BI101 Introducing Biblical Interpretation: Contexts and Resources (Referenced to Logos 5)
BI101 Introducing Biblical Interpretation: Contexts and Resources (Revised Edition)
BI111 Typological Hermeneutics: Finding Christ in the Whole Bible
BI161 Problems in Bible Interpretation: Difficult Passages I
BI162 Problems in Bible Interpretation: Difficult Passages II
BI163 Problems in Bible Interpretation: Difficult Passages III
BI164 Problems in Bible Interpretation: Difficult Passages IV
BI165 Problems in Bible Interpretation: Difficult Passages V
BI171 Problems in Bible Interpretation: Why Do Christians Disagree about End Times?
BI172 Problems in Bible Interpretation: Why Do Christians Disagree about Baptism?
BI173 Problems in Bible Interpretation: Why Do Christians Disagree about the Bible?
BI190 The Use of the Old Testament in the New Testament: Methodology and Practice
BI205 Old Testament Exegesis: Understanding and Applying the Old Testament
BI206 New Testament Exegesis: Understanding and Applying the New Testament
BI210 Introducing Hebraic Thought: A Biblical Philosophy of Truth
BI271 Interpreting New Testament Narrative: Studies and Methods
BI312 A Biblical Theology of Redemption: Themes and Interpretation
BI314 Matthew’s Use of the Old Testament: Kingdom and Christology
BI351 History of Biblical Interpretation I: Second Temple Judaism through the Reformation
BI352 History of Biblical Interpretation II: Seventeenth Century through the Present
Join Dr. Michael Heiser as he explores some challenging passages of Scripture. In this course Dr. Heiser looks at ten different passages—five in the Old Testament and five in the New Testament. He identifies the key issues and walks through different ways of understanding them. The course will help equip you to better interpret challenging passages yourself and encourage you to study God’s Word more deeply.
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BI163 Problems in Bible Interpretation: Difficult Passages III
Introducing the Speaker and Course
“If a Man Has Two Wives …”
Cultural Status Quo
What Does Scripture Actually Present?
Unreasonable Punishment?
Another Proposal
Context of Deuteronomy 25:11–12
The Meaning of “Harm”
Does the Law Devalue the Fetus?
Hammurabi’s Code
Was David an Idolater?
Insight into the Teraphim
Teraphim as Ancestor Figurines
The Test for Adultery
God Is a Witness
Different Genealogies?
Davidic Blood
Jeconiah
Lines of Descent
Solomon in Matthew’s Genealogy
Sin and the Man Born Blind
Greek Grammar
Fallacious Reasoning
Jesus Heals the Man Born Blind
The Unusual Means of Jesus’s Healing
Echoes of Creating Adam
Jesus as Creator-Potter
Creating the World or Worlds?
Several Possible Responses
The Issue in Romans 10:18
What Is Paul Quoting and Saying?
Paul’s Thinking
What’s Going On?
Conclusion to the Course
Title: BI163 Problems in Bible Interpretation: Difficult Passages III
Instructor: Michael S. Heiser
Publisher: Lexham Press
Publication Date: 2018
Product Type: Logos Mobile Education
Resource Type: Courseware, including transcripts, audio, and video resources
Courses: 1
Video Hours: 2.5
Dr. Michael S. Heiser was a former Scholar-in-Residence for Faithlife Corporation, the makers of Logos Bible Software. He served as Executive Director of the Awakening School of Theology and Ministry at Celebration Church in Jacksonville, Florida. His varied academic background enabled him to operate in the realm of critical scholarship and the wider Christian community. His experience in teaching at the undergraduate level and writing for the layperson have both directly contributed to Logos’ goal of adapting scholarly tools for nonspecialists.
Dr. Heiser earned his PhD in Hebrew Bible and Semitic languages and held an MA in ancient history and Hebrew studies. He was the coeditor of Old Testament Greek Pseudepigrapha with Morphology and Semitic Inscriptions: Analyzed Texts and English Translations, and can do translation work in roughly a dozen ancient languages, including Biblical Hebrew, Greek, Aramaic, Egyptian hieroglyphs, and Ugaritic cuneiform. He also specialized in Israelite religion (especially Israel’s divine council), contextualizing biblical theology with Israelite and ancient Near Eastern religion, Jewish binitarianism, biblical languages, ancient Semitic languages, textual criticism, comparative philology, and Second Temple period Jewish literature. In addition, he was named the 2007 Pacific Northwest Regional Scholar by the Society of Biblical Literature.