Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Lesson 4- questions from bible literature


 Questions from Bible Literature

 http://bibleasliterature.wordpress.com

Lesson Four

 How much of the Bible is written in Poetry?

Roughly one-third of the Bible is written in poetic form. Here are some of the key ingredients you’ll find in the Bible’s poetry.

 What are the main poetic ingredients? Include a brief description of each one?

·         Imagery- The use of words to paint pictures, evoking a concrete sensory experience of people, places, and things: “He makes me lie down in green pastures” (Psalm 23:1).

·         Simile- A comparison between two things that uses “like” or “as” — A is like B: “They are like trees planted by streams of water” (Psalm 1:3).

·         Metaphor-A comparison between two things that forgoes “like” or “as” to say that A is B: “The Lord is my shepherd” (Psalm 23:1).

·         Apostrophe-Addressing someone absent as though the person (or people) were present: “Depart from me, all you workers of evil” (Psalm 6:8).

·         Personification-Endowing a non-human subject with human attributes or actions: “Let the hills sing together for joy” (Psalm 98:8).

·         Hyperbole-Conscious exaggeration for emotional effect: “By my God I can leap over a wall” (Psalm 18:29).

 Read Psalm 23, describe the scene?

Green pastures, still waters, dark valley, a shepherd’s rod and staff. The images are concrete, specific, drawn from nature and everyday life. Psalm 23 is built around the controlling metaphor of a shepherd herding his sheep to safety.

 What is the difference between  Synonymous Parallelism & Antithetic Parallelism?

Synonymous Parallelism

·         Lines A and B say the same thing in similar grammatical form:

Therefore the wicked will not stand in the judgment,

Nor sinners in the congregation of the righteous. (Psalm 1:5)

 

Antithetic Parallelism

 

·         Lines A and B say the same thing in contrasting ways:

For the Lord watches over the way of the righteous,

But the way of the wicked will perish. (Psalm 1:6)

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