Exegete. Hee.
Thu, Apr. 10th, 2003 11:00 pmI am exegeting the Bible right now. Yay. It's actually a really long and tedious process for only about two to six sentences of material. I have to keep looking at various different commentaries and sources and nitpick things like, Mark says "tear" while Matthew and Luke say "open." And John? John's way out there.
I also just read Revelations for the first time, and I was amused (this is probably not a good thing). But I swear, whoever was writing that had a very fertile imagination, or else he was on some kind of ancient crack, like Coleridge and his poetry. Or Blake. But I finally got to read the first place the Whore of Babylon and the Four Horsemen show up, which pleased me. I like finding the "original" bits of where sayings and whatnot come from. And according to Revelations, Death rides a pale green horse! I didn't know that either. But reading about the Four Horsement in there and the general strangeness of the end of the world made Good Omens even funnier in retrospect.
I love Good Omens. It's one of those fantasy books on the apocalypse in the grand style of Douglas Adams and Monty Python. Hee.
I still haven't been able to find a beta reader for my little Forbidden Game ficlet, but then, that's probably because I haven't been looking very hard. It also seems as though the entire LJS fandom is very small and very non-active. The drabble list has about 6 members =(. Oh well.. at least everyone there posts a lot, inspiring me to write more too! I must keep writing this time and not let the writing muscle fall into disuse, as I do all the time. I also need to write a happy, non-miserable drabble sometime.
I also have grand plans to make more Sandman icons, except Sandman pics are REALLY HARD to find online! Must get my copies back from Cyrus and figure out how to scan! Then I want to make a whole bunch of author ones. And a NJ pride one for
hecatehatesthat because I complain about her state all the time ;).
I also just read Revelations for the first time, and I was amused (this is probably not a good thing). But I swear, whoever was writing that had a very fertile imagination, or else he was on some kind of ancient crack, like Coleridge and his poetry. Or Blake. But I finally got to read the first place the Whore of Babylon and the Four Horsemen show up, which pleased me. I like finding the "original" bits of where sayings and whatnot come from. And according to Revelations, Death rides a pale green horse! I didn't know that either. But reading about the Four Horsement in there and the general strangeness of the end of the world made Good Omens even funnier in retrospect.
I love Good Omens. It's one of those fantasy books on the apocalypse in the grand style of Douglas Adams and Monty Python. Hee.
I still haven't been able to find a beta reader for my little Forbidden Game ficlet, but then, that's probably because I haven't been looking very hard. It also seems as though the entire LJS fandom is very small and very non-active. The drabble list has about 6 members =(. Oh well.. at least everyone there posts a lot, inspiring me to write more too! I must keep writing this time and not let the writing muscle fall into disuse, as I do all the time. I also need to write a happy, non-miserable drabble sometime.
I also have grand plans to make more Sandman icons, except Sandman pics are REALLY HARD to find online! Must get my copies back from Cyrus and figure out how to scan! Then I want to make a whole bunch of author ones. And a NJ pride one for
Tags:
(no subject)
Fri, Apr. 11th, 2003 12:34 pm (UTC)Course not! ^_^ I don't mean to insult it, because I figure, to anyone else, what I believe in looks like I'm on crack too. Der. I don't think that quite came out the way it was meant to. I was raised Christian, but kind of fell out of it (though both my sister and my mother still are).
I think my class is using the Harper Collins Study Bible (New Revised Standard Version), although I do think most people I know use the NIV.
I was doing an exegesis on Mark 1:9-11 (with the Matthew, Luke and John parallels) on the baptism on Jesus.. it's for my class on the New Testament and Christian origins. I think it's absolutely fascinating, correlating what I personally know of Christianity with the early days of the religion and just how much is there. It's also almost like reading Shakespeare for the first time in discovering all the phrases that come from it. I had no idea Jesus was the one who said "pearls before swine."
(no subject)
Sun, Apr. 13th, 2003 07:20 am (UTC)Don't worry, I didn't take insult :) I was raised Christian too, except I haven't quite fallen out yet. Er, not that I'm trying to or anything!
It's also almost like reading Shakespeare for the first time in discovering all the phrases that come from it. I had no idea Jesus was the one who said "pearls before swine."
Heh, I know exactly what you mean. So many of our old proverbs and adages come from the Bible, but nobody ever knows exactly where, how, or why.