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A Student’s Notes on Genesis: The Bible for Public Schools
A Student’s Notes on Genesis: The Bible for Public Schools
A Student’s Notes on Genesis: The Bible for Public Schools
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A Student’s Notes on Genesis: The Bible for Public Schools

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Curious about ancient stories, once a part of our culture, that schools fail to teach today? Our Supreme Court gave guidelines so classes could read them, so why don't they? Are schools fearful that teachers will present the stories for religious purposes? Shouldn't students know of Eve and her fatal choice of pride's poison, a poison that took her life, sent one son to the grave, and condemned her firstborn to wander the earth? Shouldn't they know of Lamech, drunk on that same poison, singing self-exalting songs of brutality and leading the world into a violence that could be cleansed only by raging floods? Also, for their great comfort, shouldn't students know of Jacob's sons, so much like Cain yet united by a brother who laid aside pride's call for revenge--even pride's call for personal justice? This book leads public school students through the first part of the world's hidden-away bestseller, marking out a path through the legal thickets and pits of the Bible into the hearts of the ancients--people who had the same joys, sorrows, failures, and hopes that all of us have, even today.
A Student's Notes on Genesis is for curious-minded students and for public school teachers who know that education should include the world's bestseller.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 8, 2016
ISBN9781498274302
A Student’s Notes on Genesis: The Bible for Public Schools
Author

Eleanor Rupp

Eleanor Grace Rupp taught Bible in the public schools of Bluefield, WV for forty-five years, continually seeking to understand the Supreme Court guidelines for how this ancient, world-famous book may be legally taught in the public schools. She has degrees from Southern Connecticut State University, Columbia International University, Reformed Theological Seminary, and an Honorary Doctorate of Letters degree from King University.

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    A Student’s Notes on Genesis - Eleanor Rupp

    9781610979825.kindle.jpg

    A Student’s Notes on Genesis

    The Bible for Public Schools

    By Eleanor Grace Rupp

    foreword by Barbara K. Bellefeuille

    18816.png

    A Student’s Notes on Genesis

    The Bible for Public Schools

    Copyright © 2016 Eleanor Grace Rupp. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers, 199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3, Eugene, OR 97401.

    Wipf & Stock

    An Imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers

    199

    W.

    8

    th Ave., Suite

    3

    Eugene, OR

    97401

    www.wipfandstock.com

    paperback isbn: 978-1-61097-982-5

    hardcover isbn: 978-1-4982-8793-7

    ebook isbn: 978-1-4982-7430-2

    Manufactured in the U.S.A.

    King James Version (KJV) No permission needed

    Maps used by permission of Oxford University Press

    To the thousands of students, my friends,

    who walked with me through that ancient forest

    older than most ever enter,

    that undying forest of living Hebrew narratives, poetry and prophecies

    —the Bible—

    the book whose words long ago turned this world upside down.

    A thorough understanding of the Bible is better than a college education.

    Theodore Roosevelt, twenty-sixth president of the United States from

    1901

    to

    1909

    Table of Contents

    Foreword

    Preface

    Acknowledgments

    Introduction for Students

    1. My Notes for the Genesis Bible Class

    2. Overview of the Bible’s Composition

    3. The Original Bible

    4. Ancient and Recent Changes that Assist Readers

    5. History of English Bible versions, Part I

    6. History of English Bible Versions, Part II

    7. Genesis Background

    8. The Beginnings

    9. The Garden of Eden

    10. Death in Eden: Part I

    11. Death in Eden: Part II

    12. Cain and Abel

    13. Where Did Cain Get His Wife?

    14. Civilization Outside of Eden

    15. Noah and the Flood

    16. New Restraints on Evil

    17. A New Direction: Abram (Abraham) and His Family

    18. Abram Scandalizes His Own Name

    19. Nephew Lot’s Choices

    20. Great Rewards and Great Failures

    21. Visitors, Promises, Beliefs, and Fears

    22. Lot’s Rewards in Sodom

    23. Challenges to Sarah’s Son in Gerar

    24. Challenges to Isaac from Within the Family

    25. Abraham’s Worst Test

    26. The Standards for Isaac’s Wife

    27. The Sons of Isaac Compete

    28. Development of Jacob’s Family

    29. Jacob Faces Enemies

    30. From Haran to Canaan: Told from the Viewpoint of Jacob’s Young Son, Joseph.

    31. Jacob Crushed by His Sons

    32. Judah’s Sowing and Reaping

    33. Joseph’s Further Humiliation

    34. Joseph and Timing

    35. The Brothers Face Joseph

    36. Final Tests of Joseph’s Brothers

    37. Forgiveness and Comfort

    38. Jacob’s Years in Egypt

    39. Jacob Blesses His Sons

    40. Two Deaths

    Epilogue

    Bibliography

    Maps

    Foreword

    Barbara K. Bellefeuille, Ed.D.

    I approached my first public school teaching position with great anticipation. The year was 1977 and I would be teaching Bible as an elective to middle school students. Eleanor Rupp was already a teacher in the same school system. She did not know at that time that one day she would be pouring her experience into writing for public schools nor did I know that one day I would write my Virginia Tech doctoral dissertation on the same subject, public school Bible teaching.

    In our orientation at the beginning of each year, we reviewed in depth the legal guidelines for teaching the Bible in public schools. Each week throughout the year we also met with our supervisor to discuss our lesson plans, to assure that we were keeping within those guidelines. A Student’s Notes on Genesis would have been a tremendous help during my years in the public school, guiding me in my own teaching. This book represents an investment of years in careful consideration of the best content and delivery for public school classes. A Student’s Notes on Genesis has been scrutinized and refined over and over, continually evaluated in the light of good teaching practices and the Supreme Court guidelines.

    I am personally aware of the years of work this book represents. The author’s high standards automatically resisted fast-tracking a book of this importance. Finally, Eleanor Rupp is an exceptional teacher! Her teaching style, her devotion to her students, her depth of experience, and her never-ending desire to learn, combine to make her a fine example of the art of teaching. Rarely do those published have this unique package of talents.

    Preface

    A year after the United States Supreme Court ruled on the place of teaching the Bible in the public schools, I was hired to teach the Bible to high school students in West Virginia. About a week after I began teaching, a kind lady in town politely told me that what I was doing was illegal, that the Court in 1963 had removed the Bible from our schools. Thankfully, she was wrong: the Court had not removed the Bible; rather, it wrote,

    It certainly may be said that the Bible is worthy of study for its literary and historic qualities. Nothing we have said here indicates that such study of the Bible or of religion, when presented objectively as part of a secular program of education, may not be effected consistently with the First Amendment.¹

    In 1984 the Court clarified the ruling somewhat by saying that the schools may not convey a message either of endorsement or disapproval.² In other words, the teachers may show their students what the Bible says, but they may not press it upon them as beliefs to hold or as teachings to reject. Schools may expose students to religions and to the Bible, but they may not impose any of those beliefs upon them.

    That meant students would study without fear of having their own religious views condemned in class and without fear that other views would be forced upon them.

    These rulings meant that the classroom could be neither a church nor a synagogue nor a mosque nor a temple. If the schools stayed within the guidelines, they had perfect freedom to teach the Bible in the public schools.

    A Student’s Notes on Genesis guides students from Adam to Abraham (the first eleven chapters of Genesis) and then slows its rapid pace to spend the rest of Genesis (chapters 12 through 50) on Abraham’s family extending to his great grandchildren. Bible readers stay with that family, not only throughout Genesis and the first five books of the Bible, but also to the Bible’s very end. Hopefully, readers will see in that often frustrating, yet sometimes dazzling family, their own hopes, frustrations, and battles and will perhaps discover that they have found from Genesis new windows of wisdom.

    1. Abington v. Schempp, (

    1963

    ).

    2. Lynch v. Donnelly, (

    1984

    ).

    Acknowledgments

    Thanks to:

    Dr. Charles Cauthen, former president of King College in Bristol Tennessee, and his wife, Hazel, who aided and encouraged me in the long and slow process of this project.

    Dr. Barbara Bellefeuille, Vice President for Academic Services at Bethel College (IN) and former fellow Bible teacher, whose help opened up time for me to work and encouraged me with many insights.

    Emma Stanley Cooper (Mrs. Donald), former fellow teacher, whose genius in Bible teaching helped me to see through periodic mental blocks.

    Sarah Overstreet Midyett (Mrs. J. T.), teacher and writer of Bible study workbooks, for her instructions years ago, and her recent editing and suggestions.

    Karen Schwind, author of Her Life As She Knew It, for her helpful thoughts about many of the chapters.

    Mary Rupp McClure, a sister who refreshed me with her clear thinking.

    Joy Gordon Beans, my niece, for her creative insights.

    The Attorney General of West Virginia who in 1985 clarified the legality of teaching the Bible in our public schools.

    The thousands of dear students whose responses helped me see through their eyes, particularly Becky Taylor Goins, Emily Saunders Hooie, Kreston Tynes Lloyd, Alex Moore, and Loren Wells.

    My family and my friends who have patiently (and sometimes despairingly) waited for the answer to when I would finish this volume.

    Introduction for Students

    A heads-up on how to understand this book’s arrangement.

    • All Bible passages are printed in italics with the references at the end of the passage.

    • Obsolete and rarely used words and phrases are followed by bracketed explanatory words printed in roman type rather than in italics.

    • All spelling and punctuation follow the King James Version even when it horrifies modern grammar gurus. If you are not familiar with old versions of the Bible, it may take you a little while to get used to the old writing rules and the old vocabulary.

    • Pronouns for God (he, him, his) follow the King James Version and are not capitalized. Names for God are, of course, capitalized just as your own are.

    • In the Bible you sometimes see the word Lord written as Lord—a different font. The publishers do that to show you that each is a different word in the Hebrew language, the original language of the book of Genesis.

    • You will learn the rules for writing Bible references (the addresses of Bible verses) in the fourth lesson.

    lesson 1

    My Notes for the Genesis Bible Class

    I am a high school student who loves movies, books, sports (especially basketball), and hiking with friends. Near the end of our summer break, about the time when I start to get bored, I realized I hadn’t escaped into a single book this summer. That escape, I knew, was what I needed now. I wished I had a really good book waiting.

    In that state of mind I bounced my basketball along the sidewalk, unaware that the ball was about to do me a favor. It bounced right out of my hand, rolled down the street, and wedged itself into the bottom step of a store. After freeing the ball, I noticed a sign on the window: Jewish Books. The sign jogged a thought. Jewish books. Didn’t the Jews have something to do with writing the Bible?

    I had often told myself I should read it. The Bible pops up everywhere I turn: English classes, history classes, discussions, debates, music, movies, and more. I have always had to drop out of those conversations. I know almost nothing about the Bible. Maybe it’s time to get a copy and read one, so I entered the bookstore.

    Yes, the owner said, we have Bibles, and yes, we Jews do have something to do with it. We wrote it. Do you want the Hebrew Bible or the Christian Bible? I told him I couldn’t read Hebrew and I was not a Christian; I just wanted an English Bible. He patiently explained that he didn’t mean the Hebrew language. Realizing I was essentially ignorant of the book, he explained that what Christians call the Bible comes in two parts. Christians call the first and larger part the Old Testament, but Jewish people call the first part the Hebrew Bible. He said that Christians call the second part of the Bible the New Testament which is about a Jewish man named Jesus. The two parts together are what Christians mean by the Bible.

    I knew that Jesus has something to do with Christmas, so wanting to learn all I could, I decided to get both parts. I was proud of my decision, but as I glanced through the pages, I realized it would take a lot of study. A short time later I heard that my school was offering a world literature elective that would include a unit on the book of Genesis—the first book in the Bible. I decided I would take the class.

    The first day of the Genesis class

    The first day of school the teacher took away any fears we might have. She explained that the Supreme Court’s guidelines for studying the Bible in the public schools give protection to all beliefs and non beliefs—not endorsement, but protection. The guidelines free all students from fear of their beliefs being censored. She also made sure we knew that this would not be a comparative religions class and that our goal would be to know Genesis, a unit in itself and the gateway to the rest of the Bible.

    To get some idea of how familiar we were with the Bible, the teacher asked us to write down as many Bible characters as we could remember in two minutes. Then she set the timer. I was sure (almost sure) of five people—Adam, Eve, Noah, Moses, and Jesus. A girl in front of me wrote and wrote and said she needed a lot more than two minutes. Fortunately, that’s all the time the teacher gave.

    She then asked us to give our ideas of what the Bible is about. Some said it was like an anthology, a collection of old miracle stories or maybe a mystical anthology. A few thought it was a book of old laws. Several said that every day they would read something in it. One girl said she usually opened her Bible up anywhere, put a finger on the page, and read a few sentences. She found it hard to understand, but thought it might do her good. It sounded like a rabbit’s foot to me. All agreed that if they knew more about the Bible, it should help them in literature classes. I didn’t say anything. I just knew the Bible had been too influential in the history of the world for me to be ignorant of it.

    The teacher’s next words surprised me: she said that since some interpret the Bible as myths and legend and some as true historical events, if in class she took a stand on one side or the other, she would be stepping outside of the Supreme Court’s guidelines for public schools. The religion of both Jews and Christians comes out of the Bible. Since the public school teacher may neither affirm nor deny any student’s religious beliefs, the teacher said she would not take a stand on their differing religious viewpoints. Rather, she would teach its storyline—a storyline that lays a foundation for all that happens in the rest of the Bible.

    As the class ended, the teacher explained that for several days we would study the formation of the Bible, the history of Bible translations, and the battles and bloodshed that brought it to us in our modern English. Although I was eager to start studying Genesis immediately, I could see by her introduction that those topics would answer some of my other questions—questions about where the Bible came from, who wrote it, when it was written, whether the original documents still exist, and how its story has survived to this day.

    In order to make our study meaningful, at the end of each study, she will give us questions to discuss, checking our understanding and guiding us in analyzing those ancient characters and events. She said those characters were just like us, like every person—like all who sit around us in class.

    I look forward to reading this book. I think I’ll keep my notes as a journal—not just the information, but my expectations and reflections on each study. I don’t want to forget my first impressions.

    lesson 2

    Overview of the Bible’s Composition

    My first thoughts

    On the board the teacher had written the objective for the next few days: Analysis of the Composition of the Bible. Realizing these lessons might be heavy, I took detailed notes. The following notes (brushed up some) were what I recorded from the teacher’s lesson, as well as the comments from the class.

    My notes on the teacher’s lesson

    This study is to cover the dates of the Bible writings, the different divisions of the Bible, and its languages, names, and writers.

    The dates and age of the Bible writings

    How years are dated

    Before we can grasp the dates of the Bible writings, we must understand the changes in history’s calendar. Thousands of years ago people dated their lives by important events such as a natural catastrophe, the rule of a great king, or the beginning of an important treaty. As the centuries passed, Christians who saw the work of Jesus (called Christ) as the great turning point in history began dating events according to his birth. From that estimated year, we have the dates we use today. The letters bc are the initials of Before Christ, meaning before his birth. The letters ad are the initials, not of English words but of the Latin words, Anno Domini, meaning in the year of our Lord. They refer to the years following his birth.

    Events that happened one year before Jesus was born were dated as 1 bc. Events that happened one year after his birth were dated as ad 1. Notice that the letters bc follow the number of the year, and the letters ad precede the number of the year.

    Making calendars with Christ as the center of history did not begin until over 500 years after his birth, gradually becoming a general world-standard. The best efforts of the calendar-makers in trying to line up his birth with the records of history, however, apparently missed the date by a number of years. The true date of Jesus’ birth was probably about four or five years before the calendar date of 1 bc! Perhaps the only great problem created by that error was for those who were sure something cataclysmic would occur in ad 2,000. When the world celebrated the calendar year 2000 (at least four years too late), few knew that the probable two thousandth year had quietly come and gone about forty-eight months earlier with no cataclysm showing up for those parties.

    The Bible’s dates and age on a timeline

    The teacher used a timeline to help us grasp the great age of the Bible. It surprised us all. The traditional view—the view held for hundreds of years—claims the writing, or the organizing of the writings, began about 1450 bc and was completed about ad 100. Some recent views place the beginning of the Bible writings about 1200 bc and the completion about ad 150.

    Averaging the dates, Genesis was written over 3,300 years ago. Hearing that figure, a student interjected the words, In fourteen hundred ninety-two, Columbus sailed the ocean blue. He then went on to say that Columbus’s journey began a little over 500 years ago, a length of time that can seem endless to us; yet the writing of Genesis began over six times further back in history than Columbus, and the end of the Bible over three times further back. He remarked that compared to when the Bible writings began, Columbus’s discovery of America was like last week! A student who is a history buff added that when Columbus discovered America, he had a copy of the Bible with him on the ship—and the Bible was already, at that time, very, very old.

    According to traditional views, the length of time it took to write the complete Bible was about 1,550 years.

    The two major divisions of the Bible

    The Bible has two major divisions, the first division written before Jesus’ life and the second division written afterwards. Jewish and Christian students in the class agreed that the first division of the Bible is sacred scripture—writings they see as holy and revered. The Jewish students call it the Hebrew Bible. The Christians call it the Old Testament.

    The Hebrew Bible has twenty-four books. The Christian Old Testament has the same twenty-four books, though divided into thirty-nine rather than twenty-four. Some Christian Old Testaments have seven more books (and parts of books) called the Deuterocanonical books, or the Apocrypha.

    The second major division of the Bible is the New Testament which Christians consider sacred scripture also. The New Testament has twenty-seven books.

    The languages of the Bible

    Except for a few passages, the writers of the Hebrew Bible, as would be expected, wrote in the Hebrew language.

    Three centuries before the New Testament period, young Alexander (later called Alexander the Great) led his small armies in extraordinary victories from Greece to Egypt and eastward to India. No one could stop him. With his armies came the superb Greek language. No one could stop that language either. For hundreds of years and into New Testament times, even after the Greeks lost their military power, the Greek language dominated the Mediterranean world. The writers of the New Testament wrote in that Greek language making the New Testament readable and understandable over all the known world of their day.

    The names of the Bible and its parts

    Bible

    We had to use our imaginations for part of this topic; it began with a time machine. Suppose by way of a time machine the men who wrote the Bible met to decide on a name for their sacred book. Suppose then that one of them said, I think we should name our book after an ancient Phoenician city on the Mediterranean. That suggestion would have been insulting to them, for why would they write a book centered on their God and then place upon that sacred book the name of a pagan seaport! Yet that is exactly the origin of the word Bible.

    Thirty-five hundred years ago the Mediterranean world did not have paper as we know it today. They wrote on sheets made from papyrus, a plant once growing abundantly in Egypt. The Egyptians shipped their papyrus to a city on the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea. The original name of that old city was Gebal. The Greeks called it Byblos.

    Gradually, the Greeks began to call papyrus biblos from their name for the city Gebal. A papyrus book (think scroll) became a biblion, and more than one book became biblia from which we get the English name Bible. Our class easily understood the appropriateness of the name Bible (biblia) because that is exactly what the Bible is, a collection of books.

    Tanakh

    The name Tanakh (pronounced TAH nax) is another name for the Hebrew Bible. It is an acronym using the first letters of the three sections of the Hebrew Bible—Torah (Law or Teaching), Nevi’im (Prophets), and Ketuvim (Writings), forming the word TaNaKh.

    Scripture

    The word scripture comes from the Latin scriptura, meaning writings. Many use the name Scripture or Scriptures as another name for the Bible.

    Testament

    Testament is an important word in the Bible. It means covenant or agreement or sometimes treaty. Some covenants in the Bible are unilateral and some are bilateral. A unilateral covenant (think unicycle—a one wheeler) is a one-sided promise that one person makes and the other person is expected to gratefully receive as a gift.

    If obligations are attached to a covenant, it is a bilateral covenant (think bicycle—two wheeler) made between two parties or people and with obligations for each. For example, when you agree to wash your neighbor’s car if he will fix your computer, you have made a bilateral covenant.

    The writers of the Bible

    According to the traditional view, about forty people wrote the Bible. All

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