I'm grading word studies now. Out of sheer convenience and economics, I have pointed my students to Blue Letter Bible, which includes the overload fallacy dictionary to end all dictionaries, Thayer's Greek Lexicon. Other professors have a step in their word studies where they go look at Kittel's Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, the etymological fallacy capital of the theological world.
With great emotion I have written on countless papers that list this sort of extended information, "Absolutely irrelevant."
Burn them both, burn them all!
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4 comments:
Word studies, huh? I usually assign passage analyses. But, then again, I teach about 15 primary sources a semester. Looking with great depth at a short passage makes things manageable.
Nonetheless, I don't get my papers until Tuesday. I am taking the weekend off...which means I will be working on the dissertation (finally!).
Or sell Kittel for $150! :)
Sorry, I'm going to keep mine, despite my rantings...
:-)
I like the Dictionary of New Testament Theology by Colin Brown.
Brad
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