Getting the Bible Digitally (by Jeffrey Siker)

January 08, 2025 00:07:17
Getting the Bible Digitally (by Jeffrey Siker)
Ehrman Blog Daily Post Podcasts
Getting the Bible Digitally (by Jeffrey Siker)

Jan 08 2025 | 00:07:17

/

Show Notes

Jeffrey Siker discusses the impact of digital technology on how we read the text of the Bible.

Read by Steve McCabe.

View Full Transcript

Episode Transcript

[00:00:01] Getting the Bible Digitally by Jeffrey Syker in my textbook the New A Historical Introduction to the Early Christian Writings, now in the eighth edition, co authored with Hugo Mendez. Another feature I rather liked are several excurses on key issues I chose not to deal with in the text itself. A couple of these were written by other scholars in the field, including this important one on digital Bibles by my friend and occasional blog contributor Jeffrey Seika. Jeff is on the blog and will be able to answer any questions that you have the changing technology of writing and reading has always played a major role in the transmission and interpretation of the New Testament. From papyrus rolls to parchment codices to Gutenberg's printing press, and finally to our modern digital age, we are still learning how a digital screen rather than a printed book affects the way we read and understand. This applies to the Bible more than to any other book, since no other has held and continues to hold the special place of the Bible within Christian tradition and Western culture in general. [00:01:07] Indeed, the very word for book in Greek, biblion is the root word for Bible. [00:01:14] Different technologies shape the reading experience in different ways. For example, in the Greco Roman world, which provided the larger context for the rise of Christianity, only about 10% of the population, and mostly in urban areas, knew how to read and write. [00:01:32] This meant that if the Apostle Paul sent a letter to a church, most likely written on papyrus sheets that were rolled up, it would have to be read out loud for most people to learn what was in it. The letter would then have to be copied by hand by a scribe for it to circulate to a larger audience. See the discussion in chapter two. [00:01:51] With the advent of the codex, a bound book with writing on both sides of a page, all the writings of the Bible could be collected in a single volume. But in antiquity this was a very expensive and time consuming undertaking. [00:02:05] In the fourth century, the Emperor Constantine ordered 50 such copies of the Bible to be made for various important churches. Even then, though, there was no standard form of the text. Nor was there to be for over a thousand years. Not until the late 15th century, when Gutenberg invented a printing press with movable type, did it become possible to print thousands and thousands of exact copies of the same biblical text. [00:02:30] Different editions of the Bible, mostly the Latin Vulgate and then German and English versions, among others, kept appearing, making it difficult still for the text to become standardized. That is, there continue to be differences in the wording of the text. [00:02:46] Still, this was a vast improvement on the situation before the invention of the printing press. Reading and publishing exploded. And it's been exploding ever since. [00:02:56] The digital age of the computer has brought with it an even more dynamic situation for the Bible. Two technologies, both introduced in 2007, have proved central for digital Bibles. There's the iPhone with its app store, and there's the Kindle reader. The most dominant Bible App has been YouVersion, a free program downloaded over 300 million times. It provides the biblical text of over 1,700 versions in more than 1,100 languages and growing all within a few swipes and taps. The Kindle reader, in turn, revolutionized the reading of digital books on larger screens that were easier to read. The reader can now store thousands of downloaded books. [00:03:40] The digital Bible technology available today allows the text to morph across different forms. Users can read text on the screen, they can listen to audio of the Bible being read, they can watch a video cartoon of a biblical story, or they can stream a virtual Bible study. [00:03:56] Digital Bibles have thus proven to be convenient, portable, and versatile, all while providing a gateway to pursue both a more academic and a more confessional study of the Bible. And so the Bible has become a regular source of discussion and reflection on social media of all kinds, whether on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, or any of the thousands of blogs. [00:04:18] But within this new technology, certain limitations also arise, three of which stand out. There's fragmentation, superficiality, and distraction. First, rather than appearing as a whole continuous text with a particular shape and form, beginning with Genesis and ending with Revelation, digital Bibles present one page of text at a time with no real sense of literary context, let alone where one book stands in relation to another. [00:04:45] This can result in a very fragmented understanding of the Bible as a whole. Second, scientists who have studied eye movement during reading have shown that people tend to skim text on digital screens and thus not to read as deeply as readers of print text, who retain more content because their eyes slow down. [00:05:03] Third, especially on smartphones, digital Bibles competes with a wide range of other programs and apps. [00:05:10] Concentration on reading or listening becomes difficult when interrupted by a cell phone, a text message, a pinged reminder, or any of the other bells and whistles that distract us all the time. [00:05:23] On the other hand, one advantage of digital Bibles is that they allow a user to compare multiple translations quickly. At an even more advanced academic level, scholars who work with the original languages are now able to access digital versions of ancient manuscripts. This, in turn, makes it easier to compare the earliest versions of the Bible in their oldest forms. Thus, rather than focusing on producing one composite and, frankly, artificial text of some supposed original text. [00:05:53] Digital Humanities opens up the possibility of examining and analyzing different versions of the biblical text from different times and places. [00:06:02] Some scholars are concerned that this will destabilize the biblical text, making it seem disunified rather than a solitary whole. Others claim that the stability and the unity of the Bible are not actually inherent in the text, but have been imposed on it from the outside by scholars and other readers. [00:06:20] Digital Bibles are here to stay. They will likely continue to grow in popularity and use even as the printed Bible continues to be the best selling book year in and year out. Only time will tell how the advent of newer digital technologies will impact our understanding and use of the Jewish and Christian scriptures. [00:06:40] For further reading, there's Naomi Words on the Fate of Reading in a Digital World, published in New York by Oxford University Press in 2015. There's Claire Klivas edited Digital Humanities in Biblical, Early Jewish and Early Christian Studies, published in Leiden in The Netherlands by E.J. brill in 2013. And there's liquid Scripture by Jeffrey S. Saika Liquid the Bible and the Digital World by Fortress press in Minneapolis, Minnesota, published in 2017.

Other Episodes

Episode

September 27, 2024 00:06:15
Episode Cover

A PROOF of the Resurrection of Jesus. What Do YOU Think?

Bart shares his thoughts on a proposed proof of the resurrection of Jesus based on the spread of Christianity, and invites you to share...

Listen

Episode

July 03, 2024 00:10:18
Episode Cover

Did People Have Time for Jesus? - Guest Post from Platinum Member Doug Wadeson, MD.

Could Jesus have really drawn large crowds in Galilee? Read by Ken Teutsch.

Listen

Episode 0

March 23, 2021 NaN
Episode Cover

More on Marcion's Theology

Dr. Ehrman discusses our limited understanding of the ideas of the 2nd-century "arch-heretic" Marcion. Read by John Paul Middlesworth

Listen