Have a question about the Bible?
After four years in the making by religion scholars, including 杏吧视频鈥檚 Timothy Beal, the online site, 鈥淏ible Odyssey: People Places and Passages,鈥 has launched with answers and information at .
鈥淭he main idea for the site was to make the best of nonpartisan biblical scholarship accessible to a broader public,鈥 said Beal, the Florence Harkness Professor of Religion.
When the 134-year-old Society of Biblical Literature received funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities to establish the website, Beal was tapped to serve on the board to offer suggestions about the kinds of questions and interests people have about the Bible. He also edits contributions to the site.
And if people cannot find an answer, they can submit questions online at the Bible Odyssey website for Beal, the author of eight books related to the Bible, and other Bible scholars.
Among Bible Odyssey鈥檚 early visitors are 18 students in Beal鈥檚 鈥淚ntroduction to Biblical Literature鈥 course. They began using the site with their first assignment on Babel and will continue to tap it as a resource throughout the semester.
The website is among several changes Beal has incorporated in a class he has taught for 20 years.
"During that time, we have been in the midst of a media revolution that is radically changing the ways we teach, do research and publish,鈥 said Beal, who earned the distinction of Active Learning Fellow after completing the university鈥檚 Active Learning Fellows program this past summer.
鈥淎t the same time, this revolution is radically changing cultural and religious ideas and practices around 鈥榯he Bible.鈥 This is a great opportunity to revise the course in light of these revolutionary changes,鈥 he said.
One of the fellows鈥 requirements is to introduce active-learning activities to the classroom. Active learning is a process that engages students in analyzing and evaluating course content and uses technology as part of the experience.
Beal considered it an opportunity to reinvigorate and reinvent his popular Bible class that has been taught much the same way for years.
Beal said his class traditionally attracts students from a wide variety of religious, non-religious and anti-religious backgrounds, and most are unfamiliar with academic biblical studies, which differs from how the Bible is studied in a religious context, such as church or a campus fellowship group.
Many arrive for his course with what he calls 鈥淏ible baggage鈥 that often relates to common misperceptions about the Bible.
His students approach the Bible:
- As literature for reading and discussing the Hebrew Scriptures and New Testament in their socio-historical contexts.
- As scripture, where they analyze and interpret how Bibles, Bible readings and biblical interpretations function in a particular religious context鈥攁nd how Christian and Jewish scriptural practices compare with those of other religions.
- As a media, where past media revolutions have radically transformed the Bible and what is changing the holy book now.