at a time. Then I have some thoughts about translations (again) and reading in general. 

Genesis: This is a much longer book than you think! The story starts out very broad and then narrows to tell how God decides to work through a man named Abram. We then see how God continues to work through now-Abraham’s family, through Isaac, Jacob and Joseph. None of these men are perfect, or even very heroic except possibly Joseph, but God uses them anyway. Genesis is different than the other very old texts (religious and otherwise) we’ve read in this schedule, and it’s certainly quite different than the Greek philosophy. We see a God who is personal and emotional, capable of anger and also great love, and who is both all-powerful and yet interested in every individual in the entire world.

Ecclesiastes: This is a poem of sorts, and you definitely know part of it because of the Byrds’ “Turn Turn Turn.” The main character, the Preacher (likely King Solomon), reflects at the end of his days on “What’s it all for?” He never settles on a real answer but reflects on how to live, so in its themes it is a lot more like Plato or Aristotle. It’s not didactic like Confucius’ Analects. It feels a lot more like the Dhammapada, but less fatalistic and actually lovelier in its construction. I think the weariness of Ecclesiastes speaks to the human condition, common across time and geography.

Matthew: The first Gospel opens with Jesus’ genealogy through Joseph, and I think Matthew’s emphasis as he relates the story of Jesus’ life is on the fact that the very people who should have been most willing to hear the message did not. Matthew is rooted in Jewish scripture, continually quoting prophets as he relates Jesus’ ministry. The book starts with three chapters known as the Sermon on the Mount, which is harder to read straight through than I expected. It is a lot of sayings and aphorisms, not a lot of story, and you know by now how I feel about that. The book then moves into more narrative as the miracles increase in type and scope, leading to the crucifixion. The teachings from Jesus and Matthew’s own writing are aimed squarely at the Jewish leaders here, pointing out what they are missing and their refusal to see Jesus for who he is.

Mark: This is the shortest Gospel, and I also think of it as the “immediately” Gospel. Mark uses that word at almost every transition from one scene to another, and it makes the book feel very action-oriented. I felt like Mark was sitting with me saying, “Let me tell you what happened!”

Luke: Luke is not an eyewitness at all, and even opens the book up saying he has talked to lots of people so he can get an accurate history put down. Luke's always been my favorite for a variety of reasons...

John: But I was wrong. John is the single best piece of writing I have read so far in this program. It is amazing. The entire book is crafted beautifully, and it’s now my favorite Gospel. Also, it has the very best ending you could hope for. Read it.

Romans: Okay, full disclosure, my Bible study group is doing Romans this year, walking slowly through Paul’s longest letter. Coming to Romans after the previous readings, I was absolutely struck by the vigor of Paul’s writing. It’s energetic, masculine, wide-ranging and urgent. It is deeply personal in a way that none of the previous readings were. I loved reading it in one big chunk and offer reflections on how much I learned this time through Romans. But I will also fight anyone who says Paul didn’t study Aristotle!

I reflect a little on the music, Wagner, and mourn the loss of Warner Brothers cartoons in our world! And then in my culture update, it's a little good and a little BAD.

This is a year-long challenge! Join me next week as we shift our attention to Rome and the Stoics.

LINK

Ted Gioia/The Honest Broker’s 12-Month Immersive Humanities Course (paywalled!)

My Amazon Book List (NOT an affiliate link)

The book The Red Tent

The movie Tokyo Cowboy


CONNECT

To read more of my writing, visit my Substack -  https://www.cheryldrury.substack.com.

Follow me on Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/cldrury/ 


LISTEN

Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/5GpySInw1e8IqNQvXow7Lv?si=9ebd5508daa245bd

Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/crack-the-book/id1749793321 

Captivate - https://crackthebook.captivate.fm 

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Crack The BookBy Cheryl Drury

  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5

5

21 ratings


More shows like Crack The Book

View all
Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! by NPR

Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!

38,610 Listeners

The Glenn Beck Program by Blaze Podcast Network

The Glenn Beck Program

25,270 Listeners

Dateline NBC by NBC News

Dateline NBC

48,050 Listeners

The Megyn Kelly Show by SiriusXM

The Megyn Kelly Show

38,264 Listeners