Thursday, December 31, 2020

The troublesome structure of the third wasf of the Song of Songs

I blogged a couple of days about the four wasfs in the Song; 4:1-7; 5:10-16; 6:4-10; 7:1-9. Of particular interest to me was the back and forth between her (5:10-16) and him (6:4-10). The structure of the interaction is quite clear, albeit complicated.

The section 5:9-6:10 (which I am preaching on in a week or so) comes as a direct response to the conflict in the preceding verses (5:6-7) and the plea to the daughters of Jerusalem to pass on a message to him, should they find him. They ask two questions, which each receive a response from her. The first, in 5:9, is essentially, what is so good about him? The second, in 6:1, asks where he might be found. The section (I discussed the break up here) concludes with his wasf, and that's what I really want to discuss. 

But first, the questions from the daughters of Jerusalem both follow a very similar ABAC structure:

5:9 How's your beloved better
beautiful woman?
how's your beloved better
to charge us so?

6:1 Where's your beloved gone
beautiful woman?
where's your beloved turned
so we can look with you?

Her response to the first question is a wasf (again, check my previous post for a description of this), while the answer to the second is a relatively straightforward answer. Again, to summarise the whole section, we have:

5:9 what is he like?
5:10-16 he's pretty amazing

6:1 where did he go?
6:2-3 down to his garden

6:4-10 she's pretty amazing too

5:9 and 6:1 are very similar, and so is 5:10-16 and 6:4-10. Her second answer (6:2-3) is different, and looks forward to the next scene (beginning 6:11). It is a simple ABAB answer:

6:2a My beloved has gone to his garden
6:2b a description of his garden - spices and lilies
6:3a My beloved and me are each others
6:3b he's browsing among the lilies

So that's all quite interesting, but the wasfs are where I want to get to, and particularly the second. But before we get there, the first wasf has a structure which I foreshadowed in my earlier post, which is to begin and end with praise, and then in the body of the wasf (no pun intended) to talk through the attributes of the body with metaphors and similes. 

A 5:10 my beloved is distinguished among 10,000
B 5:11-16a ten-part wasf
A' 5:11b this is my beloved, daughters of Jerusalem

The wasfs in 4:1-7 and 7:1-9[2-10] are essentially of the same form as this one, even if the one in chapter 7 has a little more going on. But if we can say this is the "standard form"—a list of attributes bookended by a general adoration—then how does the wasf of chapter 6 compare?

The short answer is it's complicated. Sort of. If I were a German text critic of a century ago, I would have no problem excising verses, to make his wasf a mirror of hers. But I would be pressed between two options—mirroring hers and excising 6:8-9, or a chiastic structure excising his wasf (6:5-7) altogether. Here are the two options:

His adoration with wasf (no 8–9):

6:4 my darling is as distinguished as Tirzah and Jerusalem
6:5–7 four-part wasf
6:10 the one who appears like the dawn is as distinguished as the moon and the sun

His adoration with chiasm (no 5–7):

A 6:4 she is majestic like the sight of two great cities
B 6:8 though there be courtly women
C 6:9a my dove, my perfect one, is unique
B` 6:9b the courtly women praise her
A` 6:10 she is majestic like the sight of two heavenly bodies

Both of these have great structural integrity, and I don't know how you could choose between them if you were of a mood to excise one or the other. I really like the way the second chiastic structure draws out the parallel between the three groups of courtly women: 

6:8 Sixty queens there may be,
and eighty concubines,
and virgins (almot) beyond number;
6:9 but my dove, my perfect one, is unique,
the only daughter of her mother,
the favourite of the one who bore her.
The young women (bnot) beheld her
and queens called her blessed
and concubines praised her.

You do need to change the line breaks in the second half of 6:9 to reveal the three-part parallels between 6:8 and 6:9b; EVV have "the young women saw her and called her blessed; the queens and concubines praised her." But the Hebrew order is "Saw her did daughters and blessed her queens and concubines praised her." All you have to do is add "did" before queens (a perfectly acceptable addition in Hebrew) and you've got a perfect mirror to 6:8. This also equates virgins/maidens with young women/daughters, which again makes perfect sense even without the parallelism; with it, it is only enhanced. 

What we are left with then are two wasfs, hers and his, which are a matching pair; his is developed further to include his highlighting her uniqueness, even among the presence of the court harem. 


The final thing to mention is the verb דגל, dgl, a verb which is related to the word for "banner", but, according to HALOT, has some kind of base meaning like to be distinguished, which fits the three uses in the song here. It occurs as a qal passive participle in 5:10 to talk about him, the stand out among 10,000. And it occurs as a niphal participle in both 6:4 AND 6:10 in identical constructions, despite the confusingly different NIV translations. 

What's going on then as the bookends of his speech in 6:4-10 is a comparison of her to two pairs of great things. In the case of 6:4 it is two cities, Tirzah (the erstwhile capital of the Northern Kingdom) and Jerusalem (the capital of the Southern Kingdom and of course all Israel under the United Monarchy). George Athas suggests this is referring to the cohorts of women at two centres of Solomon's power, and others too have problems equating a woman with not just one but two cities. In the case of 6:10 she is compared to the brightness of the moon and the sun. In both cases there are two great objects, there is the exact phrase "as majestic as these distinguished [sights], and there is a description of her to which she these objects are to be compared; in 6:4 it is "my darling" and in 6:10 it is her "appearing like the dawn" which is to be compared to the brightness of the two heavenly luminaries.  

For me the parallelism between the two bookends is primary, and it's worth noting it's not the actual cities and luminaries to which she is compared, but the beauty and brightness of them. And sure, they may be no extant textual evidence of women being compared to cities, but this is the Song, so why not? And I would think the rich history of Jerusalem being personified (cf. esp. Lamentations, Isaiah) would mean this is far from a problem.


In conclusion then, his response in 6:4-10 integrates two separate poetic forms, the bookended wasf, and the chiastic structure, the latter reusing the bookends of the wasf. This enables him to both respond to her wasf (5:10-16) in kind, while also developing on the form to highlight her unassailable uniqueness.

Tuesday, December 29, 2020

The Gruffalo and the Song of Songs

 As I continue working through the Song of Songs (I preached the first sermon in our series on Sunday), I started looking at the part of the Song which is most easily explained with reference to the popular children's book, The Gruffalo. If you aren't aware of this, it's a fun story about a mouse's ruse to scare off various predators with reference to an horrible, made up, animal. 

He has terrible tusks and terrible claws
And terrible teeth in his horrible jaws.
He has knobbly knees and turned out toes
And a poisonous wart at the end of his nose.
His eyes are orange, his tongue is black;
He has purple prickles all over his back.

Essentially what the mouse is doing is walking his eyes up and down the (supposedly) imaginary creature and describing him. And that's what happens in the Song of Songs! This technique is far older than the Song and is obviously still in use (Julia Donaldson published her tale in 1999). 

This technique is given an Arabic name, "waṣf"  (or just "wasf" if the s with a hireq doesn't come out), and there are four substantial wasfs in the Song. Three of them (4:1-7; 6:4-10; 7:1-9[2-10]) are him describing her, and they are always addressed to the second person ("you"). Only one of them is her describing him (5:10-16), and interestingly it is addressed not to the second person but to the third ("he"). I find this especially interesting because she does most of the talking in the song, but evidently, at least from the wasfs (as well as the vibe), much more about him than too him (I could and should work out the actual proportion some time). 

As they come in chapters 4;5;6;7, they are all found in the latter half of the book (again, roughly; there are eight chapters), but all four of them cover essentially the same sorts of terrain. Of five elements, they all contain at least one instance of it (with one exception), and furthermore, each of them has some mention which could be seen to do with the court or the military or something in that vein. 

Here are the four wasfs then in summary,


You can see that I've smudged a few words together as "lovely/darling", with דוד (beloved), יפה (beautiful), רעיתי (my darling), תמתי (my perfect one), and so on. I think it's fair to lump in belly for him with breasts for her; and commentators love to say that hand (5:14) must be a phallic euphemism, but there's very little that people won't say is a euphemism for something, especially in the Song. But grammatically that's a bit weird, because it's literally "pair of hands" (it's in the dual form). 

If we have a look at the categories across the four wasfs, we can see how common the common things actually are: 


Only breasts/torso fails to rate a mention in chapter 6; otherwise all the categories are consistently found across the four wasfs. There are of course some extra elements (4:7 for instance) which doesn't fit so well into any category, but by and large there is a remarkable consistency both in content and, to a certain extent, in order also (far more than one would expect if it were a collection of various poems).

Of particular note for me is that the lovely/darling category bookends the wasfs (notwithstanding its triple appearance in chapters 6,7). The wasfs are thus sealed off as distinct units, even if they still are important in their context. 

Also of note, reading through George Athas's commentary, is the use of military imagery. Athas reads the Solomon character negatively, and sees references to the tower of David (4:4), the queens and concubines (6:8-9) as signs of her oppression and her immanent assimilation into Solomon's harem. I wonder whether the references to the tower of Lebanon watching over Damascus (7:4-5) and to Tarshish [stones?], pillars, and Lebanon (5:14-15) are further illustrations of this theme. Towers are military buildings, and these places, whilst far off and beautiful, are also places of power and oppression, which simple viticulturists (she) and shepherds (he) cannot hope to withstand.

I don't think I need to say anything about the other categories - they're all fairly self-explanatory. There are some questions around the translation of teeth in 4:2 and 7:9, as there are with many words in the Song. 

So it's worth looking out for these wasfs when you come across them in the Song. They reuse and develop imagery from elsewhere in the Song, they bounce off each other, and as you get into the individual wasfs themselves, there is much more to look into. I'm particularly interested the way 5:10-16 and 6:4-10 work with each other, which I hope to blog about soon - my next sermon, in a couple of weeks, is on 5:9-6:10.

Sunday, December 27, 2020

Structure of the Song of Songs

 I started a four week series today on the OT book of the Song of Songs, aka Canticles, aka Song of Solomon. I'm following the four-part structure in George Athas's commentary:

1:1-2:7
2:8-5:8
5:9-6:10
6:11-8:14

As he also did with his Ecclesiastes commentary, these are essentially preaching units rather than clear turning points in the book. And when you survey the literature, it's clear why one would want to be less rather than more prescriptive about the sections. Following especially Michael Fox, recent commentators perceive somewhere between a dozen and four-dozen separate songs; as such the "song" is actually "songs", an anthology of love poems akin to a collection of the short fragments we have of Egyptian love poetry from the New Kingdom (1500-1000 BC). 

David Dorsey has a good summary of the various positions to that point (1990) and suggests yet another approach, which focuses on keywords and refrains, as do Exum (1973) and Shea (1980) before him. They are roughly chiastic, but their choice of keywords and refrains seem somewhat arbitrary. 

The clearest markers in the text to me suggest a straightforward structure as follows. If we take the first verse as the introduction of a narrator, and take the sayings directed to the "Daughters of Jerusalem" as the end of sections, then we are left with the following structure (I have included the final verse of each of the central sections):

1:1 Introduction

1:2-2:7 Daughters of Jerusalem, I charge you
by the gazelles and by the does of the field:
Do not arouse or awaken love until it so desires.

2:8-3:5 Daughters of Jerusalem, I charge you
by the gazelles and by the does of the field:
Do not arouse or awaken love until it so desires.

3:6-5:8 Daughters of Jerusalem, I charge you
— if you find my beloved, what will you tell him?
Tell him I am faint with love.

5:9-8:4 Daughters of Jerusalem, I charge you:
Do not arouse or awaken love until it so desires.

8:5-14 Epilogue

It is the variations on this key phrase and the not grossly disproportionately different section sizes which are among the reasons to commend this structure. To my mind the other approaches seem vague and mutually contradictory. 

However, by focussing on this one phrase and its variations, there is one clear phrase which divides the text into roughly equal sections, each concluding with a speech to the "daughters of Jerusalem", who play the role of the audience, substituting in for us. The variations are interesting; unfortunately the two most promising journal articles which look like they deal with this are in Spanish and Hebrew, and not available online. 

It is however worth noting that the first two and fuller iterations of the phrase include the words "gazelles" and "does", both of which sound similar, respectively, to "[Yhwh of] hosts" and "[God] most high". Swear, in other words, not just by creatures in the field, but by the God who created both the creatures and their fields. 

The first and second occurrences of the phrase are identical, and the fourth occurrence likewise, but for the middle phrase (as I've arranged it above). The third is the only one which is vastly different, which could suggest that it plays a different role to the others. However, that being said, its similarity is probably key, and its differences only go to highlight its position and importance.


Despite what I've said, I'm still in the early stages and may well change my mind on everything, but it seems good for now. To paraphrase Michael Fox on Ecclesiastes, it's about whether the structure works; does it make better sense of the text? Or, in other words, does it preach? We shall see. 

Thursday, December 10, 2020

Reflecting on daily Bible reflections

 Back in late March this year, as we all went into lockdown, as in-person church shut down, I went to sleep thinking maybe I could send something out to encourage people as we were going through all this. My thought was to go through a psalm a day, and, God-willing, by the end of 150 days everything would go back to normal. 


Unless they were very short psalms, I wrote a summary, and at the doxology at the end of each book of psalms I wrote a little reflection on that collection of psalms. I started summarising the NIV11, then the REB, and then I started just translating (the DRV!). I slowed down a bit for Psalm 119, translated the whole stanza, so spent the better part of a month there, but otherwise it took somewhere close to 180 days for the psalms. 


I think often when we read the psalms we don't quite know what to do with them - should we look for the hidden messiah between the lines, like the New Testament seems to teach us to do? I wanted instead to show a Christian reading, which took seriously the struggles of this world (read Psalm 88 for a laugh sometime!) but also knows what it is to rest in God. 


But of course, the pandemic continued. What to do next? People were still struggling, we still weren't meeting in person, and places like Victoria were getting worse, not better. So I moved onto Ecclesiastes, in part because it's comfortable (see my book on the sidebar!), but also because I wanted to give a Christian reflection on each short section of the book. 


With both Psalms and Ecclesiastes, I wanted to model for people how to read Scripture as Christians, not as moralists or legalists, as we often default to, especially with the Old Testament. 


When Ecclesiastes came to an end after a bit over a month, I decided I would do one more book: Genesis. This time something a bit different; I wanted people to read the Bible, not just my summaries. So I asked people to read a whole chapter, and then reflect with me on just one verse. I really enjoyed doing this, and hopefully people appreciated the fact that (if they kept up) they had read a whole book of the Bible - something which some of us take for granted, but many really struggle to do. 


I only got the word out once or twice, and a couple of people join the whatsapp group every now and then. There's a few more than seventy right now, and of those probably two thirds click on the devotion. I don't know how many actually read that, but a couple of people occasionally tell me thanks, or bring it up in discussion - "like you said the other day on Ecclesiastes" - so that's encouraging! I certainly haven't gone viral, but I have encouraged people from my church and a few beyond. 


The way I've done it is start writing at 7:30am and send it out at 8:00am. Sometimes I'll write it in advance, but normally that's my routine, so it's been good for me. It's been pretty labour intensive; here are the word counts from these 262 days: 

Psalms: 73640
Ecclesiastes: 17151
Genesis: 19255

Total words: 110046

So it's taken a bit out of me, but it's also fed me. It's forced me to say something, or, better put, to listen to what God is saying, even from chapters I'd normally skim through (table of nations anyone?). 


But now, I might take a break. I might get back to it, but maybe not. I do hope and pray it encourages people in their own reading and reflecting. I'm grateful that this project was forced upon me, for the discipline it's forced upon me, and for the way that God has used this to encourage others. But now? Time for some time off.

Monday, November 30, 2020

Preaching through a Judges series

We've finished going through Judges; I broke it up into 9 weeks a little something like this: 

Judges 1:1-3:6 - beginning badly

Judges 3:7-31 - God's grace

Judges 4-5 - singing salvation

Judges 6-9 - Gideon's gaffes

Judges 10-12 - outrageous oath

Judges 13-15 - Samson's start

Judges 16 - winning through weakness

Judges 17-18 - grifters gonna get grifted

Judges 19-21 - the evil ending

I should add, I didn't think of the alliteration before today - that only just came to me now - always too late!


I try to preach through whole books where I can (see my complete list here), so that people go away from a series knowing that part of the Bible well, hopefully having read the whole thing, and with a growing picture of how the Bible fits together as a whole.


What I have been most struck by as I've worked through Judges (I had two weeks off preaching - Gideon and Samson #1 were preached by others) is the way the book uses recursion or juxtaposition. That is, every story is to be interpreted with reference to the stories either side of it. That is already obvious as the concentric structure of the book is examined, such that the opposing panels handle similar themes: 


Beginning at the end, we meet a Levite from the hill country of Ephraim. Could it be that this was the young Levite from the previous story, who was also a Levite in Ephraim? Probably not, because he moved up to Dan, but the connection is interesting.

So too with the Dan/Micah saga. The story begins without a beginning - it is as if it has slipped in between chapters 16-17. But when it begins we meet a woman who had 1100 silver shekels. Which other woman do we know with 1100 silver shekels? Delilah, from the previous episode, was promised 1100 shekels from each Philistine if she handed over Samson. Could it be that Micah's mother is Delilah? Probably not, but the connection is interesting. 

Similar connections continue throughout Judges (see my notes on Jephthah for some other examples). What this demonstrates is that Judges as a whole is thoughtfully composed, arranged, and edited with reference to every other story. However many original authors or redactors there may have been, the end result is a masterful illustration of adding meaning from structure; juxtaposing two stories next to each other forces them to be understood with reference to each other, so that two stories (or half a dozen or so) are more than the sum of their parts.  


As you work through or read through or preach through Judges, keep asking questions about juxtaposition. Rachelle Gilmour's book on Juxtaposition in Elisha is a superb guide and introduction to the question in general. 

Wednesday, November 18, 2020

Fighting and destroying in Joshua 10

We are reading Joshua in our staff meetings this year, and we were in the second half of Joshua 10 today (10:29-43). There is a lot of repetition in this chapter, but then a surprising flip at the end.

Essentially there are three elements which are repeated almost word-for-word:

A: And Joshua crossed over/went up/returned, and all Israel with him (29,31,34,36,38,43)

B: And he/they fought them/her (29,31,34,36,38,42)

C: He did not leave in her/for him a remnant (30,33,37,39,40)

There are other elements also repeated, such as the verbs for smiting (נכה) and proscribing/devoting to destruction (חרם). But each of these longer elements are almost the same, albeit with some minor variation. Until, that is the final time. 

The pattern looks like this:

29-30 ABC

31-33 ABC

34-35 AB

36-37 ABC

38-39 ABC

40-43 CBA

I don't think there's much to make of the missing C in the third cycle as חרם sort of plays the same role. Furthermore the C in the second cycle doesn't really belong with the AB but is a summary statement, similarly to the C in the final cycle.

But what is of especial interest is 42-43 and the switch from AB to BA, because there is a key difference. Every other time the subject of B is Joshua/Israel. This final time, however, as the Shephelah is tidied up, the reader is reminded that it is not Joshua but "Yhwh, the God of Israel, who fought for Israel." Not that they needed to be reminded, but the victories were only given to Israel because Yhwh fought for Israel. They fought and destroyed according to the command of Yhwh (40) and in reward for their obedience Yhwh fought for them, ensuring them total victory. 

That something different is going on is highlighted by this reversal in the final verses, and what that something is, is made clear with a new subject (Yhwh) and a new syntax (transposing the verb from a fronted wayyiqtol to the penultimate position). 

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Trying to preach through the Bible

 I've been at ND since 2012, and wanted to keep a record of how much of the Bible I've preached through (or had preached through by others). I've included proposed preaching for next year, but haven't included one-off guest spots or topical/doctrine talks.

I tend to follow the pattern of Term 1: Gospel, Term 2: OT, Term 3: Doctrine, Term 4: Epistle. I try to rotate through the major divisions of the OT (Law, Prophets, Writings), and alternate between Paul and non-Paul for the Epistles. 

Old Testament

Law
* Genesis - 2012 (5)
* Exodus - 2022 (22)
* Leviticus - 2018 (10)
* Numbers - 2012 (3)
* Deuteronomy - 2025 (9)
Prophets
Former Prophets
* Joshua - 2015 (13)
* Judges - 2020 (10)
* 1-2 Samuel
* 1-2 Kings
Latter Prophets
* Isaiah - 2024 (14)
* Jeremiah
* Ezekiel - 2017 (10)
The Twelve
* Hosea - 2021 (10)
* Joel - 2012 (3)
* Amos - 2014 (7)
* Obadiah
* Jonah
* Micah
* Nahum
* Habakkuk - 2021 (4)
* Zephaniah
* Haggai - 2023 (2)
* Zechariah
* Malachi - 2023 (3)
The Writings
Poetry
* Psalms - 2012 (4), 2019 (14) (120-135)
* Proverbs - 2023 (5), 2024 (5)
* Job
Scrolls
* Song of Songs - 2021 (4)
* Ruth
* Lamentations - 2019 (5)
* Ecclesiastes - 2016 (7)
* Esther
Others
* Daniel - 2013 (12)
* Ezra and Nehemiah  - 2023 (5)
* Chronicles

New Testament

Gospels & Acts
* Matthew - 2014 (15), 2015 (12), 2016 (13) (= 40)
* Mark - 2012 (4) (ch's 4-5), 2021 (10)
* Luke - 2013 (12) (9:51-18:30), 2023 (13) (1:1-5:11), 2024 (12) (5:12-8:25), 2025 (15) (8:26-11:32) (= 52); also most Christmases 
* John - 2017-18 (28)
* Acts - 2019 (28) (ch's 1-17)
Epistles
Pauline
* Romans - 2025 (17)
* 1 Corinthians - 2016 (5) (ch's 6-7), 2022 (22)
* 2 Corinthians - 2014 (12)
* Galatians - 2016-17 (11)
* Ephesians - 2023 (6)
* Philippians - twice through; one church camp and one preaching group (8)
* Colossians - 2012 (9)
* 1 Thessalonians - 2018 (8)
* 2 Thessalonians - 2018 (5)
* 1 Timothy - 2024 (11)
* 2 Timothy
* Titus - 2020 (5)
* Philemon - 2021 (2)
Catholic
* Hebrews - 2013 (13)
* James - 2017 (10)
* 1 Peter - 2015 (9)
* 2 Peter - 2023 (3)
* 1 John - 2021 (8)
* 2 John - 2019 (1)
* 3 John - 2024 (1)
* Jude - 2023 (3)
* Revelation - 2020 (19)

There are obviously some big gaps there; I really have to do another decent series from the Pentateuch (the two short ones were from before I had control of the preaching program), and there is a lot to fill in the writing prophets. I haven't touched the monarchy at all (1-2 Sam, 1-2 Kg, 1-2 Chron). It's a problem of the OT being 80% of the Bible and only having a term per year (although the Persia series allowed me to hit 4 books). I need to do a big Romans series, maybe for six months - breaking my system (again). That being said, I've hit every division of the Bible at least once and most a couple of times. 

Over all I think I'm pretty happy with the diet I've fed to people in terms of the breadth and depth, but it goes to show how even with an systematic, expository preaching approach, it still takes a long time to work through the Bible, and it could easily take me another nine years and I still wouldn't have got through it.

Friday, November 06, 2020

Good and Bad things happen in threes - at least for Samson

Some things I've noticed in the Samson Saga (Judges 13-16), many of which happen in threes.


Three part structure

The saga comes in three parts:

  1. Samson's parents and commissioning (13:1-25)
  2. Samson judged Israel 20 years (14:1-15:20)
  3. Samson judged Israel 20 years (16:1-31)

Parts 2&3 both begin with Samson meeting a woman.

Parts 2&3 are also bracketed with the location, Between Zorah and Eshtaol:

  1. 13:25, where Samson received the spirit of Yhwh
  2. 16:31, where Samson was buried

Three women

Samson shacks up with three different women. 
  1. The first (ch's 14-15) is an unnamed Philistine woman who is then given away, allegedly because her father thought Samson hated her. The ripple-effect of this liaison is the slaughter of 30 Philistines to settle a bet, the arson of the Philistine grain, the woman and her father being burned to death, Judah turning on and handing over Samson, and the death of 1000 Philistines with a jawbone.
  2. The second (16:1-3) is an unnamed Philistine prostitute, which gives the Philistines an occasion to ambush Samson. He does not stay the entire night with her, leaving early and helpfully relocating the city gates to a hill opposite Hebron.
  3. The third (16:1-21) is named - Delilah - and is likely also a Philistine (although it is not explicit, and her name is Semitic). The results of this union is his capture, blinding, and servitude.

Three breakouts

While Samson is with Delilah, three times he tells her a lie about the source of his strength - although they each hint in some way to the truth.
  1. tie me up with fresh strings (16:6-9)
  2. tie me up with new ropes (16:10-12)
  3. tie my hair in a loom (16:13-14)

This is obviously what Samson looked like.

Three gifts of the spirit

Three times Samson has the spirit of Yhwh. 
  1. 13:25 it begins
  2. 14:6 he rips a lion apart
  3. 14:19 he slays and deprives 30 Philistines of their clothing
When Samson receives the spirit it is certainly not a "dwelling within" gift of the Spirit, but a "equipping for a task" gift of the Spirit. The first isn't assigned to any particular task, so it has the feeling of the dwelling-within kind-of spirit, but the life of Samson doesn't testify to that being a likely understanding.

This triple gift of the Spirit in part 2 of Samson, where he is empowered by strength from Yhwh, is contrasted with the three times he breaks out with his own strength in part 3; note that the fourth time, where he tries and fails to break out, is also where his strength (that is, the spirit) leaves him. In this we see a parallel with Saul and his downfall.


 

Three numbered slaughters

Samson kills a few times. Three times there are numbers of dead people given, and there is also an escalation evident.
    1. 14:6 kills a lion
    2. 14:19 kills 30 men
    3. 15:8 "viciously attacked and slaughtered many" (NIV) "tore them limb from limb" (CSB)
    4. 15:15 kills 1000 men
    5. 16:27,30 kills 3000+ men and women
    It's also interesting, with this focus on threes, that two of the three numbers have threes - 30 men and 3000 men and women on the rooftop. 

    It's probably nothing, but it's also interesting how similar the words Samson and thirty are: שׁמשׁון & שׁלושׁים. Sure, they're not that similar, but Shimshon and Shloshim do sound very similar. Also, it's three hundred foxes that Samson catches and sets on fire. 


    Conclusion

    Good things, as well as bad things, do come in threes. There may be others that I've missed, and there may be some tenuous ones I've suggested. 

    By far the biggest thing which stands out for me is the comparison between part 2&3 of the saga, and I think the threes add to that and help us be on the lookout.

    Thursday, October 29, 2020

    When God Remembers

    I've finished my Psalm a day, and then a month of Ecclesiastes a day, and now I'm on to a chapter of the Bible a day, starting at the beginning. I hit Genesis 8 this morning and came across this:

    But God remembered Noah and all the wild animals and the livestock that were with him in the ark, and he sent a wind over the earth, and the waters receded. (Gen 8:1)

    It reminded me of one of my favourite passages at the end of Exodus 2:

    God heard their groaning and he remembered his covenant with Abraham, with Isaac and with Jacob. So God looked on the Israelites and was concerned about them. (Ex 2:24-25)

    After four centuries of slavery in Egypt, the groans of Israel are about to be answered with action.


    What was interesting was doing a quick search for God and Remembers (זכר + אלהים), and amazingly there's only four in the whole Tanach. I changed the search to include Yhwh, but that only added one further occurrence, 1 Sam 1:19. Here then are all the times when the Bible records God "remembering" his people. (If you have others which don't match the construction, let me know - this is just from a quick Accordance search.)

    1. God remembered the floating Noah (Gen 8:1) and caused the waters to recede
    2. God remembered the worried Abraham (Gen 19:29) and rescued his nephew Lot
    3. God remembered the barren Rachel (Gen 30:22) and gave her a child
    4. God remembered his covenant for the sake of his enslaved Israel (Ex 2:24) and began working to rescue
    5. Yhwh remembered the marginalised Hannah (1 Sam 1:19) and gave her a child

    Obviously God remembering doesn't imply the opposite - that he could ever forget - rather it points to the fact that he has chosen that time to act and to intervene for the sake of those he loves.

    Thursday, October 22, 2020

    Judge Jephthah in Context

    Jephthah in Context

    I've been thinking about Jephthah this week, and there are two things to note from the outset. The first is the context. After the long saga of Gideon + Abimelek, and before the long saga of Samson, there is a classic bookended structure:

    Minor judges (10:1-5)
    Jephthah (10:6-12:7)
    Minor judges (12:8-15)

    We can obviously say a lot more about the structure, but as a starting point the structure of the minor judges either side is used to mark out Jephthah in the centre as a major judge. But if we wanted to fill out the structure a little more, we can see another layer and more parallels: 

    Two judges; many sons on many donkeys (10:1-5)
    Sin, subjugation, suffering, supplication (10:6-16)
    Jephthah the new judge, one of multiple sons, saves Israel (11:1-33)
    A stupid vow and the slaughter of a virgin, succeeded by civil war and a shibboleth (11:34-12:7)
    Three judges; many sons on many donkeys (12:8-15)

    The parallels between the minor judges (two before, three after) are self-evident. Jair (10:3-5) had 30 sons on 30 donkeys ruling 30 towns. Ibzan (12:8-10) had 30 sons (to whom he married 30 women from outside his clan) and 30 daughters (who he married off outside his clan), and Abdon (12:13-15) had 40 sons and 30 grandsons on 70 donkeys. 

    We will meet more donkeys in the chapters to come, but we have seen the wiley Aksah upon a donkey securing extra water rights  (1:14-15) and donkey goers are exhorted to pay attention to the call to unity by Deborah (5:10-11). But we have also seen an army slain with a donkey's jawbone (15:15-16) - perhaps having a dig at these wannabe warlords on their donkeys. 

    The numbers 30 and 70 come up as well; 30 pops up several times in the Samson saga and in the epilogue (20:31,39), but 70 is both the number of kings mutilated by Adoni-Bezek (1:7) and the number of his own brothers murdered by Abimelek to become leader - a deal involving 70 shekels (8:30; 9:25). Are these new 70 a redemption of the number or simply a continuation? 

    But apart from the minor judges, the structure highlights the situation before Jephthah (sin, subjugation, suffering, supplication; 10:6-11) but also that, after Yhwh grants him the victory, things aren't much different (11:34-12:7). The judges to whom Yhwh grants his Spirit (in Jephthah's case, 11:29) are going to become worse and worse leaders, worse and worse examples, and will highlight more and more what a failure it is to trust in human leaders, who cannot (really) save.

    The Shortest Judge

    The second is that Jephthah leads for the shortest time of all the judges:


    That being said, we aren't always told the full details. We sometimes know how long they were judge for (from Tola onwards) and we sometimes know how long there was peace for because of their reign (up to Gideon). It could be that these timespans are coterminous, for example with Gideon it says "During Gideosn't lifetime, the land had peace for forty years." (8:28b) But we don't have the same information for other judges, and there seems to be a judgement in the latter judges (from Tola onwards) in that Israel weren't granted peace after their judge died. 

    But Jephthah stands out because he is at the very bottom of the barrel in terms of lengths (not including Shamgar because we know so very little about him), and, even though we are in a sense comparing apples (years of peace) with oranges (years led for), the only information we are given is what we have to work with. That is, 40-80 years is associated with the first four judges, while 6-23 are the years associated with the latter seven. And Jephthah is at the bottom of everything:

    • Jephthah: 6
    • Ibzan: 7
    • Abdon: 8
    • Elon: 10
    • Samson: 20
    • Jair: 22
    • Tola: 23
    • Gideon: 40

    I think why this matters is because Jephthah is not given a clear rebuke from Yhwh despite his evil vow and his evil fulfilment thereof. Rather, Yhwh is silent throughout. His name is invoked, but he is not. The response is threefold:

    1. Jephthah's line is finished. His daughter's virginity is emphasised, as is her being his only child. There will be no Jephthaian dynasty.
    2. The immediate aftermath to his victory over the enemy is civil war. There will be no united Israel under Jephthah.
    3. His leadership (including his two wars) is the shortest of any judge: only six years. His only legacy is to be known as "the one who couldn't shut up"; Jephthah coming from פתח - to open (one's mouth).


    Saturday, October 17, 2020

    Errata

     As I've been going through Ecclesiastes again, I noticed an error in my book. 

    On p50 I wrote: 

    "in 4:1 there is a fourfold use of עשׁק (to oppress), which occurs four times as a participle, albeit in different forms each time,"

    It's clearly only thrice. In trying to understand why I made this error, I think I must have misread נַעֲשִׂים (from עשה) as הָעֲשֻׁקִים (from עשק). It's also possible that my brain was looking for groups of four - in the same paragraph I discuss 4:4 and "four near-synonyms for work." 

    If you want to fix it, perhaps the paragraph should read,

    This similar formula is seen with את־כל (twice in 4:4), and then patterns of three: in 4:1 there is a triple use of עשׁק (to oppress), which occurs three times as a participle, albeit in different forms each time, while in 4:4 the pattern of three is made up of three synonyms for work, with מעשׂה, ,כשׁרון ,עמל as well as, for a potential fourth, what Qohelet describes as work’s functional equivalent, namely כי הוא קנאת־אישׁ מרעהו (for this is one’s envy over their friend).

    I'm not sure how it got through so many readings and readers, but there you go. I also still need to track down the library copy of my MTh and fix a separate typo there (which thankfully I caught before the published version). 

    Saturday, October 10, 2020

    Sisera's mother

    In chapter 5 of the book of Judges, there is a three-verse aside about Sisera's mother, absent from the chapter 4 account of the same battle, which I've always found intriguing. Here are a few thoughts I've gathered together

    Sisera's mother among the women of Judges (5:28-30)

    Through the window peered Sisera’s mother, Behind the lattice she whined: 

    “Why is his chariot so long in coming? Why so late the clatter of his wheels?”

     The wisest of her ladies give answer; She, too, replies to herself:

     “They must be dividing the spoil they have found: A damsel or two for each man, spoil of dyed cloths for Sisera, spoil of embroidered cloths, A couple of embroidered cloths round every neck as spoil.”

    (Judges 5:28–30 JPS)

    In the story of Deborah and Barak, there are three female characters, two of them named.

      1. Deborah, the key figure 
      2. Jael, the unlikely victor
      3. Sisera's mum, waiting for her son's return
    But there's a couple more groups of women. 
      1. First, the handmaids of Sisera's mum, who are standing by to help her out
      2. But second, the female captives they expect will be the spoils of the battle
    Nimrud ivory carving with “Lady at the Window” motif; Daniel I. Block, “Judges,” in Joshua, Judges, Ruth, 1 & 2 Samuel, vol. 2 of Zondervan Illustrated Bible Backgrounds Commentary: Old Testament. ed. John H. Walton; Accordance electronic ed. (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2009), 149.


    The true picture of the mother
    It seems quite innocent, but it's actually quite disturbing. 
    This lovely old lady, looking out her window, waiting for her son to slaughter the naughty Israelites, to plunder their villages in retaliation, and to steal their widows and daughters as sex slaves. 
    Because this is what she's waiting for - some nice fabric for her and some pretty women for him.
    For comparison, here's a tribute list from Ashurnasirpal of Assyria (883–859 B.C.):
    I received tribute from Sangara, king of the land of Ḫatti, 20 talents of silver, a gold ring, a gold bracelet, gold daggers, 100 talents of bronze, 250 talents of iron, bronze (tubs), bronze pails, bronze bath-tubs, a bronze oven, many ornaments from his palace the weight of which could not be determined, beds of boxwood, thrones of boxwood, dishes of boxwood decorated with ivory, 200 adolescent girls, linen garments with  multi-coloured trim, purple wool, red-purple wool, gišnugallu-alabaster, elephants’ tusks, a chariot of  polished (gold), a gold couch with trimming—objects befitting his royalty.
    The other thing to mention is that the word isn't woman or female - it's "womb" - or perhaps something even cruder, which is to say there is no value to these women except as their utility to their male captors. 

    Thankfully, when Israel do something just as evil in Judges 21 - the final chapter of Israel's descent into evil - the women there will at least be wives - therefore worthy of protection and support.

    Sisera's Mother as anti-Deborah
    Deborah is called a mother in Israel (5:7); Sisera's mother is unnamed - known only as Sisera's mother (5:28). This is important, because, from Israel's perspective 
    the story ends with Israel being forged as a nation through this victory, but Sisera's mother becomes barren, her son lying dead. 
    Deborah became a mother through victory, while Sisera's mother became an un-mother through defeat.

    Sisera's Mother as anti-Jael
    Jael is just minding her own business, doing her own thing. She's non-aligned - an independent. Sisera thinks she's allied with Jabin, but is unaware that Israel are her distant relatives through Moses's father-in-law (cf 1:16). But I think that the Kenites (her people) are able to choose their own path - do what is right without obligation. We might contrast this with Sisera's mother, who has raised her son; her hopes are his hopes, her morals his morals, and they are not good morals.

    At the end of the episode, Barak turns up, a little puffed, because he's followed the Canaanite army and cut them down - but no Sisera. So he's doubled back and in 4:22 asks Jael if Sisera came by. Jael opens the curtain of the tent - might this be the commander you're looking for?

    The contrast to this pulling back of a curtain with the curtain pulled back by Sisera's mum, standing by the window and waiting - I wonder where my boy is?

    The aftermath
    The story of these three women is the story of three different world-views.
    • Deborah is the willing servant of Israel
    • Jael is servant of none, master of her own destiny
    • Sisera's mum is anxious, awaiting the return of her brutal son and his depraved idea of spoil from war.
    I should note - Israel are going to go down a not dissimilar path - as we see how far they too have fallen. But for now there's a choice - clearly Israel have a mother (Deborah) and a cousin (Jael) who choose the right path. After their victory Israel have 40 years - an entire generation - of peace and prosperity, but Canaan is done; we won't hear from them again, as they are on the out and the Philistines will rise up to take their place as the chief enemy of Israel.

    For a time, at least, the people will mimic their mothers - Israel will mimic the wise and measured Deborah - and they will prosper while Canaan, following the instruction of people like Sisera's mother, are headed for extinction as a people - there are no more Canaanites today.

    We should rejoice at the destruction of this evil warlord and his army, and the eventual freeing of Israel from their oppressors. However, the evil expectation we see even in the mother of Sisera will sadly be matched by the Israelites at the end of the book, after which we hear the final words, "everyone did as they saw fit in their own eyes". S
    o even though evil from the Canaanites is averted right now, we also know that Israel will show themselves to be no better, 
    and as we continue on through the book we await with dread the inevitable.

    Monday, September 28, 2020

    Where is Cushan-Rishataim from?

    In my previous post, I quoted Barry Webb's comical survey of origin suggestions for the foreign king who subjected Israel to slavery for eight years:

    Cushan-rishathaim has been variously identified as a Babylonian Cassite (cf. Gen. 10:8), a Nubian, an Edomite, an Asiatic usurper in Egypt (Malamat), a Midianite (cf. Num. 12:1; Hab. 3:7), a chieftain of a tribe related to the Midianites who had migrated north and settled in Syria (Kaufmann), a surviving chieftain of the southern Judean hills (Boling), and, more recently, an Aramean adventurer from the great west bend of the upper Euphrates (Kitchen).

    Barry G. Webb, The Book of Judges, New International Commentary on the Old Testament. Accordance electronic ed. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2012), 159.

    As I've been working on it a bit more, I doesn't seem quite so intractable a problem. Let me tell you why.


    We are told two things about this king's origin. First, at the beginning of the episode:

    3:8b And he sold them into the hands of Cushan-Rishataim, king of Aram-Naharaim

    And then at the end of the episode:

    3:10d And Yhwh gave Cushan-Rishataim the king of Aram into his hand


    It seems the main difficulties with describing him as an Aramean seems to be the spatial dislocation. Aram is north of Israel (roughly modern south-west Syria), while from chapter 1 we know that Othniel is in the south of Israel, linked to the tribe of Judah, and these are pretty-much as far away as can be.

    However there are a couple of things worth noting. The first is the exceptional circumstances. In chapter 1 Othniel was called to step up in order to defeat a city and thereby to gain a wife. In chapter 3 however the Spirit is at work. We know from elsewhere that the Spirit may dislocate people (see the farcical episode in 1 Kings 18), so why not?!

    The second thing worth noting is that, even if we don't know what Aram-Naharaim refers to (v8), we do know where Aram (v10) is. We also know what Naharaim means - it means "pair or rivers", with -aim the dual-form ending, and nahar meaning river. And we also know that in Aram there are two rivers, described by Naaman in 2 Kings 5:12:

    Are not Abana and Pharpar, the rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel? Couldn’t I wash in them and be cleansed?” So he turned and went off in a rage.

    Now, I had a look on google maps and they're not readily apparent. You have to know what you're looking for and zoom in. A lot. They're two rivers which don't seem to come from or go anywhere - they just peter out as far as I can tell. Today they're called (respectively) the Barada and Awaj rivers, with the Barada flowing (when it does flow) through the heart of Damascus; the Awaj at its closest point is 13km or so south of the Barada. 

    Image made using Accordance Bible Software.
    Rivers are the thin blue lines with the red words describing them.
    Abana is the more northern river, Pharpar the more southern.

    The point is, in a desert landscape, despite their diminutive size, these two rivers would be pretty important, and one could understand why a king would be titled after his kingdom's not one but two water sources. That being said, one could also understand why this king might want to extend his kingdom to the more well-watered land south toward Lake Chinnereth (the Sea of Galilee).

    So I don't know if I've solved a riddle, or simply added yet another to the long list of suggestions, but it seems like it makes sense. 


    Update:

    Here's a clearer image from research gate. It seems they come from springs and end up in lakes, which I assume fill and dry up, depending on the season. 



    The names of Israel's enemies in Judges 3

    Cushan-Rishataim

    I've been reading through Barry Webb's NICOT commentary on Judges, he noted the way Cushan-Rishataim's name is used multiple times, and it gives shape to the whole episode.

    There is an introduction (3:7-8a), then we hear Cushan-Rishataim's name twice (3:8b-c). The action follows in 3:9-10c, and in the denouement we hear Cushan-Rishataim's name twice more (3:10d-e), before the ending (3:11).

    3:7-8a Israel's evil, Yhwh's anger
    3:8b-c Cushan-Rishataim set loose
    3:9-10c Israel cry out, Yhwh raises up Othniel
    3:10d-e Cushan-Rishataim cut down
    3:11 Quiet in the land

    We can see how the two double uses of Cushan-Rishataim's name frames the raising up of the judge his actions of saving Israel by judging and making war. 

    We actually know nothing about Cushan-Rishataim; Webb surveys the various suggestions as to his origin in a list that become ever more farcical: 

    Cushan-rishathaim has been variously identified as a Babylonian Cassite (cf. Gen. 10:8), a Nubian, an Edomite, an Asiatic usurper in Egypt (Malamat), a Midianite (cf. Num. 12:1; Hab. 3:7), a chieftain of a tribe related to the Midianites who had migrated north and settled in Syria (Kaufmann), a surviving chieftain of the southern Judean hills (Boling), and, more recently, an Aramean adventurer from the great west bend of the upper Euphrates (Kitchen).

    Barry G. Webb, The Book of Judges, New International Commentary on the Old Testament. Accordance electronic ed. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2012), 159.

    There could also be some funny business going on with his name. 3:8b describes him as "Cushan-Rishataim, king of Aram-Naharaim." Naharaim means "two rivers", so if you deconstruct Rishataim, the "aim" ending is a dual form (i.e. two) and the "Risha" beginning uses the consonants of "wicked" - hence "Double-wickedness". We don't know anything about what wickedness he got up to, but he dominated Israel for eight years, causing them to repent (at least for a time) of their apostacy and to cry out for a saviour.


    Eglon the king of Moab 

    Anyway, that is all a precursor to what I was most interested in - the use of the name of Israel's enemy in the second section. Essentially what we see is a degradation in the name of Eglon the king of Moab throughout the episode. It begins with a short chiasm:

    3:12a Israel again did evil in the eyes of Yhwh
    3:12b Yhwh raised up Eglon the king of Moab
    3:12c Because they did evil in the eyes of Yhwh

    As the episode goes on, Eglon the king of Moab is mentioned numerous times:

    3:12b And Yhwh strengthened Eglon the king of Moab against Israel
    3:14 And the children of Israel served Eglon the king of Moab 18 years
    3:15c And the children of Israel sent in [Ehud's] hand a gift to Eglon king of Moab
    3:17a And [Ehud] presented the gift to Eglon king of Moab

    However, this is the last time Eglon gets the full title. The next mention, in the same verse, is just his name, and no title:

    3:17b Now Eglon was an exceedingly fat man

    After this devastating description, his name is never mentioned again. He is "he", "him", and is described as in the WC (literally, something like "the upper cool room"), on his "throne" (I think this is a punny way of saying the toilet), and so overwhelmingly obese that Ehud's sword is swallowed by his fat as faeces comes out.

    Indeed, the only other time he gets a mention is as "their lord" (3.25d), who had fallen on the ground, dead. 

    Once Eglon the king of Moab is dead, Moab are prey for the hunter, and Ehud has Israel essentially guard the Jordan so that any Moabites trying to escape back over the border get killed , with 10,000 rich and powerful men dying. 


    Reflection

    I'm still trying to work out whether this is about making fun of Israel's enemies, or about making fun of Israel. On the one hand, the death of Eglon is told comically (with certain similarities to the poo jokes in Daniel 5), so that Israel's victory through an unlikely saviour (a lefty!) is even greater. But on the other hand, it is these morbidly obese people who are able to subdue Israel for 18 whole years. Those they killed trying to escape at the Jordan were not warriors but fat bureaucrats, and if Israel were devoted to their LORD rather than to evil, then they may have been able to withstand their Moabite "Lord".


    Epilogue

    Interestingly, Shamgar, the final Judge of this chapter (3:31), has no named adversary, but just the Philistines more broadly. If you're interested to read more about him, there's a fascinating blog over at isthatinthebible you might be interested in. 









    Saturday, September 26, 2020

    The unfilled eye - Ecclesiastes 1:8; 4:8

    I'm working through Ecclesiastes again for a daily devotion thing I'm sending out, and noticed a phrase pop up again which I hadn't previously. It's "the eye(s) is(are) not filled." 

    It's an odd phrase because we don't think about eyes being filled, although it's not hard to make sense of it. It's also missed because the two occurrences are translated differently. In 1:8 the NIV has "the eye never has enough of seeing, nor the ear its fill of hearing." (has enough represents the verb שׂבע.) In 4:8 it comes across a little differently, "there was no end to his toil, yet his eyes were not content with his wealth. (not content represents the verb שׂבע.)


    As you can see (no pun intended), the same verb with the same subject represents two different subjects which can never fill one's eyes. In the opening poem, it is the ever-changing world and innumerable experiences which can never fill the eyes. In the observation of the lonely man in chapter 4, it is greed which is the bottomless hole. Of course, it could be that greed for experiences in chapter 1 is what binds the two expressions together. Although it is described as wearying in chapter 1, it could well be that this is the reflection of someone who has spent life trying to experience enough (like Faust, perhaps) and has reached a point when they have lost all desire to learn anything or experience anything new (like the end of The Good Place, perhaps). 


    It was also interesting to chase this phrase a bit further. "Not filled" is a phrase which occurs some 20 times in the Old Testament, fairly evenly divided between the prophets and the writings (only once in the Pentateuch, Lev. 26.26). 

    Mostly the description of what one cannot be filled with (moving now beyond just the eye) is food as a punishment. "You will eat but not be satisfied" is the common way of expressing this. Usually a punishment, it can also be Yhwh's means of testing - when they realise this, will they turn back to me?

    The next most common way this phrase is used is to do with idolatry, as people went whoring after the nations or after greed, but as they did so and were not satisfied, their idolatry was exposed. They pursued something they thought would satisfy their desires but were left nonetheless with a bottomless hole, a gaping pit that could not be filled. 

    One interesting unsatisfiable was Sheol/Abbadon, which could not be satisfied with death. I'm not sure if this is negative or nature - if probably depends on the context (eg Prov 30:15-16). There was also one positive, which was Job's conative use, asking whether anyone ever went away from his feasts not satisfied (expecting the answer "no"). 


    But for me it's the greed-idolatry one which stands out most clearly. The way God has ordered this world means that serving the god of greed is a service which can never end and never give satisfaction. When greed, the accumulation of wealth is your god, there can never be enough. You will sacrifice friendships to the altar of greed but you will still never the gifts from the hand of God of true friendship, of true security, of shelter in the storm (see Eccl. 4:7-12).

    Wednesday, September 09, 2020

    Hallelujah!

    I'm getting to the end of my psalm per day reflection that I've been sending out to people from church (plus a few others) and in the last few I'm coming across the phrase "Hallelujah" quite a bit. You probably know that it means "Praise Yah", where Yah is short for Yahweh (or, as I choose to write it, Yhwh). It's one of those transliterations, which is to say "Hallelujah" isn't a translation, nor is "Hosanna" or "Baptise" or "Amen" - they have acquired meanings in English but they are not translations. (For those who are interested, Hosanna means save us, baptise means wash or overwhelm, amen is to do with agreement or trust).


    Hallelujah is mostly two words, sometimes joined with a maqqep (essentially a Hebrew hyphen), sometimes separated, and once they are joined into one word. Oh, and they all occur in the last third of the psalter, as follows:

    • Hallelu-Yah 17 (102:19; 104:35; 105:45; 106:48; 113:9; 115:17; 115:18; 116:19; 117:2; 135:3, 21; 146:1, 10; 147:20; 148:14; 149:9; 150:6b)
    • Hallelu Yah 9 (111:1; 112:1; 113:1; 135:1; 147:1; 148:1; 149:1; 150:1, 6a*)
    • Hallelujah 1 (106:1)
    I think this is all of them - it's from a software search and I haven't double checked it. But you'll notice a couple of things:
    1. The two words joined with a maqqep is by far the most common. 
    2. There is one case (150:6a) where the verb takes a different form, it's tehallel yah (all breath will praise Yah).
    3. Every time the standard form occurs without a maqqep, and including the time where they're joined (106:1), is in the first line of the psalm. The hyphenated form never occurs at the beginning of a psalm, and with the exception of 150:6a, the un-hyphenated form only occurs at the beginning. 
    4. If the form begins the psalm, it often occurs later on also. Of the nine which begin with Hallelu Yah or Halleljuah, seven have Hallelu-Yah later on. 
    5. As mentioned already, they are all in the last third of the psalter, and are clustered in a few groups: 102-106 (but not 103), 113-117 (but not 114), 146-150, with 135 the only one on its own. 

    It's also noteworthy that the phrase Hallelujah (or Allelujah in the KJV) has come into English, perhaps not from the Psalms, but from the book of Revelation, where it is transliterated from Hebrew to Greek and then into English. It occurs four times in Revelation 19:1-6, and is the noise of those in heaven roaring praises to God for destroying Babylon, vindicating his saints, and bringing them to the wedding feast of the Lamb. 

    What do we make of all this? I'm not yet sure. But it's interesting! It's also wonderful that we say it so much - and I think probably preserving the meaning - Praise Yah for his powerful works of rescue and redemption on earth, and for the future he is bringing about through the Lord Jesus. Hallelujah indeed!
     

    Monday, August 17, 2020

    Titus 3 structure

    As I mentioned recently, one thing that stands out in Titus is the number of times works are mentioned. There are good (agathos) works, there are beautiful (kalos) works, and there are righteous (dikaiosune) works. All three of these turn up four times in chapter three, with beautiful (kalos) works turning up twice, as well as a third use of kalos (translated excellent in the NIV, in parallel with profitable).

    What stands out is, for the four times works occur in this chapter (v1,5,8,14), between the first and second, and between the third and fourth, there is a description of the opposite of good works, including disobedience, depravity and division. 3:3, 9-10 essentially describe the type of person previewed back in 1.16 - the person who is unfit for, and unable to do, good works. 

    There is also, along with 2.11-14, the greatest and clearest description of the gospel in this short letter, in 3.5b-7, which occurs between the second and third occurrences of works.  This reveals this structure:

    A 3.1-2 Remind them about relationships with others, and to be ready for good works (ἔργον ἀγαθὸν)
    B 3.3 We used to be pretty awful people
    C 3.4-5a God saved us - not by our own righteous works (ἔργων τῶν ἐν δικαιοσύνῃ)
    D 3.5b-7 We were saved by Jesus Christ, through the Holy Spirit, in the hope of eternal life
    C'3.8 Those who believe in God should be devoted to good works (καλῶν ἔργων)
    B' 3.9-11 There is no more place for those who behave in awful ways
    A' 3.12-15 Those with whom I am in relationship with; remind people to commit to good works (καλῶν ἔργων)

    I like the way this structure begins and opens with practical examples of good works, moves through descriptions of the opposite of good works, then back to good works, and finally, moving to the centre, has this beautiful description of the saving gospel. 


    I've only just started working on this passage, but looking forward to preaching on it in a couple of weeks to conclude our short Titus series. 

    Monday, August 10, 2020

    Books of the Old Testament by Title

     As a follow up to the popular Books of the New Testament by Title, here is my attempt at summarising the Old Testament in a similar way. 

    This one is probably a little more controversial for what I have not said: I have not said Daniel is the author of Daniel - if that troubles you, here is a brief summary of why I think that. 

    I'm not sure whether Jonah wrote Jonah - that seems unlikely to me. So too the others, especially when they die in them (ehem, Samuel). It could be that Ezra wrote Ezra-Nehemiah - I haven't looked into that at all; I'll probably have to do a humble-pie update later on. 

    I think the others are okay. Leviticus refers to the rules given to the Levites - perhaps that should be an event also; if they were a group then the book should be called Levites, which it isn't. In Hebrew it's just called "wayyiqra" - and he called. Maybe I should do another one on Hebrew titles. 

    Oh, and Ecclesiastes is the Greek translation of what they assume Qohelet means. I think Qohelet refers to the assembler of wisdom rather than an assembler of people, but you'll have to buy my book to find out the reasoning for why I think that. 

    Saturday, August 08, 2020

    Books of the New Testament by Title

    Still thinking about Titus...

    It's one of only four NT books which is entitled by its recipient: only Philemon and 1, 2 Timothy have that honour. 

    Of course, by grouping the books/letters like this, I'm not making any definitive statements about authorship; only to say that's how we are supposed to understand them. Interestingly, Hebrews is the only book which we have zero idea about (wild guesses like Paul, Luke and Apollos not withstanding). 

    Anyway, enjoy. I just thought it was interesting to sort them in this way.

    Who is the saviour in Titus?

    I've always thought Titus was a gem, and have also had some fascinating exchanges with JW's due to the way it describes Jesus and God with identical terminology. In particular the use of "saviour" for both, with an ABABA(C)B structure to its use, in pairs throughout the letter:

    God our saviour (Titus 1.3)
    Christ Jesus our saviour (1.4)
    God our saviour (2.10)
    Jesus Christ our saviour (2.13)
    God our saviour (3.4)
    (saved … by the Holy Spirit – 3.5)
    Jesus Christ our saviour (3.6)

    It's interesting to see the Holy Spirit snuck in there between the final two as well. That said, it could be a suggestion that the whole letter is riffing off the credal statement (as assumed by some, including the NA28 editors) in 3.4-7, as the three persons of the Godhead are described as working salvation. This is of course followed with the phrase, Πιστὸς ὁ λόγος, "this is a faithful saying" (cf the identical phrase in 1 Tim. 1:15; 3:1; 4:9; 2 Tim. 2:11).


    Two other brief unrelated notes:
    1. Teaching vocabulary is seen throughout, in 1.9a, 9b, 10; 2.1, 7, 10. 
    2. The language of "good works" is also throughout the letter, 
      • works, good works ἔργοις ... ἔργον ἀγαθὸν (1.16) - are not possible for the disobedient
      • good works καλῶν ἔργων (2.7, 14; 3.8, 14) - should be given as an example, and should be zealously pursued by the godly
      • every good work πᾶν ἔργον ἀγαθὸν (3.1) - people should be ready for these
      • works of righteousness ἔργων τῶν ἐν δικαιοσύνῃ  (3.5) - these works cannot save, but only God

    Lots in this little letter, which we start this Sunday and will work through over five weeks.

    Wednesday, July 29, 2020

    Joshua 7, Achan and Eve

    A few things stand out in Joshua 7, which tells of the failed fight against Ai and the sin of Achan.

    1. One is the use of עבר, the verb for crossing over, passing over. It has that base meaning everywhere else in Joshua (50 odd times), but there are three cases, two of which are in Joshua 7, where it is used for sin; crossing over the covenant of Yhwh. Achan, in his sin, crosses over the covenant with Yhwh, rejecting God's way and choosing his own.

    2. The second thing which stands out are three intertextual links. 
    2a. One is Achan's actions are described in 7:15 as stupid - נבלה (nebalah)- which makes us remember the actions of the eponymous fool, Nabal - נבל - of 1 Samuel 25 infamy. There are of course other stupid (נבלה) acts in the Bible, prime among them being the instance with the Levite and his concubine in Judges 19-20. The stupidity in these cases (cf also Gen 34:7) is not just the action itself, but also the consequence. One also wonders whether the homophone of נבלה (albeit with different vowels) - carcass (eg Lev 5:2 et passim) - also plays into this. The stupid act (נבלה) means that this stupid man (נבל) will become a carcass (נבלה).

    2b. The second link is the "babylonian garment", which I wonder whether is a retrojection from the babylonian exile, or prefigures it in some way. It could also be looking back to the Tower of Babel story in Genesis 11, which is described as being built in the plain of Shinar - the same word used here translated "babylonian". The confusion that ensued there is seen in the one who has become confused about the great promises which would and could and should be his - if only he didn't choose folly and the beauty of Shinar and thus exclude himself from the promise.

    2c.The third link is back to Genesis 3:6, where the woman saw that the fruit was good (טוב) and desirable (חמד), she took it (לקח) and sinned. So too for Achan (7:21): he saw the robe was good (טוב), he desired it (חמד), took it (לקח) and sinned. This brings us back to Ricoeur's statement that each of us both continue but also begin, Achan beginning it all over again with the borrowed vocabulary from Genesis 3.

    3. The final thing is the way that Achan's death is on behalf of the whole community. Just as his sin poisons his whole family, meaning they and all their belongings are stoned and/or burned, so too does his death work for the cleansing of all Israel. We might compare Achan to the true Israelite, who did not covet, did not grasp, who was the embodiment of wisdom - though he was called foolish. And where Achan died for his sin - wrapping his family up in the horrid consequences - his death meant that all Israel was spared. Jesus of course did not die for his sin, but for the sin of all who trust in him, but in dying he died in our place, delivering us into the promise through his body. 


    Saturday, July 25, 2020

    Book Review: Matthias Henze, Mind the Gap


    Matthias Henze, Mind the Gap: How the Jewish Writings Between the Old and New Testament Help Us Understand Jesus, Fortress Press, Minneapolis, 2017. 235pp. $60.

    ---

    Matthias Henze (Rice University) has written this very accessible introduction to Second Temple literature in order to help readers of the New Testament be mindful of the gap between the Old and New Testaments. It is very much an introduction, as there is not a single footnote (or endnote), although there is appendix listing suggestions for further reading. As such, then, this book cannot be the only thing one reads on the topic, but the approach is a useful primer.

    As is appropriate for the readership, it is not a long book, and is divided unequally into two halves. The first is a brief but broad introduction to the Old Testament and the literature which was familiar to ancient readers, in particular the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Septuagint, 1 Enoch and 2 Baruch/4 Ezra (this last one was the subject of scholarly work he co-authored). The reason for introducing us to these is clear: Jesus "is concerned about messianic expectations, he expels demons, he expounds the Torah in conversation with the Pharisees, he preaches about the end of time, he looks forward to the resurrection of the dead, and he discusses life after death with the Sadducees." (p34) These topics are familiar to us from the Gospels, but there is scant to no cognisance of these in the Old Testament. To understand where these topics—familiar to the Jews of Jesus' time—have come from, the Old Testament will be of limited value. 

    Rather than the "four hundred years of silence", as it is often declared in churches, the three or so centuries before the writing of the New Testament was a fertile time, where scriptural interpretation took place and new literary genres were created, such as "the Tales of the Diaspora (Daniel 1-6; Esther) and the apocalypse (Daniel 7-12; 1 Enoch; 2 Baruch; 4 Ezra)." (p50) This viewpoint is an important one, well known in academia, but almost never discussed in churches. Rather, in part due to the Greek and Protestant ordering of Bibles, the Old Testament is shown as finishing with the last words of Malachi, followed by centuries of silence, and then Jesus arriving right on cue. Henze attributes this false view not just to the ordering of Bibles, but also to the prejudiced term Spätjudentum (late Judaism). In his estimation, this term implies that Judaism was on its last legs, and, had Jesus not arrived, would have died out. In contrast, Henze's purpose is to show the "vibrancy and show its unique significance in the history of Judaism." (50) 

    The far larger second half of the book (at three times the length) hones in on four topics which are central in the Gospels but seem to come out of nowhere from a reading only of the Old Testament. They are messianism, demons, the law and eschatology. In each chapter the topic as encountered in the Gospels is sketched, what Old Testament background there is is described, but also its insufficiency for understanding the Gospels; thirdly the appropriate second temple literature is detailed, and finally he describes the fuller picture arrived at after this survey.

    The first chapter of the second half is entitled "Jesus, the Messiah of Israel," where Henze works through Psalm 2, Isaiah 11 and Daniel 7. His argument is that there is no actual expectation of a future messiah in these passages; it is only the Second Temple literature which repurposed these passages to express the hope in a future messiah. His argument is a subtle one, and perhaps not the best chapter to begin this second half of the book with. His point is that while these passages could be speaking of a future messiah, they weren't explicitly thought of doing so until this later period. To this he adds Psalm 146 and Isaiah 61 to show that, in the first instance, the blessings are not associated with a messiah at all, and in the second, that the servant is no longer understood generally or in a preterist way, but in a future messianic way. This then explains how Jesus quoting Isaiah in the synagogue in Luke 4 completed the expectations of the crowd, rather than introducing a completely new understanding of Isaiah's servant. For me, this is an exegetical hypothesis about what it might for the crowds to be "amazed" (Lk 4:22) rather than an open-and-shut case. Yes, there was a heightened expectation of a future messiah in this period, but the amazement of the crowd could just as easily be due to the interpretation as to his self-identifying, but this is a case Henze needs to argue, not just state. 

    He then moves on to discuss the phrase "Son of God" and the "Son of the Most High," and this was a much more productive discussion. The expectations we are aware of from Qumran and the expectations from Luke 1:26-35, both use the same vocabulary and explain where the language comes from, which we would otherwise be ignorant of from just the Old Testament. He explains that "there is nothing arbitrary about Luke's choice of words and that his characterisation of Jesus is carefully chosen to answer the Jewish messianic expectations of his time." (81)

    The second chapter, "In a World of Demons and Unclean Spirits," has a difficult task: explaining the origin of demons, and their corollary, exorcism. His first point is that the unclean spirits we meet in the New Testament have no background in the Old Testament. There are evil spirits and lying spirits, but they seem to be doing something very different and rather than being against God, are sent by God. Henze then proceeds to lead us through Genesis 6:1-4 (MT), then Genesis 6:1-4 (LXX), then the Book of the Watchers (1 Enoch) and the book of Jubilees, in order to explain the state of affairs we encounter in the New Testament. With another Qumran text (4Q510 I, 1-9) he shows us their hope that God will scatter them, and also gives us language used in Ephesians 5:8 and 1 Thessalonians 5:5 to describe oneself as "the sons of light" in contradistinction to the evil spirits who cause havoc in the world. I found this chapter much more convincing and genuinely useful for understanding the origin of the world-view that caused people to come to Jesus for cleansing. It is easy to dismiss the link between Judaism and the world of evil spirits, but this chapter explains that there is indeed a link, albeit via several texts, which, together, make clear how it all fits together.

    The third chapter of the second half moves on the vexed topic of the place of the law, with the question, "Did Jesus Abolish the Law of Moses?" His target here is antinomianism and the mischaracterisation of the Pharisees, so he understandably wants to establish what understanding of the law was actually held during the New Testament era. In essence Henze wants to demonstrate the development of "Torah as law" to "Torah as wisdom." I was expecting a little more from this chapter, but he had more or less proved his argument from Psalm 1 and 119, which made the other material more or less redundant. There was one Qumran scroll, 4QBeatitudes, which, when coupled with Sirach, showed how the concept of Torah as wisdom was fairly well understood at that time. In summary, the logic is that for Josiah Torah was a legal code, for Ezra Torah was divine teaching, for Ben Sira Torah was wisdom, and for Paul that wisdom was Jesus. So far, so good. 

    But at this point Henze seemed to get a little distracted. Although we know the golden rule from Leviticus (19:18), for some reason Henze seemed to think we needed proof that the golden rule was not a new thing, and therefore quotes Rabbi Hillel's non-malfeasance (do no harm) to show that Jesus fitted squarely within Judaism. This was unnecessary - even a misstep - but the reason became clearer when moving on to Paul and Romans 9-11. Again, this chapter is supposed to be about showing how the New Testament treatment of the Law fits within its context as elucidated from this gap-filling literature of which he is an expert. But instead, His argument descends into a comical exposition of universalism - not because there is no argument to be made - people are welcome to do so - but because this is a non-academic book, which does not interact with scholarship, and is supposed to be about something else. In the end, this chapter ends up being an apology for a two-paths model of salvation, Torah as wisdom for the Jew, and Torah as Jesus for the Gentile. This is all the more surprising as he even quotes the sectarian Damascus Document and refers to 4QMMT, both of which he explains as pushing the argument that they alone understand the law correctly and represent God's chosen people. To then argue for a two-paths salvation model seems incredibly anachronistic. He returns to this point in the epilogue, again quoting Romans 11, advocating people get involved in interfaith movements. It was an odd note to end the book on, and on reading one cannot help the feeling that this says more about him as a German living in America who is trying to come to grips with the Holocaust (which he mentions on the first and the third-last pages) and anti-Semitism, than it does about the documents he is purportedly trying to educate his reader about.

    The final thematic chapter examines perhaps the most important missing link between the Old and New Testaments, "The Resurrection of the Dead and Life in the Company of Angels." Henze traces the thread which is seen in Isaiah and Ezekiel, speaking of national "resurrection", and places Daniel in a Second Temple context which is willing to speak more confidently of the resurrection of individuals. The views reflected in the words of Herod (John, whom I beheaded, has been raised, Mark 6:16) and Martha (I know that he will rise again in the resurrection on the last day, John 11:24) are placed in a context which includes Daniel from within the Bible, 2 Maccabees from the Apocrypha. The Psalms of Solomon show a hope for some form of life and judgement after death, while 1 Enoch 51 and 4 Ezra (late 1st century AD texts) link the resurrection for the righteous with the coming of "my Chosen One," who will appear after the resurrection to rule and judge. While those texts would make good conversation partners for Revelation and 1 Thessalonians, the next text, 2 Baruch, is selected to engage with 1 Corinthians 15, as the continuity between bodies now and resurrected bodies is discussed in these texts composed perhaps within 20 years of each other. Snippets of Qumran texts are mentioned to show a diversity of opinions which existed and discussions which were occurring about the realities of resurrection and who might expect to be resurrected and what the resurrected life would look like. 

    This chapter probably offered the deepest dive into texts many are unfamiliar with. Although there are numerous hints in the Old Testament that resurrection is within God's power, these texts show how the belief moved from possibility to expectation. I did however feel there were a few missteps in this chapter. 1 Enoch 104 (p159) did not seem to be saying what Henze said it said, which was resurrection hope, although it seemed to be more a welcome into heaven. And when discussing Herod and Lazarus, he said, "Neither of these two passages ... is about Jesus," (p150), which is a remarkable statement. Perhaps one could argue that for the Herod/John the Baptist incident, although Mark's intent was more than just updating political goings-on. But the application of this comment to John 11 is simply wrong - it is all about Jesus, who deliberately delays coming (Henze thinks it took four days to hear and travel, p149) in order to reveal the glory of God (John 11:4). Henze's approach seems a little reductionistic, as if John 11 is there to illustrate first century AD Jewish views about resurrection. All that being said, this chapter was a gateway into this topic, and would be a great starting point for finding those Second Temple texts which illuminate the development of the understanding of resurrection. 

    In the epilogue Henze answers three controversial statements he commonly has to defend, namely, that Jesus was not a Christian (he was a Jew), that these texts were important and familiar to the writers of the New Testament (who mostly quoted the Old Testament), and that the Bible is part of a literary world which helps us understand the New Testament. The discussion around these questions is the most rhetorically powerful part of this book, although presumably also the most practised. He makes a point that the unearthing of the ancient Near East was a powerful time for Old Testament studies, and has reshaped the way we understand and evaluate much of the Old Testament. It is thus important that we let these texts do the same for the study of the New Testament; that we bring the Dead Sea Scrolls and Apocrypha and other texts into conversation with the texts which comprise the New Testament.

    For the price-point of this book ($60AUD at time of this review, for 200 pages plus a suggested reading list, glossary and two indices), one would expect a more serious work. Yet there are no footnotes, no interaction with differing opinions, and discussions of a topic are limited to two or three texts. This book reads as a series of introductory lectures but is priced at a point which implies a more rigorous book, which will disappoint readers (such as myself) who hoped for a little more value for money. If it were not the middle of a pandemic at time of writing, I would recommend students borrow it from the library, but for those interested in something more rigorous they will have to look elsewhere. Nonetheless it was mostly enjoyable to read, so it functions well as an introduction to the topic, but beyond that it will leave people wanting something a little more meaty. Perhaps George Athas's forthcoming Bridging the Testaments will be more helpful in this regard.


    Two small notes: 
    1. Typographical errors: the word "of" is missing on p143, the word "had" is duplicated on p175, and there is an "s" missing from the "Index of Ancient Text [sic]" (p229).
    2. The lack of footnotes, endnotes, or bibliography, is paralleled with the absence of appropriate citations. Although translations of the Dead Sea Scrolls are cited in text (with a name only, but no date or publication), nowhere is the biblical translation appropriately cited (normally this would be noted in the front matter with appropriate copyright information). At one point, at one of the quotations of Sirach, the NRSV translation is mentioned, which appears to be the translation used throughout, but that was the exception rather than the rule.