reading the bible as literature

Sweeter Than Honey, Richer Than Gold

A GUIDED STUDY OF BIBLICAL POETRY

Leland Ryken

Sweeter Than Honey, Richer Than Gold: A Guided Study of Biblical Poetry

© 2015 by Leland Ryken

Lexham Press, 1313 Commercial St., Bellingham, WA 98225

LexhamPress.com

First edition by Weaver Book Company.

All rights reserved. You may use brief quotations from this resource in presentations, articles, and books. For all other uses, please write Lexham Press for permission. Email us at permissions@lexhampress.com.

All Scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are from the Holy Bible, English Standard Version (ESV), copyright © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

Print ISBN 9781683591542

Digital ISBN 9781683591559

Cover design: Frank Gutbrod

Contents

Series Preface

Introduction:

What Is Biblical Poetry? And Why It Is Good for You

Part 1: The Language Poets Use

1. First Things First:

The Primacy of the Image

2. How Is A Like B?

The Use of Metaphor and Simile

3. Make-Believe:

Poetry and the Nonliteral

4. Artistic Beauty:

The Parallelism of Biblical Poetry

Part 2: The Composition of Biblical Poems

5. What We Need to Know about Biblical Poems

6. Putting All the Pieces Together:

How to Explicate a Biblical Poem

7. What Are the Main Types of Psalms?

Series Preface

This series is part of the mission of the publisher to equip Christians to understand and teach the Bible effectively by giving them reliable tools for handling the biblical text. Within that landscape, the niche that my volumes are designed to fill is the literary approach to the Bible. This has been my scholarly passion for nearly half a century. It is my belief that a literary approach to the Bible is the common reader’s friend, in contrast to more specialized types of scholarship on the Bible.

Nonetheless, the literary approach to the Bible needs to be defended against legitimate fears by evangelical Christians, and through the years I have not scorned to clear the territory of misconceptions as part of my defense of a literary analysis of the Bible. In kernel form, my message has been this:

1. To view the Bible as literature is not a suspect modern idea, nor does it need to imply theological liberalism. The idea of the Bible as literature began with the writers of the Bible, who display literary qualities in their writings and who refer with technical precision to a wide range of literary genres such as psalm, proverb, parable, apocalypse, and many more.

2. Although fiction is a common trait of literature, it is not an essential feature of it. A work of literature can be replete with literary technique and artifice while remaining historically factual.

3. To approach the Bible as literature need not be characterized by viewing the Bible only as literature, any more than reading it as history requires us to see only the history of the Bible.

4. When we see literary qualities in the Bible, we are not ...

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About Sweeter than Honey, Richer than Gold: A Guided Study of Biblical Poetry

This is the second of a projected six-volume series called Reading the Bible as Literature (the first volume being How Bible Stories Work). An expert at exploring the intersection of the Bible and literature, Ryken shows pastors and students and teachers of the Bible how to appreciate the craftsmanship and beauty of biblical poetry and how to interpret it correctly. Dr. Ryken goes one step further than merely explaining the genre of poetry—he includes exercises to help students master this rich literary treasure.

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