Title: 3. God in the Old Testament
13. God in the Old Testament
- BIB566/THE566 Old Testament Theology
23.1.2 The God of the Fathers EL
- 3.1 Names of God in the O.T.
33.1.2 The God of the Fathers EL
- 1. The EL Names in the Patriarchal Narratives
- 1.1 El in names of persons and places
- We recognize it easily in such names as Beth-El
(Gen 28.19, Peni-El (32.30), Ishama-El (16.11),
Isra-El (32.28), and Bethu-El (24.15). We also
know that this El element is sometimes left out
of such names (cf. Jephtah-El Josh 19.14, 27
and Jephtah, Judg 11.1). There are good reasons
to believe that the patriarchal names Isaac and
Jacob are abbreviated El names of this sort
(originally Isaac-El and Jacob-El). One such El
name, Jaqub-El, is attested in Babylonia about
one hundred years before the time of Hammurabi,
43.1.2 The God of the Fathers EL
- whose dates are ca. 1729-1686 BCE. It is, then,
clear that the divine name El plays an important
part in the patriarchal narratives." Mettinger,
Ibid., 66
5El in Names of Places
Divine Name Place Text
El Elyon El Most High Salem Gen 14.18-22
El Roi El of Seeing Beer-Lahai Roi Gen 16.13
El Olam El the Everlasting Beer-Sheba Gen 21.33
El Elohe Yisrael El the God of Israel Shechem Gen 33.18-20
El Bethel El of Bethel Bethel Gen 31.13 35.7
El Shaddai El of the Mountain  Gen 17.1 28.3 35.11 43.14 48.3 49.25
63.1.2 The God of the Fathers EL
- 2. El in the Canaanite Texts
- 2.1 The god called El was a different character
from Baal. El was old and wise, a mild and
merciful god. El was call both father of
humankind and creator of all created beings.
El is the one who gives a child to the childless
king Keret. El is sometimes referred to as
king, but if we wish to describe his
peculiarities accurately, we can justifiably
characterize him as the patriarch among the gods
of Canaan. El emerges from the texts as an aged
father figure with an air of mild and generous
wisdom." Mettinger, Ibid., 67
7Canaanite El
8Canaanite Baal
9Canaanite Baal
103.1.2 The God of the Fathers EL
- Â 2.2 Canaanite El as origins for the El names of
God - Â 2.2.1 Gen 33.20 The altar at Shechem was to be
called El is the God of Israel )e4l )elo4he
yisra4)e3l - Â 2.2.2 Gen 46.3 In the nocturnal revelation to
Jacob in Beer-Sheba we are told, I am El, the
God of your father. Here the word )e4l bears the
definite article. - Â 2.2.3 Gen 49.25 In Jacob's blessing to Joseph we
find the words, by the El of your father.
113.1.2 The God of the Fathers EL
- 3. El as Semitic marker of deity
- 3.1 la Gen 33.20 Jacob built an altar to
El-Elohe-Israel. - Â 3.1.1 These El names were originally
pre-Israelite in their meaning. With the
exception of El Shaddai, they generally appear in
connection with particular Canaanite shrines and
reflect ancient Semitic religion. When the
Israelites came into Canaan, they took over these
shrines, together with the religious traditions
associated with them to the worship of Yahweh.
Anderson, "God, Names of," IDB, I, 413a
123.1.2 The God of the Fathers EL
- Â 3.1.2 Admittedly it is true that the word )e4l
is not only used as )e4l the proper name of a
deity, that is El with a capital E. The word is
also the common Semitic word for deity. In the
biblical tradition the word )e4l in the El names
has gradually acquired this reduced content to
Israelites in later times names such as El
Elyon and El Olam meant God the Most High
and God the Eternal. Mettinger, Ibid., 67
133.1.2 The God of the Fathers EL
- 4. El-Elyon (God Most High) Gen 14.22
- 4.1 "The Hebrew word elyon is an adjective
meaning "higher, upper," e.g., the "upper" pool
(Isa. 73), the "upper" gate (II Kings 1535),
and "highest," e.g., the "highest" of all the
kings of the earth (Ps. 8928). When used in
reference to God, the word can rightly be
translated as "Most High." Since in reference to
God elyon is never preceded by the article ha-
("the"), is must have been regarded as a proper
noun, a name of God. Thus, it can be used as a
divine name meaning "the Most High" (e.g., Deut.
328 Isa. 1414 Ps. 93) or in parallelism with
YHWH (e.g., Ps. 18 14 218 83 19), El (Num.
24 16 Ps. 10711), and Shaddai (Ps. 911)."
Encyclopedia Judaica
143.1.2 The God of the Fathers EL
- 4.2 "Among the Canaanites, El and Elyon were
originally distinct deities, the former attested
by archaeological evidence from Ugarit in Western
Syria, the latter by evidence from Phoenicia
further south. Later, both terms were combined to
designate a single god El Elyon. In the Tell
el-Amarna Letters of the 15th14th centuries
B.C.E., the Canaanites called El Elyon "the lord
of the gods." According to Genesis 14 1820,
Melchizedek, king of Salem, was "a priest of God
Most High El Elyon," and he blessed Abraham by
"God Most High, Creator of heaven and earth."
Abraham accepted the title "Most High" as merely
descriptive of his own God he swore by "YHWH,
God Most High, Creator of
153.1.2 The God of the Fathers EL
- heaven and earth." The combined form El Elyon
occurs also in the Aramaic Sefire inscriptions of
the eighth century B.C.E. (see Pope, El in the
Ugaritic Texts (1955), 54ff.) and in later Greek
inscriptions as Zeus Hypsistos. Whereas for the
pagans the term referred to the god who was
supreme over the other gods, in Israel it
referred to the transcendent nature of the one
true God. Encyclopedia Judaica
163.1.2 The God of the Fathers EL
- 5. El-)olam (Everlasting God) Gen 21.33
everlasting time, time whose boundaries are
hidden from view. Ps 90.1-2 93.2 Isa 26.4 - 5.1 According to Genesis 2133, "Abraham planted
a tamarisk at Beer-Sheba, and invoked there the
name of YHWH, the everlasting God." The Hebrew
for "the Everlasting God" is el olam, literally,
"the God of an indefinitely long time." Perhaps
it was the title of El as worshiped at the local
shrine of Beer-Sheba (cf. El Bethel, "the El of
Bethel," in Gen. 357). Then Abraham would have
accepted this Canaanite term as descriptive of
his true God. In any case, the epithet is logical
173.1.2 The God of the Fathers EL
- in the context, which concerns a pact meant for
all times. The term by which Abraham invoked YHWH
at Beer-Sheba is apparently echoed in Isaiah
4028, where YHWH is called "the Everlasting God
elohei olam, the Creator of the ends of the
earth" (cf. Jer. 1010, melekh olam, "the
everlasting King" Isa. 264, zur olamim, "an
everlasting Rock"). In Deuteronomy 3327, where
"the ancient God" (elohei qedem) parallels "the
everlasting arms" (zeroot olam), the text is
uncertain. Only in the late passage of Daniel
127 (probably translated from Aramaic) is the
article used with olam "The man clothed in
linen... swore by Him that liveth for ever
(be-hei ha-olam)." Encyclopedia Judaica
183.1.2 The God of the Fathers EL
- 6. El-Bethel Gen 31.13 35.7
- 7. El Roi Gen 16.13 God who sees me
- 7.1 The divine name El Roi occurs in Genesis
1613. After Hagar was driven away by Sarai
(Sarah) and fled into the western Negev, at a
certain spring or well she had a vision of God,
"and she called YHWH who spoke to her, 'You are
El Roi.'" The meaning of the word "Roi" in this
context is obscure. By itself it can be either a
noun, "appearance" (I Sam. 1612), "spectacle,
gazingstock" (Nah. 36), or a participle with a
suffix of the first person singular, "seeing me,"
i.e., who sees me (Job 78). Therefore, El Roi
could mean either "the God of Vision" (who showed
Himself to me) or "the God who sees me." The
explanation of the divine name that is given in
the second half of the same verse (Gen. 1613b)
is equally obscure. As the Hebrew text now
stands, it is usually rendered as "She meant,
'Have I
193.1.2 The God of the Fathers EL
- not gone on seeing after He saw me aharei
roi?'" (JPS, 1962), or, "She meant, 'Did I not
go on seeing here halom after He had seen me?'"
(E.A. Speiser, Genesis (1964),117). In the
following verse (1614) it is stated "Therefore
the well was called Beer-Lahai-Roi." This name is
explained in a footnote as "Apparently, 'The Well
of the Living One Who sees me.'" (JPS). However,
on the basis of the name of the well, E.A.
Speiser (op. cit., p. 119) would emend the
unvocalized Hebrew text of Genesis 16 13, hgm
hlm ryty hry ry, to read hgm lhm ryty why,. "Did
I really see God, yet remain alive?" The name of
the well he would then take to mean, "Well of
living sight." Since the well was in the region
occupied by the Ishmaelites (and Hagar was the
mother of Ishmael), the divine name, El Roi, may
have been proper to the Ishmaelites rather than
to the Israelites. Encyclopedia Judaica
203.1.2 The God of the Fathers EL
- 8. El Berith Judg 9.46 (alternate of
Baal-berith in Judg 8.33 9.4). Note the
covenantal idea of Josh 24 - 8.1 The divine name El Berit ("God of the
Covenant") occurs only in Judges 946, where
mention is made of "the house i.e., temple of
El Berit" at Shechem. This is certainly the same
sanctuary that is called "the house i.e.,
temple of Baal Berit" in 94. From the treasury
of the temple of Baal-Berith the citizens of
Shechem gave seventy silver shekels to Abimelech,
the son of Jerubbaal (another name of Gideon) to
aid him in his fight for the sole kingship of
Shechem against the other sons of Jerubbaal
(ibid.). A few years later, the rebellious
citizens of Shechem were burned to death by
Abimelech in the temple of El-Berith where they
had taken refuge (94649)."
213.1.3 EL SHADDAI
- 1. How old is this divine name?
- 1.1 Of the forty-eight occurrences of the name,
quite a number appear in late literature, such as
Ezekiel (twice) and Job (thirty-one times).
Nevertheless, there is practically no
contemporary scholar who claims that the name El
Shaddai was a late invention of the exilic
period. This is because there is broad agreement
about the antiquity of some of the other biblical
passages in which the name occurs for example,
Jacobs patriarchal blessing (Gen 49.25), the
Baalam text (Num 24.4, 16), and an ancient list
of names (Num 1.5-16) in which Shaddai is the
theophoric element in several
223.1.3 EL SHADDAI
- personal names Shede-ur, Zuri-shaddai, and
Ammi-shaddai (vv. 5, 6, 12). There is also a
single extra-biblical attestation. An Egyptian
figurine bears the legend Shaddai-ammi. Thus it
contains the same elements as the previously
mentioned biblical Ammi-shaddai. The figurine
in question is datable to ca. 1300 BCE.
Mettinger, In Search of God, 69
233.1.3 EL SHADDAI
- 2. Old Testament References
- 2.1The divine name (El) Shaddai occurs 48 times
in the Old Testament - The Pentateuch 9 times. Three occurrences are
in ancient tribal blessings, like the blessing of
Jacob (Gen 49.25) and Balaams blessing (Numb
24.4, 16) the other six occurrence are usually
assigned to the so-called Priestly tradition in
the Pentateuch Gen 17.1 28.3 35.11 43.14ff.,
48.3 Exo 6.3. - The book of Ruth 2 times (Ruth 1.20-21)
- The Prophets 4 times (Isa 13.6 Joel 1.15 Ezk
1.24 10.5)
243.1.3 EL SHADDAI
- The Psalter 2 times (Ps 68.14 15 91.1)
- Job 31 times
- 2.2 ". . . In addition to these attestations, the
name Shaddai is component in the personal names
Shede-ur, Zuri-shaddai, and Ammi-shaddai (Num
1.5, 6, 12). This map of the distribution of
name in the texts raises the question of its
age. Mettinger, In Search of God, 69-70
253.1.3 EL SHADDAI
- 3. Theories on Derivation and Significance
- 3.1 A common Greek rendering of El Shaddai is
pantokrato4r, the ruler of all (16 times in LXX
Job). It is clear, however, that this does not
represent an actual attempt to translate the
divine name. Rather, it is a conventional
rendering and not an effort at a linguistic
interpretation of El Shaddai. What we usually
find in modern biblical translations of the name
El Shaddai are reflections of this convention.
As a result, the expression the Almighty in the
biblical translations provides no key to the
understanding of El Shaddai. Mettinger, In
Search of God, 70
263.1.3 EL SHADDAI
- 3.2 Early Judaism understood the contents of the
name as he who is sufficient (derived from Heb.
se day). This interpretation underlies the
translation hikanos (he who is sufficient),
which we find in certain Greek translations.
Today, however, this is not held to be a
convincing alternative. Mettinger, In Search of
God, 70 - 3.3 An early interpretation associated El
Shaddai with a Hebrew root signifying violence
and destruction - sdd. This view is expressed
already in the expression as destruction of a
so4d, violence, destruction, which comes from
Shaddai (cf. Isa 13.6 Joel 1.15). But this is
probably a pun, not a linguistic-historical
derivation. Mettinger, In Search of God, 70
273.1.3 EL SHADDAI
- 3.4 The derivation that has won broadest
acceptance does not associate the name with any
Hebrew word, but with an Akkadian one found in
Babylonian texts - sadu - the usual Akkadian
word for mountain. On this theory the name El
Shaddai would then signify something like El,
the One of the mountain. Mettinger, In Search
of God, 71 - 3.5 The Amorites dwelt in northern Mesopotamia,
at the upper course of the Euphrates they were a
nomadic people whom scholars have designated
proto-Arameans, and they have been held to have
been related to the tribal groups that eventually
made up the people of Israel. These Amorites
worshipped a god called Amurru. In some texts,
it develops that this deity was characterized as
be4l sade, the lord of the mountain.
Mettinger, In Search of God, 71
283.1.3 EL SHADDAI
- 4. Possible Associations
- 4.1 A number of scholars have felt that it was a
notion of God as protector and refuge. Similar
thoughts are presumably expressed when the god of
Israel is characterized as the rock of his
people (cf., e.g., Deut 32.4, 15, 18, 30, 31 2
Sam 23.3 Ps 18.46). Another possibility is the
notion that the name El Shaddai designates God as
the One of the mount of the divine council (cf.
Isa 14.13). In this event El Shaddai would be a
name that characterized the God of the fathers as
the chief of the heavenly council. The use of the
name (El) Shaddai in close association with (El)
Elyon, God the Most High (Num 24.16 and Ps
91.1), provides a degree of support of this
conjecture, as does the occurrence of the name in
the Deir Alla inscriptions. Mettinger, In
Search of God, 71
293.1.3 EL SHADDAI
- 4.2 . . . El Shaddai frequently appears in
contexts which deal with a divine blessing one
has only to think of the blessings of Jacob and
Baalam (Gen 49.25 Num 24.4, 16 respectively).
Most occurrences in the patriarchal narratives
appear in similar contexts. Thus El Shaddai
reveals himself to Abraham and promises him
innumerable offspring (Gen 17.1) in the name El
Shaddai, Isaac blesses Jacob and communicates to
him the assurance of numerous progeny and the
blessing of Abraham (Gen 28.3-4). The same motif
recurs in Gen 35.11 in the words, I am El
Shaddai. Be fruitful and multiply. Mettinger,
In Search of God, 72
303.1.4 ELOHIM
- 1. General Usage
- 1.1 "The word eloha "God" and its plural, elohim,
is apparently a lengthened form of El (cf.
Aramaic elah, Arabic ilah). The singular eloha is
of relatively rare occurrence in the Bible
outside of Job, where it is found about forty
times. It is very seldom used in reference to a
pagan god and then only in a late period (Dan.
11 37ff. II Chron. 3215). In all other cases
it refers to the God of Israel (e.g., Deut.
3215 Ps. 5022 139 19 Prov. 305 Job 34,
23). The plural form elohim is used not only of
pagan "gods" (e.g., Ex. 1212 18 11 20 3),
but also of an individual pagan "god" (Judg.
1124 II Kings 12ff.) and even of a "goddess"
(I Kings 115)."
313.1.4 ELOHIM
- 2. When Describing the God of Israel
- 2.1 "In reference to Israel's "God" it is used
extremely oftenmore than 2,000 timesand often
with the article, ha-elohim, "the true God."
Occasionally, the plural form elohim, even when
used of the God of Israel, is construed with a
plural verb or adjective (e.g., Gen. 20 13
357 Ex. 324, 8 II Sam. 723 Ps. 58 12),
especially in the expression elohim hayyim, "the
living God." In the vast majority of cases,
however, the plural form is treated as if it were
a noun in the singular. The odd fact that Hebrew
uses a plural noun to designate the sole God of
Israel has been explained in various ways. It is
not to be understood as a remnant of the
polytheism of Abraham's ancestors, or hardly as a
"plural of majesty"if there is such a thing in
Hebrew. Some scholars take it as a plural that
expresses an abstract idea (e.g., zekunim, "old
age" neurim, "time of youth"), so that Elohim
would really mean "the Divinity."
323.1.4 ELOHIM
- 2.2 "More likely, however, it came from Canaanite
usage the early Israelites would have taken over
elohim as a singular noun just as they made their
own the rest of the Canaanite language. In the
Tell-el-Amarna Letters Pharaoh is often addressed
as "my gods ilaniya the sun-god." In the
ancient Near East of the second half of the
second millennium B.C.E. there was a certain
trend toward quasi-monotheism, and any god could
be given the attributes of any other god, so that
an individual god could be addressed as elohai,
"my gods" or adonai, "my lords." The early
Israelites felt no inconsistency in referring to
their sole God in these terms. The word elohim is
employed also to describe someone or something as
godlike, preternatural, or extraordinarily great,
e.g., the ghost of Samuel (I Sam. 2813 cf. Isa.
819 "spirits"), the house of David (Zech. 128),
the mountain of Bashan (Ps. 6816), and Rachel's
contest with her sister (Gen. 308).
Encyclopedia Judaica
333.1.4 ELOHIM
- 3. Cassutos Differentiation between Elohim and
Yahweh - 3.1 The designation, yhla was originally a
common noun, an appellative, that was applied
both to the One God of Israel and to the heathen
gods (so, too, was the name la). Cassuto, The
Documentary Hypothesis, 18 - 3.2 ...the name hwhy is a proper noun, the
specific name of Israels God, the God whom the
Israelites acknowledged as the Sovereign of the
universe and as the Divinity who chose them as
His people. Cassuto, The Documentary
Hypothesis, 18
343.1.4 ELOHIM
- 3.3 "It selected the name YHWH when the text
reflects the Israelite concept of God, which is
embodied in the portrayal of YHWH and finds
expression in the attributes traditionally
ascribed to Him by Israel, particularly in His
ethical character it preferred the name Elohim
when the passage implies the abstract idea of the
Deity prevalent in the international circles of
"wise men"- God conceived as the Creator of the
physical universe, as the Ruler of nature, as the
Source of life. The Tetragrammaton is used, when
the expression is given to the direct, intuitive
notion of God, which characterizes the faith of
the multitude or the ardor of the prophetic
spirit the name Elohim, when the concept of
thinkers who meditate on the lofty problems
connected with the existence of the world and
humanity is to be conveyed. The name YHWH occurs
when the context depicts the Divine attributes in
relatively lucid and, as it were palpable terms,
a clear picture being conveyed
353.1.4 ELOHIM
- Elohim, when the portrayal is more general,
superficial and hazy, leaving an impression of
obscurity. The Tetragrammaton is found when the
Torah seeks to arouse in the soul of the reader
or the listener the feeling of the sublimity of
the Divine Presence in all its majesty and glory
the name Elohim, when it wishes to mention God in
an ordinary manner, or when the expression or
thought may not, out of reverence, be associated
directly with the Holiest Name. The YHWH is
employed when God is presented to us in His
personal character and in direct relationship to
people or nature and Elohim, when the Deity is
alluded to as a Transcendental Being who exists
completely outside and above the physical
universe. The Tetragrammaton appears when the
reference is to the God of Israel
363.1.4 ELOHIM
- relative to His people or to their ancestors
Elohim, when He is spoken of in relation to one
who is not a member of the Chosen People. YHWH is
mentioned when the name concerns Israel's
tradition and Elohim, when the subject-matter
appertains to the universal tradition. Cassuto,
The Documentary Hypothesis, 31-32
373.1.4 ELOHIM
- 4. Problems with the Name of God criterion for
Source Critical Divisions - 4.1 Can not be applied consistently i.e.,
supposed E text of Gen 22.11 uses YHWH in Gen
2-4 it is usually YHWH Elohim in J. - 4.2 Editorial rationale is weak in spite of the
Ex 6.2c-3 and 3.13-15. - 4.3 Easy solution of name interchange, i.e.,
"YHWH is the covenant name of God, which
emphasizes his special relationship to Israel.
Elohim speaks of God's universality as God of all
earth. To put it simply, Elohim is what God is
and YHWH is who he is." Garret, Rethinking
Genesis, 19
383.1.4 ELOHIM
- 4.4 The idea that J thought the patriarchs knew
YHWH, while E and P did not is not true. Note
the problem of Gen 4.26 (J) Ex 3.13-15 (E) Ex
6.2-8 (P). - 4.5 Using the divine name as a source criterion
is contrary to all ancient Near eastern
analogies.
393.1.5 hwhy YAHWEH
- 1. General
- 1.1 "Yahweh. The name of God the OT. When it
stands alone, and with prefixed prepositions or
the conjunction wa-, and, the name is always
written with the four Hebrew letters yod, he,
waw, he-, and is for that reason called the
Tetragrammaton. In this form the name appears
more than 6,000 times in the OT. (Variation in
the Masoretic mss makes it difficult to establish
the number of occurrences exactly.) Shorter forms
of the divine name occur in personal names. At
the beginning of names the form is ye6ho- or the
contracted form yo- at the end of names,
-ya4hu or -ya4h." Thompson, Henry O., Yahweh,
ABD (6,828X)
403.1.5 hwhy YAHWEH
- 2. Pronunciation
- 2.1 "The pronunciation of yhwh as Yahweh is a
scholarly guess. Hebrew biblical mss were
principally consonantal in spelling until well
the current era. The pronunciation of words was
transmitted in a separate oral tradition. The
Tetragrammaton was not pronounced at all, the
word )a6dona4y, my Lord, being pronounced in
its place )elo4hm, God, was substituted in
cases of combination )a6dona4y yhwh (305 times
e.g., Gen 15.2). (This sort of reading in MT is
called a qere perpetuum.) Though the consonants
remained, the original pronunciation was
eventually lost. When the Jewish scholars (called
Masoretes) added vowel signs to biblical mss some
time before the 10th century AD, the
Tetragrammaton was punctuated with the vowels of
the word Adonai or Elohim to indicate that
that the reader should read Lord or God
instead of accidentally pronouncing the sacred
name (TDOT, 5, 501-02)."
413.1.5 hwhy YAHWEH
- 2.2 "The form Jehovah results from reading the
consonants of the Tetragrammaton with the vowels
of the surrogate word Adonai. The dissemination
of this form is usually traced to Petrus
Galatinus, confessor to Pope Leo X, who in 1518
AD transliterated the four Hebrew letters with
the Latin letters jhvh together with the vowels
of Adonai, producing the artificial form
Jehovah. (This confused usage may, however,
have begun as early as 1100 AD note (KB, 369).
While the hybrid form Jehovah has met much
resistance, and is universally regarded as an
ungrammatical aberration, it nonetheless passed
from Latin into English and other European
languages and has been the hallowed by usage in
hymns and the ASV it is used only a few times in
KJV and not at all in the RSV.
423.1.5 hwhy YAHWEH
- 2.3 "The generally acknowledged vocalization
Yahweh is a reconstruction that draws on
several lines of evidence. The longer of the two
reduced suffixing forms of the divine, ya4h and
ya4hu, indicates that the name probably had the
phonetic shape /yahw-/ with a final vowel. The
vowel is supplied on the basis of the observation
that the name final vowel /e4/ this inference is
confirmed by the element yahw4 occurring in the
names in the Amorite language (see TDOT 5512
the relevance of the Amorite names is challenged
by Knauf 1984 467). In the Aramaic letters from
Elephantine in Egypt (ca. 404 BC ANET, 491-92),
the divine name occurs in the spelling yhw,
probably with the vocalization /yahu/ (TDOT
5505). Instances of the divine name written in
Greek letters, such as Iao (equivalent to
Yaho), Iabe (known to the Samaritans, Theodoret
4th century AD, and Epiphanius), Iaoue, Iaouai
(Clement of Alexandria 3d century), and Iae
also favor the form Yahweh (NWDB, 453).
433.1.5 hwhy YAHWEH
- 2.4 Mettinger also notes
- 2.4.1 ...the name which is above every name.
(Phil 2.9) which is influenced by Lev 24.10-16 - 2.4.2 N.B. Pss 42-83 (the Elohist Psalms)
- 2.4.3 Some of the Dead Sea Scrolls use an archaic
lettering for the Tetragrammaton
443.1.5 hwhy YAHWEH
- 3. Meaning
- 3.1 "The meaning of the name is unknown.
Arguments favoring particular meaning have been
for the most part grammatical. The name has long
been thought to be a form of the verb ha4wa4y, an
older form of the Hebrew verb -ha4ya4h, to be.
The reconstructed from yahwe4h is parsed as
either a third-person Qal imperfect of this verb
or as the corresponding form of the causative
stem. This analysis is encouraged by theological
notions of God as one who is, or who exists, or
who causes existence. Thus the explanation of
Yahweh in Exod 3.14, I am who I am, is a folk
etymology based on the verb (ROTT, 181-182). the
analysis of the name as a causative falters on
the grammatical point observed by Barr that the
causative of this verb does not occur in Hebrew
elsewhere (HDB, 335). However, the name could be
a unique or singular use of the causative stem."
453.1.5 hwhy YAHWEH
- 3.2 Possible Meanings According to Mettinger
- 3.2.1 As a "vocative" ya and huwa (He) "He!"
(Isa 43.10, 13 Deut 32.39) - 3.2.2 Arabic hwy meaning "to fall" or "scatter"
therefore the meaning "the one who sows seeds"
463.1.5 hwhy YAHWEH
- 4. Theological Significance
- 4.1 Exodus 6.2-3
- The Context of 6.2-9
- Functions as the greatest guarantee of the
promise. - 4.2 Exodus 3.13-15
- The Context of a "call narrative"
- Functions as an proof of the "call" and
"commission" - 4.3 Other Texts of Interest Deut 33.2-3 Judg
5.4-5 (Ps 68.7-8, 17-18) Hab 3.3ff.
473.1.5 hwhy YAHWEH
- 4.4 Egyptian Sources (Amenophis III 1400BCE
Ramses II 1250BCE) - Shasu bedouins
- Yhw in the land of the Shasu bedouins
- Seir in the land of the Shasu bedouins
- 4.5 Relations to the verb "to be" in Exodus
3.13-14. - 4.6 N.B. Hos 1.9
- 4.7 G-Stem (Qal) - He is! I am
- 4.8 H-Stem (Hiphil) "Creator"
- 4.9 He is here and now helping God's active
presence to help.
483.2 Metaphors about God in the Old Testament
493.2.1 The LORD is KING
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 A Root Metaphor "The LORD as King is a "root
metaphor." It generates such metaphors as the
notion of the temple as God's royal dwelling -
God's palace the concept that God is an
enthroned ruler of the Universe and presides over
a heavenly court of divine armies the there will
be a great battle, the "Day of LORD." - 2. Statistics
- 2.1 "The OT speaks of the Lord as King a total of
85 times (ignoring personal names in which this
concept is also expressed). These are contexts in
which such words as king,' throne,' reign,'
and the like are used of God." Mettinger, In
Search of God, 116
503.2.1 The LORD is KING
- 2.2 Tabulations
- "King" l,m, used of God 43 times.
- Pent 2X Num 23.21 Deut 33.5
- Sam 1X 1 Sam 12.12
- Prophets 18X Isa 6.5 33.17, 22 41.21 43.15
44.6 Jer 8.19 10.7, 10 6.18 48.15 51.57
Micah 2.13 Zeph 3.15 Zech 14.9, 16, 17 Mal
1.14 - Psalter 21X 5.23 10.16 24.7, 8, 9, 10
29.10 44.45 47.2, 6, 73, 7, 8 48.23
68.2425 74.12 84.34 89.1819 95.3 98.6
99.4 145.1 149.2. - Daniel 1X Dan 4.37Aram v34
513.2.1 The LORD is KING
- "to be king" lm' is used 13 times of God.
- Pent 1X Exod 15.18
- Sam 1X 1 Sam 8.7
- Prophets 6X Isa 24.23 52.7 Eze 20.33 Micah
4.7 - Psalter 6X 47.89 93.1 96.10 97.1 99.1
146.10 - Chronicles 1X 1 Chr 16.31 (Ps 96.10)
523.2.1 The LORD is KING
- Terms signifying "kingdom" occur 10 times in
connection with God. - tWkl.m Ps 103.19 145.11, 12, 13(X2) Dan 4.3
Aram 3.33 4.34Aram 4.31 - hk'Wlm. Obad 21 Ps 22.2829
- 1 Chr 29.11
- The Lord's sitting on his throne is mentioned 11
times. not including the expression "he who
thrones upon the cherubim," 1 Kgs 22.19 Isa
6.1 66.1 Jer 3.17 17.12 Eze 1.26 Pss 9.4,
75, 8 47.89 89.1415 93.2 103.19.
533.2.1 The LORD is KING
- "to rule, govern" lvm' 8X Judg 8.23 Isa
63.19 Pss 22.2829 59.1314 66.7 89.910
1 Chr 29.12 2 Chr 20.6. - 2.3 "The root metaphor of the Lord as King
utilizes two divine designation "the King," and
"YHWH Sabaoth." The first gives us a glimpse of
YHWH as the warring deity and the second of YHWH
as the enthroned reigning deity." N.B. Isaiah
6.1-5
543.2.1 The LORD is KING
- 3. The LORD as KING The Victorious Warrior
- 3.1 YHWH is King not Baal!
- Problem of identifying YHWH with Baal
- Hos 2.16 2.18 On that day, says the LORD, you
will call me, My husband, and no longer will
you call me, My Baal. - The large stone jar with "I bless you by Yahweh
our guardian Yahweh of Samaria and by his
Asherah." From Kuntillet Ajrud. Dever, Recent
Archaeological Discoveries and Biblical Research,
140-149 N.B. ABD Picture!
553.2.1 The LORD is KING
- 3.1.1 Elimination of Baal in worship
"...characterized by Israel's reaction to the
sexual athleticism and the dying and rising
features of the Canaanite deities." Mettinger,
In Search of God, 94 - 3.1.2 Integration
- 3.1.3 The Battle
- Ps 74.12-14 Yet God my King from of old,
working salvation in the midst of the earth. You
divided the sea y" by your might You broke
the heads of the dragons on the waters. You
crushed the heads of Leviathan.
563.2.1 The LORD is KING
- Isa 27.1 In that day the LORD with his hard and
great and strong sword will punish Leviathan the
fleeing serpent, Leviathan the twisting serpent,
and he will slay the dragon that is in the sea. - 3.2 The LORD as King The Creation Battle
- Ps 74.15-17 You cut openings for springs and
torrents and you dried up ever-flowing streams.
Yours is the day, yours also the night you
establish the luminaries and the sun. You have
fixed all the bounds of the earth you made
summer and winter. Note the connection of the
chaos battle and the description of creation.
573.2.1 The LORD is KING
- Ps 89.9-12 v5-18 God as King gt v1819 should be
rendered "The Holy One of Israel, he is our
king" You rule the raging of the sea when its
waves rise, you still them. You crushed Rahab
like a carcass you scattered your enemies with
your mighty arm. The heavens are yours, the earth
also is yours the world and all that is in it -
you have founded them. The north and the south -
you created them Tabor and Hermon joyously
praise you name. - Rebuke gt rg"
- Ps 104.7 "At your rebuke they fled at the sound
of your thunder they took to flight." Isa 17.3
583.2.1 The LORD is KING
- "The concept of the Lord as King is associated
with the idea of the chaos battle. We have just
seen how the chaos battle also serves as a motif
of creation. In this context, the creation bears
witness of God's victory over chaos. This
establishes a connection between the Lord as King
and his creation of the world, and this
connection is attested in other biblical texts
(e.g., Jer 10.7, 12-16) and in other Jewish
literature." Mettinger, In Search of God, 100
593.2.1 The LORD is KING
- 3.3 The LORD as King The Temple and the Zion
Battle - 3.3.1 Ps 24 How the King of Glory enters his
Temple - 24.7-10 God's royal progression to his temple.
- 24.1-2 A glimpse of the Creator's battle with
the powers of chaos - 3.3.2 1 Kgs 8.13 The temple as God's royal
palace "I have built a royal house for you, an
established place for your throne forever." - The temple in Jerusalem often called lk'yhe Ps
27.4 Isa 6.1.
603.2.1 The LORD is KING
- 3.3.3 Note the Zion Theology in Ps 46 48 76
- The Lord is the great King (Ps 48.2)
- God has chosen Jerusalem (Pss 78.68-69) 132.13)
the temple on Zion is his royal palace, and God
is always present in it. - The royal presence of the god on Zion has a
series of consequences - God's blessing emanates from Zion (Pss 128.5
134.3) the temple river is a manifestation of
this (Ps 46.4 Eze 47.1-12). - In a virtual repetition of the chaos battle, the
Lord intervenes against the enemies who are
threatening Zion. God's presence makes Zion
inviolable God is the guarantor of Zion's
security (Ps 46.5).
613.2.1 The LORD is KING
- God's presence entails special demands on the
inhabitants of Zion, as sinners cannot endure the
presence of God (Pss 15 24.3-6 Isa 33.13-16). - 3.3.4 Three Key texts
- Isa 17.12-14 gt The chaos battle here is
transformed into God's battle with the enemy who
attack Zion. - Ps 46 gt God brings peace by being the battling
king and intervening against every new
manifestation of the forces of chaos. - Ps 76
623.2.1 The LORD is KING
- 3.3.5 "So far we have witnessed the importance of
the temple to the metaphor of the Lord as King.
Its architecture and cult symbols (esp. the
cherubim throne) imply that the structure in
question is the palace of he great King. In the
biblical ideological complex in which the Lord as
King is the very center, there are three
components chaos battle, kingship, and temple.
It is logical to assume that this root metaphor
was especially cultivated in the milieu of the
temple, which would help to explain its
occurrence in the Psalter and related
literature." Mettinger, In Search of God, 104
633.2.1 The LORD is KING
- 3.4 The LORD as King The Exodus Battle
- 3.4.1 Passages describing the miracle of the
exodus as a re-enactment of God's battle with the
power of chaos - Ps 114.1-5
- Ps 77.13-10
- Exod 15.1-18
- Isa 51.9-10
- 3.4.2 "We have now seen how the motif of the
chaos battle is used in the OT in a variety of
ways to show how God created this world in an
act of royal sovereignty and how God acts in new
ways on the historical plane. In this connection
we find the historicization' of the motif in
order to describe God's saving action in the
exodus. Here, too, we find God's defense of Zion
against the attacking enemy peoples. The original
mythological motif was historicized' in Israel.
643.2.1 The LORD is KING
- 3.5 The LORD as King The Battle on the Day of
the LORD - 3.5.1 The Day of Yahweh in General
- 3.5.1.1 "'The Day of the Lord' (the Day of
Yahweh') is a central feature of the prophets'
message to their contemporaries. This phrase and
such closely related expressions as the day of
the anger of Yahweh,' or Yahweh has a day,'
occur over two dozen times in the prophetic books
(most frequently in Isaiah, Joel, and Zephaniah),
and once in Lamentations (2.22). Similar terms,
particularly that day,' the day of,' and the
day when,' appear nearly 200 times in the
prophets, occasionally in Lamentations, and twice
in Psalms (Pss 110.5 137.7). The terms often are
used interchangeably with the fuller expressions
or in contexts that refer
653.2.1 The LORD is KING
- specifically to one or the other of them, e.g.,
Isa 2.12-22 (see vv 12, 17, 20) Jer 46.10 Ezk
7.5-27 (see vv 7, 10, 12, 19) and Ezk 30.2-3."
Heirs, "Day of the Lord," ABD - 3.5.1.2 hwhy Ay "An expression found in the
following OT passages Isa 13.6, 9 Ezk 13.5
Joel 1.15 2.1, 11 3.4 4.14 Amos 5.18-20 (3x)
Obad 15 Zeph 1.7, 14 Mal 3.23. There occur also
the related expressions hwhyl wy a day of
Yahweh' (Isa 2.12 Ezk 30.3 Zech 14.1) hmqn wy
a day of retribution' (Jer 46.10) hwhyl qn wy
Yahweh's day of retribution' (Isa 34.8) hwhy
trb wy the day of Yahweh's wrath' (Ezk 7.19
Zeph 1.18) hwhy _at_a wy the day of Yahweh's
anger' (Zeph 2.3 cf. Lam 2.22) and hwhy xbz wy
the day of Yahweh's feast' (Zeph 1.8). There is
also the phrase, My Lord Yahweh of hosts has a
day of tumult and din and confusion' (Isa 22.5)."
Cathcart, "Day of Yahweh," ABD
663.2.1 The LORD is KING
- 3.5.1.3 Mettinger's "More Important OT Day of
the LORD' Texts - "In the NT, the expression the Day of the Lord'
refers to the day Jesus arose from the dead -
Sunday. Alternatively, it sometimes refers to the
day of the return of Christ. In the OT, the
phrase often has eschatological connotations.
There it has to do with the day of God's final
intervention in world history, the day when he
will judge the peoples. The day of the Lord' and
related expressions occur virtually only in the
prophetic literature." Mettinger, In Search of
God, 117 - "...the more important of the Day of the Lord'
texts include Isa 2.6-22 13.1-22 22.1-14
34.1-8 Jer 46.1-12 Ezk 7.1-27 Joel 1.1-20
2.1-17 2.28-32 3.1-4 3.1-21 4.1-21 Amos
5.18-20 obad 15-21 Zeph 1.2-18 3.9-20 Zech
14.1-21. In addition to these texts, the
673.2.1 The LORD is KING
- following should be considered. They do not
contain the technical terms of the Day of the
Lord' texts, but are nevertheless related Isa
24-27 Jer 4.23-31 50-51 Ezk 38-39."
Mettinger, In Search of God, 117 - 3.5.1.4 Hoffmann's Two Principles Hoffmann,
"The Day of the Lord as a Concept and a Term in
the Prophetic Literature," ZAW 93, pp. 37-50 - The investigation should start with Amos 5.18-20.
- We must not draw conclusions about an earlier
text from a later one. - 3.5.2 Major Interpretations
- 3.5.2.1 von Rad von Rad, "The Origin of the
Concept of the Day of the Yahweh," JSS, 4, pp.
97-108 Old Testament Theology, Vol II, pp.
119-125 Holy War in Ancient Israel
683.2.1 The LORD is KING
- "There is in fact something peculiar about the
expectation of of the Day of Jahweh, for wherever
it occurs in prophecy, the statements culminate
in an allusion to Jahweh's coming in person."
von Rad, OTT, II, 119 - "The first result of this survey is to show that
the prophets expect the day of Jahweh to bring
war in its train.... In itself, the almost
stereotyped connexion of the day of Jahweh with
intervention in war reminds one of the holy wars
and all the phenomena which traditionally
accompanied them.... A particularly important
part is played by the terror caused by God
himself, a panic confusion and demoralization of
the enemy, whose effect was to paralyze their
confidence in their fighting powers and so lead
them to compass their own destruction." von Rad,
Ibid., 123-124
693.2.1 The LORD is KING
- "The concept connected with the Day of Jahweh are
therefore in no way eschatological per se, but
were familiar to the prophets in all their
details from the old Jahwistic tradition. The
prophets, however, also believed that Jahweh's
final uprising against his foe would take the
same form as it had done in the days of old. It
is beyond question that the prophetic vision of
the concept of Jahweh's intervention in war
became greatly intensified for the war was now
to affect all nations, even the fixed orders of
creation, and even Israel herself. The event has
been expanded into a phenomenon of cosmic
significance. Thus, under the influence of this
traditional element the prophetic concept of the
eschaton was also to some extent systematized,
that is to say, predictions connected with the
expectation of the Day of Jahweh which began from
different traditions were to some extent
blended." von Rad, Ibid., 124
703.2.1 The LORD is KING
- "...von Rad maintains in his theology of the OT
that the Day of the Lord' implied a renewal of
that intervention which the Lord once undertook
in connection with the holy war' which took
place after the exodus from Egypt and in
conjunction with the conquest of Canaan. Of
course, we know that the prophets sometimes
looked to the past when they spoke of that which
was to come. Thus, for example, it is possible to
interpret Isa 9.4 in the light of Judges 7, or
Isa 28.21 on the basis of 2 Sam 5.20. Moreover,
it is clear that the description of the holy
wars' of the past contain a number of miraculous
details (e.g., Ex 14.20 Josh 10.11 1 Sam
7.10)." Mettinger, In Search of God, 108
713.2.1 The LORD is KING
- "He is convinced that the Day of Yahweh
encompasses a pure event of war, the rise of
Yahweh against his enemies, his battle and his
victory' (von Rad 1959 103). He pays particular
attention to Isaiah 13 and 34, Ezekiel 7, and
Joel 2, but criticizes those scholars who take
Amos 5.18 as the starting point for in his view
this text is not sufficiently unequivocal to be
used as a suitable starting point for the
examination (1959 98)." Cathcart, Ibid., 84 - 2.5.2.2 Mowinckel Mowinckel, He that Cometh
- "Inspired by Gressmann's work, S. Mowinckel
proposed in 1917 that the Israelite New Year
Festival was the enthronement festival of Yahweh.
However, he differed from Gressmann, and from
others before him, by rejecting the existence of
a preprophetic
723.2.1 The LORD is KING
- eschatology. For him the Day of Yahweh
originally means the day of Yahweh's
manifestation in the cult at the New year
Festival. Eschatology and the eschatological
significance of the Day of Yahweh have their
ultimate source in the autumn festival, but
strictly they belong to later prophecy."
Cathcart, Ibid., 84 - 2.5.2.3 John Gray Gray, "The Day of Yahweh in
Cultic Experience and Eschatological Prospect,"
SEA, 39, pp.5-37 The Biblical Doctrine of the
Reign of God - "...J. Gray, has argued effectively that the Day
of Yahweh signified essentially the moment of
the epiphany as King, which was the highlight of
the autumn festival'.... Utilizing evidence
gathered from Canaanite sources, and esp. the
Baal myth from Ugarit, Gray
733.2.1 The LORD is KING
- stresses the importance of mispat, i.e., the
imposition of the effective rule of Yahweh as
king, the main theme of the liturgy of the autumn
festival with its ultimate origins in the
Canaanite festival at the same seasonal crisis'.
Furthermore, Gray argues that Yahweh's conflict
with the enemies of Israel, the
Volkerkampf-mythus, is the historification in
Israel of the cosmic conflict to sustain the
effective Kingship of Yahweh in the liturgy of
the autumn festival." Cathcart, Ibid., 85 - Mettinger follows a similar line when he
emphasizes that, "It is a simple fact that
certain of the texts that speak of the Day of
the Lord' or of the Day' also expressly speak of
the Lord as King. Here I content myself with
brief reference to Ob 15-21 Micah 4.6-8 Zeph
3.11-15 and Zech 14.9, 16." Mettinger, In
Search of God, 109
743.2.1 The LORD is KING
- 4. The LORD of Hosts The Regnant God
- 4.1 The Contexts of twabc hwhy
- 4.1.1 "There are 284 occurrence of the name of
these, no fewer than 251 (i.e., 88) are in the
prophetic books. The 82 occurrences in the Book
of Jeremiah represent a problem.... However, one
should note the frequency of the term in Isaiah
1-39 (56 times), Haggai (14 times), Zechariah (53
times), and Malachi (24 times). These prophets
have one notable feature in common they
represent a tradition closely associated with the
Jerusalem temple." Mettinger, In Search of God,
125
753.2.1 The LORD is KING
- 4.1.2 "...the first attestations of the name
occur in 1 Samuel (1.3, 11 4.4), where it
appears in the context of ancient traditions
associated with the Shiloh of he period of the
judges. Note also that Shiloh contained a
sanctuary, which was in fact the only sanctuary
prior to the erection of Solomon's temple that
was designated by the word hekal, temple (1 Sam
1.9 3.3). Additionally, in the early materials
the ark of the covenant is especially connected
with the Sabaoth name (1 Sam 4.4 2 Sam 6.2), and
it soon took up its place in the temple of
Solomon (1 Kgs 8.6)." Mettinger, In Search of
God, 125-6
763.2.1 The LORD is KING
- 4.1.3 In the Psalter 15X 24.10 46.7, 118,
12 48.89 59.56 69.67 80.4, 7, 14,
195, 8, 15, 20 84.1, 3, 8, 122, 4, 9, 13
and 89.89. - 4.2 Iconographic Context
- 4.2.1 The Sabaoth name seems to be connected with
the Temple and especially the Cherubim Throne. - 1 Sam 4.4 2 Sam 6.2 Isa 37.16 Ps 80.4, 7, 14,
19. - "The Sabaoth name was connected with Jerusalem
and Zion. It was sometimes complemented by the
cherubim formula,' so that the combined divine
name YHWH Sabaoth, who is enthroned above the
cherubim.' Therefore, we may conclude that the
Sabaoth name was at home
773.2.1 The LORD is KING
- in the milieu of the temple. After all, it was
in the temple that the two cherubim were placed
which formed the throne of YHWH Sabaoth. It
accordingly seems likely that the Sabaoth name
was the designation used by the temple priests
for God." Mettinger, In Search of God, 129-30 - 4.2.2 The Temple Meeting Place of Heaven and
Earth. - Ps 11.4 "The Lord is in his holy temple, the
Lord's throne is in heaven."
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823.1 Names of God in the O.T.
833.1.0.1 The Significance of Names in the Biblical
World
- 1. Name and Reality Gen 2.19 Enuma Elish and
the before of things named. - 2. Name and Personality 1 Sam 25.25 (Nabal) Gen
27.36 (Jacob) I know you by name (Ex 33.17)
Ps 30.27 20.1. - 3. Name and Presence Ex 20.24, Deut 4.7 (Where
God's name is proclaim, God is said to be
present.) - 4. Pronouncing Names as a Legal Act Psa
49.1112 Isa 4.1 Jer 15.16 I Kgs 8.43 Amos
9.12
843.1.0.2 Exodus 6.2-3 3.14-15
- A I am Yahweh.
- B And I made myself known to Abraham, to Isaac,
and to Jacob as El Shaddai. - A' And my name is Yahweh.
- B' Did I not make myself known to them?
- "I am the God of your fathers, God of Abraham,
God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob."
85Preliminary Observation
- 1. In the patriarchal narratives a number of
names of persons and places are mentioned that
have long attracted scholarly interest Abram,
Sarai, Jacob, Laban, Serug, Nahor, and Terah . .
. . Mettinger, In Search of God, 52 - 2. ...the matter of the ethnic origins of the
patriarchs. There is a well-established tradition
that associates the patriarchs with the Arameans
and that also manifests itself in the texts about
Jacob, since he is said to be related to the
Arameans through his mother, Rebecca. Rebecca was
the daughter of the Aramean Bethuel and the
sister of Laban, likewise referred to as Aramean
(cf. Gen 25.20 28.5 31.20, 24). A text from the
D-literature records that a wandering Aramean
was my father and he went down into Egypt (Deut
26.5). Mettinger, Ibid., 53
86Preliminary Observation
- 3. Although Jerusalem and Zion played a major
role in the cult during the monarchy there is no
evidence of either in these pre-monarchical
period texts. There is also no major evidence in
this literature that points to the later conflict
with the worship of the Canaanite Baal and
depicted in the monar