The Bible and Culture

The Bible and Culture

THE TEN COMMANDMENTS OF BLOGGING

posted by Ben Witherington | 8:00am Saturday May 30, 2009

1) No anonymous posts please. If you don’t have the courage of your own
convictions, then don’t post. By this I mean that I don’t mind what
your screen name is, but if when I click on that name it doesn’t lead
me to a real name and a real blog or website and a real person, then
you should not be posting on this site.

2) Blogs can serve a
lot of different purposes but this one is not intended for mere
venting, mere ad hominem arguments, and disrespectful tone or comments.
I expect the discussion to be civil, even if it becomes somewhat
heated. The goal is light, not heat in any case. Ask good questions–
don’t try to produce a visceral response through a rude remark. I don’t
mind irony, tongue in cheek, and a little good-natured sarcasm, but
ridicule and the like is not humane, never mind Christian.

3)
Try and be concise and clear. Don’t just ramble on ad nauseum. As
Alexander Pope said “Perspicuity is the chiefest virtue of a style.” My
students often ask me what will happen if they go over the page limit
on their papers. I tell them, you will find a comment on the bottom of
the last expected page which says “This was a good paper, but it ended
rather abruptly.”

4) Save non-related and personal comments for
some other means of communication, such as ordinary email. Stick to the
subject at hand, or corollary subjects.

5) Read the exhortation in James 3.3-11 before posting anything. In other words, curb your tongue.

6)
Normal discussions on a particular topic will run for 3-4 days, or
possibly a week. Then its time to move on. If you come late to dinner,
you should expect leftovers, not the main course. Nor should you expect
a response.

7) If you have good information to share, share it.
Showing off, show-boating, pontificating on the basis of feelings but
not evidence is not helpful. It just makes you look dumb.

8) Be
reflective before you post. If you are angry, compose a response. Save
it. Look at it again later in an hour or so, and then if you still
think it involves a good point, then post it. “Be angry, but sin not.”

9)
I do not mind suggested links so long as they are relevant to the
discussion. I do mind info-mercials. You need to bear in mind that an
awful lot of the stuff on the web is junk. And a lot of the supposed
scholarly stuff on the web is either very old (and so in the public
domain) bad or very tendentious information. This is why its on the web
and not published in a proper journal. Remember— “thou shalt not
steal” so if you want to copy, reuse, or link the material, then ask
permission.

10) Before posting say this ” may the words of my
mouth (or fingers) and the meditations of my heart be acceptable in thy
sight, O Lord.” In other words, do this assuming God cares and is
paying attention.



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posted 5:46:30am Jan. 11, 2011 | read full post »

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posted 7:05:08pm Jan. 10, 2011 | read full post »

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posted 5:30:50am Jan. 10, 2011 | read full post »

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Comments read comments(4)
post a comment
Nick Norelli

posted May 30, 2009 at 11:01 am


#8 is a great advice. I’ve done this a number of times and it has resulted in almost complete re-writings of certain comments.



report abuse
 

Jerry from Seal Beach

posted May 30, 2009 at 6:18 pm


Ben,
Glad you are back Blogging.
But I can’t make the Archives work, only your 2 entries thus far are are viewable.
Jerry



report abuse
 

Ben Witherington

posted May 30, 2009 at 7:59 pm


Jerry the Archives are in progress of being transferred.
BW3



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Mark Stevens

posted May 31, 2009 at 5:48 am


Ben, the new site looks great. I hope you will keep up the mix of fun and academic posts.
Is it possible to receive the entire post via RSS feed? At the moment Beleifnet only send the first few lines of each post.
Regards,
Mark Stevens



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