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      • Old Testament narratives are not just stories. They are historic accounts deliberately told to demonstrate God's faithfulness to His promises and His sovereignty over human history. Old Testament narratives are inter-related, progressing accounts of God’s purpose for history and how He intends to accomplish it.
      www.dwellcc.org/classes/electives/hermeneutics/hermeneutics-old-testament-narrative
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  2. The most common type of literature in the Bible is narrative. 40% of the Old Testament is narrative and three fourths of the Bible is Old Testament. This present chapter focuses on how Hebrew narrative works. Narratives are stories that retail historical events of the past that are intended to give meaning and direction for a given people in ...

  3. Jul 26, 2010 · Their purpose is to show God at work in his creation and among his people. The narratives glorify him, and give us a picture of his providence and protection. They also provide illustrations of many other lessons important to our lives. Three Levels of Narratives: Old Testament narratives are told on three levels.

    • Rob Berreth
  4. Old Testament narratives are inter-related, progressing accounts of Gods purpose for history and how He intends to accomplish it. As the narratives tell what happened (the context for God’s revelation), they also indicate why it matters (the purpose of history).

    • Find The Setting
    • Make An Outline
    • Start Observing
    • Consider The Characters
    • Identify Themes & Spiritual Principles
    • Working with Old Testament Narratives
    • Practice Exercise
    Read the text to get an understanding of the setting for action.
    Where or under what circumstances is the action taking place?
    Describe this setting based upon the events of the preceding passage and/or upon the opening few verses of this passage.
    Think in terms of scenes, not paragraphs.
    Read the entire passage carefully noting the shifts in focus on persons and events, or the shifts of scene from one place to another.
    Separate the passage into major scenes  and write a one sentence summary of each scene, putting the story into your own words.
    As you read answer the “5Ws and H” (who, what, when, where, why and how”).

    For each of the scenes in your outline answer the following questions: 1. What words are repeated in the text? (e.g. glory & heavy in 1 Samuel 5:6; 1 Samuel 5:11; 1 Samuel 6:5) 2. What words or ideas must you understand to understand this scene? 3. List common themes (an idea which is made in some recurrent pattern) in each scene (e.g. reversal of ...

    Who are the main characters?
    How does the passage give insight into the characters and what motivates them?
    Describe the relationships between the characters in each scene, noting any changes from preceding passages and chapters.
    Do you see God at work either explicitly or implicitly?
    Assume a unity of the material. You can assume the narratives form one coherent unfolding story. The meaning of earlier data is progressively revealed or enriched by the addition of subsequent data.
    The most helpful principle to uncover original meaning is “juxtaposition.” Consistently ask 2 questions:
    Consider the descriptions, actions of and reactions to the people of God in this scene. Does any of it remind you of passages in the gospels concerning Jesus?  Or other New Testament characters?
    Look for and state any spiritual principles from this passage. (A spiritual principle is a universal, timeless truth.)   For example, does this passage teach something about the nature of mankind t...

    adapted from How to Read the Bible for All It’s Worth,by Gordon Fee & Douglas Stuart 1. An Old Testament narrative usually does not teach a doctrine. 2. An Old Testament narrative usually illustrates a doctrine(s) taught propositionally elsewhere. 3. Narratives record what happened — not necessarily what should have happened. 4. What people do in n...

    Using the principles above, compare and contrast these scenes: 1. The annunciation of birth of a hero to a barren mother: Sarah, Rebekah, Rachel, Hannah, Manoah’s wife, Elizabeth, Mary. 2. Meeting at a well: Isaac, Jacob, Moses, Ruth, Saul, Samson, the woman with Jesus, Lydia. 3. Danger in the desert: Hagar 2Xs, Moses and Israel 3Xs, Elijah – 1 Kin...

  5. Readers constantly sense depth in Old Testament narratives, and this is usually an instinctive recognition of the way many stories transcend their original Israelite context and have a meaning and relevance for the ‘human situation’ of all periods.

  6. 1. Old Testament narratives are not allegories or stories filled with hidden meanings. 2. Old Testament narratives are not primarily intended to teach moral lessons. Their overall purpose is to tell what God was doing in Israel. 3. Old Testament narratives are implicit examples of explicit teaching given elsewhere in Scripture. III. How to ...

  7. Aug 8, 2012 · What is its theological purpose? This in no way is meant to depreciate the history. But, it is history as the servant and channel of revelation. II. Biblical Narratives. A. God is active in His world. Inspired Bible authors chose certain events to reveal God. God is the major character of the OT.

  1. The Old Testament Bible Study Is A Study That Goes Through All 39 Old Testament Books. These Free Bible Study Lessons Cover All Old Testament Books From Genesis Through Malachi.

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