Sightings

Celebrating 400 Years of the King James Bible
by Martin E. Marty | November 29, 2010

Thanksgiving weekend gave those who live off or for the media an excuse to slow down, turn off some signals, and settle back to football, turkey, and family—or to shop. For those who keep the Christian calendar, yesterday was also a significant change-of-pace day, since it was the beginning of a new church year. Readers of Sightings who are distant from Christian observances cannot have escaped the carols and wreaths which resound and decorate public spaces. Looking for ways to celebrate the season and anticipate 2011, we were aided by an editorial from the Observer in the UK.

Here’s the deal: 2011 is the 400th anniversary of the King James Version of the Bible, an event that merits observance far beyond the circles of librarians, antiquarians, and classicists. Anyone who keeps files on the fate of the KJV in the twentieth century and ever since will find many controversies to pass on the way to the book and its cultural import. Thus I have files, books, and personal recall of the way defenders of the King James edition fought off new translations. The Revised Standard Version, backed by the National Council of Churches, was scorned as “Stalin’s Bible” because it seemed to some to slight the virgin birth of Jesus. Burnings of the Bible at mid-century, when the Revised Standard Version appeared, drew attention just as the planned burning of the Qur’an recently did.

Expect debates all anniversary year over whether the authorizer of the KJV, King James I, was homosexual, bisexual, or falsely pointed to as “different” in his time as in ours. When fundamentalists have a slip of tongue or memory and speak of him as the “Saint James Bible,” selective readers of the evidence will pounce and proclaim him as a homosexual saint. This is a second distraction on the way to the celebration.

And there is much to celebrate, as the Observer editorial makes clear. More than any other writing, including the plays of Shakespeare, KJV did so much to formalize written English and do so with majesty. The Observer: “as well as selling an estimated 1bn copies since 1611,” it went into our literary bloodstream. Shakespeare needed 31,000 words to bless that bloodstream, while the KJV needed only 12,000.

Among the 12,000 words that the translating committee of King James adopted from the Hebrew and Greek were “long-suffering,” “scapegoat” and “peacemaker.” We might need all three as the antagonists line up on both sides of “Stalin’s Bible” and the sexually-complex battles mentioned above. Those who mourn the loss of the Version’s hegemony will side with Raymond Chandler, who said that the Bible was “a lesson in how not to write for the movies.” It was a lesson in how to write for elites and masses alike.

Although “secular, multicultural Britain” will celebrate the quartercentenary, Robert McCrum sounds rueful: “Some 450,000 people each month do google searches for King + James+ Bible, of which fewer than 10% originated in the UK.” The Observer editorialist looked west across the Atlantic and observed how the KJV was used by Abraham Lincoln, Martin Luther King Jr., and Barack Obama. Theodore Roosevelt declared that “the King James Bible is a Magna Carta for the poor and oppressed: the most democratic book in the world.” One hopes that controversies of the sort I mentioned here will bring this Bible to front pages and prime time.

References

 

Robert McCrum, “How the King James Bible Shaped the English Language,” The Observer, November 21, 2010.

 

 

Deathly Hallows Part 1

I’ve seen all the movies and only read the first two books.  As I mentioned on my Facebook page I would imagine that the book is better than the film.  I liked the film and I’ve liked all the films.  They are well crafted and as the main three characters have grown up their performances have gotten better.  But, as I watched today I wondered if the film is really for kids.  I’m sure the book is deep into the dark arts, but some of the imagery in the film would frighten small children.  At one point in the film today, he who shall not be named, even shocks Drako who is now sitting at the table of death eaters.  Drako is not completely on board with He who shall not be named, yet.

There are other moments when I remembered the parents who brought young children to see the film “Twister”.  I wondered how they would deal with severe storms or high winds.  Now I wonder how they will deal with shadows, sounds, and dreams that the children may experience.  Harry, it seems to me, is a hero in search of an identity.  There were times when it seems that Harry is having the same searching experience that Kazantzakis portrayed Jesus having in his book and subsequent film, The Last Temptation of Christ.  Harry has this group around him, a core, that believe he is special and holds the key to defeating the Dark Lord, but they don’t know how or when that might happen.  Voldemort knows more about his relationship to Harry, but even the powerful Dark Lord does not know how to defeat (kill) Harry.

There is a wonderfully frightening animated story within this film that tells the tale of the Deathly Hallows which is a children’s story.  Its lesson(s) will drive the plot of this film and part 2.  It seems to me that “The Deathly Hallows” story is the core of the Harry Potter books and the films.  The character development, the depiction of another world, and all the magic is quality writing in a world of reality TV and laugh track sitcoms.  Thus far, friendship prevails against the Dark Arts and like all good stories some characters reappear briefly to be lost in the conflict between evil and good.  Hermione is more powerful that Harry right now.  She has the wisdom and power of Dumbledore as well as the humility.  You learn new information about Dumbledore in this film.

So, if you are a fan I suggest a matinee and the digital format if you can find it.  As I finish up this post I’m thinking that this film reminds me of The Outlaw Josey Wales.  Could Rowling be recreating the Western with brooms rather than horse, spells and wands for six shooters?