Vast as the Sea: Hebrew Poetry and the Human Condition
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About this ebook
The poetry, imagery, speeches, and emotions readers encounter in texts like Job, Psalms, and Jeremiah are abundant resources for articulating the painful experiences of the human condition. These compositions are sacred scripts that normalize and articulate the anxiety, loneliness, and despair that mark life on earth. In Vast as the Sea, Samuel Hildebrandt presents an accessible, exegetical study of these scripts that demonstrates how the Bible's ancient poetry speaks today. In conversation with current psychological research, Hildebrandt's poetic analyses invite readers to discover the personal and expressive contours of the biblical text, as well as its liberating and healing potential.
Vast as the Sea models an approach to the Old Testament that navigates a critical and creative balance between ancient contexts and contemporary life. Hildebrandt joins these two worlds together by maintaining a conscious focus on poetic language. By reflecting on individual words, engaging selected metaphors, and unpacking expressions and their underlying worldviews, Vast as the Sea gifts to its readers a reservoir of language for putting the pain of being human into words. The world, woe, and wonder of Old Testament poetry is a vast yet overlooked resource for readers who are left speechless by the tumults of life and who struggle to reconcile such experiences with their faith. Promoting emotional literacy and wrestling with the tensions between confession and experience, Vast as the Sea will become a long-held, treasured resource for scholars and everyday readers of the Bible, as well as for practitioners in psychology and pastoral counseling.
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Vast as the Sea - Samuel Hildebrandt
Praise for Vast as the Sea
Beautifully written with a poetic feel, this study of the human condition as seen through selected poetic texts of the Hebrew Bible is a rich feast for any reader. Samuel Hildebrandt tackles difficult human issues such as loneliness, despair, trauma, imagined hope, the disintegration of known reality, and musings on time, death, and the good life. These are all viewed through the lenses of a rich appreciation of the power of Hebrew poetry and a deep engagement with the findings of modern psychological method—the findings of each individual chapter wrapped up in the metaphor of the sea of life with its characteristic tosses and turns.
—Katharine J. Dell, professor of Old Testament literature and theology, University of Cambridge
Vast as the Sea provides a navigational chart for the ocean of human emotional well-being, carefully mapped out with the aid of Hebrew poetry and taking frequent bearings from contemporary psychology. Samuel Hildebrandt does not shy away from the challenges that this task presents. He explores anxiety amidst chaos and combat, plotting a course to calmer waters; loneliness as a place that can lead to creativity; hope in the wake of trauma and despair; the plight of theology amidst shattered assumptions; the tyranny of time; and the quest for wisdom amidst seeming meaninglessness. This beautifully written book should be of interest to all who wish to explore what the Bible has to teach about mental health and well-being.
—Christopher C. H. Cook, emeritus professor, Institute for Medical Humanities, Durham University, United Kingdom
Samuel Hildebrandt begins Vast as the Sea with a mesmerizing word picture of the sea and its moods, painting a backdrop for his thoughts on what it means to be totally human, both in pleasant times and, most especially, in difficult times. He focuses on the connections between Hebrew poetry and human experience, and draws a clear path between aspects of poetry such as the shape of the text, the role of imagination, and the power of poetry for expressing emotions. This path leads through reflection on human psychology and the effects of trauma and then comes full circle as Hildebrandt demonstrates the power of words and of poetry to address the difficult things—the anxiety, loneliness, and despair that often come with the human experience. Hildebrandt chooses his words with artistic care, and his understanding that the biblical poetry offers a language for acknowledging and articulating the unspeakable
is invaluable, as finding words to express the vastness of trauma can be the primary step in recovery. This trip to the seaside is not to be missed. The combination of well-explained biblical text, big life questions, and beautiful words is both compelling and productive.
—Elizabeth Hayes, affiliate professor of Old Testament, Fuller Theological Seminary
Here is a book that sets forth the intimate, honest, agonizing, yet somehow life-giving relationship between the human condition and human words, even biblical poetic words. While avoiding mechanical analysis or finalized interpretations, and illustrating adept engagement with psychology and trauma, Samuel Hildebrandt turns Hebrew poetic texts such as Jeremiah, Job, and Ecclesiastes into soul friends in the struggle to face anxiety, instability, loneliness, despair, finitude, and other painful vicissitudes of our own humanity. In Hildebrandt’s able hands, the difficult poetry of these biblical texts is a gift to anyone seeking language to wrestle with the hard realities of human life—and so is this book.
—Brad E. Kelle, professor of Old Testament and Hebrew, Point Loma Nazarene University
This wonderful book examines the difficult question of the human condition (conditio humana) through texts like Psalms, Jeremiah, Job, Qohelet, and others. As Hildebrandt’s poetic analyses show, each of these voices has its own evaluation of what it means to be human. But all of them have a common ground: the belief in the God of life and his empathy for the human condition.
—Professor Bernd Janowski, Evangelisch-theologische Fakultät der Universität Tübingen
This beautifully written text offers an interpretation of Hebrew poetry that speaks to the experiences of many of us living during these stressful and anxiety-filled days. I would not hesitate to recommend this book for use in a parish or a classroom. It is accessible and clearly demonstrates how the imagery and language of Hebrew poetry connect with the psychological struggles of being human today. Hildebrandt is a skilled writer who has given to both the church and the academy a creative view of Hebrew poetic imagery that will help readers discover its value and relevance.
—The Rev. Dr. Maryann Amor, adjunct lecturer in Hebrew Bible, St. Stephen’s College, University of Alberta, and rector, Anglican Parish of Christ Church, Grande Prairie, Alberta, Canada
As a mental health therapist, I am all too familiar with the challenge of articulating the tensions and contradictions of human experience. Samuel Hildebrandt is not afraid to enter the deep end of the chaos, despair, and disappointment familiar to the ancient and modern person alike. Vast as the Sea gives us words—honest, compassionate, and hopeful words—that normalize and authenticate what it means to be human. It is a gift to me and to my clients.
—Karen Gibson, marriage and family therapist, Saskatoon, Canada
Plumbing the language of loneliness and alienation in the Old Testament’s major prophets and wisdom literature, Hildebrandt brings to voice its questions of meaning and human existence, looking also to various psychotherapeutic models for healing of mental affliction. The book offers a creative approach to biblical theology.
—Kathryn Greene-McCreight, PhD, Episcopal priest and author of Darkness Is My Only Companion: A Christian Response to Mental Illness and Galatians: A Commentary
Hildebrandt’s gentle, poetic book is a beautiful and scholarly contribution to an increasingly prominent area of biblical studies. He unpacks and explores the Psalms’ language and what lies beyond language to speak of mental health, well-being, and the journey that all human beings are on in an uncertain world.
—Rev. Prebendary Dr. Isabelle Hamley, secretary for theology and theological adviser to the House of Bishops, Church of England
In Vast as the Sea, Samuel Hildebrandt takes his readers on an insightful and accessible journey through biblical poetry to unveil the texts’ expressions of often negatively associated aspects of the human condition. In carefully formulated prose, he shows how biblical texts such as Psalms, Job, Jeremiah, and Ecclesiastes provide a language for loneliness, worry, despair, and hope to their ancient readers as well as their contemporary counterparts. A timely book on a timeless topic.
—Dr. Karolien Vermeulen, affiliate postdoctoral research fellow,Institute of Jewish Studies, University of Antwerp
Hebrew poetry as a lifeguard in the turbulent, roaring waters of human existence—this is what Hildebrandt makes us see. He shows us a delicacy for those appreciating the Bible, consolation and help for all seeking orientation, and new strength in their various struggles on earth with anxieties, loneliness, and despair but also hope, imagination, and creative language.
—Georg Fischer, SJ, professor emeritus, University of Innsbruck,
and author of commentaries on Genesis 1–11, Exodus, and Jeremiah
Samuel Hildebrandt’s Vast as the Sea is a remarkable union of expert biblical scholarship and careful pastoral insights conveyed in striking and beautiful composition. It takes the rich expressions of emotion in Scripture and makes them intelligible to the wide array of human experiences. The academic will find much to appreciate. The pastor will find, at many points, observations to assist in caring for the church.
—Andrew Kelley, teaching pastor, Hope Chapel, Hermosa Beach, California,
and author of Thaumaturgic Prowess: Autonomous and Dependent Miracle-Working in Mark’s Gospel and the Second Temple Period
In this stunning short book, Samuel Hildebrandt dives into the oceanic depths of Hebrew poetry. He plumbs the biblical poets’ depiction of the human condition—from the raw realities of anxiety, loneliness, and despair to the perennial possibilities of hope and comfort. Elegant, lyrical, and engaging, the book draws out ancient poetic wisdom for the complexities of human life, which confront us afresh each day.
—Suzanna Millar, chancellor’s fellow in Hebrew Bible/Old Testament,New College, University of Edinburgh
Vast as the Sea
Vast as the Sea
Hebrew Poetry and the Human Condition
Samuel Hildebrandt
Fortress Press
Minneapolis
VAST AS THE SEA
Hebrew Poetry and the Human Condition
Copyright © 2023 by Fortress Press, an imprint of 1517 Media. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical articles or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Email [email protected] or write to Permissions, Fortress Press, PO Box 1209, Minneapolis, MN 55440-1209.
Scripture translations are the author’s except where indicated.
Scripture quotations marked NRSV are from the Common Bible: New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
Scripture quotations marked NIV are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version®, NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com. The NIV
and New International Version
are trademarks registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office by Biblica, Inc.™
Scripture quotations marked ESV are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), copyright © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved."
Scripture quotations marked NLT are taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation, copyright ©1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations marked NKJV are taken from the New King James Version®. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations marked RSV are from the Revised Standard Version of the Bible, Apocrypha, copyright © 1957; The Third and Fourth Books of the Maccabees and Psalm 151, copyright © 1977 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Hildebrandt, Samuel, author.
Title: Vast as the sea : Hebrew poetry and the human condition / Samuel Hildebrandt.
Description: Minneapolis : Fortress Press, [2023] | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2023021504 (print) | LCCN 2023021505 (ebook) | ISBN 9781506485492 (print) | ISBN 9781506485508 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Bible. Old Testament--Criticism, interpretation, etc. | Hebrew poetry, Biblical. | Human ecology--Religious aspects--Christianity.
Classification: LCC BS1430.52 .H55 2023 (print) | LCC BS1430.52 (ebook) | DDC 220.4/4--dc23/eng/20230808
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2023021504
LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2023021505
Cover design: John Lucas
Cover image: Bird flying over the sea during daytime, photo by Sasha Matic on Unsplash
Print ISBN: 978-1-5064-8549-2
eBook ISBN: 978-1-5064-8550-8
Für meine Eltern
Contents
Preface
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
1. Living in a Restless World: The Chaos and Calm of Psalm 46
2. The Lonely Bird on the Roof: Psalm 102 and the Reality of Life Alone
3. Words of Woe: Jeremiah’s Articulation of Despair
4. A World Undone: Job 3 and the Language of Shattered Assumptions
5. Caught in the Flow of Time: Qohelet’s Poetry for Human Existence
6. Wise Words for the Weary: Speaking with Agur about the Good Life
Epilogue
Bibliography
Author Index
Scripture Index
Preface
Of making many books there is no end.
Having reached the point in history when we publish more than we can read, it is easy enough to agree with these words from Ecclesiastes’s epilogue. But neither this concession nor our libraries and hard drives need to be read as a plea to make fewer books or stop writing altogether. The Hebrew poet who penned this line bemoans in the next that much study is a weariness of the flesh,
not that humans write too much. Thinking and writing are exhausting, they truly are. But as with anything worthwhile, this is to be expected and no reason to run from the desk. So instead of surrender or sneer, we might stop and ask why there is no end. We might ask why Ecclesiastes was written, why the library of humanity keeps on growing, why the weariness of time and effort has not long turned the final page of the bookish business.
This question opens a personal and yet pragmatic reflection on the human condition—on the nature, notion, and needs of being human. Such reflection can be made from several angles, and rightly so. Times change, people as well, and the complexities of life leave any monologue about the human condition fragile at best. Ecclesiastes’s poet and the rest of the Hebrew writers provide an early snapshot of the long and layered conversation that needs to be had on this topic. Each voice has its own evaluation of what it means to be human yet there is some common ground. With the imago dei as its starting point, Gordon McConville’s Being Human in God’s World (2016) follows the Bible’s articulation of the creator–creature relationship. Bernd Janowski’s masterful Anthropologie des Alten Testaments (2019) highlights other constants, such as the phases of life and the experience of space and time. My reflection on the Hebrew poetic books finds some harmonies as well, yet Vast as the Sea is not a biblical theology or an encyclopedia. Instead, I hope to show that the Hebrew poets would answer the question about the endless making of books and the question of what makes a human being with one and the same sentiment: there is no end to the writing of books because there are people who cannot help but write them, people who think and talk and converse because that is what people do, have always done, and will always do.
The existence of the Bible as much as all the other books that Ecclesiastes has in view witnesses to a relentless need for expression and speech. Our daily output of words and pages, the inescapable pull of each comment and conversation, the inner voice and the racket of public discourse all assign language a central part in the exercise of being human. The plan to read the Hebrew poetic books, which themselves participate in this exercise, through this lens is pragmatic and perhaps a bit obvious. Yet, as I said above, it is also very personal. Vast as the Sea marks a milestone on a weary but worthwhile journey of listening to these ancient voices, yet it also bubbles with the weight and wonder of my own adventures with words. The frustrating search for the right English word in a translation. The surprising moments when a conversation suddenly becomes a real encounter. The speechless marvel when my colleagues or my children put something into words that I had never even thought before. The painful silences. Those conversations you never forget. The things we cannot say. Language has its limits, which often show their stern face when being human reaches its limits. But language also makes life possible. On rare occasions, it creates worlds we thought humans could not inhabit or articulate. This book is about speech as much as it is about being speechless. For better and for worse, the human condition knows both all too well.
For all their creativity and literary legacy, the Hebrew poets who penned the Psalms, Job, and Proverbs are shrouded in anonymity. As much as their words mean to me, I am thankful for all the wonderful human beings whose names I do know, who have listened, laughed, and learned with me while I was searching for the words for this book. I am grateful, first of all, for Darcy, with whom I enjoy the longest conversation of my life and without whom I had so little to say about so many things. Sophie, keep writing and I will read every word of yours. Ezekiel, there is no end to your golden ideas and golden words. I am so thankful for working at Nazarene Theological College, a place packed with thoughtful humans who know how to speak and who granted me a sabbatical without which this vast project would have never reached the shore. The team at Fortress Press shares in this compliment: thanks to Emily R. King (now at Notre Dame Press) and Yvonne D. Hawkins for their enthusiasm and for giving this book a horizon I could not see myself. A special note of thanks goes to Dustin for giving me new words when I needed them the most; to Rob Wilms and Robert Parkinson, both so remarkably careful and caring in what they say; to Gwen and Randy for taking me on as a resident author; to Steve for driving us to Cardiff and all the other conversations; to Justs and Ben for all the best words; to Sam for every play on words. Thank you, Mom, for every coffee break on this long road. Micha, Daniel, Sonja und meine lieben Eltern, wo findet man die Worte, euch für jeden Anruf und Austausch zu danken? There are many, many other people who need to be mentioned here. You know who you are, I hope! Your words and your open ears have often made my days brighter and in many unspeakable ways, they have made me who I am. If the words that I have put down can be a friend to you, all the weary hours of writing will mean something and we will know, once again, why we should never stop making books.
Samuel Hildebrandt
Manchester, March 2023
List of Abbreviations
AB Anchor Bible
AIL Ancient Israel and Its Literature
AJPH American Journal of Public Health
AnBib Analecta Biblica
ANES Ancient Near Eastern Studies
Ann Beh Annals of Behavioral Medicine
ATR Anglican Theological Review
BBR Bulletin for Biblical Research
BCOT Baker Commentary on the Old Testament
BETL Bibliotheca Ephemeridum Theologicarum Lovaniensium
BibInt Biblical Interpretation: A Journal of Contemporary Approaches
BibSem The Biblical Seminar
BTB Biblical Theology Bulletin
BTCB Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible
BThAT Beiträge zur Theologie und Anthropologie des Alten Testaments
CC Continental Commentaries
CBQ Catholic Biblical Quarterly
CBW Conversations with the Biblical World
Colloq Colloquium
CovQ Covenant Quarterly
CHANE Culture and History of the Ancient Near East
CrStHB Critical Studies in the Hebrew Bible
CT Christianity Today
D Clin Neurosc Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience
DSD Dead Sea Discoveries
DSM-V Association, American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. 5th ed. Arlington, VA: American Psychiatric Association, 2013.
ESV English Standard Version
FRLANT Forschungen zur Religion und Literatur des Alten und Neuen Testaments
HBM Hebrew Bible Monographs
HBR Handbooks on the Bible and its Reception
HS Hebrew Studies
HTR Harvard Theological Review
HTS Teologiese Studies
HUCA Hebrew Union College Annual
IBC Interpretation: A Bible Commentary for Teaching and Preaching
ICC International Critical Commentary
IJPS International Journal of Philosophical Studies
Int Interpretation
Int J Geriatr Psy International Journal for Geriatric Psychology
Int J Philos Stud International Journal of Philosophical Studies
JAET Journal of Asian Evangelical Theology
J Affect Disord Journal of Affective Disorders
JAMA Netw Open Journal of the American Medical Association Network Open
JBC Journal of Biblical Counseling
JBL Journal of Biblical Literature
JBQ Jewish Biblical Quarterly
JESOT Journal for the Evangelical Study of the Old Testament
JFSR Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion
J Loss Trauma Journal of Loss and Trauma
JNES Journal for Near Eastern Studies
J Pastor Theol Journal of Pastoral Theology
JPCC Journal of Pastoral Care & Counseling
J Pers Soc Psychol Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
JPS Jewish Publication Society Translation
JPT Journal of Psychology & Theology
JSMH Journal of Spirituality in Mental Health
JSNTSup Journal for the Study of the New Testament Supplement Series
JSOT Journal for the Study of the Old Testament
JSOTSup Journal for the Study of the Old Testament Supplement Series
JSSM Journal of Semitic Studies Monograph
J Trauma Stress Journal of Traumatic Stress
JTS Journal of Theological Studies
JYM Journal of Youth Ministry
KJV King James Version
LHBOTS Library of Hebrew Bible/Old Testament Studies
LSTS Library of Second Temple Studies
MHRC Mental Health, Religion & Culture
NICOT New International Commentary on the Old Testament
NIV New International Version
NKJV New King James Version
NJPS New Jewish Publication Society Translation
NLT New Living Translation
NRSV New Revised Standard Version
NSBT New Studies in Biblical Theology
ORA Orientalische Religionen in der Antike
OTE Old Testament Essays
OTL Old Testament Library
OTM Oxford Theological Monographs
Pastoral Psychol Pastoral Psychology
PT Psychology Today
RBS Resources for Biblical Studies
RelStud Religious Studies
RIMA Royal Inscriptions of Mesopotamia, Assyrian Period
RRJ Review of Rabbinic Judaism
SANT Studia Aarhusiana Neotestamentica
SBT Studies in Biblical Theology
SciRep Scientific Reports
SHBC Smyth & Helwys Bible Commentary
SJOT Scandinavian Journal of the Old Testament
SJT Scottish Journal of Theology
SKI.NF Studien zu Kirche und Israel. Neue Folge.
SOTSMS Society of Old Testament Study Monograph Series
SymS Symposium Series
SysRev Systematic Reviews
TS Theological Studies
TZ Theologische Zeitschrift
UBL Ugaritisch-Biblische Literatur
VT Vetus Testamentum
VTSup Vetus Testamentum Supplements
WBC Word Biblical Commentary
ZAW Zeitschrift für die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft
ZMR Zeitschrift für Missionswissenschaft und Religionswissenschaft
Introduction
There is no Frigate like a Book
To take us Lands away
Nor any Coursers like a Page
Of prancing Poetry —
This Traverse may the poorest take
Without oppress of Toll —
How frugal is the Chariot
That bears the Human soul.¹
Emily Dickinson
There lies the sea, wide and calm, gentle and vast. A blanket of blue that stretches to a simple line where heaven and earth touch. Here, all strands run together and all life takes a breath, here in the cradle of the world. The sea has been telling its story for longer than time can tell and it is a story of unspeakable momentum, strength, and grace. Every tide a chapter, every wave a paragraph, every shoreline a sentence. But the script of swell and surge cannot be sight-read, nor can its meaning be distilled from this surface of signs and wonders. The eye may capture the endless horizon all at once, the ear take hold of surf and gulls, the chest imprison the piercing cold, yet never will the sea be held in the palm of one’s hand. Its current runs too deep, its reach stretches too far. A veil of silence lies across the sparkling expanse and there are no words for plumbing the bottomless beauty of the ocean, no speech adequate for the terrifying darkness, the brooding storm. There it lies, with majesty beyond words, with clamor unspeakable.
The sea has been many things to humanity and, for better or for worse, human life has not been able to stop heeding the siren sound of its waves. The relationship between people and ocean has many faces yet never will the two meet at the beach as equals. The sea does not flow at the same pace as human life, does not know the limits of sleep, sickness, and death. Perhaps it is precisely this difference that brings the human heart so close to the shore. There is no competition and no comparison, just the common ground of depth and surface, ebb and flow, perspective and boundary. The open sea is a mirror for all who have carried their own tides and torrents to its shoreline in search of an open ear. This turn to the surf speaks of a profound solidarity between humanity and the world at large, but it also washes ashore the human search for words that can express the experience of living. To gaze at the horizon on a sunny day is easy enough. But whenever the waves rise too high, there are few places on earth that grant a more accurate language for the human condition than the unspeakable depth of the sea with its sharp winds, broken shells, and foaming swell.
What can I say about you, with what can I compare you,
O Daughter Jerusalem?
To whom can I liken you that I may comfort you,
O Maiden Zion?
For vast as the sea is your collapse.
Who can heal you?
These ancient lines from Lamentations 2:13 were crafted by an anonymous Hebrew poet who looked for words in the aftermath of Jerusalem’s destruction in 587 BCE—and who fell short of finding them. The trauma of defeat and violence, the confusion about one’s place in the world, and the uncertainty about God and the future, such turmoil, such a complex catastrophe will evade all comparison and embarrass all analysis and description. And yet something needs to be said. Confronted with too many questions that cannot be answered, the poet turns to the sea and learns from it a language for the shattered city. Parsing Jerusalem’s collapse with the phrase vast as the sea
neither downplays the disaster nor attempts to cure it. In the place of assurances, promises, explanations, and encouragements stands a personal poem that extends an honest hand to the helpless, that finds a language for acknowledging and, somehow, articulating the unspeakable. Because even if there are no words, something needs to be said.
Human Condition, Human Communication
Witnessing beautiful sunsets and horrendous wars alike, the experience of being human is a search for words. The first chapters of the human story and the first years of every new living being manifest the unprompted urge to assign words to objects, to articulate to others what can be seen, touched, heard, and felt. Human beings are bent on communication unlike any other occupant of this planet. Deciphering, translating, and recording, the homo communicatio busily casts net after net into the world to capture every facet of reality in a system of sounds, signs, and syllables. Non-human animals trump this effort in some areas, such as distance, frequency, and speaking under water. But no songbird builds a library and no cat learns zebra.
Whereas the scientific interest in this human trait often revolves around genetics, religious traditions around the globe have venerated language as a creative power, as a sign of human unity, and as a divine gift. Gods who speak the world into existence appear in the Babylonian Enuma Elish, in Hindu scriptures, and in the Bible’s first chapter. Likewise, the Tower of Babel stands alongside other accounts of humanity’s early years when people spoke in one tongue. Speech is at the heart of the Bible’s anthropology. There are more words, more divine speech on the sixth day in Genesis 1 than in the previous five days. Birds and beasts are blessed like humanity, but only those who are made in the image of God
are addressed directly (and God said to them,
v. 28). But unlike Norse, Greek, or Navajo literature, the biblical creation account does not depict language as a gift that is bestowed upon the earthlings from on high. From Adam’s love poem to the destructive dialogues in Genesis 3, from Lamech’s violent words to Noah’s curse of his son, humans are masters of their own words, and with that agency, they are makers of their worlds. Every ancient text and modern theory has to be heard on its own, but as a whole they speak with one voice about the foundational place of language in the story of humanity.
From the first clay tablets and parchments to the torrents of books and blogposts, the past millennia have written this story with an impressive prowess of communicative and technological progress. But while the river of time flows onward and new words give voice to the bends in its course, there remains much hidden ground and many lonely islands that these waters cannot touch. Many of the essential aspects of the human condition will trouble recourse to the dictionary; many events in life will be too turbulent and diffuse to express with the language that one has learned. Here lies the problem: to be human is to speak but many human experiences cannot be put