Proverb Essay

1614 Words4 Pages

Applying Narrative:

• Note good and bad human examples (1 Cor 10:6, 10).
Narrative most often illustrates or demonstrates truth or doctrine taught directly elsewhere. Biblical stories are not doctrinal treatises. Narratives generally teach by implication and/or extrapolation.
-David and Bathsheba narrative - some of the causes and effects of adultery and deceit. The story illustrates and brings out some of the implications of the Sixth Commandment (murder), Seventh (adultery), Ninth (false witness), and Tenth (covetousness), among other things.
-Judges 13-16 The Samson Narrative cannot be used to teach the idea that a great volume of Christian service or flurry of activity can offset or negate the effects of sin in one’s life, as though …show more content…

Understanding Biblical Proverbs (adapted from McCune)
A proverb is “a brief statement of universally accepted truth formulated in such a way as to be memorable” (Grant Osborne, The Hermeneutical Spiral, p. 195).

• A Proverb usually has a single principle.
Proverbs 31:14 “She is like a merchant ship.” The parallel clause explains it: “she brings her food from afar.” The principle is that a wise woman goes various places to get food; she is a good shopper.

• Many Proverbs are general truths that assume exceptions.
(This is perhaps the greatest principle to learn in interpreting proverbs--what they are not. Most misinterpretations occur here.)

Proverbs 3:35 “The wise will inherit honor, but fools get disgrace.” This is the ideal when common grace is at work. Sometimes the wise will be disgraged in sinful society; sometimes a fool will be honored in a sinful society. Matt 5:11 – blessed are you when reviled for Jesus
Proverbs are not promises (as Ecclesiastes and Job emphasize) but are a call to action…wise living. 4. Apocalyptic Writing: Most of Revelation; also portions of Daniel, Zechariah, and other …show more content…

Ask: “What is this passage teaching about God and His ways?”

• Find God and His people. Ask: “What is this passage teaching about how people should respond to God?”

• Jesus is the main point. See him, trust him, admire him, worship him, love him, and follow him.

• Looking toward the end should lead to right living in the present (2 Pet 3:11).

5. Gospel: Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John

The Gospel genre is similar in many ways to the narrative genre, but is completely focused on Jesus. The gospels present the story of Jesus’ ministry, teaching, resurrection, and death from four different angles. Much overlap and many parallel passages, also unique sections in each.

Matthew
Written by one of Jesus’ apostles – a former tax collector

Purpose: Presents Jesus as the promised Jewish Messiah (“Christ”) and King. Jesus fulfills all the promises made to Israel.

• Starts with a genealogy; Jesus is the descendant of Abraham and David.
Central Theme: Authority (Matt 7:29; 28:18)

Mark
Written by an associate of the apostle Peter

Features: fast-paced (“immediately”), brief, and is focused on the works of

More about Proverb Essay

Open Document