Title: 1' History of Old Testament Theology
11. History of 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
- Paul R. House, Old Testament Theology.
4Further Difficulties
- Pluralism Pluralformity
- Historical Critical Issues the Historiography
- Sect / Denominational Issues
- General presuppositions when approaching the O.T.
5The Bible as a Problem for Christianity
- "If the equation is made between the biblical
representation of Yahweh and the God of creeds of
theology, then major problems arise. It is the
theological appropriation of the Bible, or,
alternatively, the invasion of religion by
philosophy (which produces theology in the first
place), which constitutes the problem, and which
makes the Bible such an uneasy object in the
temple of theology." Robert P. Carroll
61.1.2 Five Possible Starting Points
- 1.1.2.1 The Old Testament itself
- Intra-Testamental Michael A. Fishbane, Biblical
Interpretation in Ancient Israel, 1985.
7Inner-Biblical Exegesis
- Michael Fishbane has argued that the first steps
toward exegesis begins in the Scriptures
themselves - "The Hebrew Bible (HB) is thus a thick texture of
traditions received and produced over many
generations. In the process, a complex dynamic
between tradition (traditum) and transmission
(traditio) developed since every act of
traditio selected, revised, and reconstituted the
overall traditum. To be sure, the contrast
between authoritative traditum and ongoing
traditio is most clear at the close of ancient
Israelite literature."
81.1.2 Five Possible Starting Points
- 1.1.2.2 Version Analysis LXX, Qumran, Samaritan
Pent., MT, etc. - N.B. Brevard Childs chooses the MT via a
Reformation bias. - However each textual trajectory has its own
theological commitments.
9Versional Analysis
- The Era of Pluriformity
- The period 250 BCE 100 CE was an era when the
Scriptures were pluriform. - The "proto-Masoretic," "proto-Samaritan
Pentateuch," Old Greek with its Hebrew Vorlage,
the Greek translational emendations, Targumic
beginnings, rewritten Bibles, possibly sectarian
versions (?)? - Some OT scholars have argued that the "all/every"
scripture of 2 Timothy 3.16 referred to the
pluriform state of the Scriptures.
10Versional Analysis
- Different Approaches to the so-called Canon
- Qumran Community
- Pharisees
- Sadducees Samaritans
- Septuagint with what F. F. Bruce called the
Septuagint Plus - What was the role of the Rewritten Bibles?
11Septuagint
- "The problem of the historical and theological
relation of Old Testament and New Testament is,
to a large extent, understood as the relation
between the Biblia Hebraica and the Novum
Testamentum Graece. It is symptomatic that in
academic education, the Hebrew original text of
the Old Testament receives a lot of attention in
contrast to the Septuagint, the Greek translation
produced in the Egyptian Alexandria. But during
the process of translation a certain shift
occurred toward Hellenistic thinking Based on
this translation, a considerable Hellenizing of
the Old Testament cannot be denied, even if the
extent may be debatable. In the Septuagint the
spiritual attitude of Hellenistic Judaism in the
diaspora is expressed one may refer to its
greater emphasis on universalism." Hübner
121.1.2 Five Possible Starting Points
- 1.1.2.3 New Testament
- "For the New Testament authors the Scripture of
Israel was not the Old Testament. The correct
formulation can only be the New Testament
authors were theologically dealing with the
Scripture of Israel which for them exclusively
was holy Scripture and, thus, the literal word of
God announcing Christ by divine authority."
Hübner
13Robert L. Hubbard, Jr. Doing Old Testament
Theology Today
- 1. "First, one must remember that, compared to
the OT, the NT has a narrower focus. It is does
not set aside, revise, or update the OT rather,
its primary preoccupation is to interpret the
significance of the Christ-event and to set up
the fledgling Christian church on a solid
footing. . . . the point is that the NT does not
see itself as replacement of the OT, so that
latter retains full authority for Christians."
14Robert L. Hubbard, Jr. Doing Old Testament
Theology Today
- 2. "Second, however, a well-intentioned desire to
retain the value of the OT and the unity of the
testaments should not blind one to the glaring
differences between them. That is, besides
fulfilling the OT, the NT goes beyond it." - 3. "Most important, Jesus does more that simply
fulfil OT prophetic hopes - He actually exceeds
their expectations by radically reforming
Israels religion and by inaugurating a new era
of Gods dealings with humanity."
15Robert L. Hubbard, Jr. Doing Old Testament
Theology Today
- 4. "Fourth, the principle of analogy is the key
link that unites the testaments. In other words,
both share analogous concepts with each other-
e.g., a self-revealing creator-God, a people of
God, gifts given to them by God, concepts of
salvation, etc." - 5. Fifth and finally, one must define how Jesus
Christ relates to the OT since He is the heart of
the NT. Obviously, Christians regard Him as the
fulfilment of some OT theological ideas. . . . On
the other hand, Christ provides a new, final
interpretive key for the Bible. Christians view
everything within the Bible from the point of
view of Christ."
161.1.2 Five Possible Starting Points
- 1.1.2.4 Early church fathers, medieval
interpreters and leaders of the Reformation John
Calvin and Martin Luther, etc. - David C. Steinmetz Precritical Exegesis
- Brevard S. Childs, Biblical Theology of the Old
and New Testaments Theological Reflections on
the Christian Bible, 30-51.
17Steinmetz Theology Exegesis
- 1. The meaning of a biblical text is not
exhausted by the original intension of the
author. - 2. The most primitive layer of biblical tradition
is not necessarily the most authoritative. - 3. The importance of the Old Testament for the
church is predicated upon the continuity of the
people of God in history, a continuity which
persists in spite of discontinuity between Israel
the the church.
18Steinmetz Theology Exegesis
- 4. The Old Testament is the hermeneutical key
which unlocks the meaning of the New Testament
and apart from which it will be misunderstood. - 5. The church and not human experience as such is
the middle term between the Christian interpreter
and the biblical text. - 6. The gospel and not the law is the central
message of the biblical text. - 7. One cannot lose the tension between the the
gospel and the law without losing both law and
gospel.
19Steinmetz Theology Exegesis
- 8. The church which is restricted in its
preaching to the original intention of the author
is a church which must reject the Old Testament
as an exclusively Jewish book. - 9. The church which is restricted in its
preaching to the most primitive layer of biblical
tradition as the most authoritative is a church
which can no longer preach from the New
Testament. - 10. Knowledge of the exegetical tradition of the
church is an indispensable aid for the
interpretation of Scripture.
20Precritical Movement
- Four Fundamental Assumptions Governing the
Difference Between the Precritical versus the
Historical-critical Exegesis - 1. "First, unlike the historical-critical
exegesis of the eighteenth, nineteenth, and
twentieth centuries, the older exegesis (whether
of the patristic, medieval, or Reformation eras)
understood the historia that is, the story that
the text is properly understood to recount to
be resident in the text and not under or behind
it. In other words, the "story" is identified
with the literal or grammatical sense."
21Precritical Movement
- 2. "Second, quite in contrast to modern
historical-critical exegesis, the older exegesis
assumed that the meaning of a particular text is
governed not by a hypothetically isolable unit of
text having a Sitz im Leben distinguishable from
the surrounding texts or from the biblical book
in which it is lodged. Instead, the meaning of a
text is governed by the scope and goal of the
biblical book in the context of the scope and
goal of the canonical revelation of God. In other
words, Christian exegetes traditionally have
assumed that a divine purpose and divine
authorship unite the text of the entire canon."
22Precritical Movement
- 3. "Third, the older exegetes understood the
primary reference of the literal or grammatical
sense of the text not as the historical community
that gave rise to the text, but as the believing
community that once received and continued to
receive the text. The text is of interest above
all because it bears a divinely inspired message
to an ongoing community of faith and not because
it happens also to be a repository of the
religious relics of a past age. . . . The
precritical exegete . . . did not understand
these historical or contextual issues as
providing the final point of reference for the
significance of the text. . . . the precritical
exegete understood the text, but its very nature
as sacred text, as pointing beyond its original
context into the life of the church. 'Literal,'
therefore, had a rather different (and fuller)
connotation for the older exegetical traditions
than it does for many today."
23Precritical Movement
- 4. "A fourth point amplifies the third. The
Reformation-era exegete, like his medieval and
patristic forebears, never conceived of his task
as the work of an isolated scholar on the
shoulders of whose opinion the entire exegetical
result could be established and carried. Instead,
the exegete of the Reformation era indeed, even
the Protestant exegete of the later
sixteenth-century, who held as a matter of
doctrine that Scripture was ultimately
self-authenticating as the highest norm of
theology understood the interpretive task as an
interpretive conversation in the context of the
historical community of belief."
241.1.2 Five Possible Starting Points
- 1.1.2.5 Rabbinic scholars
- Jon D. Levenson, "Why Jews are not interested in
Biblical Theology." - Martin Buber, Abraham Heschel, Emil Fackenhiem
25Levenson, "Why Jews are not interested in
Biblical Theology."
- 1. "The sad truth is that Old Testament
theologians have generally treated the themes
that appeal to them as more pervasive in the Old
Testament and the religion of Israel than is
warranted. Historians of religion without
theological commitment would, instead, be
inclined to acknowledge the diversity and
contradiction of biblical thought frankly. They
would feel no need to concoct a spurious "unity."
26Levenson, "Why Jews are not interested in
Biblical Theology."
- 2. "One reason for the distance Jewish biblicists
tend to keep from biblical theology is the
intense anti-Semitism evident in many of the
classic works in that field." - 3. "Historically, biblical theology has been not
only non-Jewish, but actively Protestant." - Karaism's "search out the Torah thoroughly" and
the anti-Oral tradition yielded a pursuit of the
peshat (plain sense) reading of the Bible, but
this was annomolous. There was not ad fontes
(back to the sources!) movement in Judaism.
27Levenson, "Why Jews are not interested in
Biblical Theology."
- 4. "The effort to construct a systematic,
harmonious theological statement out of the
unsystematic and polydox materials in the Hebrew
Bible fits Christianity better than Judaism
because systematic theology in general is more
prominent and more at home in the church than in
the bet midrash (study house) and the synagogue."
28Levenson, "Why Jews are not interested in
Biblical Theology."
- Susan Handelman "One of the most interesting
aspects of Rabbinic thought is tis development of
a highly sophisticated system of interpretation
based on uncovering and expanding the primary
concrete meaning, and yet drawing a variety of
logical inferences from the meaning without the
abstracting, idealizing movement of Western
thought."
29Levenson, "Why Jews are not interested in
Biblical Theology."
- Gershom Scholem "not system but commentary is
the legitimate form through which truth is
approached." - "It is hard to see how a biblical theology that
did not respect the doctrine of the priority and
normativity of the Pentateuch could be authentic
to the Jewish tradition."
30Levenson, "Why Jews are not interested in
Biblical Theology."
- 5. "It is precisely the failure of the biblical
theologians to recognize the limitation of the
context of their enterprise that makes some of
them surprised that Jews are not interested in
it."