Bible Hunters – A Smithsonian
Documentary – Many Gaps
Dick B.
© 2014 Anonymous. All
rights reserved
This
evening, while browsing TV channels, I stumbled upon a documentary that engaged
my attention for two hours. The Smithsonian Library presented the film called “Bible
Hunters.” And I was intent on hearing the documentary. For the Bible has played
a large part in my life, with my son Ken. We have traveled many thousands of miles;
visited many museums and libraries, universities and seminaries, churches and
monasteries; and collected a host of Bible versions. In a trip to the Holy Land
in 1979 and to Europe in 1986, and frequently since, I viewed a wide array of
biblical manuscripts in the British Museum in London, in the Chester Beatty
Library in Dublin; the John S. Rylands Library in Manchester, England; the St.
Catherina Monastery in the mid-east; the ancient biblical manuscript center at
Claremont University in California, as well as manuscripts in Tel Aviv and one Dead
Sea Scrolls exhibit in Selma, Alabama. This has been coupled with extensive
reading, lessons, conferences, and Bible fellowships.
I thought
the Smithsonian program was well presented. But, like so many of the current
A.A. plays, videos, movies, and books, it told only part of the story. Many
aspects of the Bible manuscript trail, travel, and account were subjective in
that the narrator was not a Christian; the film deftly left out a whole segment
on early manuscripts and attacked the Bible as “the Word of God, and many
versions and translations that abound today. Regrettably, it was clearly aimed
at making Bible readers doubtful, unsettled, and concerned about reliability.
And that’s about where many believers who cherish A.A. find themselves in today’s
secularization of their Society.
It was a
pleasure seeing this rendering of such an important subject omitting so much
that it would foster religious controversy instead of inviting biblical
research, information, and learning. The parallel with the “rest of the story”
about A.A. history is remarkable. And, on the eve of our starting the filming
of our videos and guidebook on “Bill W., Dr. Bob, and the Cure of Alcoholism:
The Rest of the Story,” the program on “Bible Hunters” offers the same
challenge that our program on the “rest of the A.A. story” will be doing
shortly. It won’t be telling what has already been told. It will be
highlighting what has never been told or accurately reported.
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