OT511: Old Testament Theology I: Pentateuch and Former Prophets

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OT511: Old Testament Theology I: Pentateuch and Former Prophets Course Lecturer: Richard E. Averbeck, Ph.D. Professor of Old Testament and Semitic Languages at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School Course Description Welcome to Old Testament Theology I: Pentateuch and Former Prophets, an online graduate-level course designed to expand your understanding of foundational theological concepts introduced in the Old Testament which will inform interpretation of all of Scripture. Our focus will be on the books of Genesis through Kings. All meetings for this course will be conducted online. In terms of academic credit, this is a semester-length course, but it is offered in an intensive 8-week format. Course Objectives CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITY GLOBALNET COURSE SYLLABUS In this course, Dr. Richard E. Averbeck introduces the content and theology of Genesis through Kings, identifying the foundational themes that emerge and tracing them through the rest of the Bible. The goal of the course is to work through the books section-by-section focusing on major passages and their theological connections through all of Scripture. Special attention is given throughout the course to the significance of these passages for the church and the Christian life so that you will be keenly aware of the need to go beyond a simplistic and mechanistic reading of the text into a deeply implicational reading expecting to be both informed and impacted by its message. Upon completion of your study, you should be able to do the following: Identify various genres of literature in Genesis through Kings and learn to interpret them with credibility. Articulate the significance of Genesis 1-11 as the primeval historical and theological foundation for understanding our human experience in the world. Understand how the Pentateuch (Genesis-Deuteronomy) lays the historical and especially the theological foundation for the Former Prophets (Joshua-Kings) and for the rest of the Bible. Understand how the Pentateuch and the Former Prophets fit together within the canon, and how they contribute to our understanding of faith experience in ancient Israel. Value the ways in which Ancient Near Eastern literature can inform our reading of Scripture. Become familiar with the history recorded in Genesis through Kings and its relationship to the history of the surrounding Ancient Near Eastern world. View CUGN Academic Policies www.cugn.org OT511 Course Syllabus Christian University GlobalNet and RBC Ministries; all rights reserved. 1

Trace the overall historical progression of God s covenantal redemptive program from Genesis through Revelation. Value all of the above goals as crucial to an ongoing study of the whole canon of Scripture as well as foundational to the way we live our Christian lives and pursue our ministries. Accessibility If you have particular accessibility needs, please contact the CUGN Registrar at the beginning of the course. This will allow us to work directly with you to make efforts to accommodate your situation and ensure as full as possible accessibility to the course. Course Lecturer Richard E. Averbeck is professor of Old Testament and Semitic Languages at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, Deerfield, Illinois (1994 present). He has published numerous journal articles as well as contributed to several books and dictionaries, including the Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology (Baker, 1995), Faith, Tradition, and History (Eisenbrauns, 1994), Cracking Old Testament Codes: Guide to Interpreting Old Testament Literary Forms (Broadman & Holman, 1995), and the New International Dictionary of Old Testament Theology and Exegesis (Zondervan, 1997). Education: Calvary Bible College, B.A. Grace Theological Seminary, M.A., M.Div. Annenberg Research Institute (formerly Dropsie College), Ph.D. Other CUGN courses by this professor: OT512 Old Testament Theology II: Latter Prophets and Writings SF403 Spiritual & Ethical Formation: Theology and Practice (with Dr. James Grier) SF507 The Foundations of Spiritual Formation I Online Professor CUGN will assign one of its faculty members as its online professor for this course. Your professor will be introduced the first week of the course and will guide you and the other students through the 8-week study. Your online professor will be available to you by email and, at set times, by chat room or other real-time technology. The following will be done by the online professor in order to stimulate student involvement and to facilitate effective learning: Post discussion questions for the online forum Interact with students in all discussions Evaluate student papers and/or assignments as they are submitted Provide assistance with technological problems that may occur Issue the students final grades For additional help as you work through this course, please read Succeeding in Your Online Course, which is provided at the end of this syllabus. OT511 Course Syllabus Christian University GlobalNet and RBC Ministries; all rights reserved. 2

Course Texts Dyrness, William. Themes in Old Testament Theology. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1979. Sandy, D. Brent & Ronald L. Giese, Jr., eds., Cracking Old Testament Codes: A Guide to Interpreting the Literary Genres of the Old Testament. Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 1995. Walton, John H. Chronological and Background Charts of the Old Testament. Revised and Expanded. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1994. You will also need a copy of the Bible as you will be required to read the Old Testament books of Genesis through Kings, as well as several additional biblical texts. See Weekly Topics and Assignments for further details. You should use a modern translation (not a paraphrase), e.g., RSV, NASB, NKJV, NIV, NRSV, etc. To order your textbooks, you may use the CUGN online store available on our website. Shipping is available to international students, but please place your order early enough to allow adequate time for delivery. When available, you may also consider downloading the textbooks to an ereader. Academic Honesty At CUGN, we believe all we do is as unto the Lord and we thus hold to a high academic standard of honesty; we do not tolerate plagiarism and cheating. Students found guilty of any form of academic dishonesty face consequences ranging from interaction with the Academic Dean to expulsion from CUGN. Quizzes and Exams: Any student found guilty of cheating on a quiz or exam will automatically receive a score of zero for that quiz or exam. A second offense will result in automatic course failure and possible disciplinary action and/or expulsion from CUGN. Please view the CUGN Academic Catalog for a full definition and examples of cheating. Plagiarism: If a student s work is found to be plagiarized, consequences will vary depending on the nature of the plagiarism. If an offense is deemed unintentional, the student will have an opportunity to resubmit the work. A second offense will result in an automatic score of zero for that assignment, which may also result in failure of that course. More serious plagiarism offenses could result in automatic course failure, disciplinary action, or expulsion from CUGN. Please view the CUGN Academic Catalog for a full definition and examples of plagiarism. If you have questions about plagiarism, or would like to request resources for learning how to avoid plagiarism, please contact our Registrar s Office at registrar@cugn.org or toll free at (888) 487-5376 ext. 3. Course Methods Throughout this course, a number of methods will be used to engage the students in learning and processing information, interacting with other students, and applying the learning to their lives. These methods include the following: OT511 Course Syllabus Christian University GlobalNet and RBC Ministries; all rights reserved. 3

Media/Materials The course will include media presentations of lectures and supplementary materials to be viewed, listened to, and/or read throughout the lessons of the course. Interaction Audio-based teaching The primary teaching session in each lesson is provided in audio format. We also provide the option of reading the lesson from a transcript of the audio lecture (found in the course Audio Lecture section). Multisensory learning Because the primary teaching information is provided in audio and PDF text documents, students can choose the medium (or combination of media) that most closely aligns with their individual learning styles. Readings and other media Reading from the required textbooks will be assigned to students each week. Whether sitting in a traditional classroom or studying from a distance, students benefit from interaction and collaboration with other students. In order to meet this need in distance theological education, CUGN offers structures and resources to encourage effective community interaction in this course. Discussion Forum This forum fosters peer-to-peer interaction in a global, threaded discussion. Students are required to respond to relevant questions posted by the instructors and to read and respond to the posts of fellow students. Reflection Through blogging, CUGN provides many opportunities for students to reflect on what they have learned, what they believe, and where they are challenged. The goal of these reflections is personal spiritual growth and transformation. Course Requirements This course consists of a mentor relationship, readings, audio lectures, videos, online group discussions, a creative research project, quizzes, and blogging. The information regarding these course components and expectations is as follows: Mentor This course requires that you seek out a mentor in your community with whom you can communicate by e-mail and/or telephone and with whom you can meet face-to-face at least twice during the course. The purpose of this mentoring relationship is to enable you to assimilate the teaching in this course into your life and ministry. Further definition of the mentor s role in this course can be found in the mentor requirements document available in the Course Introduction in the Before You Begin section of the course. Reading Study assignments covered in this course should be read in the context of the lesson in which they are assigned. In addition to the required textbooks, you may be asked to read supplementary materials. The required reading is as follows: OT511 Course Syllabus Christian University GlobalNet and RBC Ministries; all rights reserved. 4

1. Read the books of Genesis through Kings and several additional biblical texts as assigned in each lesson. You should use a modern translation (not a paraphrase), e.g., RSV, NASB, NKJV, NIV, NRSV, etc. 2. Read William Dyrness Themes in Old Testament Theology in its entirety. 3. Read Brent Sandy and Ronald Giese s text, Cracking Old Testament Codes, in its entirety. This text is a compilation by several scholars (including Dr. Averbeck) and provides background and perspective on the various genres of the Old Testament, which are crucial for proper interpretation. 4. Read 500 additional pages from the readings referenced in the lecture outlines or the course bibliography. This is your opportunity to pursue topics of interest. Readings completed for your creative research project may count toward this reading requirement. List all completed readings in a reading log as part of your blog. Audio Lectures Each of the lessons in this course features an audio lecture of approximately 45 minutes in length delivered by Dr. Richard E. Averbeck. These instructional lectures are required and can be listened to as many times as needed. The written text of the lecture as well as a guided outline to assist in note taking are made available in PDF format. There are 24 lectures in this course; therefore, three lectures will be presented and discussed each week. Discussion Forums Discussion questions related to each week s lectures are integrated into the weekly course requirements. The Discussion Forum for each week will begin on Monday at 12:01 a.m. Eastern Standard Time (EST), and your required posts must be submitted prior to the following Sunday at 11:59 p.m. EST. You must visit the Discussion Forum at least three times during each week of the course and your attendance will be validated by your posts. You are required to post responses to the questions as noted in the lesson requirements and to respond to at least two of the posts presented by other students each week. Each response should consist of a well-conceived short paragraph or two. In addition, your course professor may comment on your posts, and you should be prepared to respond to those comments as well. Video Presentations There are four video presentations related to this course that are required viewing. You will note them in the assignment section in the weeks where they are relevant. Creative Research Project You will develop a creative research project on a topic of interest related to the subject matter of this course. Upon completion of the project, you will submit a paper describing the project along with any related documentation. More guidance concerning the project will be provided by your course professor during the first week of the course, and you may also download the ideas document from the Additional Assignments found in Week 1 of the course. The topic for your research project must be submitted to your professor for preapproval prior to beginning your research. Projects may be posted online to be read and commented on by other students. All projects and related writing are due at the end of Week 5. Remember, each week begins on a Monday and ends the following Sunday; therefore, the Creative Research Project is due on the Sunday of Week 5 at 11:59 p.m. EST. OT511 Course Syllabus Christian University GlobalNet and RBC Ministries; all rights reserved. 5

Quizzes You will take a 10-question, multiple choice and/or true/false quiz at the end of each lecture. There is a remediation feature built into all quiz questions that allows you to review questions you missed and locate the specific section of the lecture or reading from which the question was drawn. Once you have reviewed the question again, you can attempt to answer a second time. If you are correct, you will receive half of the normal credit for that question. If you do not attempt to answer the second time, you will not receive credit for that question. You will be given only one attempt to take each quiz. All quizzes are timed (20 minutes) and will be graded automatically. Reflection You will be required to keep a blog during the 8 weeks of this course, posting at least once per week. Blog entries can be viewed only by you and your online professor. The purpose of the blog is to help you reflect on what you are learning, what you believe, and where you may be challenged in your thinking and your life by what is studied in this course. The goal of these reflections is personal spiritual growth. See the Personal Reflection and Evaluation section on p. 10 of the syllabus for blogging guidelines. Due Dates Each week of the course begins on Monday at 12:01 a.m. EST and ends on Sunday at 11:59 p.m. EST. Unless noted otherwise, all assignments are due at 11:59 p.m. EST on the Sunday of the week in which the assignment is due. For example, if an assignment is due during Week 2, you must complete and submit it by 11:59 p.m. EST on Sunday, the last day of Week 2. It is at your online professor s discretion to penalize late work. Course Grading All coursework must be completed and turned in to your online professor within five days of the end of Week 8. Please note that it is at your online professor s discretion to penalize late work. Your grade for the course will be determined as follows: Online Participation Creative Research Project Lesson Quizzes Reading Mentor Meetings 30% of Course Grade 30% of Course Grade 25% of Course Grade 10% of Course Grade 5% of Course Grade Grades will be issued within two weeks of the end of the course. Weekly Topics and Assignments Week 1: Take the Moodle tutorial for online instruction. Post introduction of yourself in the Student Introductions discussion forum. #1: God, People, and the Bible OT511 Course Syllabus Christian University GlobalNet and RBC Ministries; all rights reserved. 6

#2: Introduction to the Book of Genesis #3: Creation and Structure of the Cosmos: Genesis 1 Genesis 1:1 37:1 Dyrness: Introduction and Chapter 1 Sandy/Giese: Introduction and Chapters 1 and 2 Complete quizzes 1, 2, and 3. Identify and contact your mentor. Submit topic for Creative Research Project. Week 2: #4: The World of Mankind: Genesis 2 #5: The Fall and Fallenness: Genesis 3:1-13 #6: The Curses: Genesis 3:14-24 Genesis 37 Exodus 34 and Matthew 18:1-5 Dyrness: Chapters 2 and 3 Sandy/Giese: Chapters 3 and 4 Complete quizzes 4, 5, and 6. Have first meeting with your mentor. Week 3: #7: The Effects of the Fall: Genesis 3 4 #8: The World of the Flood: Genesis 5:1 6:8 #9: The Flood, Noah, and Abram: Genesis 6 12 View the video Hebron: The City of Promise. Exodus 35 Numbers 14 Dyrness: Chapters 4 and 5 Sandy/Giese: Chapters 5 and 6 Complete quizzes 7, 8, and 9. OT511 Course Syllabus Christian University GlobalNet and RBC Ministries; all rights reserved. 7

Week 4: Week 5: Week 6: #10: Covenant and Redemption in the Bible #11: Covenant Commitment, Continuity #12: In the Wilderness and at Sinai View the video The Unbreakable Promise: God s Covenant with Abraham. Numbers 15 Deuteronomy 11 Dyrness: Chapters 6 and 7 Sandy/Giese: Chapters 7 and 8 Complete quizzes 10, 11, and 12. #13: Theophany and Law at Sinai: Exodus 19 20 #14: The Book of the Covenant and the Tabernacle #15: Introduction to the Levitical Regulations View the video The Unbreakable Promise: God s Covenant with Moses. Deuteronomy 12 Joshua 24 Dyrness: Chapters 8 and 9 Sandy/Giese: Chapters 9 and 10 Complete quizzes 13, 14, and 15. Submit Creative Research Project. #16: Levitical Regulations, Purity and Holiness #17: The Law, the Church, and the Christian Life I #18: The Law, the Church, and the Christian Life II Judges 1 I Samuel 20; Matthew 5:17-48; 22:34-40; Jeremiah 31:31-34; Ezekiel 36:22-27; II Corinthians 3:3-6 Dyrness: Chapters 10 and 11 Sandy/Giese: Chapters 11 and 12 OT511 Course Syllabus Christian University GlobalNet and RBC Ministries; all rights reserved. 8

Complete quizzes 16, 17, and 18. Read and comment on Creative Research Projects. Week 7: #19: The Law, the Church, and the Christian Life III #20: History and Writing in Ancient Israel I #21: History and Writing in Ancient Israel II I Samuel 21-I Kings 11; Romans 6-8 Dyrness: Chapters 12 and 13 Sandy/Giese: Chapter 13 Complete quizzes 19, 20, and 21. Read and comment on Creative Research Projects. Week 8: #22: The Book of Joshua #23: The Period of the Judges #24: The Institutions of Priest and Prophet View the video The Unbreakable Promise: God s Covenant with David. Read the following from the course texts: I Kings 12 II Kings 25 Dyrness: Chapter 14 Sandy/Giese: Chapter 14 Complete quizzes 22, 23, and 24. Read and comment on Creative Research Projects. Have final meeting with your mentor. Week 8 Follow-Up: Complete the mentor form and submit it to your online professor. Complete and post all blog entries. Complete Discussion Participation, Reading Completion, and Mentor Meetings Validations. Complete and submit course survey form. OT511 Course Syllabus Christian University GlobalNet and RBC Ministries; all rights reserved. 9

Personal Reflection and Evaluation The following guidelines may be of help to you as you prepare to make blog entries throughout the course. To integrate academic studies with the walk of faith, you are asked to reflect on the content of the course and evaluate your life in light of what has been learned. These questions may help to guide your reflection process. Step 1: Review Think about the material you have studied in the course. Then ask these questions: What are two things you learned that you did not know before this study? What, if anything, in the course made you look at the church or something in the Bible in a new way? Step 2: Assess Think about your life, both past and present. Given the insights or understanding that you gained in this course, what changes do you need to make in the way you think or behave? Step 3: Apply What specific steps will you take in order to put these positive changes (from Step 2) into practice in your life? Step 4: Record Write your responses to the above reflections in your blog. Course Contributors CUGN utilizes the radio and television teams of RBC Ministries to enhance the students educational experience. This course uses five videos from the Day of Discovery television program. The expert contributors to these programs are listed as follows: Mart DeHaan, Litt.D. (Cornerstone University), President RBC Ministries Jimmy DeYoung, Ph.D. (Louisiana Baptist University), Journalist and Conference Speaker Michael Rydelnik, D.Miss. (Trinity Evangelical Divinity School), Professor of Jewish Studies at the Moody Bible Institute David Wilder, B.A. (Case Western Reserve University), Spokesman for the Committee of the Jewish Community of Hebron Notes Regarding This Syllabus This syllabus is designed to provide learners with an overview of the course. CUGN will provide specific instructions related to assignments for each lesson, specific discussion question postings, and interactive involvement with all students. OT511 Course Syllabus Christian University GlobalNet and RBC Ministries; all rights reserved. 10

Succeeding in Your Online Course 1. Remember that this is a full semester s study completed in eight weeks. Therefore, expect that there will be a significant time commitment needed in order to complete all the requirements. 2. If you have any questions about the Moodle program, the course requirements, schedule, or assignments, please contact the online professor who is ready and willing to help you have a successful online learning experience. 3. Technological problems may occur. Be sure to have a back-up plan in case of computer failure or late arrival of textbooks. 4. The satisfaction you get from this course will, in large part, depend on relationships you develop with other participants. So interact honestly, thoughtfully, considerately, and often. Lively discussion challenges the mind and energizes the soul! 5. Before you post a comment or a response to another student s comment, be sure you have read the material and listened to the lectures related to the topic under discussion. 6. Think about how you can promote additional discussion by the comments you post. 7. When you post, respond directly to the question under consideration and express your points clearly and concisely, making only one main point per post. 8. Participate in the threaded discussion at least three different times during each week. 9. Engage fellow students and the professor in dialogue, responding to comments made to your posts. 10. If you find sources related to the topic being discussed, please share them with the class. By the end of the course, we may be able to build a bibliography of books, articles, and Internet sources related to our topic. 11. Practice good netiquette : Disagree respectfully, stay on point, and don t post anything that is derogatory or inflammatory. 12. Enjoy, learn, challenge, and be challenged! Christ-Centered Learning Anytime, Anywhere OT511 Course Syllabus Christian University GlobalNet and RBC Ministries; all rights reserved. 11