Pleas also include the questions before the answer.
Some Basic Questions
Every genre, indeed every passage, of the Bible is unique. Still, there are some basic questions about every passage that you need to ask yourself. Examples of these fundamental questions follow, grouped by general type.
Basic Literary and Rhetorical Dimensions
What are the key terms and images? What do they mean?
Are there any key terms or ideas whose meaning may be explained by looking elsewhere in the book?
Are there any literary or rhetorical devices (simile, metaphor, hyperbole, personification, repetition, irony, etc.), and if so, what is their effect?
What kinds of sentences are used? What are the major components of each sentence? What verbal actions or states appear in these sentences, and what subjects are associated with them?
Traditions, Scripture, and Other Sources
Does the text include appeals to tradition or Scripture, such as stories, beliefs, laws, and well-known historical figures? If so, how do these appeals function?
Does the text appear to use sources, whether written or oral? If so, how are the sources used?
Larger Literary and Rhetorical Dimensions
If the text is a narrative, what aspects of setting, plot (conflict, suspense, resolution), and character development does each part of the text (or the text as a whole) convey?
Which components of the text work, individually or together, to instruct, delight, or move the reader?
What is the tone, or mood, of the passage, and what features convey that time?
The parts of the whole
How does each part of the passage relate to the other parts?
How does each part contribute to the hole?
How does my emerging understanding of the whole affect the meaning of the parts?
Overall communication
What does the text communicate and how?
How does the various parts of the passage reflect, or address the situation of the readers?
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