Wednesday, September 25, 2019

Taking God's Name in Vain?



Called to Question
presents
Taking God's Name in Vain?
A Closer Look at a Misinterpreted Passage of the Bible (Exodus 20:7) 
with guest speaker 
Carmen Joy Imes, Ph.D.
Carmen is Associate Professor of Old Testament at Prairie College in Three Hills, Alberta. Carmen's primary areas of research are Exodus and Psalms. She is the award-winning author of Bearing YHWH's Name at Sinai: A Reexamination of the Name Command of the Decalogue (Eisenbrauns, 2018) as well as the forthcoming Bearing God's Name: Why Sinai Still Matters (IVP, December 2019), which makes the results of her doctoral study available accessible to non-specialists. 

This evening's talk will examine Exodus 20:7 (or the "command not to take the Lord's name in vain"), which is usually interpreted as a prohibition against speaking Yahweh's name in a particular context: false oaths, wrongful pronunciation, irreverent worship, magical practices, cursing, false teaching, and the like. However, it lacks contextual clues needed to support the command as speech related. Taking seriously the narrative context at Sinai and the closest verbal parallels, a different picture emerges-one animated by concrete rituals and their associated metaphorical concepts. The result is a command that has much broader implications for faith communities.

Date and Time:
Saturday October 19, 2019 at 7pm
Coffee and snacks provided.

*Please let us know if you plan on attending as seating is limited.

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Quote Worthy

I suspect that most of the individuals who have religious faith are content with blind faith. They feel no obligation to understand what they believe. They may even wish not to have their beliefs disturbed by thought. But if God in whom they believe created them with intellectual and rational powers, that imposes upon them the duty to try to understand the creed of their religion. Not to do so is to verge on superstition." - Mortimer J. Adler