Abstract

‘Mimesis’ is a concept explored in Antiquity as well as in cultural history. It also plays an important role in the Bible. In this article we argue for ‘mimesis’ as a role model for Bible teaching in religious education. In the first part we give some insights into the concept of mimesis, drawing on ancient philosophers (Aristotle, Plato). ‘Mimesis’ does not denote a copy of a prescribed object; instead, the type of depiction and reference brings it into the present in an intensive, creative and productive way. In the second part we want to give some examples for how ‘mimesis’ is used in the Bible itself. Biblical tradition can be described as a ‘mimetic process’. Furthermore, authors like Paul explicitly use the concept of ‘mimesis’, for example in his ethical admonition. Thus, the use of ‘mimesis’ in the Bible inspires directly our teaching on biblical genres, motifs and ways of thinking. The third part gives a draft of how the ‘mimetic didactic’ works, drawing on parables, Gospel writing, Johannine theology and coping with painful fate like Job. Mimetic hermeneutics transforms tradition in applying it into the contemporary situation. This can prove stimulating for contemporary contexts: mimesis is closely connected to tradition, but simultaneously encourages its transmission into the present day with astonishing variability and freedom.

Highlights

  • The goal of Bible didactics is the understanding of the Bible in a religious-pedagogical context

  • It is not specified whether the object of hermeneutics is primarily the Bible itself or whether the understanding refers to a self-knowledge of the reader in the light of the Bible or even to the act of understanding in the hermeneutical process with the Bible

  • Unfamiliarity and incomprehension at times drive the hermeneutical process forward, in the ‘hermeneutic circle’ (Gadamer 1993) there always needs to be an expectation of meaning, an anticipatory desire for understanding and an advance of trust in addition to the classical preconceptions in order for understanding to succeed

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Summary

Original Research

& Zimmermann, R., 2015, ‘Mimesis Bible Didactics: An outline in the context of religious education’, HTS Teologiese Studies/ Theological Studies 71(1), Art. ‘Mimesis’ is a concept explored in Antiquity as well as in cultural history. It plays an important role in the Bible. In this article we argue for ‘mimesis’ as a role model for Bible teaching in religious education. The use of ‘mimesis’ in the Bible inspires directly our teaching on biblical genres, motifs and ways of thinking. The third part gives a draft of how the ‘mimetic didactic’ works, drawing on parables, Gospel writing, Johannine theology and coping with painful fate like Job. Mimetic hermeneutics transforms tradition in applying it into the contemporary situation. This can prove stimulating for contemporary contexts: mimesis is closely connected to tradition, but simultaneously encourages its transmission into the present day with astonishing variability and freedom

Introduction
Mimesis in theology
Terminological background
The Bible as a mimetic process
Further examples
Full Text
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