Title: 1.0 History of Old Testament Theology
11.0 History of Old Testament Theology
- BIB566/THE566 Old Testament Theology
21.1 Introduction
31.1.1 Difficulties in Approaching O.T. Studies
- 1.1.1.1 Historical barriers
- 1.1.1.2 Literary barriers
- 1.1.1.3 Theological/Hermeneutical barriers
- 1.1.1.4 General unfamiliarity with the O.T.
- 1.1.1.5 Scholarly barriers
- House, Paul R., Old Testament Theology
41.1.2 Five Possible Starting Points
- 1.1.2.1 The Old Testament itself
- Intra-Testamental Michael A. Fishbane, Biblical
Interpretation in Ancient Israel (Oxford
Clarendon, 1985). - 1.1.2.2 Version Analysis LXX, Qumran, Samaritan
Pent., MT, etc.
51.1.2 Five Possible Starting Points
- 1.1.2.3 New Testament
- 1.1.2.4 Early church fathers, medieval
interpreters and leaders of the Reformation . . .
John Calvin and Martin Luther - Brevard S. Childs, Biblical Theology of the Old
and New Testaments Theological Reflections on
the Christian Bible (Minneapolis Fortress,
1992), pp. 30-51. - N.B. Brueggemann, Walter. Theology of the Old
Testament Testimony, Dispute, Advocacy.Minneapoli
s Fortress Press, 1997.
61.1.2 Five Possible Starting Points
- 1.1.2.5 Rabbinic scholars
- See John H. Hayes and Frederick C. Prussner, Old
Testament Theology Its History and Development
(Atlanta John Knox, 1985).
71.2 Reformers Protestant Orthodoxy (1550-1650)
81.2.1 Reformers
- "While the Bible has been read theologically
since its formation, biblical theology as a
discipline has its roots in the Protestant
Reformation. The Reformers' emphasis on Scripture
as the sole source and norm for all matters of
faith provided the soil from which biblical
theology sprang. While the term itself was not
used by the Reformers to designate a distinct
discipline, it is clear that for them biblical
theology meant a systematic theology which was
biblical in character, that is, for which the
Bible was the primary, if not the sole, source
and norm. Insofar as the Reformers
self-consciously sought to differentiate their
theology from Roman Catholic dogma, in which
tradition played a major role, one may note a
polemic
91.2.1 Reformers
- dimension in the birth of biblical theology. One
could go on to observe that while the target of
the polemic changed periodically, the polemic
dimension has been a constant feature of biblical
theology throughout its history, in the sense
that it had to fight repeatedly for an unbiased
hearing of the theological witness of Scripture." - Lemke, Werner E., "Theology (Old Testament),"
The Anchor Bible Dictionary, Freedman, David
Noel, ed., (New York Doubleday) 1997, 1992
101.2.1 Reformers
- "The Protestant principle of "sola scriptura,"
which became the battle cry of the Reformation
against scholastic theology and ecclesiastical
tradition, provides with its call for the
self-interpretation of Scripture (sui ipsius
interpres) the source for the subsequent
development of Biblical theology. The Reformers
did not create the phrase "Biblical theology" nor
did they engage in Biblical theology as a
discipline as subsequently understood. . . .
111.2.1 Reformers
- Luther's hermeneutic of "sola scriptura" and his
principle "was Christum treibet" together with
the "letter-spirit" dualism prevented him from
developing a Biblical theology. . . . " - Hasel, Old Testament Theology
121.2.2 Protestant Orthodoxy
- 1.2.2.1 While the Reformers in their use of
Scripture introduced a creative tension between
the Bible and dogmatic theology, the opposite was
true of the proponents of Protestant orthodoxy
who followed them. In their hands the Bible
became subservient to Protestant dogmatics, which
determined the selection, order, and treatment of
biblical passages. The Bible came to be viewed as
a uniform sourcebook of quotations whose primary
task was to support the dogmas of Protestant
orthodoxy against the dogmas of Roman
Catholicism. No distinctions were made in regard
to time, authorship, historical context,
compositional purpose, or distinctive theological
perspectives of the biblical documents. The
system of arranging biblical data was the
traditional loci method known from medieval
scholasticism. That is, various Scripture texts
would be listed and briefly
131.2.2 Protestant Orthodoxy
- commented upon under the topical rubrics drawn
from dogmatic theology. The understanding of
biblical theology reflected in Protestant
orthodoxy may be characterized as "dogmatic
biblicism" or proof-texting (dicta probantia).
Early in the 17th century, the actual words
"biblical theology" began to appear in the title
of works of this kind. As far as we know, the
first work to use such a title was W. J.
Christmann's Teutsche Biblische Theologie
published in 1629. While many other works of this
nature were published subsequently, a significant
shift in the understanding of biblical theology
began to take place during the second half of the
17th century, thus ushering in a new era in the
history of the discipline." - Lemke, "Theology (Old Testament)," ABD
141.2.2 Protestant Orthodoxy
- 1.2.2.2 "Proof-texts" - dicta probantia -
collegia biblica - "Emerging, as it did, as a child of Protestant
Scholasticism, its basic presuppositions
reflected the peculiarities of the parent system
of thought. It began with the belief that the
church dogmas contained the correct
interpretation of the Christian religion. These,
in turn, were deemed to be sacrosanct, true for
all time, and unchangeable. Their authority lay
especially in the fact that the Scripture,
constituting the literal Word of God, was
considered to give them a supernatural approval."
151.2.2.2 "Proof-texts"
- ". . . the Bible was regarded as uniformly
authoritative and that any notions of the
dissimilarity between the Old and New Testaments
were completely nonexistent." - "Old Testament theology thus described may be
taken to mean the use of Israels canonical
writings for the purpose of demonstrating the
soundness of Protestant doctrine on the basis of
certain passages selected for their suitability
as proof-texts. Since all of Scripture was deemed
to be of equal value, such passages could and
were chosen from all sections of the Old
Testament, the only requirement being that the
texts could be interpreted to agree with whatever
doctrine was being considered."
161.2.2.2 "Proof-texts"
- "Under these circumstances, the method of
discussion was an extremely simple one, involving
only three steps. It began with the authoritative
definition and elucidation of an individual
doctrine. It then moved on to choose passages
from the Old Testament which might be thought to
support that formulation. Finally, it entailed
the detailed exposition of those texts in order
to show how they actually did provide such
support."
171.2.2.2 "Proof-texts"
- "The order of the subject matter came bodily from
the doctrinal systems themselves. In this respect
Schmidt was only following the practice current
among the Protestant theologians of his day." - Hayes Prussner, Old Testament Theology it
history development
181.3 Emancipation from Dogmatics (1650-1800)
191.3.1 Introduction
- 1.3.1.1 "The more attentively Scripture was read
and studied during the course of the 17th
century, the more it became apparent that the
biblical documents did not really contain a
theological system of doctrines at all. Rather,
Scripture was cast into the form of a historical
narrative. It told the story of God's unfolding
relationship with humanity through a sequence of
temporal events (oeconomia temporum)." - Lemke, "Theology (Old Testament)," ABD
201.3.2 Pietism Enlightenment
- 1.3.2.1 Pietism
- "The shift from a dogmatic to a more historically
oriented approach to biblical theology
accelerated during the course of the 18th
century. Of particular importance in this
development were two cultural movements of the
18th century German Pietism and the
Enlightenment. Pietism was a revolt within the
German Church against Protestant scholasticism,
which it considered to be excessively preoccupied
with dogmatic speculations and arid abstractions.
Whereas Protestant orthodoxy tended to equate the
Christian faith with intellectual assent to sound
doctrine, Pietism stressed personal experience
and awareness of the presence of God, as
211.3.2.1 Pietism
- nourished through a life of prayer, personal
devotion, Bible reading, and moral living.
Pietism's emphasis on the reading and study of
Scripture by all brought about a greater
familiarity with the contents of the Bible. It
also brought about an increasing awareness of the
differences between biblical and dogmatic
theology." - Lemke, "Theology (Old Testament)," ABD
221.3.2.1 Pietism
- "The back-to-the-Bible emphasis of German Pietism
brought about a changing direction for Biblical
theology. In Pietism Biblical theology became a
tool in the reaction against arid Protestant
Orthodoxy. Philipp Jacob Spener (1635-1705), a
founding father of Pietism, opposed Protestant
scholasticism with Biblical theology. The
influence of Pietism is reflected in the works of
Carl Haymann (1708), J. Deutschmann (1710), and
J. C. Weidner (1722), which oppose orthodox
systems of doctrine with "Biblical theology."
231.3.2.1 Pietism
- "As early as 1745 Biblical theology is clearly
separated from dogmatic (systematic) theology and
the former is conceived of as being the
foundation of the latter. This means that
Biblical theology is emancipated from a role
merely subsidiary to dogmatics. Inherent in this
new development is the possibility that Biblical
theology can become the rival of dogmatics and
turn into a completely separate and independent
discipline. These possibilities realized
themselves under the influence of rationalism in
the age of Enlightenment." - Hasel, Old Testament Theology
24Enlightenment
- Nature and Nature's laws lay hid in night God
said, Let Newton be! and all was light! - Alexander Pope
251.3.2.2 Enlightenment
- "The increasing differentiation of biblical
theology from dogmatic theology was also greatly
aided by the Enlightenment which swept across
Europe during the 18th century. Rationalism's
aversion to dogmatic religion, its belief in the
powers of the human intellect to ascertain truth
through observation and inductive reasoning, as
well as its belief in the existence of universal
natural religion which was in conformity with the
demands of reason, exerted a powerful influence
on biblical studies and widened the gulf between
biblical and dogmatic theology. Increasingly the
Bible came to be subjected to the same kind of
critical and rational study as any other human
document of antiquity." - Lemke, "Theology (Old Testament)," ABD
261.3.2.2 Enlightenment
- "In the age of Enlightenment (Aufklärung) a
totally new approach for the study of the Bible
was developed under several influences. First and
foremost was rationalisms reaction against any
form of supernaturalism. Human reason was set up
as the final criterion and chief source of
knowledge, which meant that the authority of the
Bible as the infallible record of divine
revelation was rejected. The second major
contribution of the period of the Enlightenment
was the development of a new hermeneutic, the
historical-critical methods which holds sway to
the present day in liberalism and beyond. Third,
there is the application of radical literary
criticism to the Bible by J. B. Witter, J.
Astruc, and others. Finally, rationalism by its
very nature was led to abandon the orthodox view
of the inspiration of the Bible so that
ultimately the Bible became simply one of the
ancient documents, to be studied as any other
ancient document." - Hasel, Old Testament Theology
271.3.2.2 Enlightenment
- Enlightenment as it Impinged on Christian
Theology - Historical Science matured which produced a
by-product of historical skepticism - Literary Criticism was the subject ot intense
occupation - The enthronement of reason
- Sciences, i.e., physics, astronomy, etc.
- General religious skepticism
- Period of toleration
- Humanitarianism
281.3.2.2 Enlightenment
- Omnicompetence of Criticism
- Utilitarianism
- Pervasive Moralism
291.3.3 Scholars
- Johann Solomo Semler (1725-1791)
- ". . . claimed that the Word of God and Holy
Scripture are not at all identical. This implied
that not all parts of the Bible were inspired and
that the Bible is a purely historical document
which as any other such document is to be
investigated with a purely historical and thus
critical methodology. As a result Biblical
theology can be nothing else but a historical
discipline which stands in antithesis to
traditional dogmatics." Hasel, Old Testament
Theology
301.3.3 Scholars
- Gotthilf Traugott Zachariä (1729-1777)
- Under the influence of the new orientation in
dogmatics and hermeneutics he attempted to build
a system of theological teachings based upon
careful exegetical work. Each book of Scripture
has its own time, place, and intention. But
Zacharia held to the inspiration of the Bible, as
did J. A. Ernesti (1707-l781) whose
Biblical-exegetical method he followed.
Historical exegesis and canonical understanding
of Scripture do not collide in Zacharias thought
because the historical aspect is a matter of
secondary importance in theology. On this basis
there is no need to distinguish between the
Testaments they stand in reciprocal relationship
to each other. Most basically Zacharias interest
was still in the dogmatic system, which he wished
to cleanse from impurities." Hasel, Old
Testament Theology
311.3.3.1 Johann Philipp Gabler (1753-1826)
- Gabler took the ideas that were present in the
18th century and presented them in an orderly
fashion. - "Concerning the Proper Distinction between
Biblical and Dogmatic Theology and the
Appropriate Definition of the Respective Goals of
Both"
321.3.3.1 Johann Philipp Gabler (1753-1826)
- Biblical Theology Biblical theology is
historical in character that is, it sets forth
what the sacred writers thought about divine
matters. - Dogmatic Theology Dogmatic theology is didactic
in character, teaching what a given theologian
thinks about divine matters in accordance with
his ability, his particular circumstances, age,
locale, religious and intellectual tradition, and
similar conditioning factors.
331.3.3.1 Johann Philipp Gabler (1753-1826)
- Two phases or distinct tasks of biblical
theology - True "The first task of biblical theology was to
ascertain simply what the various biblical
authors thought and asserted about divine matters
in their various contexts. This was to be
accomplished by means of a purely grammatical and
historical exegesis. All allegorizing or
spiritualizing was to be shunned. Care was to be
exercised in differentiating the various ideas of
biblical writers, not to blur differences but to
arrange and compare these ideas in some suitable
manner." Lemke, "Theology (Old Testament)," ABD
341.3.3.1 Johann Philipp Gabler (1753-1826)
- Pure "The second task of biblical theology was
to sift these various biblical concepts and
assertions in terms of their universal and
abiding value and to deduce some general concepts
and ideas from these which could serve as a basis
for the construction of a dogmatic theology." - Lemke, "Theology (Old Testament)," ABD
351.3.3.1 Johann Philipp Gabler (1753-1826)
- "One possible implication of Gabler's proposal is
that the Old Testament occupies a lower rung on
the ladder of reason than does the New after
all, it is from an earlier ear. Georg Lorenz
Bauer was the first to draw this implication . .
. ." - Ollenburger, "From Timeless Ideas to the Essence
of Religion," in The Flowering of Old Testament
Theology A Reader in Twentieth-Century Old
Testament Theology, 1930-1990
361.3.3.1 Johann Philipp Gabler (1753-1826)
- A three-stage approach to examining biblical
theology - First, interpreters must gather data on "each of
the periods in the Old and New Testaments, each
of the authors, and each of the manners of
speaking which each used as a reflection of time
and place." - Second, having gathered this historical material
theologians must undertake "a careful and sober
comparison of the various parts attributed to
each testament." Biblical authors ideas should
be compared until "it is clearly revealed wherein
the separate authors agree in a friendly fashion,
or differ among themselves."
371.3.3.1 Johann Philipp Gabler (1753-1826)
- "Third, the agreements and disagreements must be
duly noted and analyzed in order to determine
what universal notions emerge. Gabler offers no
specific criteria for determining what
constitutes universal notions except to cite
"Mosaic law" as one example of what no longer
applies to Christians. He simply distinguished
between that which applied to the authors times
alone and that which has more long-term value." - House, Old Testament Theology
381.3.3.1 Johann Philipp Gabler (1753-1826)
- "Underlying Gablers approach was a rationalistic
view of the inspiration and reliability of
Scripture. For him, only eliminating the
temporary, human, nonuniversal elements of
Scriptures teachings can produce ideas that are
truly inspired and valuable for church dogmatics.
Even an appeal to passages on the Bibles
inspiration does not help determine the extent of
the Bibles inspiration, since "these individual
passages are very obscure and ambiguous."
Therefore those who "wish to deal with these
things with reason and not with fear or bias"
must not "press those meanings of the Apostles
beyond their just limits, especially since only
the effects of their inspiration and not their
causes, are perceived by the senses."
391.3.3.1 Johann Philipp Gabler (1753-1826)
- Strength "Its chief strength is the insistence
on the value of biblical theology." - Weaknesses
- "First, his insistence on rationalism and its
refusal to discuss what lies beyond the human
senses eliminates much of Scripture from serious
theological consideration." - "Second, despite his program for incorporating
biblical and systematic theology, Gablers
theories open the door for a negative separation
of Old and New Testament theology."
401.3.3.1 Johann Philipp Gabler (1753-1826)
- "Third, a cleavage is created between the
academic study of theology and the churchs
teaching of doctrine." - House, Old Testament Theology
411.3.3.1 Johann Philipp Gabler (1753-1826)
- Hayes, John H. and Frederick Prussner, Old
Testament Theology its history development,
(Atlanta John Knox Press, 1985), 62-66. - Knierim, Rolf P., "On Gabler," in The Task of Old
Testament Theology Method and Cases (Grand
Rapids William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company,
1995), 495-556. - Ollenburger, Ben C., "Biblical Theology
Situating the Discipline," in Understanding the
Word Essays in Honor of Bernhard W. Anderson,
eds. James T. Butler, Edger W. Conrad and Ben C.
Ollenburger, (Sheffield JSOT Press, 1985),
37-62. - _____, "From Timeless Ideas to the Essence of
Religion," in The Flowering of Old Testament
Theology A Reader in Twentieth-Century Old
Testament Theology, 1930-1990, (Winona Lake,
Indiana Eisenbrauns, 1992) - Sandys-Wunsch, John and Laurence Elbredge, "J. P.
Gabler and the Distinction between Biblical and
Dogmatic Theology Translation, Commentary, and
Discussion of his Originality," Scottish Journal
of Theology 33 (1980), 133-158.
421.4 Influence of Rationalism (1750-1875)
431.4.1 Initial effects of Rationalism
- "Initially rationalism, along with Pietism, had
been a constructive force in emancipating
biblical theology from the stranglehold of
dogmatic theology and in establishing it as a
distinct theological discipline in its own right.
Many 18th-century biblical theologians combined
both currents in their life and their
scholarship. That is, they were both devout
believers as well as rationalists, and this was
reflected in their scholarly work on the Bible.
But toward the latter part of the 18th and
especially during the first half of the 19th
century, these two currents more often than not
stood in opposition to each other, as rationalism
became the more powerful of the two.
Increasingly, rationalist philosophy penetrated
biblical theology and for a time forced it into a
philosophical straitjacket which threatened to
become as rigid as the older religious dogmatism
had been. The Bible was now understood in terms
of an evolutionary religious process leading from
441.4.1 Initial effects of Rationalism
- lower forms of religion to the absolute or
universal religion. The latter was usually
defined as a religion of reason (deism) or
morality (Kant). Representative of this kind of
19th-century biblical theology were the works of
G. L. Bauer, C. F. von Ammon, and G. P. C.
Kaiser. Only those teachings of Scripture which
were in accord with reason, or the universal
religion as established by reason, were of
abiding value. Everything else was to be
discarded as the outgrown ideas and practices of
a particular culture or period in history.
Concomitant with such a rationalistic approach to
biblical theology was an increasing devaluation
of the OT as the record of an inferior stage in
the religious development of the human race, and
hence less suitable than the NT for the
construction of a biblical theology." Lemke,
"Theology (Old Testament)," ABD
451.4.2 Rationalist Scholars
- Christopher Friedrich von Ammon ". . . framework
of Immanuel Kant's moral philosophy, and
specifically of "Kantian hermeneutics" - Gottlieb Philipp Christian Kaiser "He subsumed
the Old Testament under the universal history of
religion, and then ultimately under the
universal religion. The particularity of Old
Testament religion, which Kaiser refers to as
Judaism, can only be understood in relation to
religion in general." - Ollenburger, "From Timeless Ideas to the Essence
of Religion," in The Flowering of Old Testament
Theology A Reader in Twentieth-Century Old
Testament Theology, 1930-1990
461.4.2 Rationalist Scholars
- Bauer the Division of OT and NT Theology
- "Another important development during this period
was the division of biblical theology into the
separate disciplines of OT and NT theology, a
practice which has become customary down to the
present day. Several reasons may be cited for
this development. One was undoubtedly the
increasing recognition of the diversity of
Scripture, especially the distinct differences in
content, historical context, and outlook between
the testaments, which made it more difficult to
treat them as homogenous documents. Another
reason was the sheer increase in data and new
discoveries pertaining to the Bible, which made
it more difficult for anyone to master the entire
field of biblical studies. Thus specialization
became a necessity. But thirdly, it must also be
said that the rationalistic
471.4.2 Rationalist Scholars
- devaluation of the OT in favor of the NT
undoubtedly contributed to this bifurcation in
biblical theology. At any rate, the work that
marked the beginning of this division of the
discipline, and thus the beginning of OT theology
proper, was G. L. Bauer's OT theology published
in 1797. " Lemke, "Theology (Old Testament),"
ABD - ". . . the task of OT theology was to trace the
religious ideas of the Hebrews in their
historical development and against the background
of other ANE religions with whom the Hebrews came
into contact. Already the influence of
comparative religion was beginning to make itself
felt here in this first OT theology. Bauer's
rationalistic orientation manifested itself in
the manner in which he judged the religious
content of the OT. Miraculous and mythological
elements in the Bible were dismissed by him as
superstitions of a primitive race."
481.4.2 Rationalist Scholars
- "(1) For Bauer, Old Testament theology focused
primarily on religious ideas or concepts. (2) He
claimed that historical interpretation must trace
the development of those ideas and interpret them
in independence from dogmatic theology's
definitions. Only in that way would Old Testament
(and then New Testament) theology be able to
reform dogmatics. (3) In the course of their
development, in the Old Testament as in history
generally, ideas move from particular to
universal, and it is these universal religious
ideas that are most important for the present.
Bauer says that in the Old Testament these
universal ideas are to be found principally in
Proverbs and Job, because their authors are the
least concerned with particulars with their own
time, their own people, their own situation."
Ollenburger, "From Timeless Ideas to the Essence
of Religion"
491.4.3 Summary of Gabler Bauer's Influence
- 1. Gabler and Bauer basically create the
discipline of Old Testament theology. They argue
that the Old and New Testaments deserve to be
heard on their own terms before their ideas are
incorporated into dogmatic theology. - 2. Both Gabler and Bauer believe Old Testament
theology must have a strongly historical
component. Unfortunately this historical
component is based on a rationalism that leaves
little room for the supernatural. It also
questions a great deal of material that is
suspect only to keen rationalists.
501.4.3 Summary of Gabler Bauer's Influence
- 3. Gabler and Bauer argue that the Old Testament
teaches some universal truths applicable to
Christians in all eras. To find these concepts,
however, both men eliminate much of the Old
Testament as being due to the authors "own
ingenuity." This approach questions the general
value of the Old Testament and leaves it with
little to say that the New Testament does not
repeat.
511.4.3 Summary of Gabler Bauer's Influence
- 4. Gabler never writes an Old Testament theology,
but in his work Bauer divides the biblical
material into the study of God, humankind and
Christ.
521.4.4 Continued Rationalism
- Wilhelm Martin Leberecht de Wette
- "Though he shared the rationalists conclusion
about the Bibles depictions of miracles,
prophecies and so forth, he thought the
rationalists dismissal of such accounts
wrongheaded. Rather, de Wette argues, myths are
poetic means of expressing feelings about God and
all sacred things. Many ancient peoples thought
and wrote in such terms, so it is not unusual
that Israel did so as well. Thus Old Testament
theologians must seek to understand the feelings
and universal truths behind the myths, not simply
discard them as fantasies penned by irrational or
primitive people." House, Old Testament Theology
531.4.4 Continued Rationalism
- Wilhelm Vatke
- "Wilhelm Vatke (1806-1882) regarded the
rationalistic period of Biblical theology as a
necessary but now superseded development. He was
the first to adopt the Hegelian philosophy of
thesis (nature religion), antithesis (spiritual
religion Hebrew religion), and synthesis
(absolute or universal religion Christianity),
in his Die biblische Theologie. Die Religion des
AT (Berlin, 1835). He claimed that the system for
the arrangement of the OT material must not be
set forth on the basis of categories derived from
the Bible but must be imposed from the outside,
and formulated the dogma of the
history-of-religion approach concerning the
independent totality of the OT. Three years
after the publication of Vatkes
541.4.4 Continued Rationalism
- tome, which later had great influence on J.
Wellhausen, a second history-of-religions OT
theology based on Hegelianism was published by
Bruno Bauer (1809-1882), who arrived at opposite
conclusions from his teacher Vatke." Hasel, Old
Testament Theology - "By the time Vatkes work was published and read,
a perceptible dogmaticism had settled into the
liberal ranks of Old Testament theology. First,
the Old Testaments historical statements were
clearly suspect. Stated authorship of books,
accounts of the miraculous and description of
historical events were all challenged and often
denied. Second, the Old Testament was at worst a
slight contributor to legitimate biblical
theology and was at best a legitimate source of
universal ideas and inspired religious feelings.
Third, it was unlikely, then, that the
551.4.4 Continued Rationalism
- unity of the Bible could be maintained.
Evolutionary views of history made it much more
likely that the Old Testament was a lower
religious state that had to be completed for the
New Testament to emerge. Challenges to these
assertions were soon to come, but they were not
to have the lasting force their authors desired."
House, Old Testament Theology
561.4.5 Reactions Against Rationalism
- "However, in response to the excesses of vulgar
rationalism, a conservative reaction took place
around the middle of the 18th century, leading to
the writing of OT theologies along more orthodox
lines. Representative of this development were
scholars like E. W. Hengstenberg and F.
Delitzsch. Other OT theologians of this period,
like H. Ewald, G. F. Oehler, and E. Schultz, took
a more moderate or mediating position somewhere
between the rationalists and the orthodox
Lutherans. Of these, the OT theology by Oehler,
published posthumously in two volumes (1873-74)
and written from a heilsgeschichtliche
perspective, was a particularly influential work.
It was also the first of the major German OT
theologies to be translated into English shortly
after its original publication." Lemke
571.4.5 Reactions Against Rationalism
- Ernst Wilhelm Hengstenberg (1802-69)
- Christology of the Old Testament and a Commentary
on the Messianic Predictions - History of the Kingdom of God in the Old
Testament - G. F. Oehler
- Oehler reacted both against the Marcionite strain
introduced by F. Schleiermacher with the
depreciation of the OT and the total uniformity
of OT and NT as maintained by Hengstenberg. But
he himself does not give up the unity of the
Testaments. There is unity in diversity. Oehler
accepts the division of OT and NT theology, but
OT theology can function properly only within the
larger
581.4.5 Reactions Against Rationalism
- canonical context. OT theology is a "historical
science which is based upon grammatical-historical
exegesis whose task it is to reproduce the
content of the Biblical writings according to the
rules of language under consideration of the
historical circumstances during which the
writings ooriginated and the individual
conditions of the sacred writers." Hasel, Old
Testament Theology - "Oehlers OT theology is considered to be "the
outstanding salvation-historical presentation of
Biblical theology of the 19th century." However,
it is "today almost completely outmoded, largely
because Oehler attempted to deal with the
material genetically" under the influence of
Hegel."
591.4.5 Reactions Against Rationalism
- Henrich Ewald (1803-1875)
- "Just before OT theology was eclipsed by the
history-of-religions approach, which dealt it a
virtual deathblow, Henrich Ewalds four-volume
monumental magnum opus was published. For a whole
generation Ewalds conservative influence held
back German scholarship from accepting the
modernistic reconstruction of Israelite religion
as popularized by Wellhausen. Ewalds students
Ferdinand Hitzig (1807-1875) and August Dillmann
(1823-1894) wrote OT theologies which were
posthumously published. Ewald defended a
systematic treatment of his subject Hitzig wrote
a history of ideas and Dillmann a history of
revelation with salvation-historical emphases."
Hasel, Old Testament Theology
601.4.5 Reactions Against Rationalism
- J. Ch. Konrad von Hofmann (1810-1877)
- According to Hofmann, the necessary
presupposition of Christian self-certainty
(communion with God mediated in Christ) is a
relation within the Trinity, among the Father,
Son, and Spirit, that involves both unity and
differentiation-or objectification. All of
history, from the worlds creation to its
consummation, is a historical manifestation of
the divine self-differentiation (1852-56 136,
234). Within universal history there occurs
salvation history, a set of events that achieves
the Sons reconciliation with the Father and
humankinds reconciliation with God. Salvation
history is the meaning of universal history, and
each of its discrete events, narrated in the
Bible, occupies its own necessary place. Thus,
the whole of salvation history is the essential
framework for understanding any particular text.
611.4.5 Reactions Against Rationalism
- In Hofmanns theology, then, there is a perfect
symmetry among (a) that of which Christians are
certain, (b) the presuppositions of that
certainty spelled out by systematic theology, and
(c) the salvation history narrated in the Bible.
The historical form of the Bible is not
accidental it is necessarily analogous to Gods
trinitarian history, which expands and unfolds
itself into the worlds history and then
Israels. For Hofmann, biblical theology is
thinking in our relation to God, not about it
hence, its relaltion to systematic theology is
organic, not something to be considered
separately. No one before or after Hofmann
achieved such a thorough integration of
historical interpretation of the Bible and
systematic theology. Whether he brought Gablers
programmatic distinctions to fruition, or simply
betrayed them, is a matter of judgment." Ben C.
Ollenburger, "From Timeless Ideas to the Essence
of Religion,"12-13
621.5 OT Theology Eclipsed by the History of
Israelite Religion (1875-1930)
631.5.1 History of Israelite Religion
- Three Factors
- Greater historical consciousness
- Archeological discoveries of Mesopotamia, Egypt,
Ugarit, Greece, etc. - The literary critical works of Vatke, Graf,
Kuenen, and above all Wellhausen.
641.5.1 History of Israelite Religion
- "The history-of-religion approach differentiated
itself from OT theology as traditionally
conceived by the following characteristics (1)
an exclusive reliance on a historical-genetic,
rather than a systematic-conceptual, approach to
the OT (2) a concomitant de-emphasis on the OT
as special revelation, in favor of seeing it as a
historical and human record of the evolution of
Israelite religion and (3) greater emphasis and
attention to Israel's ANE environment.
Increasingly, the OT was seen as an integral part
of that environment and only one particular form
of religious development among many." Lemke
651.5.2 Julius Wellhausen
- "Wellhausen accepted de Wettes conclusion that
Deuteronomy was written in the seventh century
B.C. instead of by Moses. He agreed with Vatkes
assertion that Israels religion evolved over
time, which meant to him that complex priestly
material like that found in Leviticus was written
at the end of Israels history and that the
Pentateuch was completed after the Prophets.
Likewise, he agreed with Karl F. Graf, Abraham
Kuenen and other scholars who thought the first
four books of the Pentateuch consisted of written
documents, or sources, that used different names
for God and proclaimed differing theological
views. He agreed that Vatkes views about
Hegelian historical theories and de Wettes
conceptions about myth were correct. To these
notions Wellhausen added his own thoughts on the
prophets as the founders of ethical monotheistic
faith and on the origins of Israels religion in
nature cults."
661.5.2 Julius Wellhausen
- "The synthesis of all these beliefs began with
the assumption that Israelite religion evolved
from roots in nature religion similar to other
ancient Canaanite religions, to ethical
monotheism in the prophets and the early stages
of the Pentateuch, to a stronger monotheism and
insistence on a central sanctuary in Deuteronomy
and books it influences (Joshua, Judges, 1-2
Samuel, l-2 Kings, Jeremiah), to the detailed,
priest-guided religion like that found in Ezra,
Leviticus, Ezekiel and l-2 Chronicles. Unlike
Vatke, who saw this evolution as positive,
Wellhausen mourned the loss of the earlier,
simpler religion. Like Vatke, Wellhausen
considered much of the stated historical contexts
in the Old Testament to be reflections of later
generations transposed upon the past. To
Wellhausen, Moses was at best a shadowy
historical figure, and the patriarchs could not
have been as advanced culturally as the Old
Testament indicates. Prophetic monotheism
eventually led to the Law, not the reverse as the
Old Testament says." House
671.6 Rebirth of OT Theology (1930-1960)
681.6.1 Catalysts for Change
- 1. World War I showed the moral depths to which
human beings can sink. - 2. Karl Barth's emphasis on the revelation of God
in Scripture - 3. Loss of faith in evolutionary naturalism
- "The dominant hold which the history-of-religions
approach had exercised over the discipline of OT
theology began to wane during the period between
the two world wars. Several factors helped bring
this change about. Among them were the general
change in theological climate following World War
I, a reaction against the extremes of
19th-century historicism and evolutionary
developmentalism, and new developments in the
field of OT scholarship itself." Lemke
691.6.2 Eissfeldt vs. Eichrodt Debate
- "Eissfeldt, the historian, urged a sharp
distinction between the history of Israelite (and
Jewish) religion and Old Testament theology
(1926). They employ two different approaches, he
says, which correspond to different functions of
the human spirit active knowing and passive
believing. History of religion is objective,
although it depends on an empathetic reliving
of its object, and it makes no judgments about
validity or truth. Old Testament theology, on the
other hand, cannot be a historical inquiry,
because it is concerned with what is timelessly
or abidingly true, as determined by a particular
(Christian) confession. Eissfeldt bases this
argument on the assumption that
historical-critical research cannot penetrate to
the proper essence of Old Testament religion,
and is thus unable to answer the questions of
faith assigned to Old Testament theology."
Ollenburger
701.6.2 Eissfeldt vs. Eichrodt Debate
- "In 1926 Otto Eissfeldt distinguished between two
different fields of inquiry. The history of
religion is a field that proceeds along the lines
of intellectual understanding or knowing. In this
field, the effort is made to comprehend as a
historical entity the religion of Israel as one
religion among others. A second field, theology,
is concerned with faith. Here the religion of
Israel is regarded as the true religion that
witnesses to God's revelation, and the effort is
made to assess its veracity. Accordingly, the
first field proceeds in a more historical
fashion, while the second sets forth a more
systematic presentation. Both have methods of
inquiry that stimulate each other as they carry
out their respective tasks and objectives.
However, these methods of investigation should
not be so blended
711.6.2 Eissfeldt vs. Eichrodt Debate
- together that the tensions between them are
eliminated. Their unity is found in the person of
the scholar who works in both fields. Reflecting
on the questions that had emerged since Gabler,
Eissfeldt's argumentation was stimulated by the
emerging dialectical theology. He sought not to
search vigorously for the "Word of God" but also
to establish the independence of historical
investigation." Preuss
721.6.2 Eissfeldt vs. Eichrodt Debate
- Eichrodt, the theologian, answered that
Eissfeldts view, while preserving the integrity
of history of religion, compromises that of Old
Testament theology by removing it from the
framework of Old Testament and historical inquiry
generally (1929). In opposition to Eissfeldt,
Eichrodt claimed that historical investigation
can get to the essence of Old Testament religion.
But Eichrodt redefined the essence of the Old
Testament as the deepest meaning of its
religious thought world that historical
investigation can recover through an analysis
that cuts across the various historical levels in
the Old Testament. In other words, since
essence is whatever historical inquiry can
recover, historical inquiry, as a matter of
definition, can recover the essence of Old
Testament religion. Much of what Eissfeldt
included within Old Testament theology-
731.6.2 Eissfeldt vs. Eichrodt Debate
- questions of truth and faith -Eichrodt assigned
to dogmatics. On the other hand, however, he
ascribed to historical investigation a distinctly
theological character all historical research
presupposes a subjective moment, he claims, and
the interpreters Christian confession provides
the content of that moment in Old Testament
theology-thus, it must be considered a legitimate
part of historical scholarship." Ollenburger
741.6.2 Eissfeldt vs. Eichrodt Debate
- "By contrast, W. Eichrodt wished to see the two
fields mentioned above as a unity. One could
certainly press toward the nature of Old
Testament religion by proceeding only along the
pathway of historical inquiry. This would mean
that the questions of truth and value would
belong to the field of dogmatics but not to
biblical theology. However, scholarship may no
longer rest content with only a genetic analysis
rather, it must produce a comprehensive
systematic work by laying out a cross section
through the material that would point out the
religion's inner structure and would establish
the relationships between the varieties of its
content. This way of proceeding would still
represent a
751.6.2 Eissfeldt vs. Eichrodt Debate
- historical approach and would not place its
results under the scrutiny of normative questions
of faith. Nor would this approach function as a
testimony to the revelation of God. Eichrodt
argued that his approach would free Old Testament
theology from the chains of an Old Testament
history of religion." Preuss - "It may only be mentioned at this point that the
"battle for the Old Testament" that had
intensified toward the end of the nineteenth
century with the "Bible-Babel controversy" and
the nationalistic and racist ideas of developing
anti-Semitism and emerging national socialism
also entered in general into this discussion
concerning the Old Testament." Preuss
761.6.5 Walter Eichrodt
- "The year 1933 may be said to mark the beginning
of a new era in OT theology with the appearance
of two such works, one by E. Sellin and the other
by W. Eichrodt. By far the most outstanding and
enduring representative of the new era in OT
theology is Eichrodt's Theologie des Alten
Testaments, originally published in three parts
between 1933-39 (Eng 1961-67). In spite of
legitimate criticisms and acknowledged
shortcomings (Hayes and Prussner 1985 277),
Eichrodt's work so far remains unsurpassed in
comprehensiveness, methodological thoroughness,
and theological acumen. From our vantage point in
the late 20th century, one may safely say that it
has stood the test of time and may well turn out
to be the most significant work of its genre in
the 20th century. Lemke
771.6.5 Walter Eichrodt
- . . . Eichrodt defined the task of OT theology
as constructing a complete picture of the realm
of OT belief in its structural unity. Such an
exposition was to be done with constant reference
to two contextual realities the world of ANE
religion on the one hand, and the realm of NT
belief on the other. It should be observed,
however, that in actual execution, Eichrodt paid
far more attention to the former than the latter.
His methodology sought to differentiate itself
self-consciously from the systematic rubrics of
dogmatic theology on the one hand, and the
genetic approach of a radical historicism on the
other.
781.6.5 Walter Eichrodt
- The biblical concept of "covenant" was chosen by
him as an overarching category or unifying center
of OT theology, and the material was presented in
accordance with the following tripartite scheme
God and the People, God and the World, God and
Man. A look at the full table of contents reveals
that the organizational principle operative in
Eichrodt's theology was systematic or conceptual.
It should be noted, however, that within this
systematic scheme, allowance was made for
historically tracing changes in Israelite
religion or in the perspective reflected in the
chief documents and tradition complexes of the
OT."
791.6.5 Walter Eichrodt
- ". . . Eichrodt maintained that the theologian
can take a "cross-section" (Querschnitt) of this
dynamic development at any point in the
historical process in order to explore the Old
Testament's structure of belief and to perceive
its integrity vis-Ã -vis the religions of the
environment. Just as a logger can cut through a
tree and study the structure of its growth, so
the theologian can study the "cross-section" that
shows the "inner shape" or consistent structure
manifest in its development. The faith of Israel
is not a miscellaneous assortment of beliefs, nor
is it only a process of growth and development.
Rather, it manifests a structural unity or
theological integrity that is fundamentally the
same in all historical stages.
801.6.5 Walter Eichrodt
- Eichrodt's approach is synchronic ("happening
together," like notes struck simultaneously in a
musical chord), though he also attempted to do
justice to the diachronic dimension ("happening
through time," like the successive notes of a
scale). In his view Old Testament theology does
not concentrate on growth or evolution (e.g., the
growth of the idea of God) but on "structural"
features that remain the same in all historical
periods. Anderson
811.6.6 Gerhard von Rad
- While there were differences in the choice of
organizational schemas and overarching concepts,
nearly all OT theologies were written from such a
systematic-conceptual perspective. This
methodological consensus was shaken during the
late 1950s by G. von Rad with the publication of
his immensely stimulating Theologie des Alten
Testaments in two volumes (Eng 1961-65). Against
the systematic-conceptual approach to the OT, von
Rad insisted that the theological task proper to
the OT is not the spiritual or religious world of
Israel, nor the belief system of the OT, but
simply Israel's own explicit assertions about
Yahweh as reflected in the major tradition
complexes of the OT. The latter,
821.6.6 Gerhard von Rad
- however, presented Yahweh's relationship to
Israel as a continuing divine activity in
history. Consequently, it was this picture of
Yahweh's activity in the history of Israel as
reflected in the traditions of the OT which, for
von Pad, constituted the proper subject of OT
theology. - Methodologically, this meant for him that the
retelling of this confessional story of the OT
traditions was the most legitimate form of
theological discourse on the OT. This conviction
is reflected in the manner in which von Rad
organized and presented his material. Vol. I
consists of two parts a concise survey of the
history of Israelite religion, followed by a
theology of Israel's historical traditions.
831.6.6 Gerhard von Rad
- After a brief chapter on methodology, the latter
are treated under the following three headings
"The Theology of the Hexateuch," "Israel's
Anointed" (covering the Deuteronomistic and the
Chronicler's history), and "Israel Before Yahweh
(Israel's Answer),"which covers the Psalms and
the Wisdom Literature. Vol. II is divided into
three parts as follows "General Considerations
in Prophecy," "Classical Prophecy"(which treats
the OT prophets from Amos on in their sequential
appearance down to and including apocalyptic
literature), and "The Old Testament and the New"
(in which the author sets forth his understanding
of the relationship between the testaments).