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Humanities 1110 20072008 Greek and Biblical Traditions

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Title: Humanities 1110 20072008 Greek and Biblical Traditions


1
Welcome!
2
Humanities 1110 2007-2008Greek and Biblical
Traditions
  • Winter Term 2008
  • Unit 4 Hebrew Bible
  • Jonah, Ruth, Esther
  • 9 January

3
Welcome!
  • Reminder
  • Test 2
  • (30 of the course grade)
  • Next Wednesday,
  • 16 January 2008,
  • 830 a.m.1000 a.m.

4
Lecture
  • Thesis Evidence from inner-biblical
    interpretation in its various modes shows that
    there are different understandings of the
    relationship between Israel and the Divine,
    ranging from where the Divine is close to the
    community or removed from it.

5
Lecture
  • Critical Skills
  • Literary Criticism
  • Identifying literary units
  • Repetition of words, and themes metaphor
  • Structure of Narrative e.g. inclusio
  • Genre
  • Redaction (Editorial) Criticism
  • Modes of Inner-Biblical Interpretation
  • Ideological Criticism
  • Tradition and Inner-Biblical Interpretation
  • Redescription

6
Lecture
  • What are the modes of inner-biblical criticism
    discussed by Benjamin Sommer?

7
Review of Two Case Studies1Creation Narrative
  • Genesis 11-24a
  • 26 And God said, Let us make man in our
    image27And God created man in His image, in the
    image of God He created him male and female he
    created them. 28God blessed them and God said to
    them, Be fertile and increase.
  • Genesis 24b-324
  • 7 the LORD God formed man from the dust of the
    earth. He blew into his nostrils the breath of
    life, and man became a living being.

8
Comments
  • (1) The mode of Divine activity in Genesis
    11-24a is not specified other than He
    created, whereas Genesis 24b presents divine
    activity in terms of a human craft, making a clay
    figure/figurine. (2) In the tradition, these
    accounts are harmonized so that each narrative
    presents a different aspect) of the divine
    nature.

9
Comments
  • In a redescription, however, these narratives
    represent different understandings of the divine,
    two different ideologies. Both are in TNK. The
    editor is conservative both narratives are
    included without comment as to the relationship
    between them.

10
Review of Two Case Studies2David and Bathsheba
Frame Narrative
  • 2 Samuel 10-12
  • 111 At the turn of the year, the season when
    kings go out to battle, David sent Joab with
    his officers and all Israel with him, and they
    devastated Ammon and besieged Rabbah David
    remained in Jerusalem. 2 Late one afternoon,
    David rose from his couch1226 Joab attacked
    Rabbah of Ammon and captured the royal city.
  • 1 Chronicles 19-20
  • 201 At the turn of the year, the season when
    kings go out to battle, Joab led out the army
    force and devastated the land of Ammon, and then
    beseiged Rabbah, while David remained in
    Jerusalem Joab reduced Rabbah and left it in
    ruins.

11
Comments
  • (1) Note the marginal comment The narrative of
    Davids adultery and murder is embedded in the
    account of the war with Ammon.
  • (2) Chronicles omits the narrative of David and
    Bathsheba. See the marginal notes for 2 Samuel
    some rabbinic sources say that David did not
    commit adultery, for Uriah would have given
    Bathsheba a conditional divorce, and the
    Ammonites killed Uriah, not David (part of the
    tradition).

12
Scholium (plural scholia)Scribal Comment (in
margin?)
  • 1 Kings 151-8
  • 5 For David had done what was pleasing to the
    LORD and never turned throughout his life from
    all that He had commanded him, except in the
    matter of Uriah the Hittite.
  • Comments
  • Sometimes later, scribal comments are
    subsequently copied into the text.
  • See the marginal comment.
  • This text is missing in LXX (Septuagint, Greek
    translation of TNK).

13
Comment
  • The textual evidence mentioned in the marginal
    note refers to Codex Vaticanus, a fourth century
    CE manuscript in book form (codex) which includes
    most of TNK and the Christian texts that make up
    the Christian New Testament. The earlier
    translation of TNK into Greek, the Septuagint.

14
Prophecy
  • And though I kept sending all My servants, the
    prophets, to them daily and persistently
    (Jeremiah 725).
  • Then I heard the voice of my Lord saying, Whom
    shall I send? Who will go for us? And I said,
    Here am I send me. 9And He said, Go, say to
    that people Hear, indeed, (Isaiah 68-9).

15
Prophecy
  • 10Come, therefore, I will send you to Pharaoh
    11But Moses said to God, Who am I that I should
    go to Pharaoh? 12And he said, I will be with
    you that shall be your sign that it was I who
    sent you 13 Moses said to God, When I come to
    the Israelites and say to them, The God of your
    fathers has sent me to you, and they ask me,
    What is name? What shall I say to them? 14
    He continued, Thus shall you say to the
    Israelites, Ehyeh sent me to you15 Thus
    shall you speak to the Israelites The LORDhas
    sent me to you (Exodus 310-15)

16
David and Bathsheba2 Samuel 11-12
  • David sent Joab (111)
  • 3and the king sent someone to make inquiries
    about the woman
  • 4David sent messengers to fetch her
  • 5she sent word to David, I am pregnant.
  • 6Thereupon David sent a message to

17
David and Bathsheba2 Samuel 11-12
  • Joab, Send Uriah the Hittite to me a
  • and Joab sent Uriah to David.
  • 12 David said to Uriah, tomorrow I will send
    you off.
  • 14 In the morning, David wrote a letter to Joab,
    which he sent with Uriah.
  • 18 Joab sent a full report of the battle to
    David.

18
David and Bathsheba2 Samuel 11-1225
  • 22 The messenger set out he came and told
    David all that Joab had sent him to say.
  • 27 After the period of mourning was over, David
    sent and had her brought into his palace she
    became his wife and she bore him a son.
  • 121 But the LORD was displeased with what David
    had done, and the LORD sent Nathan to David. He
    came to him and said,.
  • 1225 and He sent a message through the prophet
    Nathan .

19
Comments
  • The omission of this narrative by the Chronicler
    implies that the Chronicler identified this
    material as a single literary unit, a short
    story.
  • The verb send is used fourteen times this verb
    gives the narrative its forward motion. One
    character either sends someone somewhere, or
    sends a message to someone by a messenger.
  • David is the chief sender. The messenger is the
    senders servant (subordinate).

20
Comments
  • Davids desire is realized when he sent a
    message for Bathsheba to be brought to the
    palace to be his wife.
  • The narrative divides into two equal parts.
  • The beginning of the second part, the reversal at
    the mid-point is 121 But the LORD was
    displeased with what David had done, and the LORD
    sent Nathan to David. He came to him and said,.

21
Comments
  • There is an inclusio with 121 at the conclusion,
    1225 where God sent a message to the prophet
    Nathan.
  • Send appears once more in the frame-story
    Joab sent messengers to David (1227).
  • Prophets are in the service of the divine, and
    carry messages from the divine to an audience.

22
Comments
  • Prophet Greek, pro- phêmi. Pro can mean
    either before or on behalf of. A prophet may
    speak beforehand about a future event (Nathan re
    the child), but always the prophet speaks on
    behalf of his superior.
  • The Greek translation of this text uses apostellô
    for send. The noun related to this verb is, in
    English, apostle. This word is important in early
    Christian literature, especially Pauls letters.
  • In Latin, mitto, from which mission and
    missionary are derived.

23
Comments
  • We can now better appreciate the text from
    Jeremiah
  • And though I kept sending all My servants, the
    prophets, to them daily and persistently
    (Jeremiah 725).
  • In prophetic narratives, 2 Samuel 11-12, for
    example, the divine is presented as fairly close.
  • In non-prophetic narratives, the divine is remote
    or absent.

24
Moses, the Paradigmatic Prophet
25
Moses, the Paradigmatic Prophet
  • The institution of the prophet, however, already
    implies a shift away from the immediacy of the
    divine, as shown in the creation narrative in
    Genesis 2-3, where the divine came to the garden
    for conversation.

26
Moses, the Paradigmatic Prophet
  • Moses, in the Deuteronomist narrative, does have
    an immediate experience of the divine Never
    again did there arise in Israel a prophet like
    Moseswhom the LORD singled out, face to face,
    for the various signs and portents that the LORD
    sent him to display in the land of
    Egypt(Deuteronomy 3410-11).

27
Moses, the Paradigmatic Prophet
  • You speak to us, they said to Moses, and we
    will obey but let not God speak to us, lest we
    die (Exodus 2016).
  • Moses is the go-between, the intermediary,
    between the divine and the community.

28
Moses, the Paradigmatic Prophet
  • The Spokesperson as Intermediary
  • When Moses tried to get out of his prophets job,
    God became angry
  • 13But he said, Please, O Lord, make someone
    else Your agent. 14The LORD became angry with
    Moses, and He said, There is your brother Aaron
    the Levite. He, I know, speaks readily

29
Moses, the Paradigmatic Prophet
  • The Spokesperson as Intermediary
  • Thus he shall serve as your spokesman, with you
    playing the role of God to him,. (Exodus 416).

30
Organizational Chart
31
Prophecy as a Cross-Cultural Phenomenon
  • Identify Prophets in Non-Israelite Literature
  • Cassandra in
  • Agamemnon.
  • Cassandra is the spokesperson for
  • Apollo.

32
The Joseph Novella and the Distant Divine
  • There are no citations of divine sayings except
    in Genesis 484.
  • No divine origin is given for Josephs dreams in
    375 and 9 unlike Matthew, where an angel of
    the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream or
    variant of the formula (118, 213, 19, 22).
  • The emphasis is on Josephs ability to interpret
    the dream, because the Pharaoh had dreams too.
    Compare Daniel in Daniel.

33
The Joseph Novella and the Distant Divine
  • Joseph tells Pharaoh that his dreams have a
    divine origin God has revealed to Pharaoh what
    He is about to do (4128) this statement is
    part of Josephs interpretation.
  • Who, cross-culturally, is a dream interpreter?

34
The Joseph Novella and the Distant/Hidden Divine
  • It is Joseph who is the pious character that
    makes the connection with the divine, though,
    unlike the Exodus story, or the Flood stories,
    there is no narrative of divine intervention
  • God has sent me ahead of you to ensure your
    survival on earth 8So, it was not you who sent
    me here, but God and He has made me a father to
    Pharaoah (457-8).
  • But Joseph said to them, Have no fear! Am I a
    substitute for God 20Besides, although you
    intended me harm, God intended it for good, so as
    to bring about the present resultthe survival of
    many people. (5019-20).

35
Narrative Construction of Jonah
Chapter 1 innocent(14)
Chapter 4 do not yet know their right hand
from their left (11)
Inclusio
Chapter 3
Chapter 2
36
Jonah Inner-biblical Interpretation Polemic
  • The theme of innocence calls to mind Genesis 18,
    where Abraham debates with the divine being
    concerning the fate of Sodom and Gomorrah.
  • 23Abraham came forward and said, Will You sweep
    away the innocent along with the guilty? 24What
    if there should be fifty innocent within the
    city will you then wipe out the place and not
    forgive it for the sake of the innocent fifty who
    are in it.

37
Jonah Meta-Prophetic Narrative
  • Typically, the prophet conveys a message from the
    divine to human beings for example
  • And He said, Go, say to that people
  • Hear, indeed, but do not understand
  • See, indeed, but do not grasp.
  • .
  • Lest, seeing with its eyes
  • And hearing with its ears,
  • It also grasp with its mind,
  • And repent turn and save itself. (Isaiah
    69-10)

38
Jonah Meta-Prophetic Narrative
  • Jonahs message was Forty days more and Nineveh
    shall be overthrown (34), a proclamation of
    judgment only (12).
  • The response The people of Nineveh believed
    God. They proclaimed a fast (35). Contrast
    Isaiah 6.
  • The prophetic message of judgment and the
    possibility of repentance is uttered by the King
    of Nineveh (37-9)
  • 8Let everyone turn back from his evil ways and
    from the injustice of which he is guilty. 9Who
    knows but that God may turn and relent? He may
    turn back from His wrath, so that we do not
    perish.

39
Jonah Meta-Prophetic Narrative
  • The result of the message
  • 410 God saw what they did, how they were
    turning back from their evil ways. And God
    renounced the punishment He had planned to bring
    upon them, and did not carry it out.
  • Turn, like send, is a metaphor, derived from our
    embodied experience in space, to express a
    re-orientation in the domain of religious
    discourse.
  • The response of the divine was as much in
    response to the Kings edict (He had the word
    cried through Nineveh By decree of the king and
    his nobles No man or beast 37) as in
    response to Jonahs message.

40
Jonah Mode of Divine Activity
  • In this narrative, the divine acts closely
  • The word of the LORD came to Jonah (11)
  • But the LORD cast a mighty wind upon the sea
    (14).
  • The LORD provided a huge fish to swallow Jonah
    (21).
  • The LORD commanded the fish, and it spewed Jonah
    out upon the dry land.
  • The word of the LORD came to Jonah a second
    time (31).
  • The divine provides three things in chapter 4.

41
Narrative Construction of Ruth
Chapter 4 The gate of Bethlehem
Chapter 1 BethlehemBethlehem turn10x barley
harvest122
Chapter 3 Naomis plan threshing
Chapter 2 barley harvest 223
42
Intertextuality in Ruth 418 This is the line
of Perez
38 In the middle of the night, the man gave a
start and pulled backthere was a woman lying at
his feet!
36Thus the two daughters of Lot came to be with
child by their father. 37The older one bore a son
and named him Moa he is the father of the
Moabites today.
16So he turned aside to her by the road and
said, Here, let me sleep with youfor he did
not know that she was his daughter-in-law.
43
Narratives of Male Vulnerability
  • So the LORD God cast a deep sleep upon the man
    and, while he slept, He took one of his ribs and
    closed up the flesh at that spot (Genesis 221).
  • 20Noah, the tiller of the soil, was the first to
    plant a vineyard. 21He drank of the wine and
    became drunk, and he uncovered himself within his
    tent. 22Ham, the father of Canaan, saw his
    fathers nakedness (Genesis 920-22).

44
Narratives of Male Vulnerability
  • Genesis 1930-38 33That night they made their
    father drink wine, and the older one went in and
    lay with her father he did not know when she lay
    down or when she rose.

45
Narratives of Male Vulnerability
  • 18 Jael came out to greet Sisera and said to
    him, Come in, my lord, come in here, do not be
    afraid. So he entered her tent, and she covered
    him with a blanket.19He said to her, Please let
    me have some water I am thirsty21 Then Jael
    wife of Heber took a tent pin and grasped the
    mallet. When he was fast asleep from exhaustion,
    she approached him stealthily and drove the pin
    through his temple till it went down to the
    ground. Thus he died (Judges 417-21).

46
Narratives of Male Vulnerability
  • 38 In the middle of the night, the man gave a
    start and pulled backthere was a woman lying at
    his feet! (Ruth).

47
Mode of Divine Activity in Ruth
  • There is no explicit divine activity in Ruth,
    rather it is Naomi who is the central figure, and
    she expresses what the divine has done (the
    LORD has dealt harshly with me 121).
  • At most the narrative mentions a report of divine
    activity for in the country of Moab she had
    heard that the LORD had taken note of His people
    and given them food (16).

48
Narrative Construction of Esther
  • 1-5
  • Esther becomes queen (217)
  • the book of annals
  • (221-23)
  • Hamans edict (38-15)
  • The stake (514)
  • 6-7
  • Reversal of Fortune
  • the book of annals (61)
  • Haman impaled (710)

Mordecai takes Hamans Place (81-2) Counter
Edict 83-919 916-32 Etiology 101-3 Mordecai
49
The Divine and Esther
  • Mordecais message to Esther On the contrary,
    if you keep silent in this crisis, relief and
    deliverance will come to the Jews from another
    quarter, while you and your fathers house will
    perish. And who knows, perhaps you have attained
    to royal position for just such a crisis
    (414).

50
Esthers Tactics (5-7)
  • Esther requests the king and Haman to come today
    to the feast that I have prepared for him (54),
    where she will make her request.
  • The occasion is a wine feast. Esther requests the
    king and Haman to come a feast, and tomorrow I
    will do your Majestys bidding (58). Haman was
    happy and lighthearted (59) because no one
    else was there except the king, Esther, and
    himself (512) And tomorrow too I am invited by
    her along with the king (512).

51
Esthers Tactics (5-7)
  • So the king and Haman came to feast with Queen
    Esther. 2On the second day, the king again asked
    Esther at the wine feast, What is your wish,
    Queen Esther? (71-2).
  • Esther names Haman. The king leaves. The king
    returns !_at_!!!! and finds
  • Haman in a compromising position Haman was
    lying prostrate on the couch on which Esther
    reclined. Does he mean, cried the king, to
    ravish the queen in my own palace? (78). Queen
    Esther does nothing to help Haman.

52
Esthers Tactics (8-9)
  • Esther requests a counter-edict (83-6)
  • Esther writes a second letter of Purim.
  • Esther uses happy-hour to effect her plans
    Queen Esther is the perfect hostess.

53
Intertextuality and Esther
  • There is no (explicit) allusion to the
    paradigmatic narrative, the Exodus.
  • The reference to Agag is found, as the editor
    indicates, in Exodus 178-16 and 1 Samuel 15.
    King Saul failed to exterminate the Amalekites.
    Esther is a midrash on this story.

54
Intertextuality and Esther
  • What is Adele Berlins explanation for the
    absence of references to the divine and religious
    observance in this text?
  • The best explanation for their absence ,
    especially the absence of Gods name, is that,
    given that the story is so comic, at times
    bordering on lewd, such reticence about things
    religious is preferable, lest religion be
    debauched (JSB 1624).

55
The Thesis
Close Mediated
Remote
Deanthropomorphization
56
Thesis
  • But Joseph said to them, Have no fear! Am I a
    substitute for God 20Besides, although you
    intended me harm, God intended it for good, so as
    to bring about the present resultthe survival of
    many people. (5019-20).
  • let dispatches be written countermanding those
    which were written by Haman son of Hammedatha the
    Agagite, embodying his plot to annihilate the
    Jews throughout the kings provinces (Esther
    85).

57
Thesis
  • The novellas about Joseph and Esther are stories
    by which the community celebrates its continuing
    identityits survivalby commemorating those
    resourceful individuals whose interventions saved
    the community from destruction.
  • These novellas, along with Ruth, are a feature of
    post-exilic literature, when the Judaic community
    has experienced living outside of Israel.
  • Deanthropomorphization as a polemic against
    polytheism, Israelite literature describes the
    divine in non-human terms and metaphors.
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