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A case study is an open-ended learning activity (i.e., a problem is presented that precipitates discussion) in which the participant must enter into the character of someone in a real-life situation and then reflect on what he/she would do in that situation.
1. Read the Case Study in the Reading & Study folder (Find the readings below AND THE CASE STUDY BELOW ALSO:) and
2. Then compose a thread of at least 400 words expressing how you would respond to the given situation.
3. Be sure to interact with all assigned materials from Module/Week 1 regarding the importance of knowledge of the Jewish setting of the New Testament. Be sure to document any ideas not your own or “common knowledge” (including your textbooks and presentations) using parenthetical citations. Acceptable sources include the Bible, the course textbooks, and other peer-reviewed scholarly sources. Popular sources and
Internet sources are not allowed.

Discussion Board 1 Case Study
A Sunday School class has as its lesson Luke 2:41-52, Jesus in the Temple as a boy. The teacher, following the background and explanatory information in his teacher’s quarterly, is trying to help the class understand this story in its historical context and original setting and the fact that Luke (who alone among the Gospel writers tells this story) seems to want to underscore Jesus’ heritage and formation as a Jew. He discusses with the class the fact that the context, culture, and setting of the story was first-century Judaism, and that an understanding of that context is critical to a proper understanding of the story. The teacher spends considerable time with this background information, all of which is quite foreign and strange to those in the Sunday School class whose experience is that of  21st century Gentile Christians.

Finally, and with some exasperation, someone in the class challenges the teacher: “But you talk as though Jesus was a Jew. He wasn’t a Jew; he was a Christian! Oh, I know that he was born a Jew, but he rejected all that ‘law stuff’ along with the rest of Judaism as a false religion. Why are you trying to make Jesus out to be a Jew? Why do we need to know all this Jewish stuff to interpret the New Testament? This is a church, not a synagogue!

You’re the Sunday School teacher. How would you respond to this person?

1. Lea, Thomas D., and David A. Black. The New Testament: Its Background and Message. 2nd ed. Nashville: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 2003. ISBN: 9780805426328. (READ CHAPTER 1)

2. Scott, J. J., Jr. Jewish Backgrounds of the New Testament. 2nd ed. Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 2000. ISBN: 9780801022401. (READ CHAPTERS 1 – 7 )

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