Eslinger Into The Hands of The Living God 1990 PDF
Eslinger Into The Hands of The Living God 1990 PDF
Eslinger Into The Hands of The Living God 1990 PDF
SUPPLEMENT SERIES
84
Editors
David J.A. Clines
Philip R. Davics
24
General Editor
David M Gunn
Assistant General Editor
Danna Nolan Fewcll
Consultant Editors
Elizabeth Struthcrs Malbon
James G. Williams
Almond Press
Sheffiead
Hebrews 10:31
Dedication:
To Gloria, Cole, & Amanda
of the Living
God
Lyle Eslinger
The Almond
Press
1989
CONTENTS
Preface
Abbreviations
ix
x-xii
Verse
Verse
Verse
Verse
Verse
Verse
Verse
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
1
1
4
10
15
16
18
21
23
25
29
30
31
33
44
55
55
56
62
62
64
66
71
73
74
75
78
81
85
86
88
90
90
91
94
Verse
Verse
Verse
Verse
Verse
Verse
Verse
Verse
8
9
10
11
12
14
15
16
Structural Excursus
Verse 17
Verse 18
Verse 19
Verse 20
Verse 21
Verse 22
Verse 23
Verses 24-25
Chapters KING SOLOMON'S PRAYERS
1 Kings 1-11
Light from the Preceding Context
1 Kings 2
1 Kings 2:15
1 Kings 2:24
1 Kings 2:26-46
1 Kgs 3
1 Kings 4
1 Kings 5-7
The Subsequent Context of the Prayers
1 Kings 9:24-28
1 Kings 11
1 Kings 8
The Role of the Prayer in the Dtr Narrative
Chapter 6 THROUGH THE FIRE
Introduction
Irony
Reading 2 Kings 17
Comparing Evaluation to Story World Reality
The Evaluative Pre-Context to 2 Kings 17
Judges
1 Samuel
2 Samuel
1 Kings
2 Kings
The View of the People from the Database
The Judges 2 Connection
96
98
99
100
103
106
107
108
109
112
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
123
123
125
125
128
128
128
129
140
141
144
149
153
155
176
183
183
185
188
192
192
193
193
194
196
199
200
202
Notes On 2 Kings 17
2 Kings 17:7
2 Kings 17:8
2 Kings 17:9-12
2 Kings 17:13
Structure in 2 Kings 17:7-20
2 Kings 17:15
2 Kings 17:16-17
2 Kings 17:18
2 Kings 17:19-20
2 Kings 17:22
2 Kings 17:23
Conclusion
Chapter 7 EXPLICIT EVALUATION IN THE
THE DEUTERONOMISTIC NARRATIVE
Computer-Assisted Biblical Studies
Hypotheses and Database Record Structures
Software: Reflex
"For Each" & "Intra-Field"
Graphic Analysis
The Problem & History of Scholarship:
The "Deuteronomist"
Hypothesis & Record Structure
The "Spikes" and the Narrator's Point of View
Character Spikes
The Larger Overview
The "Normal Quantity" of Explicit Evaluation
Evaluative "Spikes"
Graphs by Book
1. Deuteronomy
2. Joshua
3. Judges
4. 1 Samuel
5. 2 Samuel
6. 1 Kings
7. 2 Kings
The Overall Picture
Bibliography
Index of Authors
Index of Subjects
Index of Textual References
Index of Hebrew Terms
205
205
207
208
210
211
213
214
215
215
217
218
218
221
221
223
224
224
225
230
233
233
234
234
236
236
236
237
239
240
241
242
243
244
245-259
261-263
265-267
269-271
272
PREFACE
This book, written over several summers and during a one year
fellowship at The Calgary Institute for the Humanities, offers a new
perspective on the "Deuteronomistic History." Drawing on key
concepts from modern literary theory and a sub-discipline, narratology, my studies of these books have led me to an unorthodox (some
might say eccentric) reading of these narratives. Studies of selected
passages in this part of the Biblethe "great orations" identified by
Martin Nothlead me to reject historical-critical hypotheses about
the literary history of these books. A consequent agnosticism about
the literary history of the booksat least about the supposed history
sketched in existing suggestionsleads me back to a traditionallooking assumption of unitary authorship, a single Deuteronomist if
you will. The same view is fostered by purely technical study of the
formal voice structures in these narratives: there is nothing in the
conventional literary ontology of these stories that could lead any
reader to assume that more than one author, one voice, is expressing
itself. But even the appearance of having settled for one rather than
several "Deuteronomists" is misleading. As my reading of the story of
Solomon will show (chapter five), I have not so much settled for the
school of Noth as for the school of nought since I do not find much
in these stories that convinces me of Deuteronomic fideism on the
part of the unknown author(s) of this, the Bible's most extended narrative piece. The book of Deuteronomy remains a key to unlocking
the story's meaning, but seems not the key to the author's own ideology.
Thanks for research support from the following agencies: The
Calgary Institute for the Humanities (1986-87); The University of
Calgary, Research Grants Committee (1985-88); The Social Sciences &
Humanities Research Council of Canada (1986-87). Last, but not least,
thanks to David Gunn for accepting the book for the Bible &
Literature Series and to David Orton, editor at Sheffield Academic
Press, for suggested improvements.
ABBREVIATIONS
AB
AnOr
AOAT
ARW
ATD
BAR
BASOR
BDB
BHK
BHS
Bib
BKAT
BLS
BO
BZAW
CBQ
CBQMS
BSOAS
FRLANT
GKC
HALAT
HAT
HKAT
HSM
HTR
Anchor Bible
Analecta orientalia
Alter Orient und Altes Testament
Arcbiv fur Religionswissenschaft
Das Alte Testament Deutsch
Biblical Archaeology Review
Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental
Research
F. Brown, S. R. Driver, C. A. Briggs, Hebrew and
English Lexicon of the Old Testament
R. Kittel, Biblia Hebraica
Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia
Biblica
Biblischer Kommentar: Altes Testament
Bible & Literature Series
Bibliotheca orientalis
Beihefte zur Zeitschrift fur die alttestamentliche
Wissenschaft (Giessen), Berlin.
Catholic Biblical Quarterly
Catholic Biblical Quarterly Monograph Series
Bulletin of the School of Oriental (and African)
Studies
Forschungen zur Religion und Literatur des Alten
und Neuen Testaments
Gesenius, Kautsch, Cowley, Gesenius' Hebrew
Grammar
W. Baumgartner et al., Hebrdisches und
aramdisches Lexikon zum Alten Testament
Handbuch zum Alten Testament
Handkommentar zum Alten Testament
Harvard Semitic Monographs
Harvard Theological Review
Abbreviations
HUCA
JAAR
JSS
ICC
IDBSup
IEJ
Int
JANESCU
JETS
JNSL
JSOT
JSOTSS
JSS
JTS
KAT
KHAT
KAT
KJV
NAB
NASV
NCB
NEB
NIV
OTL
OTS
RB
RHR
RSV
RV
SAT
SBLDS
SET
SH
TDOT
XI
Xll
TWAT
VT
VTSup
WBC
WMANT
ZAW
ZTK
Abbreviations
G. J. Botterweck and H. Ringgren (eds.),
Theologisches Worterbuch zum Alien Testament
Vetus Testamentum
Vetus Testamentum, Supplements
Word Bible Commentary
Wissenschaftliche Monographien zum Alten und
Neuen Testament
Zeitschrift fur die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft
Zeitschrift fur Theologie und Kirche
CHAPTER 1
N A R R A T O R I A LSITUATION S
IN THE B I B L E
Historical Criticism and Literary Criticism
etween modern and traditional biblical interpretation there
B
is one primary difference: the critical stance of the former.
The critical method was developed to organize knowledge
about the Bible, unhindered by the trammels of faith. As we all
know, the movement that resulted was historical criticism. It
has taken hold of academic biblical study and established a
monopoly that has, for a time, successfully rebuffed all
competition.
As its name suggests, the organizing principle of historical
criticisma name that has become synonymous with biblical
criticismis history. By reorganizing the data of biblical literature within a historical framework, the historical critic creates a
logical, non-contradictory representation of the events described in biblical narrative. Through this process the critic
also generates another narrative about the literary history of the
biblical narratives. That is, the historical critic creates two historical frameworks to explain biblical narrative because the
critic perceives two different kinds of data requiring organization. The primary concern, at least in the beginning, is with the
participants, actions, and events described in the narrative; historical organization of this plane of the Bible's narrative literature culminates in a history of Israel. But to write accurate histories of Israel, the historical critic must also take into account
another level in biblical narrative: the compositional plane of the
author. This plane intervenes between the critic and the events
* "Historic and literary study are equal in importance: but for priority in order of
time the literary treatment has the first claim. The reason of this is that the starting
point of historic analysis must be that very existing text, which is the sole concern of the
morphological study. The historic inquirer will no doubt add to his examination of the
text light drawn from other sources; he may be led in his investigation to alter or rearrange the text; but he will admit that the most important single element on which he has
to work is the text as it has come down to us. But, if the foundation principle of literary
study be true, this existing text cannot be truly interpreted until it has been read in the
light of its exact literary structure. In actual fact, it appears to me, Biblical criticism at
the present time is, not infrequently, vitiated in its historical contentions by tacit assumptions as to the form of the text such as literary examination might have corrected"
(R.G. Moulton 1908:ix). Moulton and others who voiced similar warnings went unheeded
in the early part of this century. Historical criticism's triumphs over traditional literalist
readings of the Bible allowed it the unfortunate liberty of ignoring all opposing claims,
regardless of their validity. Only more recently has the sentiment expressed by Moulton been able to gain an audience, mainly because the passage of time has allowed the
deficiencies in the historical-critical method to come to light and so to criticism more
willingly heard (e.g. Polzin (1980:6), who voices a similar caution to Moulton's).
a narrative are to be attributed to the author, the critic must engage in literary analysis and more particularly in analysis of the
question of point of view. Therein lies the problem that plagues
all historical criticism and, from the perspective of the new biblical narratology, vitiates most existing historical-critical readings of biblical narrative.
In its hasty, but enlightened pursuit of the historical truth
about the events described in Bible stories, historical criticism
paused only brieflydid it pause at all?to develop crude,
makeshift tools for literary analysis of the variety of phenonema
bearing on the complex of narrative phenomena collectively
known as "point of view." Unfortunately, the literary theory
that supported these rudimentary tools was frequently a product of critics' casual acquaintance with the literary works of
their contemporaries or with literary theories developed to explain modern European literature. Certainly there are many
parallels between ancient and modern literaturewe "moderns"
are not that distant from the literate cultures that have preceded
us in human historybut the theories derived from the study
of contemporary European literature require, as we know now,
adaptation to the peculiarities of ancient Hebrew narrative style.
Some features of narrative literature such as manipulation of
narrative ontology and "point of view" are common; others,
such as Hebrew narrative's manipulation of redundancy and
repetition are less so.4 Without a constant view to adaptation
and an inductive approach to the study of biblical literary technique, anachronistic analysis was inevitable and many of the
conclusions drawn were hampered by it.
Narrative Ontology
The attempt to relativize authorial distortion in description of
events is a good example of what I am talking about. Every
4
Even with many good literary studies of repetition in Hebrew literature in existence,
some historical critics seem unable to turn more than a blind eye to an inductive
appreciation of the Bible's foreign literary conventions. B. Halpern, for example, can
only caricature modern studies of biblical repetition: "... these [literary studies] assume
that the author was free to say what he wanted in any way he wanted to say it: he wrote
doublets and created contradictionshe stuttered and stammeredby choice"
(1988:199). Halpern begs exactly the point: that repetition can be intentional and
significant. And historical-critical perceptions of contradiction frequently depend on
inattention to subtle differences in supposed reiterations of "the same thing." The
biblical authors did not stutter and stammer; they repeated themselves on purpose,
sometimes because it takes people more than once to catch on to what is being said.
Concerned to know the historical truth about the events described in the story, historical critics must relativize at least
three levels of literarily (characters, narrator) or historically
(actual author) conditioned perception before they can even
begin to evaluate the historical value of the story.6 If they do
not relativize either the literary or historical tiers that bar them
from the history for which they search, their reconstructions
are predestined to certain delusion.
" The actual events that the story is based on are not represented in the diagram.
Imagine them as lying in the paper of the page upon which the diagram is printed. You
may catch a direct glimpse of them if you look at the page edgewise. The edgewise view
though slim, is about as dose as we can come to a view not conditioned by the multiple
levels of relativized perception in biblical narrative.
In fact, however, historical-critical analyses have run roughshod over the hierarchical narrative ontology. The complex
narrative layering of varying views of characters, the comments
of narrators, and the overarching structural and thematic implications of the implied author have all been lumped together in a
literary-historical hypothesis that sees the narrative literature as
a flat, two dimensional mass of opinions from the long line of
actual authors who have contributed to these stories. The third
dimension, that of the hierarchical narrative ontology, is entirely
overlooked in conventional historical-critical treatments. And
aspects of the narrative that are, without presupposing anything
beyond the generic conventions of narrative literature, part of
the third dimensionthe narrative's vertical ontologyhave
been mistaken for the products of compositional production
through time.
A prime example of the danger of the two dimensional historical interpretation of biblical narrative is the treatment of 1
Samuel 8-12, in which historical critics have seen the hands of
numerous authors and redactors of varying opinions about the
value of a monarchy. No matter whether it is Samuel, God, or
the people speaking in the narrative, all statements are directly
ascribed to a real author7 who stands immediately behind the
voice in the narrative and voices his own dissenting views over
against the other authors of this text, whose contrary voices are
heard directly through the other characters or the narrator's
own voice. But when one pays some attention to the hierarchy
of perspectival levels within the narrative, it is not difficult to
see correlations between particular views expressed in the narrative and particular characters or perspectival levels (Eslinger
1983; 1985). The dissonant voices can be heard and understood
within the framework of the story world and the ontology of
that particular narrative. Samuel, for example, criticizes the proposed monarchy because he stands to lose his pre-eminent
position of authority (Eslinger 1985:260-2).
If historical critics had seen the existential matrix that conditioned Samuel's view, which is relative to his personal situation
in the story world, I doubt that they would have posited the
existence of a dissenting author behind this character. That hypothesis was, after all, supposed to resolve a literary conflict in
7 I use the noun "author" to describe all authorial roles, variously described by biblical scholars as "redactors" (editors), compilators, glossators, and sources.
the narrative that could not be resolved except by resort to literary history. The hypothetical explanation of historical-criticism, in which contrary perspectives are explained by recourse
to the inference of varying authorial opinions that now find expression in one conglomerate narrative, is a second-order interpretation whose complexity and conjectural foundation
makes it easy prey for a literary explanation in terms of narrative ontology.8 The elegance of the narratological explanation is
best appreciated after hearing the multitude of hypothetical literary histories promoted as explanations of the perspectival
layers in 1 Sam 8-12. Like phlogiston, the pro- and anti-monarchic sources (or traditions, or redactions) are a plausible, if unverifiable explanation of a literary phenomenon. Now that a
first-order alternative presents itself such conjectures should, if
one subscribes to Occam's dictates, be put aside. There can be
no easy peace between the two reading strategies.
Excursus: Historical & Literary Criticisms
Despite calls for a rapprochement between the new literary
studies and historical criticism the contest has hardly begun.
Critical interaction between the two perspectives so far has
been extremely limitedengagements from the historical-critical side, such as John Emerton's recent articles in Vetus Testamentum, are the exception not the rulewith most historically
oriented work simply ignoring the criticisms of the literary
critics or passing off their theory, methods, and work as inappropriate to biblical literature.
Baruch Halpern's new book (1988) on the deuteronomistic
narratives is a case in point. Halpern begins from the
assumptionhe calls it an intuition (p. xvii)that biblical
narratives are historical, are intended to be taken as histo8 Moulton (1908:ix) provides the following early example of an elegant obviation of a
second order explanation:
"In the latter part of our Book of Micah a group of verses (vii. 7-10) must strike even a
casual reader by their buoyancy of tone, so sharply contrasting with what has gone before. Accordingly Wellhausen sees in this changed tone evidence of a new composition,
product of an age different in spirit from the age of the prophet: "between v. 6 and v. 7
there yawns a century." What really yawns between the verses is simply a change of
speakers .... At this point the Man of Wisdom speaks, and the disputed verses change
the tone to convey the happy confidence of one on whose side the divine intervention
is to take place .... I submit that in this case a mistaken historical judgment has been
formed by a distinguished historian for want of that preliminary literary analysis of the
text for which I am contending."
riography. He spends a lot of time (pp. 3-15) trying to legitimate his effort to get at authorial intention, surely a wasted effort as methodological history repeats itself on the question of
"the intentional fallacy." (Halpern suggests that some [all?] literary critics "transmogrify the Intentional Fallacy ... from an esthetic into a historical principle. They deny that readers can
construe what the Israelite historian meant ..." (p. 5). Anyone
who has read the New Critical debate over authorial intention
knows that this is a bad case of straw-manning. The point was
and is that we simply have no better access to the author's intention than the text that conveys his thoughts. And biblical literary critics are more justified than their New Critical ancestors
in applying this view to the Bible, for which so little external
data is available to temper our perceptions of authorial intent.)
Authorial intention aside, however, Halpern wants his
readers to believe that the central dispute is the question of
whether or not it is legitimate to treat biblical narrative as historiography. Attacking literary criticsHalpern calls them
"Pyrrhonists"for rejecting this possibility, he distracts attention onto this subordinate question, away from the real issue.
The real dispute is with the faultiness of historical-critical literary theory and the consequent reading on which all of its historical considerations rest. Whether or not any given text or
passage ought to be regarded as historiography is a second order generic question rarely addressed by literary critical analyses of biblical narrative. It is a neglected question precisely because it is, for most such analyses, a matter of indifference to
the primary task: the careful reading of biblical literature in
sympathy with its own conventions. Most literary critics would
agree, I think, that after a careful reading of the text the question of its generic status, historiographic or otherwise, is fair
and legitimate game. Genre, after all, is not a tag pre-defined
and readily accessibleit is a product of our reading apprehensions of a text. The literary strategies that a good close reading
uncovers may lead one to suppose that, yes, it looks like good
history writing should. My reading of narratorial objectivity in
the deuteronomistic narratives, though I am inclined to see it as
a rhetorical strategy and hence to regard it with some suspicion,
might be quite amenable to a reading as a historian's controlled
objectivity. Halpern could, I think, use it to buttress his plea for
a reconsideration of the author's status as historian (e.g. pp.
275-78). On the other hand, a contrived plot such as is found in
10
9 Having made this plea I find myself in the unfortunate position of being guilty of insufficient engagement with historical-critical readings in this set of essays. In defence, I
have done a fair job of debating the issues, which are the same, in my first book on
these narratives (1985). If I had had the time, I would have extended each of these
essays in the same measure and written a series rather than a monograph. But the book
is already much delayed and the reader will have to look to the detailed study of 1
Samuel 1-12 for the bulk of the methodological debate.
11
12
*2 David Damrosch (1987:66-77) has offered one such reading of the book of Leviticus.
According to Damrosch, "Rather than a sterile opposition between law and narrative,
the text shows a complex but harmonious interplay between two forms of narrative. Law
and history meet on a common ground composed of ritual, symbolic, and prophetic
elements."
13
14
15
Cf. Dorrit Cohn, "The Encirclement of Narrative," Poetics Today 2:2 (1981) 164,
"first person narration posits a relationship of existential contiguity between discourse
and story, authorial [third person] narration posits a merely mental, cognitive relationship between these two functional spheres."
15
16
the narrative brackets in the book of Job. Remaining is approximately 11% of biblical narrative, all mediated by a "first
person" internal narrator (Nehemiah, retrospective; Ezekiel,
prophetic). The Bible does not contain any lengthy continuous
narrative representation of events seen solely through the eyes
of a character in the story (a so-called "reflector" character, cf.
Stanzel 1984:59).
Genesis 1
As a rule the opening sentence or paragraph of a narrative
reveals the type of narratorial situation used throughout, though
as Bal points out, there can be a switch in situations mid-way
through (1985:105-6). The introduction also provides some
indications as to why this type of narration was chosen to mediate the story (cf. Stanzel 1981:9).
The introduction to biblical narrative is no exception. Genesis 1:1 begins "In the beginning." This is an ultimate beginning
at the dawn of creation, before any human observer was created. Yet here is our narrator telling us what happened then.
Obviously he is not limited to any position in space and time,
especially not to the singularity of place and time that governs
all normal human existence. The fact that he can tell us something that no human character within the story could (humans
are not created for another 26 verses) shows that he is existentially immune to conditions that will govern characters
within the story world and readers in the real. But it is not only
what the narrator tells that separates him from the story, it is
also how he tells it. The Genesis narrator reveals his temporal
separation from the event by describing God's action with a
preterite verb"In the beginning God created ..." He stands
subsequent to the event of creation, as do all other human beings both inside and outside the story, yet he is able to see back
to that primeval event. What an extraordinarily perceptive fellow!
The narrator's distinctive vision is made more so by his failure to identify the source of his knowledge. He does not say,
"In the beginning I saw," or "I dreamt that in the beginning," or
even "God told me that in the beginning"; he simply says "In the
beginning." His superhuman ability is unapologetically unconditioned. He just knows. The content of this first disclosure
suggests that there is little if anything to do with the cosmos that
this narrator could not know.
17
The narrator continues to display his unconditioned knowledge in v. 2 by describing physical conditions prior to God's
imposition of law and order on the cosmos. The human characters within the story all depend on this very created order for
all facets of their existence. But the narrator is free of such dependence and knows about things outside that order and prior
to it; his unconditioned knowledge puts a wide existential and
epistemological gap between him and his characters. As his
readers we are temporarily privileged to rise above our limitations to share his unobstructed perspective and insight. In
reading, the reader gains an Olympian overview of the story
world. This perspective is unavailable to any of the human
characters in the story and normally unavailable to the reader
who seeks to understand his own world, which is at least analogous to the story world. The overview is freed from the human
limitations of viewing the world from within. With this narrator
we stand outside looking in.
In w. 3-4 the narrator's dispassionate neutrality towards the
world of the story contrasts with God's affection. When God
calls light into existence the narrator reports objectively, "There
was light." God, on the other hand, "saw that the light was
good," an evaluation that implicates him in the story world.
And, at the very moment when the narrator is revealing God's
involvement in the story world he is also demonstrating his own
separation from it by displaying his ability to know the minds of
the characters who inhabit that world, including even the mind
of God. Moreover while God sees that the light is good the
narrator's knowing of God's mind is not even represented by a
cognitive verb let alone a perceptual one. God, however
supreme and omnipotent compared to the human denizens of
the story world, is definitely implicated and subordinated by his
involvement to the all-seeing wisdom and insight of the external
unconditioned narrator.17 The contrast illumines the extreme
17
On this point I disagree with the position that seems to be shared by three notable
commentators on biblical narrative: Robert Alter, Robert Polzin, and Meir Sternberg.
All three authors seem to believe that the biblical narrator consciously subordinates his
perspective and views to the deity also known as the character Yahweh or God in the
narrative. Sternberg is most explicit on this point: "The very choice to devise an omniscient narrator serves the purpose of staging and glorifying an omniscient God"
(1985:89).
God's omniscience and his power are certainly "staged" in the narratives of the
Bible. But it is often an exposition of which the character in the narrative would disapprove. Many times the insights that the narrator's own unlimited access to information
18
19
*8 The introductory superscription, "The words of Nehemiah, son of Hacaliah," are not
part of the narrative. Rather, they function as a descriptive title for the subsequent narrative.
20
!9 Stanzel (1979:126) describes the internal first person narrator as "Ich mit Leib," a
characterization well suited to this conditioned and limited narratorial situation.
21
22
23
20
Frequently readings such as I present here (cf., e.g. the readings of D.M. Gunn 1980;
1982) are mistaken for a dark, perverted misreading of biblical narrative. It is only
against the ponderous sanctimony that has characterized so much of the pious apologetic that passes for exegesis that descriptions of the objective narration of the Bible
seems bleak. But as Herbert Schneidau has pointed out, the Bible is a book that constantly challenges and provokes the reader; it is an alienating literature that constantly
exposes established dogmas to new searching and criticism. "... what the Bible offers
culture is neither an ecclesiastical structure nor a moral code, but an unceasing critique
of itself" (Schneidau 1976:16). I, for one, would apply this to the biblical narrator's critique of the theological dogmas contained within biblical narratives.
24
CHAPTER 2
THESE N A T I O N S THAT
REMAIN
Behold, I have divided unto you by lot these nations that remain, to
be an inheritancefor your tribes, from Jordan, with all the nations
that I have cut off, even unto the great sea westward (Joshua 23:4).
26
Failure
1. Ai 7:4-5
2. (Gibeon 9:14-27)
3. Anakim in Gaza, Gath,
andAshdod ll:22b.
4. Geshurites, Maacathites
13:13.
1
J.M. Miller (1977:215-17) summarizes the inconsistencies between the accounts that
sparked the scholarly debate.
2 Needless to say Wright, following Albright's historical suggestions (1939:11-23), also
presents arguments from archaeological studies to support the historicity of Judges 1011 (1946:109-14).
8.
27
5. Jerusalem 15:63.
6. Canaanites in Gezer
16:10.
7. Canaanite cities 17:11-12
Beth-Shean and towns
Ibleam and towns Dor
and towns En-dor and
towns Taanach and towns
Megiddo and towns
Napeth.
8. Seven tribes of undivided
inheritance 18:2.
28
29
30
has been conquered and some not. Yahweh's assessment includes neither excuses nor blame; he simply indicates where
things stand. As an interpretive key to the failure of total conquest and of Yahweh's promise Yahweh's summary evaluation
is of little use. But it is extremely valuable, both to the reader
and the narrator, as a buttress supporting the factuality of the
narrator's descriptions of a failed total conquest. Yahweh's
candid admission of the failure of the total conquest comes as
confirmation from within the story that the reality of the situation, which the reader must presuppose, is presented in the narrated description of events, notwithstanding any statements to
the contrary. That this evaluation should come from Yahweh
himself, by far the most cognizant character in the story,
strengthens its support for the narrated reality of a failed total
conquest.
Joshua's Evaluations
31
rael have been fulfilled, implying that the possession of the land
is complete. Obviously Joshua's perceptions (if he speaks in
simplicity) or assertions (if he speaks with duplicity) are the
product of his existential situation in the story. He offers this
bald contradiction of events as the elderly representative of
Yahweh rehearsing what has been accomplished during his
term in office. Even when he does admit the contradictory fact
that nations remain he tries to ameliorate the difficulty by bequeathing this remnant to Israel as an "inheritance." From the
purely theoretical perspective of narratology, of course, all
characters' evaluations are contextualized within the story and
cannot possibly compete with the authoritative perspective of
the narrative as a whole.
The Narrator's Evaluations
7 Cf. Rimmon-Kenan (1983:103), "A covert, extradiegetic narrator [my external, unconditioned narrator], especially when he is also heterodiegetic, is likely to be reliable."
She summarizes the sources of unreliability as the narrator's limited knowledge [access
to information], personal involvement [conditionedness], and his problematic valuescheme (100-101).
32
opens two logical possibilities for the reader. Either one must
reject the factuality of the description of events in the story,
which would mean rejecting the story (cf. above, note 3) or one
must reject the apparent meaning of the evaluation as either
wrong or ironic. There is but one reading option: if the reader
is to continue reading the narrative as a coherent document, the
evaluation must be taken as ironic in tone.8
To say that the narrator of the book of Joshua makes ironic
statements about the events of the story is to introduce a much
greater complexity into one's understanding of the narrative.
"Irony carries an implicit compliment to the intelligence of the
reader, who is invited to associate himself with the author and
the knowing minority who are not taken in by the ostensible
meaning" (Abrams 1981:90). The problem, tactically speaking,
with suggesting that the narrator presents the conquest from an
essentially ironic perspective is that irony is always an implicit
device that cannot appear directly on the surface of the narrative. To place it on the surface of the narration, of course,
would destroy it as irony; remaining would be a narrative with
an obviously different perspective than the one that now exists.
From the vantage of the conventional interpretation of the
book of Joshua, however, it is a lame critique that attacks an established interpretation on the basis of a literary device that is
said to be implicit and needful of subtle perception to appreciate the irony.9 The ironic interpretation of Joshua would benefit greatly from some specific examples or more tangible
evidence of the narrator's effort to place his own and the characters' positive evaluations of the conquest in an ironic light.
Such examples must demonstrate that the context of the supposed ironic narratorial evaluations supports an ironic inter8 Polzin's proposal of an ironic meaning is preferable to weak historical-critical harmonizations such as Wenham's (1971:143; Wenham cites Kaufmann (1953:84) in support): "The passage at the end of ch. 11 requires careful study, for on first reading it
looks as though the editor is guilty of crass self-contradiction. On the one hand he says
that he took (vss. 16, 20) all the land; yet some of the big towns were not burnt and some
of the earlier population was left (vss. 13, 22). Though possibly in the early sources of
Joshua the situation was seen differently, the deuteronomic editor probably understood
the taking of the land to mean the gaining of control without eliminating all the opposition."
9 Note E. Vogt's strong reaction even to the lesser suggestion of a unitary narrative.
"Man wollte die Erz&hlung als einheitlicb verstehen, etwa mil Berufung auf semitische
ErzAhlungsweise, aber es ist sicher keine glatte ErzAhlung, ouch nichtfdr einen Semiten"
(1965:126). Of course Vogt's reaction to apparent obscurantist refuge in a supposed
Semitic mentality is laudable.
33
The well known story in Josh 2-6 of Rahab the harlot "who
by faith did not perish along with those who were disobedient,"
(Heb 11:31) raises large questions about the actions of both
Yahweh and Israel and so about the state of affairsthe conquestthat issues from their actions. Why was a non-Israelite
allowed to make a treaty with the invading Israelites when it was
clearly stated in the covenant (Deut 7:2; cf. 20:17) that such contracts were forbidden? Stranger yet, why was such a blatant
disregard for the regulation of Deut 7:2 (cf. 20:17) overlooked
by God? And why was the later campaign against Jericho nevertheless successful?11
The case of Rahab appears in the book's first description of a
battle in the mission of conquest. It is also the first instance of a
failure in the campaign of total conquest; as such, it is extremely
important for our understanding of the incomplete conquest (cf.
Boling 1982:204-5). Polzin, who also sees the narratorial perspective of the book of Joshua as thoroughly ironic, suggests
that this incident is symbolic:
The complicated relationships in Deuteronomy 9:4-5 between God,
Israel, and the other nations are once more affirmed in Joshua 2 with
the spies taking the place of God, Rahab taking the place of Israel,
and Israel taking the place of the other nations. Rahab's descendants
will continue to dwell in the land not because of their own merit or
integrity but because of the "wickedness" of Israel and the promise
made to their ancestress by the Israelite spies (1980:90).
I" Cf. B. Uspensky (1973:126), who also says that it is primarily literary context that allows a reader to know when an authorial voice is ironic in tone.
11 All these questions depend, of course, on the common assumption that the
Deuteronomistic narrative was written and should be read in the light of the book of
Deuteronomy.
34
God's anger burn when a real Israelite, Achan, breaks the command banning collection of booty (7:1)? Where now is God's
mercy, allowing Israel to inherit, even undeservedly, the land?12
Why would the narrator symbolically represent God's mercy
toward Israel in the Rahab episode, and then immediately contradict the symbolic instance with the actual case of Achan?
Surely the infringement of the ban was more serious regarding
the persons of Rahab and her household than it was in the case
of individual theft of material objects.
A closer examination of Josh 2 reveals that there is much
more than a symbolic meditation on the mercy of God towards
Israel in this story. The failure to conquer Jericho totallyRahab and her family are sparedis the result of lapses on the
parts of both God and Joshua. As to motivations for these
lapses the narrator maintains his characteristic reticence. But he
has already revealed some of Joshua's doubts about God in the
instance of the spies, who are not commissioned by God. And
he will later (Judg 2:23) reveal that God intentionally undermined the totality of success in the conquest as a final trump to
be played if Israel defected from its covenantal obligations, a
betrayal about which God has already expressed suspicions
(Deut 31:16-18).
Ironically, it is lapses in the role fulfilment of both God and
Joshua that make room for Rahab to play her crucial role in the
conquest of Jericho. Success here comes when both God and
his servant Joshua fail their duties and an outsider comes to the
rescue, affording the incomplete success that issues from the
conquest of Jericho.
The reader comes to the tale of the Israelite encounter with
Rahab in Josh 2 having read ch. 1. There is a striking discongruity between the two chapters. Sigmund Mowinckel's reaction is typical: "Die Erztihlung steht im krassesten Gegensatz zu
den heiligen Legenden, die sie in Kap. 1 und in 3:7-75 umgeben"
(1964:13; cf. G.M. Tucker 1972:69).
After Yahweh's
ceremonious and detailed instructions to Joshua in ch. 1 the
reader expects Joshua to act immediately in accordance with his
12
Nowhere is there any indication that "the ban" (/jerem, Deut 7:25-6; 13:18) was of any
greater importance than the command against fraternizing with the enemy. Cf. Boling
(1982:220), "It is going too far to make the fierem into the central feature in holy war." Of
course there is a way out of the contradiction in Polzin's reading, namely source analysis; the story of Achan is from a separate source or tradition. But Polzin would hardly
take it
35
13 Cf. H. Gressmann (1914:130), who interprets the contrast in strategic action as result
of the generic distinctiveness of ch. 2).
14
Cf. G.M. Tucker (1972:69, 72), who observes from a literary-historical perspective
that ch. 1 should lead to a crossing of the Jordan and would more logically be followed
by ch. 3:lff. than ch. 2. GJ. Wenham (1971:141) says that the narrative emphasizes
Joshua's obedience to the commands of ch. 1. He suggests that verbal repetition
stresses the exact fidelity of Joshua in carrying out the commands. But his suggestions
are undermined by ch. 2, in which the immediate response to the commands is presented with anything but word for word fidelity (cf. H.W. Hertzberg (1959:18)).
36
14:4).15 The result of that mission was the Israelite people's failure of nerve. So the mission of conquest was aborted. When
the same Joshua, previously a positive influence and model of
obedience in the dark affair that arose out of an authorized
spying mission, now initiates an unauthorized spying mission
instead of responding positively to the commands issued in ch.
1, there is a strong, contextually induced presumption based on
precedent that the mission may jeopardize the conquest. It is
significant that the Israelite people are not implicated in any
failings here regarding the spies, unlike the prior failure resulting from the spying mission in the book of Numbers. They
are explicitly divorced from implication by the narrator, who
reports that they exhorted Joshua to be "strong and courageous," Q)*zaq we3CmS$, 1:18), the same exhortation made by
Yahweh himself three times previously (w. 6, 7, 9). For the
spies Joshua alone is responsible.16
The spying mission scuttles any chance of total conquest
owing to the spies' contact with Rahab. For the favours that she
does for them, the spies agree to grant her a sign of
"faithfulness" (v. 12, *meO as a token of the covenant they have
made with her and her family on behalf of Israel. The spies' action would ordinarily be unexceptionable. But these are no ordinary spies; they are representatives of Israel and are supposed
to act in strict accord with the dictates of the Sinaitic covenant.
In view of the legislation set down in Deut 7:2 prohibiting any
covenants between Israel and the resident nations of the land,
the spies' commitment to Rahab is wrong.17 There is some mitigation for the spies' actions in the description of the circumstances under which they were asked to make the agreement
with Rahab. The great length at which the narrator describes
the extenuating circumstances (w. 1-8) suggests that the reader
is supposed to appreciate the dilemma that traps the spies.
15 B. Peckham (1984:428) provides a detailed listing of allusions to the books of Exodus
and Deuteronomy in this episode.
16
Cf. McCarthy (1971:170). Against Wenham (1971:141), the "function of the spies"
in what context, one might askis not "to encourage Israel": that is after the fact. They
are what they arespies. As to their function, in the context of the narrative they instigate, via Joshua and Rahab, the illegal covenant with Rahab.
17
Against McCarthy (1971:174), who claims, "the only acceptable way to avoid the ban
is to make a covenant with Israel. This can be done openly (Rahab) or by a trick
(Gibeon) ..." There is no acceptable way to do so, given the explicit prohibition in
Deuteronomy. Any exceptions are indications of a failure to uphold the covenantal
standard on the parts of both Yahweh and Israel.
37
38
*9 G.W. Coats (1985:51) provides the correct reader-response to the incongruity: "this
speech reflects the interests of the redactor ...", though he does shift to a literary-historical hermeneutic and misses the point made in context; cf. Tucker 1972:78-9.
39
2" The same pattern is also implied for the battle against Og as the vocabulary parallels between Deut 3:2-3 and 2:30-1 suggest. In addition Yahweh says in 3:2 that he has
prepared the way for Israel to do to Og what it has already done to Sihon.
21
The connection between this passage and the obdurifications that are performed in
the book of Joshua was already noted in the Mekilta (7*. Shirata9, 114).
40
22 Coats (1985:51) notes the parallels in psychological warfare tactics, but finds no significance in them.
2
3 Cf. C.A. Keller (1956:93), "... so bat doch zweifellos die Erinnerung an das
Geschehen vom Yam Supb Wesentliches zur Gestaltung der Jordanlegende beigetragen," and Cross (1973:104), who speaks of the "transparent symbolism" of the Jordan
crossing.
2
^ The pattern has already appeared in the final conflict with Pharaoh and the Egyptians (1. Exod 11:6; 12:29-33; 2. Exod 14:3- 8; 3. Exod 14:24-30). Of course the most visible instance of this sequence of manipulations of Israel's enemies is the case of Pharaoh
himself; having terrorized Pharaoh several times and obdurified him as many, Yahweh
caps the repetitions of steps one and two with the third and conclusive step in the process:
Demoralization Obdurification
Annihilation
8:8
8:15
41
8:25
9:27-8
10:8
10:16-7
8:32
9:34-5
10:11
10:20
10:24
10:27
12:31-2
14:5,8
14:27-8
25 Cf. Millard C. Lind (1980:50) who underlines the fact that it was Yahweh alone who
defeated Egyptapart from Israelite action. "The sea event has a causal effect upon relations with other Near Eastern peoples. The Egyptians went down "like a stone" QExod
15] v. 5); the nations whom Yahweh's people later contacted were "as still as a stone"
QExod 151 v. 16). The effect of the exodus as a paradigm for Yahweh's saving action in
Israel's difficult experiences is found within the poem itself."
2
" Cf. Boling 1982:147. The formal covenantal structure of Rahab's request has been
detailed by K.M. Campbell 1972:243-44.
27
Against McCarthy (1971:173), who says of the Rahab episode that "it includes a great
confession of faith, and it shows Yahweh taking care of a singularly incompetent set of
42
43
28 Against Peckham (1984:429), "The fifth incident ... ensures that the ban is observed
(6:17-19, 21, 24)."
44
^ Boling suggests that the story of Achan has been adapted to deal with the issue of
the ban from an "old narrative core" in which Achan confessed only to having stolen
from legitimate booty (1982:229). His suggestion, however, does not change the fact that
in the existing narrative the ban is a central concern. In addition, Boling's literaryhistorical conclusion fails to consider the immediate environment of Achan's statement
in 7:21, which does have an infra-narrative, story-world context.
The fact that Achan is in mortal danger when he admits to having stolen from the
"booty" rather than from the things under the ban is most economically understood as
Achan's attempt to evade the deadly consequence of his act. Before resorting to the
context of literary history, it is methodologically sound to examine the existing narrative context as the frame in which various utterances and their nuances may be understood.
45
30 Though J. Dus (1960:372) notes an implicit awareness in the narrative of the unjust,
anti-covenantal nature of the pact with Gibeon, he reifies this important perspectival
signification into a hidden historical polemic by Ephraim against Benjamin. Moreover,
he accepts Moth's suggestion that historically, assimilation of a Canaanite city was unexceptional, a simple fact if the manner of conquest (p. 371).
31 Scholarly readers have noted fictitious elements about the story of the Gibeonite
covenant with Israel, but instead of taking the lack of verisimilitude as a sign post to the
narrator's focus in this tale they have tracked such features as the spoor of unknown
redactors who have left us a heritage of confused tradition (e.g. J.A. Soggin 1972:110-11
and others cited by him. Cf. J. Liver 1963:228). Why the Gibeonites should ask for a
covenant is not the narrator's concern (against Soggin (1972:111), "If the Gibeonites
claimed to come from a long way off (w. 6b, 9, 22), why did they ask for a covenant?
What use would it have been to them?") Such incongruities in the narrative should
serve to point the reader away from what is obviously peripheral towards what is central,
the making of the illegal covenant and the contributors thereto.
46
32 In Josh 9:14 MT reads, "So the men took their provisions," (.wayyiqhti h8*nS$fm
mi$fdSm), whereas LXX has hoi arxontes which suggests an original hann'Si'im. In favour
of LXX are the following considerations:
1. MT's "the men" makes the subject of the verb ambiguous; which men is important
since their action is important in paving the way to an agreement. Furthermore since
there is a later division amongst the Israelites over the covenant and over the proceedings leading to it, and since the narrator does describe the rift in some detail, the ambiguous noun seems out of place.
2. In the surrounding context it is either Joshua and an unidentified man who deal with
the Gibeonites (w. 6, 8, 15, 22-3, 26-7) or the leaders (.hann'H'tm) who treat with the
Gibeonites; the common Israelites play no part.
3. If it were simply "the men" who took the provisions from the Gibeonites, granting
that "the men" refers to the Israelites and not Joshua and the unidentified man of w. 67, and if this action is to be regarded as preliminary to formal ratification of a treaty (so
most commentators), then the Israelites really have no call or grounds for the strong
complaints they voice when the mistake is discovered. Either the congregation is hypocritical in w. 18, 26, from which it seems that they were ready to properly exterminate
the Gibeonites with whom they themselves had no pact, or it was the leaders who acted
in v. 14.
4. The scribal error involved in transposing the letters of hann'df'tm resulting in
h8*n85tm is not implausible. Given the context in which hann'Si'Jm appears in w. 15, 18
(2X), 19, 21 (2X), all instances attributing responsibility for the covenant to the leaders,
it seems most economical to accept LXX in v. 14 and to explain MT as a simple case of
transposition.
5. The leaders strongly defensive stance in the face of criticism from the congregation
(w. 18-21) suggests that they accepted all responsibility for the covenant and that there
were no grounds for placing any blame on the laity.
Boling (1982:265) rejects LXX because he believes that the narrator had "the men" here
to show that fault for the covenant was shared. But what does one make, then, of the following context in which no one, the narrator included, disputes the congregation's selfrighteous stance of innocence (cf. A. Malamat 1955:9)? Furthermore Boling states, "The
LXX reading here mentioning "the leaders" instead of "the men" cannot be correct
since this verse merely assigns fault, whereas "the leaders" are going to be the ones to
salvage something out of the situation." Isn't it more likely that the leaders being the
ones at fault are naturally also the ones that must do something to salvage the situation?
The fact that the LXX reading of v. 14 identifies the leaders as the initiators of treaty
proceedings is in no way contradictory to the subsequent context.
33 Against Wenham's (1971:142) reading and condemnation of the Israelites for supposedly having culpably omitted the query "and so afterwards regrets its action" (9:14).
There is no regret in 9:14 nor at any point thereafter. For general discussion of the
problem see B. Halpern 1975:310 a 26.
47
The chiastic narratorial description of the lack of communication with Yahweh juxtaposes two things at the centre of
the chiasmus: the deceptive provisions and the counsel of Yahweh. A structural parallel is used to draw attention to two
seemingly separate items whose close relationship is highlighted
by this formal device. Standing opposite the deceptive provisions of the Gibeonites is the potentially revelatory counsel of
Yahweh. What is the content of this potential revelation? It is
not simply an exposition of the Gibeonite falsehood that lies
hidden in the unbidden counsel of the Lord; there is also an explanation of how it is that the Gibeonites have come to the place
of being able to pursue a course of deception instead of the
headlong path to destruction taken by the rest of their fellow
countrymen (9:1-2). Standing at the centre of the chiastic v. 14
are two deceptions: on an explicit level, the Gibeonites' stale
provisions, and on a more secretive, subtle plane, Yahweh's
failure to proclaim and explain his neglect of the psychological
48
49
Israel after these clear infractions of the covenanted requirement of the ban feature Yahweh's reluctance to veto the agreement and punish Israel for entering into it. Each time the unexpected divine condescension is the logical and structural counterpart to the unexpected failure to harden the hearts of Israel's
opposition; both are actions expected of God but which he neglects to do. The connection is obvious and logical.
One common aspect has been overlookedin the comparison
of Rahab and the Gibeonites: the parallel social contexts out of
which each of these exceptional traitors come. Our interest, of
course, is not any supposed historical social context, but the
context created in the conventional story world reality of the
narrative.
Reviewing the case of Rahab it is apparent that she stands
alone among her peers in her reaction to the spies and the report of what had happened to Egypt, Sihon, and Og. As soon as
the king of Jericho hears that there are Israelite spies in Jericho
he issues an order for their arrest (2:2-3). If the reader accepts
Rahab's word (2:9, 11) that all the inhabitants of the land melted
at the report of what happened to previous resistorsa supposition supported by prior divine promises (Exod 23:27; Deut
2:25) and not contradicted by anything the narrator says or describes in the context of Rahab's statementthen it must be the
case that the king of Jericho has later been hardened as would
be expected according to the pattern of conquest previously
described.
Rahab's uniqueness is further underlined with the characteristic device used in biblical narrative to focus reader attention, namely repetition. In the story of the spies the verb "to
pursue" (rdp) together with the noun "pursuers" is repeated no
less than seven times (w. 5, 7 (2X), 16 (2X), 22 (2X)). By foregrounding the "pursuit" of the spies the narrator draws attention to the fact that the previously melted inhabitants have
somehow gotten the courage to seek the curtailment of Israel's
endeavours. In context, the most likely explanation for their
change of heart (cf. v. 11) is, of course, that Yahweh has done to
them what he did to Pharaoh, Sihon, and Og.
A similar situation exists in the case of the Gibeonites. Here
the reader needs the intervening narration to perceive the pattern and the uniqueness of the Gibeonites' exceptional behaviour. In 5:1 the narrator describes the reaction of the Amorite and Canaanite kings to the report of how Yahweh "dried up
50
3* S. Talmon (1978:17) gives the following description of the technique. "By cutting
the thread of a story at a convenient, or even not quite so convenient, juncture, then interweaving other matter of a different narrative character, and again resuming the first
account by means of repeating the verse, phrase, or even the word, at which the cut-off
had occurred, the author safeguards the linear continuity of the narration, and at the
same time permits the listener or the reader to become aware of the synchroneity of the
events related." Cf. Ramban's discussion of Exod 1:1 in his commentary on the Torah
(1973:6).
51
The narrator has drawn attention to the Gibeonites' tit for tat
with the emphatic restatement of the subject, "even they" (gamhmm). The emphasis draws even more attention to their unexpected response.
Again it is interesting to see how the narrator draws attention
to the contrasting reactions of the general populace (as represented by their kings) and that of the Gibeonites. Avoiding any
explicit statements about it, he uses structural and grammatical
devices to focus attention on the crucial differences. With such
a method of narratorial exposition it is impossible to recover
the meaning of the narrative if one is not prepared to entertain
implications that do not lie on the explicit plane of discourse in
the narrative.
Given that the Gibeonite action parallels the action of the
kings in 9:1both are responses to "hearing" about the conquestit is obvious from their response to the news that they
have escaped the requisite hardening of heart. Their unique
status of existing as eternally, covenantally bound servants of
Israel (9:23) is ultimately due to Yahweh's unexplained failure
to include them in the psychological manipulations accorded to
52
the remainder of the resident population. Like the other exception, Rahab, the Gibeonites remain "to this day"another Leitwort connectionillegal aliens dwelling in Israel's midst (9:27;
6:25). The repeated reference to the prolonged tenure of these
profane intruders in Israel's sacred midst highlights and intensifies the wrongfulness of this situation.
Of the material devoted to describing the campaign of conquest in Josh 1-12, fully 47% is given to detailing the failures
related to these two contraventions of the ban.35 The relative
balance between descriptions of success and these specific instances of failure indicates the latter's importance in the narrator's overall conception of the conquest: what he chooses to
dwell on is what the reader should recognize as important in
the narrative.
With this balance in mind, it seems to me impossible to turn
again to the narrator's explicit summation of the campaign of
chs. 1-12 and accept it at face value. There is definitely a tongue
in that seemingly pious cheek. "So Joshua took the whole land,
according to all that the Lord had spoken to Moses ..." (11:23
NASV). The land is not taken according to all that Yahweh
spoke to Moses, at least not according to the book of Deuteronomy. And the blame for the failure to do so is laid primarily,
but only implicitly, on Yahweh. Secondary responsibility goes
to Joshua and to the leadership of Israel, who are also a divinely
provided gift to Israel (e.g. Num 27:15-23).
The question of why Yahweh should fail to perform the
operations necessary to the success of the conquest is not addressed by the narrator or the events of his story. Instead this
question remains as an expositional gap in the narrative. The
reader is left alone to raise and study possible explanations for
Yahweh's anomalous behaviour. The effect of the gap on the
reader's response to the narrator's ironic evaluations of the
success of the conquest is to make them all the more provocative. The reader waits for some suggestion from the narrator,
the source of authoritative explanations in the narrative, about
Yahweh's motives regarding Rahab and the Gibeonites. What is
given instead are the absurd statements that the conquest was a
complete success. And what is more, the reader knows that
both Yahweh and Joshua are to blame for the incompleteness.
55 The story of Achan's sin is counted as a contrastive element the Rahab account.
53
3" As subsequent episodes in the Dtr narrative show and as the exodus story shows the
divine accounting of the success or failure of his machinations in Israel's history are
quite another matter.
54
CHAPTER 3
A NEW G E N E R A T I O NIN
ISRAEL
And also all that generation were gathered unto theirfathers: and
there arose another generation after them, which knew not the
Lord, nor yet the works which he had done for Israel (Judges 2:10).
56
57
58
action with the text so that the meaning or message has a greater
impact on the reader. Given the controversial nature of the
narrator's view, already visible in the ironies of the book of
Joshua, it is essential that the reader by brought "on board" by
whatever literary means are at the author"s disposal. Teasing
suspense followed by an all-encompassing revelation are not
the least important tools for such ideological persuasion.
To study this narrator's expositional strategy one must not
anticipate him too much: one must follow the course of reading
that he has laid out for his reader. The narrative in Judg 1 paints
a picture of a growing crisis in the affairs of a leaderless Israel.
The conquest of the land resumes with God's reaffirmation of
his intent to give the land over to Israel (v. 2). The process of
conquering continues much the same course that it took in the
book of Joshua until v. 19, in which the narrator notes that the
tribe of Judah could not dispossess (yr) the valley dwellers
because they had iron chariots.1 The narrator's explanation of
Judah's inability would be plausible if it stood by itself, but
coming just after the observation that "Yahweh was with Judah"
it raises a critical theological question by answering a trivial,
logistic one.
An underlying assumption of Israelite theology and military
strategy was that if Yahweh was with Israel in the battles of
conquest then no one, no matter what their military advantage,
could stand against them. Joshua says as much in response to
the tribe of Joseph when they had doubts about their chances
against the very same iron chariots of the Canaanites (Josh
17:16-18; cf. 23:9-10). The narrator phrases the mitigating
circumstance in Judg 1:19 as an allusion to the previous
concerns of expressed by the tribe of Joseph to highlight, once
again, the contrast between the high-minded ideology expressed
by Joshua and the reality of the situation as Israel finds it. Yes,
Joshua should be right in theory; but no, in practice, he is
wrong. The reader can only draw one conclusion from Judg
1:19; Yahweh did not support the campaign. Having pin-pointed
a major difficulty, once again by subtle implication, here
through the technique of literary allusion, the narrator leaves
1 In v. 19 there are two occurrences of the verb yrS, the first an active 3rd m.s. form,
and the second an infinitive construct in a ki clause: ki 10* I'hOrtS. It is generally agreed
that context and grammar require the governing verb ykl before the infinitive construct
here (e.g. Moore 1895:38; Boling 1975:58, a reading witnessed by three versions and two
manuscripts (cf., however, Driver 1892: 204).
59
Cf. M. Buber (1964:1097), "Das tst nicht beilAufige Wiederbolung, sondern die aus
zablreicben Stellen zu belegende phonetisch-rbythmische oder paronomastische
Method der Bibel, ein Wort oder eine Wortfolge von einer besondern Wichtigkeitsei
es einer nur innerbalb dieses Textes, sei es einer tiber thn hinausdem H6rer oder
Leser einzuprAgen."
60
God gives the land to Israel and it possesses if it has kept the
commandments.4 Possessing the land is the culminating act of
obedience to the commands of Yahweh. The opportunity to
"possess" depends upon prior obedience to the commands, but
the possessing is itself another act of obedience, also governed
by commands.5
The evidence of Deuteronomy sheds a new light on Israel's
behaviour after Judah's inexplicable inability to dispossess the
inhabitants. Unlike Judah, who was unable to dispossess Qo3
ySkelu Ieh6ri) the inhabitants, all subsequent failures are
presented in the form of negated Hiph'il verbs. In each case,
Israel is responsible for not dispossessing the inhabitants.6 Not
once, however, does the narrator condemn Israel for any
wrongdoing. Instead he simply presents the evidence which
speaks for itself, just as in v. 19 he presents, without comment,
an apparent instance of Yahweh's failure to hand the charioteers
over to Judah. Throughout the narrator avoids simplistic momentary evaluations, steering instead, towards a comprehensive
overview within which wrong-doing is apparent but
understandable because we are given enough information and
an objective stance from which to view it. The goal seems not to
blame, a trivial and obvious game in any analysis of divinehuman relations in the Bible, but to comprehend.
3 Cf. Deut 4:1, 5, 14, 22; 5:31-3; 6:1, 11, 17-18; 7:1-5; 8:1,11; 11:2-8, 22-3, 29, 31-2; 12:1;
15:4; 16:20; 27:21; 30:18; also, immediately prior to Judge 1, in Josh 23:5-13 Joshua makes
it clear that for Israel to continue possessing the land it must remain faithful to the
terms and conditions of the covenant.
4
Deut 2:31; 3:12, 18, 20; 11:31; 12:29; 17:14; 19:1; 26:1; 30:5; 31:3; cf. Josh 1:11, 15; 18:3.
5 The parallel statements in Deut 31:3, 5 reveal the two-fold nature of "dispossession"
as both blessing and duty:
Verse 5
Verse 3
1. Preparatory act of God:
hQ*-ya5m1d 'et-haggQylm hSVleh
mlll'paneyka
2. Israel's pan:
wlrlStSm
6
fiwwitt'etkem
6l
62
63
specific instances of treaty making between Israel and the inhabitants or any cases of Israelite apostasy, the fact that Israel
did not "dispossess" the inhabitants and sometimes made forced
labourers of them shows that they have broken the spirit of the
command that Yahweh cites, if not the letter (cf. Deut 7:2). The
punishment for disobedience is the withdrawal of divine
support in the conquest; because Israel refused its tasks of
"dispossession" (yr) and dissociation, Yahweh says he declines
his"I will not drive them out (gr) before you."8
Taken at face value Yahweh's appraisal of Israel's action
seems accurate and his response appropriate. They had had
ample warning; the withdrawal of divine support and the
consequent assurance of an incomplete conquest are Israel's
sole responsibility. Yahweh had done his part in the exodus
and in the conquest thus far; Israel alone is to blame for the
failure. The terms of the covenant and justice itself demand the
punishment that Yahweh sets. The only thing that stops the
reader from swallowing Yahweh's line is the implication, back
in 1:19, that Yahweh may himself have had a contributory role
to play in Israel's defection. Nevertheless the combination of
the narrator's silence on that point, the compatibility of
Yahweh's analysis and Israel's behaviour, and the wellestablished presumption in biblical literature that problems in
the covenantal relationship are generally Israel's doing all
dispose the reader to accept Yahweh's diagnosis of the past and
to put the blame on Israel for the darkening of its future hopes.
Such disposal is, however, a trap that will be sprung to catch the
unwary reader in the grips of his own orthodox, ill-considered
prejudices.
In response to Yahweh's announcement Israel weeps and
offers sacrifice to Yahweh as a visible sign of contrition.
Obviously the nation accepts the validity of Yahweh's claim and
hopes to soften the judgement through its display. The
narrator's description of the people's response goes further to
strengthen the reader's belief that Israel is responsible for this
catastropheif Israel accepts its own guilt, why should the
reader question it? But the description of a weeping, sacrificing
The suitability of the requital appears in the light of two occurrences of the verb grS
in the book of Exodus. In both Exod 23:30 and 34:11 Yahweh promises to "drive out"
(grS) the inhabitants followed by a reminder that Israel must make no covenant with the
inhabitants and must destroy their religious facilities.
64
9 E.g. Moore (1895:62-3), who cites Vatke's Biblische Theologie (1835), and Holing
(1975:75-6), who echoes Moore's reiteration of Vatke's assessment.
65
10
Cf. G.E. Wright (with R.G. Doling) 1982:52-5. Wright nevertheless offers a
historicist's apology for the deuteronomist's supposed views.
66
67
** in Deut 11:2 the word mdsar is defined by the following series of parallel objective
and subordinate relative clauses that are governed by the same verbs, i*h and ydc, that
govern mtfsar. The "instruction of the Lord," therefore, is the exodus that he performed
for Israel's benefit. The event teaches those who experienced the event to be obedient
to their benefactor.
68
14 in Deut 29, another chapter devoted to Moses* efforts to promote obedience to the
covenant, Moses begins and ends his speech with reference to the compulsive nature of
witnessing the events.
And he said to them, " You have seen (pattern r*?fern) everything that Yhwh did
before your eyes (.I'fnikeni) in the land of Egypt ... the great trials that your eyes
saw (^er rSV fneyJta), the signs and those great miracles" (Deut 29:1-2).
"The hidden things belong to Yhwh, our God, but the things revealed (hanniglGf)
are ours and our sons forever, to do all the words of this law" (Deut 29:28).
Here Moses notes the essential psychological precondition for covenantal obedience
even as he tries to extend it "forever" to subsequent, non-witnessing generations as well.
Heavy emphasis falls on the sense obligation produced by the exodus experience.
Those who lived through it could never forget their obligation, at least in theory. As
Yahweh's preacher, however, Moses tries also to involve subsequent generations in the
obligation, even though they could never be a real party to it.
15 According to Num 14:29, survivors of the wilderness period who had witnessed the
exodus would have been limited to Joshua, Caleb, and anyone under the age of 20 years
at the time the punishment was announced to the generation of grumblers. The point of
the Numbers' story is to highlight another of these discontinuities (cf. D.T. Olson 1985),
the difficulties of which attracted a variety of responses in Israelite thought and religion.
But the continuity of those who have witnessed the exodus events is not broken until the
event described in Judg 2:10.
16 By historiographic I do not mean that the explanation is historical and even less
that it is intended to be so, though it might be both things. I only mean to point out
that this explanation of a covenantal crisis is unusual in tracing the problem to a chain
of events and a set of circumstances that are beyond the control of all the characters.
Halpern's reading of authorial intent"to construe history" (1988:138)is plausible but
beyond verification. One could as easily believe that the author uses verisimilitude and
objectivity as a cloak for self-conscious partisan views. After all, even an overt statement
of historiographic intent such as the opening of the gospel of Luke can be read with
69
70
wayySmotyosSp w^ol^eh
wekol hadddr hahu3
Syw
71
72
73
lib
12
13a
13b
wayya'abdu
wayya'azbu
wayya eazbu
wayya'abdu
'et-habb^aftm
'et-yhwh
'et-yhwh
labba'al w'la'aStardt
74
Israel
1. Forsakes the God of their
fathers, who led them out
of Egypt to follow gods of
the people round about
them (.s^ibdtBhem, v. 12).
2. Bow themselves down to
the gods of these
surrounding peoples (v.
12).
Yahweh
1. Gives Israel over to their
plunderers; sells them to
their enemies round
about (missSbib, v. 14).
2. (Sells Israel) so that they
can no longer stand before their enemies (v. 14).
20
Though Webb (1987:110) sees the balanced approach, as replicated in the literary
structure of the passage, he wrongly intimates that this reflects the narrator's alignment
with Yahweh's perspective"Considerable pains are taken here to depict Yahweh's
angry response as controlled and fully justified1 (my e mphasis). The narrator retains
his usual semblance of objectivity; Yahweh's response, however measured, is his and his
alone.
75
21
Cf. Webb (1987:113), "Yahweh no longer speaks to the Israelites ... but about them.
... Perhaps it [the divine monologue] is meant for the ears of the heavenly court ..."
Whatever the merit of the hypothesis of a divine courtnone plays a role in this
narrativeWebb's response registers the oddity of this fascinating revelation into an
unguarded moment in the divine mind.
76
parallelism of subject matter and language between the monologue and the proclamation.
In private Yahweh's views have a slightly different emphasis,
from those he makes known to Israel:
Monologue
v. 20 This nation has trans-
gressed my covenant
which I commanded their
fathers ...
v. 20 They do not hearken
to my voice.
Proclamation
v. 1 ... and brought you to
77
78
Halpern (1988:134) also sees the nations that remain as the focal point of the
narrator's explanation for the course Israel's history takes, but he does not study the
narrative carefully enough to discern the subtle exposition provided by the Carefully
structured parallels and voicing. Halpern also sees the nations that are left as a means
to "keep Israel honest" and give them knowledge of Yahweh's power through warfare
(1988:135). Such may, in fact, have been one of Yahweh's underlying motivations. But
there was only one exodus and it alone, as all of the references back to it as key
covenantal motivator show, could elicit obedience. When Israel finally perceived that
79
80
2/
* I do not mean to suggest that either the narrator or the narrative, nor especially the
author was truly objective. The appearance of objectivity is manipulated as a literary
device by which the author presents his interpretation, which may well be thoroughly
partisan.
CHAPTER 4
A KING IN W H O M
THERE IS NO PROFIT
But do not turn aside after vanity, which cannot profit or deliver, for
such things are vain (1 Samuel 12:21).
Samuel 12 is a chapter in the deuteronomistic narrative de1 voted
entirely to a report of a high-powered speech and
* Samuel is so opposed to the idea that he even goes so far as to disobey Yahweh's
direct order to install a king in ch. 8 (Eslinger 1985:269-73).
2 "Samuel's personal dislike for the request receives additional emphasis in the narrator's description of what specifically bothered Samuel about it: The matter
displeased Samuel because (ka'aSer) they said, "Give us a king to judge us".' Point-
82
83
Given the narratorial situation from which the narrator describes Samuel's speechit is the situation of an external, unconditioned narratora safer assumption, with regard to the
voice and views of the author (redactor, editor), would be that
there will be a marked difference between the views of a character within the story world and those of the narrator (the voice
of the author and supposed deuteronomistic editor) outside it.
The narrative's ontology puts them worlds apart with an incredible discrepancy in the degree of involvement in the events
of concern and an even larger disparity between their comprehension of those same events. This is an assumption that should
have been built up and established by observation of the narratorial situation that prevails in 1 Samuel up to this point and
which continues on through the rest of the book and the entire
narrative. It is, in fact, the narrative situation that has been used
from the book of Deuteronomy on. It is an assumption that
should be all that much more common and reliable when the
character utterance in question comes from a character who
evaluates persons or events in which he is deeply involved, as
Samuel is here.
What is it about Samuel's speech that has led scholarly readers to hear in it the voice of the author? Given the common
perception that the deuteronomistic narrative is an assessment
of Israel's history for purposes of writing a theodicy, one
would expect a large quantity of narratorial expositionevaluative discourse from the narrator/editor or an especially
striking character in it. If the narrative had such an evaluative
perspective one would expect to hear frequently from the narrator who wants to interpret and evaluate the events and characters he describes. But on the relative scales of evaluative
prominence, the sheer quantity of evaluative language, 1 Sam 12
does not score that high. Hannah's prayer, in 1 Sam 2, is far
more prominent. Yet scholarly readers have only seen the former, and not the latter, as an outlet of narratorial exposition. So
it cannot be for Sheer mass of evaluative language that 1 Sam 12
is identified as a critical passage for comprehending the narrative's evaluative stance. Quantity of evaluation, though important, is alone not enough to get scholars to characterize an inset
113). Any reader operating under such an assumption cannot see that Samuel's rhetoric
leaves the facts behind, a price that Samuel's tendentious revisionism must and can well
afford to payhe has plenty of backing from his thundering God (w. 17-19)to rewrite
the history of the monarchic affair.
84
evaluative discourse as narratorial exposition. Evaluative discourse in the deuteronomistic narrative must, it seems, also have
a certain quality, assumed theological propensity, or tone to be
labeled as redactional exposition from the deuteronomist(s).
One such quality, shared in some measure by several of the
speeches that Noth and others have identified as key orations
through which the author/editor is supposed to speak, is the
retrospective or prospective character of the evaluation.5 A
prominent character will evaluate events and characters, among
whom Israel is usually included, with a view to summarizing the
consequences of past actions and the projections for the future.
Samuel's speech in 1 Sam 12 is exemplary in this respect. His
broad review of Israel's covenantal history with God (w. 7-12)
is designed to prove that the request for a king was unwarranted and indefensible in terms of covenantal categories. God
had, according to Samuel, done everything that he had promised
and more than everything that could be expected of him. Israel's request for a king to replace the divine monarch was (v.
12) characteristic of its history of wanton covenantal behaviour
(w. 8-9). Perhaps more than anything else in the speech it has
been this sweeping historical review that has led scholarly
readers to the belief that here the historically oriented editor(s)
of the narrative speak in their own native tongue. History, so
the assumption goes, is written by history writers.
Another quality of Samuel's speech that has supported biblical scholars' beliefs about the telling characteristics of the first,
is the pious remonstrative theological tone of this speech. Many
scholarly readers share the fundamental assumption that the
deuteronomistic narrative was written to explain Israel's fate by
impugning Israel for covenantal infidelity. It would be difficult
for the such readers not to believe that the author speaks
through, or at least supports Samuel's speech when its tone so
obviously supports such a view. By way of contrast, Hannah's
song, though loaded with strong evaluative piety, lacks the
parenetic tone and the historical sweep that readers have identified as the supposed hallmarks of this (these) author(s) / redactor(s).
5 Weinfeld (1972:12) has noted that the orations frequently occur on the occasion of a
change in leadership, at the end of "an historical period." The situation explains the
retrospective and prospective character of the oration.
85
On the difference between these two kinds of monarchy see M. Buber (1956:128).
86
87
Cf. (Gunn 1980:64), "Again we are given a hint of Samuel's sense of personal rejection ..."
8 Weiser is an example of a reader taken in by Samuel's rhetoric. He goes so far as to
suggest that the author of 12:2 seems neither to presuppose nor even to be aware of the
sins of the sons as they are described in 8:3, mistaking Samuel's disingenuity for literary
disparity (1962:80; cf. Veijola 1977:95; Crusemann 1978:610.
88
89
First, Samuel implies that the law and legal practises of Israel
still remain a theocratic province, even when it is the theocratic
mediator that is being tried. Though they now have a king
(requested, we are reminded by v. 2, on account of corrupt
judges [cf. 8:3-51) he is by definition "Yabiveb's anointed" and
not an alternative or separate authority (cf. Gutbrod 1956:87).
The new king has not altered the judicial hierarchy in Israel,
even though it had been expected that a king would do so by
judging Israel "like all the nations" (8:5). The "anointed" stands
with Yahweh.
Second, Samuel puts himself on trial with the confident expectation of being cleared. He risks little, given the contrived
charges he offers against himself. Samuel recruits the new king,
his supposed replacement, as a witness to the fact that such replacement was uncalled for. The king is made to witness to his
own redundancy in Israel's legal system and testimony to
Samuel's own virtue is wrung from both the new king and the
hapless people who dared try to replace him.
The injustices that Samuel denies stand in obvious contrast to
the provocative misdeeds of Samuel's sons (Boecker 1969:70;
Crusemann 1978:64f; Vannoy 1978:12 n.!2a) but more particularly to the manner of the king in 8:11-8 (Budde 1902:78; Schulz
1919:168; Boecker 1969:70; Veijola 1977:95; Crusemann 1978:64f;
Vannoy 1978:16). Unlike the hypothetical acquisitive king that
he had warned about in 8:11-8, Samuel claims that he has taken
(/<7/i) no livestock and has wronged or abused no one. And unlike his sons, Samuel has taken no bribes.10 Samuel sets up the
questions, all relating to the abuse of power by a mediator, an
abuse of which he knows himself innocent. No one every
questioned his integrity, that was not the issue. But the real issue in the request for a king is not what Samuel wants to make
an issue of here. Should his audience admit his innocence, his
rhetorical ploy will trap them in the implication that nothing was
chy, which is recognized as God-given (v. 13), as he is of the reasons and attitudes displayed by Israel in its bid for political change (cf. McCarthy 1974:102).
*0 The contrasts between Samuel and his sons do not consist of the verbal linkages so
often used when contrasts and comparisons are made in biblical narrative (cf. Crusemann 1978:640. This vagueness is purposeful; Samuel is trying to prove that the request
for a king was unwarranted. He does so, in part, by pointing to his own uprightness in
the office of judge while avoiding any reference to the wrongdoing of his sons. Samuel
is significantly more specific in his allusions to 8:1118; he does not take OqW livestock,
but the king does (8:l6f; cf. Boecker 1969:70; Vannoy 1978:16).
90
11 Cf. Gunn (1981:64), "The people without further ado bear witness loyally to Samuel's
personal integrityand thereby appear to put themselves in the wrong. If they have
nothing against Samuel why then should they have demanded a king? The propHet now
moves easily into a broader attack."
91
subject of the verb. Whether one follows the plural of the versions or simply understands Israel as a unit to be subject of the
singular (so Keil & Delitzsch 1880:116; cf. Vannoy 1978:18 n. 23),
the context seems to demand that the subject be the people, who
agree to Samuel's claim: in v. 3, Samuel calls for testimony
against himself; in v. 4, the people reply (3rd pi. of 3mr without
specified subject), clearing him; in v. 5a, Samuel replies (3rd sing,
of 3mr without specified subject) with a citation of witnesses; in
v. 5b, the people reply (3rd sing, of 3mr without specified subject)
in agreement; and, finally, in v. 6, Samuel replies (3rd sing, of 3mr
with specified subject, necessary for clarity on account of the
singular in v. 5b) with a comment on the people's agreement.
Both the alternating dialogue and the explicit subject of v. 6
suggest that the unidentified subject of v. 5b is the people. The
fact that Samuel is specified as the new subject of 3mr in v. 6 also
suggests that the verb in v. 5b should be left in the singular: if it
were plural, there would be no need to re-identify Samuel as
the respondent, since he is the subject of all third person singular utterances in ch. 12 up to v. 5b.12
Verse 6
Inextricably linked to the difficulties in v. 5 is Samuel's description of Yahweh in v. 6.13 Attempts to regularize the syntax
of the verb have either followed and inserted <ed before yhwh
(e.g. Thenius 1864:47), or inserted the pronoun hu3 between the
words yhwh and *!er (e.g. Ehrlich 1910:207). The syntactic difficulty of v. 6 can also be alleviated (as Keil & Delitzsch suggest
[1880:116]) without alteration on the basis of versions by careful
attention to context.
Identifying Samuel's as the speaker in v. 6 clarifies any confusion produced by the last sentence in v. 5. His answer in-
12 McCarter offers the interesting suggestion that the last sentence in v. 5 and the first
in v. 6 are conflate variants, "And he said 'Witness.' And Samuel said to the people,
'Witness,1 ..." (restoring a second tf after hcm with ) (1980:210). He opts for a conglomerate reading using elements from both variants"'Yahweh is witness,' he said . . . "
(1980:208, 210), a solution that removes the difficulty by creating a new version. The new
version also creates a new problem for the reader, who must now supply the connection
between Samuel's discourse on Yahweh's past history and the preceding dialogue. If the
reader follows MT, the connection is supplied by the logic of the alternating dialogue
between Samuel and the people.
*3 Cf. Buber (1956:1570 who eliminates both w. 5 and 6 as, respectively, insertion and
gloss on insertion.
92
In contrast to Keil and Delitzsch, who suggest only that 'the context itself is sufficient to show that the expression "is witness" is understood" (1880:116), I would maintain that Samuel's interruption incorporates the last word of v. 5, lced,' into his own sen
tence, and hence that nothing needs to be presumed. In other words.Samuel interrupts
to finish that last sentence of v. 5 with his own conclusion, thus shaping the people's
admission to suit his own purposes before they have a chance to change the direction
in which he wishes to go.
15
Against Smith (1899:85); Ehrlich (1910:207); Birch (1976:65); Veijola (1977:940; Vannoy (1978:21-3); McCarter (1980:214), who all read v. 6 exclusively as an introduction to
w. 7-12.
*" Some, on the other hand, have regarded this information, especially the peculiar
note that Yahweh "established" [CS$&] Moses and Aaron as justifiable grounds for excising at least v. 6b as a secondary intrusion; e.g. Buber 1956:157f; Noth 1967:59 n.3; Boecker
1969:71; Stoebe 1973:237; Veijola 1977:94; McCarthy 1978:207, "a gloss as in v. 8?"). Keil
& Delitzsch suggest that the expression "he made Moses and Aaron," means "to make a
person what he is to be" (1880:116; cf. Driver 1913:92).
93
!7 According to W. Eichrodt, the fidqdt yhwh are Yahweh's military victories on Israel's
behalf, which, as proofs of Yahweh's righteousness, suggests why they are labeled $dq
(1961 vol. 1:242).
Zimmerli touches on a more appropriate understanding of Yahweh's $dq with respect to Yahweh's relationship with Israel. 'When the Old Testament speaks of
"Yahweh's righteousness" it means rather the social bond existing between him and his
people and Yahweh's actions based on this bond" (1978:142). With respect to Yahweh's
fidqdt in Judg 5:11 and 1 Sam 12:7, both in a context of recitations of Yahweh's military
acts on Israel's behalf, it would appear that these acts are called fidqdt because they justify Yahweh's covenantal claim on Israel. Yahweh's fidqdt are those actions that justify
(or make right, and hence "righteous") Yahweh's status as Israel's political leader, the
divine king. "Yahweh is acclaimed as king in the light of the victories [fidqdt yhwh]
which he and his armies have wrought..." (P.D. Miller 1973:84).
m Of course I speak of Samuel's rhetoric and presentation, not the narrator's. Even
the audience within the story world would only be compelled to admit Samuel's argument if they allowed Samuel's suggestion that the request for a king was partly or wholly
entailed by his own performance as mediator. That the narrator does not share
Samuel's perspective is evident from his authoritative presentation of the problem in
8:1-3- The fact that Samuel's audience seems to accept his views is explained by the
combination of Samuel's overbearing rhetoricthey can hardly get in a word edgewise
(v. 5)and their characteristic docility. Samuel's rhetoric not withstanding, their admission of his innocence does not, according to the preceding events described by the
narrator, extend to cover the sins of his sons.
94
19 Boecker argues that the references to Moses and Aaron in v. 6 (and v. 8) are conspicuous and without contextual mooring (1969:71; cf. Veijola 1977:85). But Samuel has
already shown great concern for the office of mediator in w. 1-5 and v. 6 also bears on
that topic. Samuel continues in the same vein as he traces both the benefits and the
lineage of mediators from the paradigmatic Moses and Aaron down to himself (w. 611). To deny the rhetorical logic of the connection between Moses and Aaron and
Samuel's remarks on Yahweh and his beneficial mediators one must ignore the syntactic
parallels between the descriptions of Moses and Aaron (v. 8) and the other judges (w.
10-12). Both form and content speak against the elimination of Moses and Aaron from
Samuel's speech.
95
Samuel said, "I have listened to everything you said and set a
king over you ...
w. 2-5 (6)
"And now," as for Samuel's conduct,
w. (6) 7-12
"And now," as for Yahweh's conduct.
96
draws attention to the seriousness and the covenantal dimensions of the business at hand with a formal call to assembly
(w^atta hitya$$ebu), an expression that Muilenburg identified as a
common feature of covenantal formulations (1959:361, 363, cf.
Baltzer 1964:74 n. 1; McCarthy 1978:207; Vannoy 1978:240.
Samuel had last called such a formal assembly in 10:19 (also
w^attS hitya$?ebu) when he installed Saul under the guise of a
replacement for Yahweh. The re-assembly in 12:7 recalls the assembly of 10:19 and its mood. At both gatherings Yahweh's
history of beneficent acts on Israel's behalf is invoked as a
demonstration of the senselessness of the request for a human
king (cf. Boecker 1969:74).
VerseS
Samuel begins his recitation, naturally enough, with the exodus. In Samuel's version it is Israel, represented here by Jacob, that gets itself into trouble in Egypt. Yahweh has no involvement in the migration to Egypt, only in the positive events
leading out of it (contrast Gen 15:13). Because Samuel wants to
focus on the series of interactions between Yahweh and Israel
he dispenses with the Egyptian oppression and moves directly
from Israel's entrance into Egypt to Israel's cry to Yahweh for
such affiliations unless exact replication of all elements is present. Veijola, for example,
denies the validity of reading ch. 12 in the light of covenantal forms, "because here it is
neither a matter of a "covenant" nor a monarchic constitution" (1977:95 n.79). McCarthy rightly stresses the covenantal aspects of Samuel's presentation, even though
there is no strict adherence to any idealized covenant form (1978:218).
Cf. A. Fowler (1982:38), "The literary genre, moreover, is a type of a special sort.
When we assign a work to a generic type, we do not suppose that all its characteristic
traits need be shared by every other embodiment of the type. In particular, new works
in the genre may contribute additional characteristics. In this way a literary genre
changes with time, so that its boundaries cannot be defined by any single set of characteristics such as would determine a class. The matter of change we shall return to later.
Here the notion of type is introduced to emphasize that genres have to do with identifying and communicating rather than with defining and classifying. We identify the genre
to interpret the exemplar."
One might add that the story as developed up to this point requires neither a new
covenant nor a covenant renewal. The fact that the people have accepted Saul and renewed the kingdom by making Saul king before Yahweh (11:140 is a sufficient expression
of their willingness to remain under and within the theocracy. Covenantal relationship
at the end of ch. 11Yahweh having given a conditional monarchy and the people having accepted itis restored and in no need of repair. If Samuel presents his argument
in ch. 12 in covenantal terms, we must read this in terms of his own peculiar rhetorical
purpose, which is to re-define the whole escapade from the theocratic perspective.
97
98
99
100
2" ... the fact remains that Dtr. wishes to remind us of all the "saviour" figures of the
"Judges' period" (Noth 1981:51 l=1967:59D.
The widely accepted emendation that reads Barak (following ) rather than the obscure Bedan (e.g. Driver 1913:93) receives support from the widespread use of allusion
in the immediate context. If Samuel's aim is to convey a general impression of the entire period, the introduction of an almost unknown character among the allusions would
be a poor rhetorical strategy.
Zakovitch's suggestion (1972:1240 would alleviate this difficulty. He suggests that
Bedan, identified as a Gileadite in 1 Chron 7:17 is actually another name for Jepthah,
also a Gileadite (Judg 11:1). The existence of two names for the same man is paralleled
by the case of Gideon-Jerubbaal. Originally the list in 1 Sam 12:11 contained only the
names Jerubbaal, Bedan and Samuel. A copyist or redactor who knew that Jepthah =
Bedan inserted the name Jepthah after Bedan to explain the relatively obscure Bedan.
Finally a later copyist, not knowing that Jepthah was intended as a gloss on Bedan,
added the words vfet before Jepthah (1972:125).
Whether one follows (Barak) or Zakovitch, the result is much the same: Samuel alludes to the period of the judges. If, on the other hand, one follows MT, one must assume that Bedan was a judge, whose memory has been lost, of whom Samuel could assume his audience's knowledge.
Finally it is just possible that Samuel, in the heat of the moment, might make a
rhetorical blunder by introducing a character that did not fit his overall rhetorical purpose.
101
27 "... in order to make his case relevant to the current situation, and the request for a
king" (Vannoy 1978:37; cf. Hertzberg 1964:99).
^
"In passages where derivatives of the root bfb are used to describe relationships between human beings, frequently they describe security that is taken for
granted, but which also turns out to be disappointed, i.e. a credulous, frivolous, or
even arrogant unconcern and security ... Frequently btb is used to describe a person who thinks he is secure, but is deceived because the object on which his feeling of security is based is unreliable. When we take all the passages in which btb is
used in this sense, we get a picture of everything to which the heart of man dings
and on which he believes he can build his life, but which will end in failure"
(Jepsen. 1977:90).
102
portance of the emissaries in the larger framework of the continuing acts of justification Samuel shifts his focus, from the
beneficial acts and actors to the resulting peace of mind given to
Israel. Samuel ensures that no one will misunderstand the ambiguous word bth by making it clear that any feeling of security
was a response to an act of God.
As Smith notes, the picture of peaceful external relations in
v. 11 is similar to the situation with which ch. 7 concludes
(1899:86; cf. Schulz 1919:170). Samuel paints this pastoral backdrop in anticipation of his next point: the senseless, unwarranted nature of the request for a king. His description of Israel's security relies on the thought and language of such passages as Deut 12:10, 25:19, and Josh 23:1, a portrait of Israel's
past that the narrator has already gone far to undermine (cf.
above, "These Nations That Remain"). The attainment of such a
state of peaceful security, courtesy of Yahweh, was the goal of
Israelite existence; according to Samuel's review, therefore,
there was nothing more to be achieved and nothing more that
Israel could have wished for.29 Such peace established, Israel
ought to act in accordance with the wishes of Yahweh, who has
fulfilled his covenantal commitment by giving them this secure
refuge.
Both Samuel's audience and the reader know, however, that
his recollection of the past is, mildly put, selective. He has
avoided any reference to the disastrous events of chs. 2-6 and it
was for those events, not the pastoral pastimes of Samuel's reminiscences, that Israel rebelled against God and Samuel. But no
one in Samuel's audience objects to Samuel's contrived fiction.
This silence from within the story world goads the reader to
voice the necessary objections to Samuel's "official version."
The narrator's own expositional silence on Samuel's offensive
rhetoric only increases the reader's provocation. Far from
"In contrast to this dear linguistic usage of bfb there is another that is even
clearer. The community of Yahweh can know for sure that it can rely on him"
Qepsen 1977:92).
"Thus the feeling of being secure in God is the only certain support for human
life. When Israel lives securely, it is a result of divine guidance: 1 S. 12:11; 1 K 5:5
(4:25); Ps. 78:53" Qepsen 1977:93).
29 According to Deut 12:9 this security is part of the 'rest and inheritance" given by
Yahweh to Israel. Only when these are actualized is Israel allowed to establish the place
of sacrificial worship that Yahweh will choose (w. 8-11). So also in Josh 23, 'the supposed achievement of this security is presented as cause for a moment of recollection
and re-commitment to maintain the achievement
103
speaking through the voice of Samuel here, the narrator and the
narrative present that voice in its most offensive, jarring dissonance. It disagrees with the reality of events that has already
been presented in the narrative. Its strident pieties move the
reader to reject such officious platitudes, here and anywhere
else such similar sentiments might find expression in the narrative. The speech, then, does not express the narrator's opinions, but it is given full, unhindered expression to spur the
reader to his own seemingly unabetted reaction against the
fraud that seems to go unrequitted on both the levels of the
story world and the narrative. Samuel's speech may not express
the narrator's view, but it serves it well.
Verse 12
Nowhere is the discrepancy between Samuel's presentation
and what actually happened (according to the narrator) more
obvious than in v. 12.30 Samuel's blatant attempt to rewrite history, the reality of which has already been presented by the authoritative voice of the external narrator, is an error that works
to characterize Samuel. His view is the product of his own
involvement, of his bias for Yahweh and against the monarchy,
of his fear of losing his cherished status (Eslinger 1985:259-62; 1
Sam 12:l-5).31
According to Samuel the request for a king was simply another in the series of Israelite defections from loyalty to Yahweh. When the people saw Nahash the Ammonite advancing
against them they said, "No, but a king shall be king over us"
yet Yahweh was their king. Having just rehearsed the usual
course of action when faced with an external threatto cry to
Yahweh (v. 10)Samuel obviously regards Israel's "no" as a
rejection of the theocratic framework for national defense, a
framework that he claims to have defended. In place of the cry
to Yahweh for help, Samuel says, Israel uttered its unutterable
"nobut a king shall be king over us" (Boecker 1969:76; Veijola
1977:960. The request for a king, which Samuel quotes from
the stronger, reactionary formulation of 8:19 rather than the true
30 Cf. D. Jobling (1985:65), "this claim flies in the face of ch. 8."
31 Vannoy is a reader who comes close to this conclusion: "Samuel's statement in 1
Samuel 12:12 is thus compatible with chapters 8, 10, and 11, but more important is that it
reveals bis own analysis of the motivation behind the initial request of the elders for a
king" (my emphasis, 1978:39).
104
32
105
rael's new king. He introduces the king first as "the king whom
you have chosen," an expression that Samuel last used in 8:18,
his attempt to dissuade the people. There is no suggestion in
this allusion that they might have obtained the despot against
which Samuel sought to advise them. Instead the allusion emphasizes that the people have gotten what they wanted.
Samuel's second characterization of the king continues in the
same vein. The king is as the one "whom you requested," implying, with this play on the name $2fuland the verb S^eltem that
King Saul is in fact a king such as they had asked for (cf. 10:22).
Samuel wants Israel to be happy with its new monarchy, however far the actuality is from the original vision of a non-theocratic state.
Samuel shifts, next, from congratulating Israel on its accomplishmenthollow salutations in the light of his view of the
monarchy's originto the task of dictating correct behaviour
for the future. He signals this shift with another introductory
use of the particle hinnSh (cf. Boecker 1969:77). "So now, Yahweh has installed a king over you."
The combination of the verb ntn with the preposition cl,
33 "[Verse] 13 marks the climax of the formulation and it reverses the history of sin.
The king is no longer the sign of a great infidelity; he is Yahweh's gift" (McCarthy
1974:102; cf. Muilenburg 1959:363; Boecker 1969:77; Birch 1976:69).
106
34 Solomon, too, will be given the floor to voice the deuteronomic phrasings and he
too will have his rhetoric undercut by the surrounding narrative context. See below,
"King Solomon's Prayers."
*5 Boecker has shown that the expression hSyS 'abar, "to be behind," is a suitable apodosis in v. 14 (1969:77-82). By fulfilling all the conditions mentioned by Samuel, the
people and their king will be true followers of Yahweh. As the phrase reveals in other
contexts (2 Sam 2:10; 15:13; 1 Kgs 12:20; 16:21), to be a true follower of Yahweh means to
recognize him as king. "hSyS *abar, to be after or behind a person, is good Hebrew and is
frequently met with, particularly in the sense of attaching one's self to the king, or holding to him" (Keil & Delitzsch 1880:119; cf. Boecker 1969:80; McCarthy 1978:215f; Vannoy
1978:420.
107
3" Many scholars have argued that w. 14f constitute a representation of the covenant
blessing and curse, indicating that Israel is being offered a fresh beginning in its relationship with Yahweh (Muilenburg 1959:363; Weiser 1962:86f; Boecker 1969:81f; Veijola
1977:87f; Vannoy 1978:460.
108
requested as an instrument of political change, is publicly subsumed within the old order.37
Verse 16
Verse 16 marks a new stage in the proceedings: gam-^attS.
links the verse back to the prior use of 3att in v. 7. The emphatic particle gam renews Samuel's formal call to assembly
(Mya$?e>u).38 Samuel's emphasis, in his redoubled call to assemble, lies not so much on the physical detail as on the psychological attitudes and religious meaning of the act of assembly.39 The people are called to assemble and witness "this
tremendous deed" which Yahweh is about to do before their
very eyes. Samuel (and God) want a duly impressed and submissive Israel to issue from the occasion.
Vannoy has observed that there is a close phraseological resemblance between Samuel's introduction of this phenomenon
and Moses' introduction to Yahweh's deliverance at the Reed
Sea (1978:470. Samuel sets himself up as a Moses figure, leading
Israel to a new or renewed experience of relationship with
Yahweh. The formation of the relationship in Exodus and the
reformation in w. 16-25 are catalyzed by the experience of
Yahweh's miraculous deeds. In the exodus experience the miracle of the Red Sea was enough to make the Israelites fear
Yahweh and believe in Yahweh and in Moses (wayyfru hafSm 3etyhwh wayya3amlnu bayhwh ubemo'$eh eabd6, Exod 14:31). Likewise,
the thunderstorm is aimed to convince the people, whose quest
for a king has already been compared to Israel's apostasy dur-
37 It is important to note, with regard to the suggestion of a supposed anti-monarchistic dtr redactor speaking through Samuel in ch. 12, that at this crucial juncture where the
conditions for Israel's survival under the monarchy are established, no special emphasis
is placed on the behaviour of the king as opposed to the people. People and king stand
together under the call to obedience. Considered together with the fact that what
Samuel criticizes in ch. 12 is not the monarchy, but the request for a king in place of
Yah web, ch. 12 can no longer be marshaled in support of the literary-historical claim
that the deuteronomist, supposed to speak through Samuel in ch. 12, saw the monarchy
as Israel's downfall (so Noth 1967:54038 cf. Ehrlich (1910:208) against Buber (1956:158), who says "the gam->att$ of v. 16 is
completely meaningless."
39 Both Muilenburg (1959:359, 363) and Harrelson (cited by Vannoy 1978:47 n.106)
suggest that the verb hty$b is used in such contexts as a formal expression.
109
ing and since the exodus (1 Sam 8:8; 12:8-12; cf. 10:18f),40 that
their request for a king was sinful.
The plan does, in fact, meet with success: Israel does fear
Yahweh and Samuel (wayyira3 kol-hafam me36d 3et-yhwh wC3e
$emu3el, v. 18).41 The opening phrases show Samuel operating in
the role of mediator; once more in a position of dominance, he
exhibits an attitude of assurance. Though he began his remarks
with intimations that he would step down from his post in deference to the new king and perhaps to the younger generation
(v. 2), Samuel's demonstration of power, both Yahweh's and his,
puts him right back in the position he last held in ch. 7.
Structural Excursus
Both Buber (1956:158) and Seebass (1965:294f.) have seen the
parallels between 12:16-25 and ch. 7 (cf. Press 1938:211f;
Hertzberg 1964:100). Seebass even argues that this section in ch.
12 is modeled on ch. 7 (1965:294f; cf. Birch 1976:70, criticizing
Seebass' proposal). The parallelism is not accidental, nor is it
evidence of a vapid redactor forced to repeat himself for lack of
traditional material or a fertile imagination.
The demonstration in ch. 12 is an affair staged for Israel's
benefit, no less a part of the effort to convict Israel than
Samuel's own walloping rhetoric. The primary difference between the demonstration of power and the preceding historical
revisionism is that Yahweh is complicit in the demonstration,
with an appropriate escalation in the force of the argument. The
parallel between w. 16-25 and ch. 7, the second to last such
demonstration of divine might in the arena of Israel's experience, aims to cultivate a similar response in Israel. The parallel
is intentional, a part of Samuel's and God's effort to re-enlist Is-
40 cf. Speiser (1971:283), who also notes that Yahweh and Samuel see the request for a
king as comparable to Israel's previous expressions of desire to return to a lifestyle such
as they had when they were slaves in Egypt. "Thus 'the manner of the king' as it is
stigmatized in I Sam 8.11-8, could just as aptly have been labeled in that context 'the
Egyptian manner'."
41 Buber's impression that "the combination of Yahweh and Samuel in v. 18b seems
almost a travesty in comparison to Exod 14:31" (1956:159) is a good example of a
reader response to the self-aggrandizing tendency in Samuel's rhetoric. Samuel seeks to
secure the position of mediator, first held by Moses, for himself (cf. w. 6-11). The parallel with Moses in the exodus is, therefore, an important recollection of the fundamental role that Samuel plays here: he achieves his goal.
110
Chapter 12
Israel is promised that if
they will fear Yahweh and
serve him, heed his voice
and not rebel against his
command, then Israel and its
king will be behind Yahweh
and by implication Yahweh
will be before them (v. 14).
Samuel says to assemble
(hty$ti) to see the tremendous deed that Yahweh is
about to perform for them.
Though it is now harvest
time, Samuel will call to
Yahweh and he will send
thunder and rain so that Israel will recognize and see
the great evil that they have
done in Yahweh's eyes, by
asking for a king (w. 160.
Samuel calls to Yahweh and
he sends thunder and rain
on that day (jbayydm haM3} (v.
18).
As a result of Samuel's call
and Yahweh's response, the
people greatly fear (wayyfra3)
Yahweh and Samuel (v. 18).
111
112
42 cf. G. A. Smith (in a chapter appropriately titled "The climate and fertility of the
land, with their effects on its religion"): "In May showers are very rare, and from then
till October, not only is there no rain, but a cloud seldom passes over the sky, and a
thunderstorm is a miracle" (1900:65)
Ehrlich suggests a third implication of the out-of-season shower. With it, Yahweh
shows "that he finds his people's wish for a king [equally] untimely" (1910:209).
"*3 in view of the widespread belief that ch. 12 is critical of the monarchy, it is worth
pointing out that Samuel only says that the show of force is supposed to convince the
people of the evil of their request (.llS'61 Iskem meteJt). The thunderstorm is not a criticism of the monarchy of Saul, an institution created and implemented by Yahweh himself.
113
114
though it was not at fault in the rupture. Yahweh gets away with
gracious condescension. Yahweh forces a confession in ch. 12,
even though the request for a king was a restrained response to
the behaviour of Yahweh and his priestly mediators. Israel is
forced into humble submission.
Verse 18
Having presented Samuel's description of what he was about,
the narrator describes the undertaking itself. Samuel's actions
correspond word for word with what he said he would do, as
do Yahweh's supporting actions.
The thunderstorm serves both as a theophany and a sign (cf.
Vannoy 1978:50f; McCarter 1980:2l6).44 The people fear Yahweh and Samuel, a twofold result corresponding to these two
sides of the demonstration. On the one side, Birch observes
that thunder (qdf) is common to theophanies (1976:70). Both the
people's fear of Yahweh (v. 18) and their fear that they might
die if Samuel did not pray for them suggest a response to a
theophany (cf. Birch 1976:70). "God, who had been shoved
aside as a shadowy unreality by Israel with its insistent demand
for a king, plainly reveals himself as the living one, who is quite
able to annihilate his creature" (Gutbrod 1956:900- The manifestation of divine power as a displeased reaction to their request seems to the people to threaten their very existence (v. 19;
cf. McCarthy 1978:217; Vannoy 1978:500.
On the other hand, the demonstration also serves to legitimate Samuel by showing the people that they need his services as mediator to pray on their behalf.45 The storm proves
that Yahweh's real power and real domination over Israel con-
44 The significance of Yahweh's response is disputed;, some view the thunder (and
rain) as an echo of theophany, especially the Sinai theophany (Weiser 1962:87); others
argue that the out-of-season storm is a visible manifestation of Yahweh's power, a sign
in response to Samuel's call and so an authentification of Samuel as mediator (Boecker
1969:85; Stoebe 1973:238f; Veijola 1977:98).
45 McCarter confuses the issue. "The point of the narrator is clear: a prophet is the
proper and divinely sanctioned channel between man and God, and in this respect the
request for a king is a great evil" (1980:216). Nobody has suggested that the king might
replace the prophet as channel. The king was intended to replace both prophet and
God as Israel's political leader. He obviates this sort of communication with God in
times of need. What the demonstration does show with reference to McCarter's concerns, is that even though Israel now has a king it is still in need of Samuel's intercession
precisely because it has made the request and so displeased Yahweh. King or no king,
the people cannot escape Yahweh. They need a Samuel to pray for them.
115
116
117
Verse 21
Though v. 21 is frequently discarded as a late gloss on account of the supposed anachronism of the word tShu ("empty,"
e.g. Budde 1902:81; Buber 1956:159; Stoebe 1973:239; cf:, however, Deut 32:10) and the ease with which the verse may be
omitted without disturbing the sense of the context (Budde
1902:81; Boecker 1969:86), it is not entirely inappropriate. As
Boecker observes, v. 21 is connected to v. 20 by the repetition
of the verb tSsuru, which is given an expanded interpretation in
v. 21 (1969:68; cf. Seebass 1965:295 n.21). Repetitious, yes, but it
is part of Samuel's expansionistic rhetoric. The repeated exhortation taken from v. 20 is "Do not turn aside." Following the
exhortation is a ki clause explaining why one should not turn
(cf. Muilenburg 1961:157). "Do not turn aside, for (kf) [it is] after vanities which can neither benefit nor deliver because they
are vain."
The word tdhu, though usually understood as a reference to
false gods on the basis of Deutero-Isaiah (e.g. Keil & Delitzsch
1880:121; Hertzberg 1964:100), has a more specific reference in
this context. In v. 20, Samuel balances the evil that has been
donethe request for a kingagainst the exhortation not to
turn aside any more from after Yahweh. By a series of associations Samuel equates the anti-covenantal request for a king like
the nations with defection (swr) from Yahweh: 1. the request
for a king was evil (v. 17); 2. the evil (the request) done is not a
cause for fear so long as Israel no longer turns aside, as it did in
the request, from after Yahweh (v. 20); 3- one should not turn
aside because the things so pursued are worthless (v. 21). In v.
21, Samuel provides even more detail. Israel should not engage
in such defections. Why? Because all such things are worthless. They are profitless (Id3 yd'flu) and unable to deliver Qo3
ya$$ilu). In contrast to these worthless thingssuch as the
kingship the people had requestedare Yahweh's actions. He
brought Israel up (hecelett, 10:18) from Egypt, and he delivered
(,w53a$?il, 10:18; cf. 12:11) Israel from all its enemies. No one but
Yahweh, says Samuel, is of any use to Israel as a source of security: in comparison, everything else is hattohu, "worthlessness."
118
119
47
120
view of the ominous threat of divine punishment must be accepted as a valuable and necessary service to Israel.
The reader cannot help but notice that the installation of the
theocratic mediator as the official censor, dictator of the "good
and upright path," is the final blow to Israel's idea of a political
system unfettered by the unreliable theocracy. Israel's quest
for independence has only strengthened the theocratic hand on
this people whom it has pleased Yahweh to make. Whether the
people will always accept this imposition, and whether the king
will be satisfied with his subordination remain as questions that
the reader must carry into the subsequent scenes of the monarchic history (cf. Gunn 1980:65).
One thing is certain about v. 23: it marks the end of the
movement for a king like all the nations. Just as the request for
a king was sparked by a recurrence of a previous circumstance,
the dangerous state of affairs in the mediator's family, so the
conclusion to the chain of events resulting from the request is
marked by the recurrence of the scene at the end of ch. 7. In
both scenes Samuel has brought Israel through a crisis and
stands ensconced as mediator, faithful shepherd of the people
of Yahweh. Both the request for a king and the conclusion of
the issue illustrate the narrative technique of using scenic parallels and allusions to add commentary to scenes that otherwise
appear to lack narrative exposition (cf. Alter 1981:7). With
Samuel's remarks in v. 23 and the parallel situation in ch. 7, it is
almost as though the request had never been made. Under
Samuel's direction, with special effects by Yahweh, the pursuit
of a king like the nations is only a bad dream Qiattohu).
Verses 24-25
Samuel finishes his presentation with a yet another reminder
of Israel's duty to balance his descriptions of Yahweh's and his
own roles (w. 220. Of the exhortations only the addition of the
adverb be3emet, "sincerely," is not a repetition of what he has already said in w. I4f, 20. The penalty, on the other hand, for
continued disobedience is that both they and their king will be
swept away. The people had said about their proposed king,
"Even we fea/n-^najmtf) will be like all the nations" (8:20), to
which Samuel responds here "Even you and even your king
(ganHatte/n gam-malkekem) will be swept away."
The installation of a king has changed nothing with regard to
Israel's theocratic obligations. They are still governed by the
121
CHAPTER 5
1 Kings 1-11
owhere is there more discongruity between narrator and
N
character, between the ideology of one of the great orations
and that of its larger narrative context, than in the case of King
Solomon's prayers in 1 Kgs 8. Here the reader meets with a
character utterance laced with the theology and language of the
book of Deuteronomy. 1 Solomon's prayer is a fount of
deuteronomic piety that would do any preacher proud. Given
the phraseological concord and the pious tone of his prayer,
how could it and the narrative that contains it be anything but in
agreement with the "deuteronomistic" narrator's views on the
subject matter of the prayer?2
124
involved and biased human character (against Polzin (1981:57), who errs in hearing a
melding of the voices of narrator/author and Moses through the ontological structuring
of voices in and subsequent to the book of Deuteronomy. A study of evaluative
language in the book of Deuteronomy (see ch. 7, "Explicit Evaluation in the Dtr Narratives") shows that the narrator separates himself absolutely from the numerous value
judgements voiced by Moses, who presents them as the normative definitions given by
God himself.
2
So Martin Noth makes it a matter of fact that the prayers belong to the Dtr author
(1968:174). Cf. S.J. De Vries (1985:121), "1 Kgs 8 is especially crucial in Dtr's overall plan
because he here takes advantage of an opportunity to make Solomon the mouthpiece of
his theology." As De Vries' remark shows, the conventional reading of the prayer
ignores the central role of narrative ontology and voice structure in creating narrative
meaning.
3 The reverse assumption is amply evident throughout historical-critical work on these
narratives. De Vries, for example, says of the deuteronomistic vocabulary in 1 Kgs 8,
"we are able to put to good effect what we already know of the diction, style, and
ideology of Dtr in order to isolate what actually belongs to him ...." (1985:122). Given
such assumptions there can be nothing but an indiscriminate, uni-dimensional reading
of allusions to the book of Deuteronomy in these narratives.
125
"* "We cannot but draw the conclusion that it is chiefly the dark side of David's life
and personality which is made visible here" Q. Fokkelman 1981:386). See especially n. 5
on p. 386 for Fokkelman's clear view of the difference between the narrator's
presentation, essentially negative, and possible positive socio-cultural interpretations
such as J. Pedersen's (1926:424ff.). A good example of the critical implications of the
text is found in w. 8-9. There the author has David allude to his promise not to kill
Shimei (cf. 2 Sam 19:18-23). But whereas in the actual instance David, reveling in his
victory, only says, "you shall not die" to Shimei, here he adds that "he swore to him by
Yhwh." And then, immediately following this stronger vow David says to Solomon,
"you are a smart fellow and know what to do ..." A vow by Yhwh was not part of the
deal; its introduction here makes David's plan and Solomon's implementation all the
darker.
126
murders make no political gains: "and the kingdom was established in the hand of Solomon" (.wehammamlaka nakonS bey ad
Sel6m6ti). The only difference is that the establishment of the
kingdom now bears the imprint of Solomon's bloody hand.5
In 2:4, prefacing the murderous instructions, David adds a
strange condition to the unconditional promise of dynasty that
God made to him in 2 Sam 7. He instructs Solomon to obey the
Law (v. 3) so that God will keep his dynastic promise (v. 4).
Why?6 A clue to David's rhetorical strategy here lies in the order of his last comments, which can be outlined as follows:
I am dying.
Be strong and obey the Law so that God will maintain our
line.
Here is what you must do:
Joab
sons of Barzillai
Shimei
David's instructions to Solomon are symmetric with references to the latter's manhood and adult intelligence bracketing the injunctions to a murderous covenantal obedience.
The suggestion, fostered by David's agenda, is that the prescribed actions will fulfil the Law, implying even that they are
5 Fokkelman also notes that v. 12 establishes the security of Solo-mon's reign, but
differs in finding irony in the repetition of v. 46; "only when Solomon feels the kingship
firmly in his grasp is the kingship then firm for him. But he feels it securely only after
three executions by which he allays his feelings of being threatened" (1981: 409). The
main point seems to be the manner of establishment and the forebodings that such an
establishment bears.
6 The usual explanation (e.g. J. Gray 1970:100) is that a Dtr redactor has
conditionalized this reference to the unconditional covenant recorded in 2 Sam 7 by
inserting w. 3-4 (cf. Noth 1968:30; MontgomeryAGehman 1951:87). Campbell (1986: 84
n. 43) criticizes Veijola's attribution of the passage to a Dtr redactor but offers
essentially the same explanation when he shifts attribution to his "Prophetic Record."
R.D. Nelson (1981:100-6) provides an extensive discussion of the redactional reading of
this conditionalization but also fails to consider the possibility of local rhetorical
reasons for the change.
127
128
129
claims a distinction between the line of David, i.e. himself, hopefully ever blessed with peace as the reward for their
peacefulness, and bloodthirsty men such as Joab.
The narrator's comment on Solomon's behaviour? "And the
kingdom was established in Solomon's hand," the inclusiastic
end (on the basis of kuri) to what began in 2:12. The implication
of this dry comment on Solomon is that these actions, these
lame justifications and this modus operandi are what can be expected under this administration (cf. E. Wiirthwein 1977:31,
against Gray 1970:105).10 And if Yhwh has indeed used
Solomon and his wisdom to complete a series of actions begun
long before (2:27) then it would seem either that Yhwh's hands
are also fouled by Solomon's actions, or else his endswhatever they may bejustify the use of means such as Solomon
and his Machiavellian wisdom.
!Kgs3
Hard on the heels of the ironic presentation of how
Solomon went about establishing his kingdom, ch. 3 presents
the odd business about the wisdom of Solomon. Immediately
after reporting that this is how, "the kingdom was established i
Solomon's hand," the narrator goes on to describe the next step,
a pact through marriage, with Pharaoh. Solomon strikes a deal
with the arch-villain, the Pharaoh, "king of Egypt," of whom the
last two recollections have been associated with the Bondage (1
Sam 2:27; Deut 7:8), and who can never be mentioned in the
Bible with neutrality. The Pharaoh is, after all, anathematic
opponent Yahweh. Could Solomon have chosen a less appropriate ally? Not only does he ally himself with Pharaoh, he
even goes so far as to marry Pharaoh's daughter, contravening
the commandment of Deut 7:3-5 (cf. Josh 22:5; 23:7-8).n And
may be David's dupe in settling old scores but he is anything but passive after ch. 1. A
rough count of verbs and their subjects in 1 Kgs 1-10 shows a total of 278 with Solomon
holding title to 131: a full 47% of the total. Hardly the most passive character in this
tale!
10
Cf. Noth (1968:39), "von einer Sympatbie des Haupterztihlers fur Salomo kann
qffenbar keine Rede sein."
11 Any ambiguity over the narrative's implications in v. 1 is disambiguated a few
chapters later, in 7:8, 9:16, and especially 11:1, each of which in its own context show
how the Egyptian alliance is true only to Solomon's own personal preferences and
130
ambitions and anathematic to the behaviour that Yhwh desires of his people and their
king. Given the strength of Egyptian symbolism throughout the Biblea biblical
archetype if there is onethe subsequent confirmation is really superfluous (part of
what Sternberg calls "foolproof composition" (1985:234).
12 The Greek translators were vexed by Solomon's actions to the point of rearranging
the text in order to ameliorate them (D.W. Gooding, Relics of Ancient Exegesis , pp. 912, cited by De Vries 1985:50).
13 The connection is syntactically foregrounded by the connections between w. 1 & 2:
He takes the daughter of Pharaoh
He brings her to the city of David
"until" (cad) he finished building: his house, the house of Yhwh, and the wall of
Jerusalem
"howbeit" (rag) the people were still sacrificing at the high places
for the house of Yhwh wasn't built "yet" Cad), at that time.
Though Solomon is building the house of Yhwh it isn't first on his list; in the mean time
Cad) the people continue a religious practise that is offensive to Yhwh.
14 Once again, the narrative takes pains to ensure that the reader sees the connection
between the peoples' behaviour and Solomon's:
"only" (rag) the people were sacrificing at the high places
for the house of Yhwh wasn't built yet.
Solomon loved Yhwh, to walk in the statutes of David
"only" (rag) at the high places he sacrificed and burnt incense.
There is even a chiastic pattern within this pattern, between its first and last lines:
rag hS'Sm m*zabbebim
babbSmdt
131
juxtaposition of w. 2 and 3 is designed to highlight the incongruity. Like the people, Solomon worships at the high
places. Unlike them, he is in a position to change the fact that a
temple does not exist by expediting, as he does not, work on
the temple project. He could, after all, transfer all the construction workers to the temple project.
Chiastic incongruities continue as the narrative's focus in w.
3-5:
Solomon loved Yhwh
but he worshipped at the high places.
He went to Gibeon, to the great high place &
offered a thousand burnt offerings in that altar.
At Gibeon, worshipping at the high place
Yhwh appears in a dream and offers to grant a request!
went to Gibeon to sacrifice at its high-place, as that the story has been so artlessly
preserved"but misreads it as the mark of clumsy composition. For Kenik (1983:203),
whose careful reading of Solomon's dream is marred by indiscriminate attributions of
all major character utterances to the Dtr (an attribution endowed to her by conventional wisdom about the Dtr's compositional methods), Solomon's cultic celebrations at
Gibeon were intended, by the Dtr, to portray legitimate, pre-Temple worship. But there
is nothing in the context that implies that Gibeon was one of the places where Yahweh
had caused his name to dwell. To the contrary, the structure of w. 2-3 and 3-5 implies
that worship at Gibeon impinged (jaq) on the love of Yahweh and legitimate Temple
worship. Kenik notes the negative implications of context (1983:186 n. 30) but fails to
pursue the implications for the worship at Gibeon. Furthermore, although she is aware
of the connection between w. 3 and 15 in the narrative (1983:191-5), a connection that
focuses on Solomon's mercenary attitude towards worshipping Yahweh in Jerusalem, she
does not see anything odd about Solomon offering sacrifice at Gibeon, when Jerusalem
was obviously an available and fitting place of sacrifice (v. 15). Why does Solomon
travel to Gibeon, some 15 km. distant, when he could have offered the same burnt
offerings before "the ark of the covenant of Yahweh" (v. 15) in Jerusalem? Or even
more interesting, because the narrator raises this question through structural implication, why does Solomon return to Jerusalem to make those same burnt offerings,
though less of them, along with peace offerings before "the ark of the covenant of
Yahweh" (v. 15) after Yahweh has granted him a boon? Solomon's behaviour is
presented as a textbook case of religious mendacity.
!5 De Vries (1985:51; cf. e.g. Noth 1968:49) does not hear the irony (first pointed out to
me by David Gunn). Instead he believes that the narrator was forced to admit that
Solomon participated in foreign religious observance in order to include the story
about the dream at Gibeon. The narrator's emphasis, says De Vries, is on Solomon's
love for Yahweh. How inept a redactor to have so foregrounded the irony he was trying
132
to hide! Gerbrandt (1986:176) cites the verse as an adulation of Solomonic piety but
cuts the verse off, in his citation, before the part about Solomon's ecumenical tastes.
Halpern seems of two minds on Solomon's behaviour here: that it is implicitly critical
(1988:155) or that it is neutral because of the Dtr's view of the history of Israel's cult (p.
146). Kim Parker, who concentrates his analysis on a larger structural parallelism in 1
Kgs 111, also takes the narrator's statement about Solomon's love for God at face value
(1988:22). His reading of the parallels would, in fact, be strengthened along with his persuasive formal arguments for the unity of this passage if he had seen that there is no Dr.
Jekyll and Mr. Hyde characterization here. Solomon is pure Hyde, albeit without
prejudice.
1" Montgomery (1951:108) follows Holscher in viewing v. 15's removal of Solomon to
Jerusalem as an insertion (cf. Gray 1970:127). Having done so, Montgomery also fails to
see the implications for Solomon's character that are drawn only by means of the
parallel between v. 15 and v. 4.
17 The Chronicler offers a good example of a reader who sees the problem. His
innovative solution to it is one of many examples of his greater concern for
maintaining piety and propriety where Kings offers provocation and puzzlement. The
solution: to split the legitimate focal points of cultic observance, the tent and the ark,
placing the tent at Gibeon and the ark in Jerusalem. "Then Solomon and all the
assembly with him went up to the high place at Gibeon, for there was the tent of meeting
of God, which Moses, servant of Yhwh, made in the wilderness" (2 Chron 1:3). In this
version Solomon gets away with nothing and there is no dissonance at all in God's
appearance and offer to Solomon at Gibeon. Keil (1982:41) gratefully accepts the
Chronicler's pious rendition of the episode, subverting the narrative rhetoric of Kings
with that of Chronicles in the mistaken belief that both must accord with the one
historical reality and that the Chronicler's version is most correct because it raises no
questions about God's motives in this most unusual incident.
1 This is the only place in the Bible where God says "ask what I should give you" (S^al
mS 'etten-lSk), allowing complete leeway for Solomon to respond as he pleases. (A dose
133
134
Kenik's Dtrtoo dose to the views expressed in the narrative. The conflict is not the
narrator's. He sees it; he sets up the chiastic structure that highlights it. But he does not
identify with either side, a truly conventional reading, or with both together, Kenik's
innovation. There is no real resolution of this conflict in the narrative. Solomon sticks
to his view and God to his. In the end, God prevails and any notion of divine
obligation to the promises to David is deflated. 2 Kgs 25:27-30 is not a hopeful
conclusion (cf. Noth 1981:98).
Throughout, the narrator keeps his detachment from the views expressed by
characters, God included. He does not say that God should have kept the promises that
he made to David; Solomon does. He only reports that God did not and even then he
does not criticize God for reneging. Neither does he say that Solomon must now,
against 2 Sam 7, obey in order to receive the Davidic reward; God does. And when
Solomon does not obey the narrator does not criticize, though he supplies plenty of
allusions to Deut 17 to highlight the disobedience. The narratorial situation is external
and unconditioned; the narrator maintains an objectivity that, however much a literary
convention, remains unsullied by the issues within the story world. Comprehension, not
partisan involvement, was the goal of this reporter.
21 In the context of ch. 2 Solomon's oily efforts at humility ring false. Isn't this
"innocent little boy" (yfint na'ar qSfOn 10' 3Sdac fit wSb8*) the same person who just wiped
out his political opposition? Solomon may think he can put this over on God, but only
the most jaded of readers could swallow such bilge.
22
M. Weinfeld (1972:256) notes the connection between the two passages, but confuses
Moses' and Solomon's rhetoric with that of the author/narrator of each passage (cf.
Kenik 1983:143-6). "Like the author of Deut. 1:9-18, the deuteronomic editor of I Kgs.
3:4-15 regards the possession of wisdom as the principal requisite for the competent
functioning of the judiciary." Unfortunately this confusion leads Weinfeld to believe
that the narrator supports Solomon's request and favours its outcomeSolomon's
acquisition and employment of wisdom. The context of the request, and it is in the
narrative context that we hear the narrator's own voice and views, is objectively neutral
about Solomon's acquisition of wisdom, pointing to several anomalies and problems in
its procurement.
135
23 T.N.D. Mettinger opts for the judicial sense of the expression "to discern good from
evil," but admits that "this faculty to discern "between good and evil" grants the king a
quality of incomparableness on earth (1 R 3,12), it renders him to some extent "like
God" (cf. 2 S 14, 17.20; Gn 3,5.22; 1 R 3,28)" (1976:244).
24 "And it was good, in the Lord's view, that Solomon had asked this thing" QiaddSbSr
hazzeti).
25 Cf. Hos 13:11 for an example of the potential for disaster in God's acquiescence to
human requests.
136
" Kenik (1983:44) regards the phraseological variations between Yahweh's and
Solomon's versions of what he is to get as the same content said four different ways.
Such a reading ignores the common biblical device of contrastive characterization
through such subtle variations (cf. Alter 1981:72-6). The differences between the
characters is significant and revelatory: what Solomon wants is not what God wants to
give. (Compare, for example, 1 Sam 8:5, where the people ask for a profane king "like all
the nations," to which God responds with a designate (jiSgid) "over my people Israel.")
This is not the same thing said twice but differently.
2' Cf. C. Meyers (1987:197), "... the riches and honor which characterized his realm
were not of his choosing."
137
2 Kenik sees, in the relationship of w. 6 and 15, a balanced tension established by the
Dtr redactor. "Out of this tension, the Dtr's purpose to bring the Davidic covenant into
harmony with Torah is effected" (1983:54). As the story develops, however, it becomes
very clear that the tension is not balanced at all. Solomon's grand scheme, the Temple
and its public inauguration, is a clever attempt to trap God into a commitment to an
unconditional covenant, or at least a conditional covenant whose conditions are
meaningless. And Yahweh is equally steadfast in his newly imposed conditionalization
of the Davidic covenant. Here there is no balanced tension; to reduce it to such is to
dull the edge of character strife and to ignore the subsequent sequencing of interactions
which lead to open confrontation and ultimate imbalance of the tension. Yahweh does,
after all, win the dispute (ch. 11).
138
covenant is a trap. And like David's own conditionalized version of 2 Sam 7 the terms of the agreement are rearranged to
suit the aims of the interpreter. Here we see the beginning of
Solomon's end and the end of the unconditional covenant to
David and his descendants.
With v. 15 the inclusio of w. 3-5 is extended:
Sacrifice and burnt offerings at Gibeon.
Dream and boon.
Sacrifice and burnt offerings in Jerusalem before
the ark of the covenant!
139
had any other plan. It is only an assumption, receiving no explicit confirmation in the narrative, that the different turn events
take was Solomon's plan. Only the mother's outburst halts the
proceeding.30 What kind of wisdom is this? Certainly events do
turn out right, but is it because of Solomon or inspite of him?
The conclusion of the tale has also been misread. In v. 28 the
narrator says, "all Israel heard the judgement that the king adjudged. And they feared on account of the king for they saw
that the wisdom of God was in him to do judgement." It is significant that the narrator couches the perception in a character
observation; he does not lend even this limited observation any
of his own authority. The people, viewing the outcome, assume
that Solomon planned it that way. But the narrator does not
confirm their assumption and readers who accept the observing
characters' point of view do so in the face of narratorial silence
on the matter. The people do indeed see the wisdom of God
operating, but it is not a wisdom controlled by Solomon.31 It is
a wisdom that operates through Solomon, but it is not operated
by Solomon. Rather, the divine wisdom that resolves this difficult case is accidental to Solomon's own wisdom; it appears in
the events more through the intercession of the mother of the
live child than through Solomon's decree. And even operating
through Solomon, what are we to think of this wisdom? Is it the
kind of decision that any human being would like to face? The
140
141
filment of the promises and Solomon's rule: in Solomon, the fulfilment is at hand. This same connection is prominent in another distinctive parallel in the chapter. The enlargement of Israel and of Solomon's wisdom are linked in their allusion to the
fulfilment of the promise to Abraham (progeny [v. 20; cf. Gen
22:17; 32:12] and land [v. 21; cf. Gen 15:18]). The allusion characterizes this point as the height of Israel's political existence.
It also points to the problem, given Solomon's personality, of
this wisdom. On account of the latter, people from all the kings
of the earth begin to come to Solomon. God is as responsible
for the aggrandizement of Solomon's wisdom as he is for the
fulfilment of the Abrahamic covenant here. The narrative will
soon show how those contacts affect Solomon and lead him
astray.
1 Kings 5-7
These chapters describe an important part of Solomon's
building campaign: construction of the temple of Yahweh and
the house of the king. One should say, rather, the house of the
king and then the house of Yahweh, for this is the order and the
priority of construction described by the narrator. Here as in
other lists in the Bible, ordering indicates priority. As before
(3:4, 15) Solomon's priorities put his personal goals before
Yahweh's.
In 6:111 the narrator describes the house Solomon built for
Yahweh. The description is paralleled in great detail by the description (ch. 7) of the house that Solomon builds for himself.
He and Yahweh have much the same house plan and they live in
the same neighbourhood (cf. De Vries 1985:103).
In the midst of the construction Yahweh issues an ominous
warning to Solomon about the significance of the temple (6:1213). Once again (cf. 3:14) the gist of the message is a conditional
qualification of the unconditional promise to David.32 But a
comparison of this second iteration with the first reveals a
growth in the applicable conditions:
142
3:14
6:12
143
144
145
146
having brought his own plans to the light of day, Solomon has
forced Yahweh into a more explicit revelation of his own purpose. Though Yahweh is not forced to make his own requirement of total obedience stifferit is infinitely stiffer than what
he promised David (cf. 3:14; 6:12-13)Solomon's rhetorical
moves in the public prayer force him to make an opposing,
more explicit statement of the necessity of obedience and the
severe consequences of betrayal.
In response to Solomon's effort to ameliorate the curses of
Deut 28, Yahweh reaffirms them in 9:7-9, alluding to Deut 28:37,
45, 63; and 29:23-26 (cf. Keil 1982:139):
And I will cut off Israel from on the face of the land
that I gave to them
and the house that I sanctified to my name
I will cast off from before my face.
Israel will become a proverb and a saying (cf. Deut 28:37) among all
the people
and this house will be a heap.
All passing by it will be astonished and exclaim, "For what did Yahweh to such a thing to this land and this house?" (cf. Deut 29:23).37
And they will reply, "Because they forsook Yahweh, their God, who
brought their fathers from the land of Egypt. And they embraced
other gods and worshipped them and served them. Thus Yahweh
brought upon them all this evil" (cf. Deut 29:24).
147
vine plan? What is the divine plan? What is made certain about
the divine plan is that it is not to support or extend the "golden
age" of Solomon.
Neither Yahweh nor Solomon are criticized in the narrative.38 That Solomon sinned and that Yahweh helped him along
his road to ruin are simple facts in this narrative, neither requiring nor receiving any explicit comment. The focal concern
is the pseudo-synergistic impetus that the God/man interaction
gives to Israel's history. Israel's history moves according to a
divine plan, of which the human characters in the story are almost totally ignorant and of which, if they could be aware, they
would most certainly disapprove.
The reader's awareness of the divine plan is only slightly
greater, and that thanks to the narrator's selective implicit illuminations. What the narrator reveals is not where God is
taking Israel's destiny; he only reveals that God is purposefully
shaping it. Thus we see God methodically puts temptation in
Solomon's way with one hand while exacting a heavier tribute
in obedience with the other. When Solomon tries to gain a little
more breathing room for himself, God only becomes more
adamant. Solomon is unable to meet the requirementshis human frailty is already evident in ch. 2and his monarchy, along
with the eternal dynasty promised to David, is doomed. Neither
the narrator nor God says anything explicit about the aim of this
plot. It is left to the reader to draw conclusions from the trajectory that events take. It does not take any meticulous exploration to see that what God does in and through the reign of
Solomon is to end the unconditional promises that he made to
David; this is, from God's point of view, the single accomplishment of the entire Solomonic era. After Solomon, it is only a
few quick steps to the ultimate end itself, the Exile.
In 9:10 we read again that Solomon completed his building
projects (cf. 6:9, 14, 38; 7:51; 9:1). This notice is followed b
more detailed descriptions of Solomon's administrative practices (w. 11-18), especially as affected by his Egyptian contacts
(w. 15-19). The inclusiastic connections between 9:11-15 and
5:6-13 imply that nothing has changed, despite all that has inter-
148
149
150
And king Solomon became greater than all the kings of the earth
in wealth
and wisdom.
And all the earth was seeking the presence of Solomon to hear
151
horse story, and the queen's "conquest" serves much the same
purpose as Rahab's conversion in the book of Joshua.
The queen's speech (v. 10) proclaims what Solomon's wisdom should do for Israel, i.e. "justice and righteousness." This
piece of dramatic ironythe queen is unaware of itcontrasts
markedly with the actual results of Solomon's reign, which have
just been foregrounded in w. 4-5, where Solomon displays the
gains of his wise action:
And when the queen of Sheba saw all the wisdom of Solomon:
the house that he built,
the food on his table,
the attentiveness of his servants,
the dutifulness of his servers,
and their attire,
and his cupbearers,
and his stairway [to heaven] by which he could go up to the house of
Yahweh,
she was deflated.
152
The link between the first and last lines alludes again to 3:14.
What has come to pass is exactly what God promised at that
point. And since the special focus of the chapter is on
Solomon's contravention, thanks to his wisdom, of the legislation in Deut 17,41 these two verses highlight the fact that it is
God who ultimately affords Solomon the opportunity and
means to contravene the law. The question that the narrative
raises for the reader is why?
Verses 24-25 also highlight the connection between
Solomon's wisdom and the wealth that it attracts:
24 All the earth was seeking (m'baqSim) Solomon's face to hear the
wisdom that God put in his heart.
25 And they were bringing (meb/J>im) each his gift: articles of silver &
gold, garments, weapons, spices, horses and mules annually.
41
The recent effort of A. Millard (1989) and K.A. Kitchen (1989) to defend the
plausibility of the quantity of loot acquired by Solomon are well-intentioned and, from
a non-specialist's perspective, persuasive. But they miss entirely the point being made
in ch. 10 and only impede a reader's understanding of it by distracting attention from it
onto the irrelevant matters of historical possibility. Biblical verisimilitude here, as so
often for modern readers of the Bible, only gets in the way.
42 Montgomery marks the connection with Deut 17 here (1951:228), but gets caught up
in piling up delightful historical analogies and misses the point of the allusion.
153
43 For those readers who have failed to appreciate the charlatanic nature of Solomon's
rhetoric in the prayers, the narratorial description that opens ch. 11 has often proved a
problem. "The idolatry into which Solomon fell in his old age appears so strange in a
king so wise and God-fearing as Solomon showed himself to be at the dedication of the
temple, that many have been quite unable to reconcile the two, and have endeavoured
to show either that Solomon's worship of idols was psychologically impossible, or that
the knowledge of God and the piety attributed to him are unhistorical. But great wisdom
and a refined knowledge of God are not a defence against the folly of idolatry ..." (Kei
1982:166). When the reader understands the euphuistic rhetoric of the prayers' piety, an
154
155
44 The same, in fact and also to David's discredit when compared to 2 Sam 11:12:
l"t ?St hammaPkim ... way*hi l*St hStereb wayySqom dSwid
156
45 The force of Solomon's rhetoric has impressed many readers. So taken in by the
power of the prayers, however, scholarly readers have been wont to attribute them to the
author instead of leaving them as the relativized statements of the character to whom
they have been granted by the narrator (e.g. Montgomery 1951:194, "these prayers
attributed to Solomon compose one of the noblest flights in sacred oratory from the
deuteronomic school").
4 The continual narratorial allusions to the completion of the work on the Temple
culminate here. Solomon's bid, so heavily dependant on the edifice in the process of
being built, ends with its completion in failure.
157
** The fact that the rhetoric of the prayers is so well-suited to Solomon's predicament
warns against attributing it to a contrary redactional layer in the text. Pre-exilic or exilic
hands cannot be distinguished in a text where characters are allowed the liberty to
dispute points of obvious personal interest as the issues of dynasty and covenant were to
Solomon and Yahweh. But for readers who reject the notion that the biblical authors
could have created a narrative with conflicting opinions expressed by its characters, the
case for a pre-exilic as opposed to exilic redactional layer in 1 Kgs 8 is made by
Halpern (1988:168-74).
4
" The narrator emphasizes the causal connection between these ceremonies and the
stalemated Temple construction by using the strong adverb '&z with the imperfect, rather
than simple parataxis (cf. GKC 107b, c; Konig 137, 138). Isaac Rabinowitz's study of }Sz
followed by an imperfect verb supports this reading. "Referring to the foregoing
context of narrated past events, >8z + imperfect indicates this context as approximately
the time when, the time or circumstances in the course of which, or the occasion upon
which the action designated by the imperfect verb form went forward: this was when
[then?] ... so-and-so did (imperfect) such-and-such" (1984:54, cf. 59).
158
49 Though w. 12-13 are very different from the rest of the prayers, a bit of poetry at
the opening of an elevated speech is not altogether an unknown rhetorical device
(against e.g. Levenson 1981:153, who marks these verses as a separate "address" on
account of their literary appearance). How much more informative it is to ask why
Solomon should preface his prayers with a bit of poetry than to ask where the author
might have gotten this bit from and how old it might be ("... most likely the oldest
piece in 1 Kings 8," Levenson, p. 153).
What is Solomon trying to accomplish with this introductory recitation? He
emphasizes the perpetuity of the arrangement he proposes through the word "forever"
CWffmfm), the force of which can be gauged by the response of a reader such as C.F
Keil, who spends much effort apologizing for Solomon's attempt to constrain God for
all eternity (1982:124). Cf. Noth (1968:182), "o'n'jir setz das Nochbestehen des
salomonischen Tempel voraus."
159
5 Cf. De Vries (1985:123), who calls this first section "a protocol of legitimation," and
Levenson (1981:154).
51 De Vries hears the rhetoric (1985:125), but credits the Dtr narrator for the
concentration on the fulfilment of the promise to David as one of the "Dtr's priorities."
Cf. Levenson (1981:153) "Nowhere is this keynote [2 Sam 7] dwelt upon at greater length
than in Solomon's second speech."
52 "The substance of the prayer is closely connected with the prayer of Moses,
especially with the blessings and curses therein (.vid. Lev. xxvi. and Deut. xxviii.)" (Keil
1982:125; cf. I. Benzinger 1899:59).
160
A prime example of how historical critics have misread the deuteronomistic rhetoric of
Solomon's prayers is offered by Gray (1970:213). "The rhetoric and hortatory style of
the whole and its theology, strongly impregnated with the conception of sin and
inevitable retribution, stamps it as deuteronomistic, and indeed such orations with
historical recapitulation and the future prospect at significant crises of the history of
Israel are distinctive of the deuteronomistic history ..." Gray hears the allusions to the
language of Deuteronomy (he even notes (p. 215) that Burney (C.F. Burney, Notes on
the Hebrew Text of the Books of Kings) suggested connections to the curses of Deut 28)
but he jumps, immediately, to the conclusion that here the narrator/author speaks and
we already know what he will say from our knowledge of deuteronomic ideology and
deuteronomistic historiography. Such assumptions must inevitably foreclose on careful
reading in favour of automatic support for the conventional historical-critical
interpretation.
" In both cases, Solomon's claim is that this day, in which Solomon, son of David,
king of Israel, consecrates the Temple, God is fulfilling his word to David. If God
accepts this claim, logic dictates that Solomon and the Temple must continue or the
promise will be broken and God will have betrayed his servant.
161
162
see that Solomon's version is very different, eclipsing his obligation to action behind his burning vision of the eternal aspect
of the promise, which God has sought to depreciate.
Solomon's opening address to God is formally similar to his
first address to the people. The parallels are:
8:14-21
Solomon blesses the assembly of Israel, who stand
[before him] (v. 14).
Solomon blesses Yhwh,
"who spoke with his mouth
to (!) David my father and
with his hand fulfilled ..." (v.
15).
8:22-26
Solomon stands before the
altar of Yhwh, opposite all
the assembly of Israel (v. 22).
Solomon praises Yhwh to
high heaven, the God who
keeps covenant and fidelity
C/iesecO with his servants ...,
who kept with his servant
David (my father) what he
spoke to him. "... you
spoke with your mouth and
with your hand you fulfilled,
this very day" (w. 23-24).
Solomon's revisionist view
of the conditional qualification of the covenant (v.
25).
"And now, O God of Israel,
confirm (,3mn) your word,
which you spoke to your
servant, David my father" (v.
26).
163
we3el-hattepilla'
"Ser <abdeka
mitpallel
fyaneyka hayydm
Solomon melds vocabulary parallels and syntax together to create a concentrated focus of petition, humble and pious, which
God can ill-afford to ignore given the mass of onlookers. Such
is the plan, in any case.
Standing at the centre of this chiastic focus is Yahweh, addressed by Solomon as "my God," public testimony to
Solomon's claim of fidelity to his divine Lord. Solomon asks
"his God" to hearken to the solicitous cry QiSrinnf) that he
raises in prayer. And just as he has reiterated his claim that God
has fulfilled his promise to David "this very day" (cf. w. 20, 24)
he asks God to hear, "this day" Qiayydni), the prayer addressed
to him. All is carefully crafted as coercive supplication.
The keynote in the requests that follow is "hear and forgive"
(cf. w. 30, 32, 34, 36, 39, 43, 45, 49-50). Here we come to
Solomon's main front against Yahweh's provisos to the Davidic
covenant. In the very first request, as throughout, the keynote
is given a prominence through rhetorical structuring. It occu-
164
pies the centre position in each of a series of enveloped structures. The pattern is set in this first, innocuous petition:
When a man sins against his neighbour
and is required to make an oath
I and brings the oath before your altar in this house
Hear in heaven, act, and judge your servants
condemning the wicked and justifying the righteous
165
narrator (redactor). As a result, its significance is quite different from what Wurthwein sees in it. Solomon does, indeed,
seem to be stressing the meaning that Wurthwein suggests for
the phrase. But he does so only because, in fact, he wants to
implement its reverse. The point of all of his lengthy prayers is
to win from God a concession that would make the temple the
place towards which one could pray and gain forgiveness and
reconciliation for just about any sin imaginable, at least within
the conceptual bounds set by the catalogue of sins in Deut 28.
The incessant reminder to God that Solomon does not for
one moment think that he could possibly live or even fit into
the temple (w. 27, 32, 34, 36, 39, 43, 45, 49)56 fulfils the same
function as the first scenario about the two litigants (w. 31-2).
It is aimed at allaying any divine suspicions that Solomon might
be trying to constrain God through the device of the temple.
The message of the rhetoric is that this is a law-abiding prayer,
pious and proper beyond reproach. Each time that Solomon
puts forward the idea that God should honour all petitions directed towards the temple he adds a qualification like, "hear in
heaven, your dwelling place" (v. 49), so that his brazen scheme
to undo the curses of Deuteronomy 28 with the temple will not
be so obvious.
Solomon gets down to business in w. 33-34. The opening
phrases"When your people, who have sinned against you, are
stricken before an enemy Q}ehinn5gep cameka yiSra'el lipnG 36y
..."allude to Deut 28:25, "Yahweh will have you stricken before your enemies (jiiggop lipnG ^y^ykS) ..." one of the curses
in this collection of curses called down upon any future waywardness on the part of Israel (cf. Lev 26:17). Within the frame
of Deuteronomy this curse was the sure recompense for an infraction against the covenant by Israel. Now Solomon adds a
proviso to the curse. If the curse is invoked, says Solomon, the
temple could function as the Mecca of contrite prayer and God
could, upon witnessing such focused repentance, forgive the
sin and stop punishing his people. In Solomon's representation
the unmitigated finality of the deuteronomic curse is dissolved
by his new mechanism for repentance, the temple. With his last
petitionary breath, with regard to military defeat that is,
5 Against Wurthwein (1985:97), v. 27, the strongest assertion of this prominent theme
in the prayers, is not an extraneous marginal comment, but a well-placed disavowal of
any intention to incarcerate God in the Temple.
166
57 Solomon alludes, by the word "inheritance," to Yahweh's promises of the land, his
part of the Sinai covenant (cf. Deut 4:21, 38; 12:9-10; 15:4; 19:10, 14; 20:16; 21:23).
167
" On the covenantal literary form of the book of Deuteronomy and its resemblance
to ancient near eastern treaty forms see M. Weinfeld (1972) or D.J. McCarthy (1978).
168
the land
place
Hear, in your heavenly dwelling place and forgive;
render to each, whose heart you know according
to his ways, for you alone | kno know the hearts of man
That they may fear you all the days that they live
on the face of the land that you gave to our fathers.
169
60 As always, references to Yahweh's great name, his mighty hand, and his outstretched
arm are strong allusive references to the foundational exodus events in Israel's history.
Cf. e.g. Deut 4:34.
170
"1 One wonders whether Solomon's solicitude for the cultic needs of the foreigners
might not also be a back-door route to allow for the foreign cults of his wives (cf. 11:4-8,
esp. v. 8).
111
The first half (v. 44) of the larger envelope structure is itself
chiastically organized:
Israel (acting for God)
divine choice and action
prayer to Yhwh
divine choice (and action)
Solomon (acting for God)
62 Weinfeld (1972:150-5) discusses the phrase cSh miSpaf with regard to David in 2 Sam
8:15-18. He suggests that it means to "establish justice," following a suggestion from A.B.
Ehrlich. In both passages, the phrase emphasizes the legal obligation of the king to his
subjects.
63 The stylistic divergencies of the last scenario from the previous six led Jepsen to
posit the existence of an exilic addendum (w. 44-53) to the prayers (1956:15-16). It is,
however, equally possible to interpret the variations as integral to the rhetoric. It is the
culmination of Solomon's effort, after all, and stands out for length alone. The stylistic
divergencies to which Jepsen points have significance in Solomon's argument;
explanation in terms of literary history is therefore unwarranted and destructive of the
172
A When they sin against you and you deliver them to an enemy
who takes them captive to a land far off or near (v. 47).
B If they repent in the land of their captivity and make supplication (w'hithann'nu) to you (v. 48).
C If they return with all their heart and soul and pray to you, toward
their land that you gave to their fathers, the city that you chose, and
the house that I have built for your name (v. 49).
D Hear their prayer and supplication in your heavenly dwelling
place and do them justice; forgive your people and make them objects of compassion (v. 50).
C' For they are your people, your inheritance (cf. Deut 4:20; 9:29,
which you brought out of Egypt from the midst of the iron furnace
(v. 51; cf. Deut 4:20).
B' May your eyes be open to the supplication (ffcinnaO of your servant and of your people Israel, to listen to them whenever they call
to you (v. 52).
A ' For you separated them for yourself as your inheritance from all
the peoples of the earth, just as you said by the hand of Moses your
servant when you brought our fathers out of Egypt (v. 53; cf. Lev
20:24, 26; Deut 32:8).
prayers' semantic structure. Jepsen observes the divergencies and, without further
investigation of their significance, assumes that they are the telltale signs of a second
hand.
173
Abstracted in this way, Solomon's characteristic focus on divine duty is clear. He does not say that God owes Israel because Israel has lived up to expectations. On the contrary, he
frankly admits Israel's sin: it is a matter of fact. His argument,
rather, is that God owes it to himself to continue the project that
he began so long ago, provided of course that Israel should be
truly contrite for its sins. And how is God to know? Quite
simple: when they pray towards the holy city, in the centre of
which is the temple, "which I have built for your name," then
God can rest assured that they are truly desperate and in need
of his compassion.64
The deuteronomic clause to which Solomon addresses himself this time is found, again, in the curses of the book of
Deuteronomy (28:49): "Yahweh will bring against you a nation
from afar (merShdq) ..." (cf. 1 Kgs 8:46, "to the land of the enemy, far off (jelidqa) or near"). Once again, Solomon does his
best to ensure that even the ultimate punishment, the exile that
should spell the end of the covenant relationship, can be remitted on the basis of prayer towards the temple (v. 48). Unlike the
"foreigner from afar," who was transformed in Solomon's version, this allusion maintains the same thought and tone as the
deuteronomic curse. Solomon's tactic here is candid admission
of the cause of the curse's invocationIsraelite sincombined
with a reiterated emphasis, complete with supporting allusions,
on God's promises and past actions on Israel's behalf.
Solomon's temple plays a critical role in his proposal both as a
focal point for Israel's contrition and supplication and as a visible reminder to God of his promises to David: "the city that you
chose and the house that I have built to your name." In
Solomon's presentation God's promises and his covenant are
too historic and too progressive to be deterred by Israel's sin.
Capital covenantal punishmentexile away from the landis
transmuted into a life sentence with the possibility of parole at
any time the guilty confess and repent of their sin.65
""* Solomon's portrait of Israel's experience in exile is much milder than that of Deut
28:64-8. In Deuteronomy, Israel is destitute and despairing; according to Solomon, they
are full of contrition and desire for reconciliation.
Exile spells the end in
Deuteronomy; in Solomon's prayer it is only a stage in a domestic quarrel.
" Levenson (1981:158) dates w. 44-53 to the exile, reasoning that only in such a
context does the hope of return from the exile make sense. In the overall context of the
174
prayers, however, in which Solomon does his best to undo the curses of Deuteronomy,
the ultimate curseexileis obviously an important subject, not to be omitted. For
Solomon to speak about return from exile, therefore, tells us little about the date of this
piece of rhetoric. And from a historian's point of view, there is every reason to believe
that just as "Israel knew of and dreaded exile long before she experienced it" (Levenson
1981:157), it could also entertain the hope for reprieve should that terrible eventuality
ever come to pass.
175
Whereas these sentiments, which are always incorrect wherever they occur, were previously set in an ironic frame in the
narrative Solomon uses them here to convince his audience that
God has, indeed, fulfilled all and that he, Solomon, is the peak of
fulfilment. The dissonance between Solomon's representation
and the ironies of the book of Joshua heightens the reader's
sense of the emptiness of all Solomon's rhetoric. He has played
many rhetorical tricks through his allusions and references to
tradition. Here he gets caught and it is the narrator's own irony
that catches him. Like Joshua's similar assertions, however,
there is no indication that the human audience was privy to the
vacuity of the assertions. Solomon's rhetoric aims to compel
God by saying that he has done the very things that the narrator
and the narrative have shown he has not done. The ironic implication of this allusion to the ironical judgments at the end of
the book of Joshua is that Solomon's rhetoric cannot succeed.
It bears within it the seeds of its own destruction.
The remainder of Solomon's public address is primarily
taken up with exhortations to God: to remain with Israel and to
incline their hearts to obedience to his commandments. The
latter is significant because it reveals Solomon's efforts to put
almost all the weight of allegiance to the covenant, even Israel's
allegiance, on God. Twice more (v. 59) does he reiterate his request for God to "do the right" of Israel, his servant. In v. 60 he
alludes to the larger purpose of the exodus eventsknowledge
of Yahweh throughout the worldclaiming that by maintaining
Israel as Solomon has suggested, God will accomplish what he
once sought to accomplish through the exodus. "... that he
might do the right of his servant and the right of his people Israel, day by day, so that all the peoples of the earth will know
that Yahweh is God; there is none other." With this argument,
Solomon augments Moses' embarrassment argument (God must
preserve Israel or be shamed before the nations) with God's
demonstrated concern for international reputation. God can
only win!
Only in his last exhortation does Solomon finally call for action from Israel. "Let your heart be whole (.Salem ) with Yahweh, our God ,..."66 By keeping exhortations to Israel minimalactually they are insignificant in comparison to all those
"" Ironically it is Solomon himself who is first to fail in "whole-heartedness" with God
(cf. 11:4, vflP hSya-fbabd SSlSm <im-yhwh).
176
directed to YahwehSolomon has, on a larger scale, also inverted the overall emphasis of the deuteronomic curses (Deut
28:15-68), which overbalance fifty-four verses of cursing in
case of Israelite sin against fourteen verses of blessing in case
of obedience.67 Even on the less obvious structural level, everything in the prayers is devoted to undermining this key passage from the book of Deuteronomy.
The crowning glory of the prayers is the public sacrifice, a
physical manifestation of the rhetorical spirit and ploys of the
prayers. The sacrifice is, by design, all encompassing. It lasts
for seven and seven days, a perfect and whole period twice extended to ensure completion (v. 65).^ It includes, within its geographical purview, all Israel from its northern (the entrance of
Hamath) to its southern most extremes (the brook of Egypt) (v.
65). "All Israel" celebrates with Solomon (v. 65). And no less
than 22,000 oxen and 120,000 sheep are slaughtered (v. 63).
These numbers and for that matter the entire account may seem
fantastic (so Montgomery 1951:199-200; De Vries 1985:127) but
such is the nature of this affair in the story world of the narrative. It is fantastic that Solomon should so try to coerce God.
The prayers and the sacrifices are at once subtle and heavyhanded in the manner in which they aim to extract divine assent
to Solomon's proposals.69 But then Solomon, as the narrator
shows in chs. 9-10, has an extravagant nature.
The Role of the Prayer in the Dtr Narrative
Martin Noth and most other interpreters of the Dtr saw the
numerous literary connections between Solomon's prayers and
the book of Deuteronomy as a sign that here the
deuteronomistic ideology of the author of this history was
shining through clearly. "Finally, after the completion of the
*>7 Against A. Sanda 0911:221), "Das Game klingt in der Aufforderung der Gemeinde
zur treuen Anbanglichkeit an Jahve aus."
68 The seven days twice done are the perfect complement to the seven scenarios of the
perfect prayer. The parallel numerical symbolism counts against those who wish to
disallow w. 44-51 as original to the main prayer (e.g. Wiirthwein 1985:97).
"9 cf. Keil (1982:135), who is innocently taken with Solomon's rhetoric of word and
deed, "The thank-offering consisted, in accordance with the magnitude of the
manifestation of divine grace of 22,000 oxen and 120,000 sheep" [my emphasis]. Keil
correctly sees the point of the exceptional offering as a response to the tremendous
leeway that Solomon seeks in the prayer. He fails to see, however, that the grace is
something sought by Solomon but rejected by God.
111
temple in Jerusaleman event that was of fundamental importance to Dtr.'s theological interpretation of historyKing
Solomon makes a detailed speech in the form of a prayer to
God, which thoroughly expounds the significance of the new
sanctuary for the present, and especially for the future" (Noth
1981:5-6; cf. Noth 1968:175, 182).
Noth's interpretation is wrong. The reasons for his error are
twofold. First his belief that the Dtr redactor had inserted, at
key points, his own ideological exposition into the narrative led
Noth to read these insertions at some remove from their narrative context. Treating the speeches as redactional insertions,
Noth never gave any serious consideration to the subtle contextual moorings of the speeches. Consequently all of the powerful narratorial exposition through implication, which completely relativizes the propositions set out in the prayers, was
overlooked. Second, Noth read the narrative in total neglect of
its voice structure. He made no distinction between the voice
of Solomon and the voice of the narrator. Once again he was
misled by the assumption that the high ratio of deuteronomistic
vocabulary and ideology in Solomon's prayers was a certain indication that 1 Kgs 8 represented the views of the Dtr author/redactor. This lack of depth perception regarding the
voice structure led Noth to interpret the obvious concentration
of highly charged deuteronomistic language as a nugget of authorial exposition, concentrated commentary lodged in a mass
of traditional narrative material. Given that the supposedly traditional material appeared so bereft of commentary, what else
could such a vein of evaluative discourse be than the persuasive
rhetoric of the redactor trying to breath his own meaning into
the bare historical facts of tradition? Presuppositions about the
evaluative stance of the redactor combined with the sheer
weight of Solomon's charged rhetorical valuations inevitably led
Noth, and others, to the simple equation between the views expressed in the prayer and the views of the redactor(s)/author.
Solomon's prayers and speeches are, together, one among a
series of character utterances in the Dtr narratives in which
there is an abnormally high evaluative content. In each case
(e.g. 1 Sam 12; 1 Kgs 8) a character in the narrative is given the
floor and makes a series of strongly evaluative statements. The
narrator never explicitly contradicts what the character says,
allowing context and implication to do a more effective job of
relativizing and so undercutting the character's assertions. That
178
179
there any indication that the narrator (= the author) shares any
part of Solomon's actual or rhetorical views. He simply reports
them, showing how they derive from Solomon's ambitions and
lifestyle. Far from being a statement of the narrator's (= author's, Dtr redactor's) views about the temple and the future,
Solomon's prayers are the tendentious rhetorical peregrinations
of a desperate king seeking to outfox his divine overlord.
Neither does the narrator express any support for Yahweh's
apposite rebuttal to Solomon's impious prayers. Having exposed their impiety, he is not at all concerned to decry it.
Rather, the narrator's concern seems to be to show how all of
Solomon's efforts to retrieve the promises that Yahweh has revoked end up putting him at loggerheads with Yahweh. And
that is all that he is concerned to do. He provides a history of
the difficulties through which the covenantal relationship
moves. Since it is the narrator's special talent to include revealing information about God's behind-the-scenes schemes
and manipulations of his human partners, it is safe to say that assumptions of agreement between narrator and divine character
are sure to go astray.
Neither is the narrator a railing critic who chastises God for
having changed the terms of his agreement with David. He simply tells his story in which Yahweh does, in fact change, the
terms when they are handed down to Solomon. Here there is
no need for the extended description that is provided to show
the extent of Solomon's perfidy. The simple fact that God does
renege on his promise to David is provocative enough, a provocation only made stronger by the fact that no explicit excuse or
condemnation is made for the divine character. Any implication
on the divine action at this point is not critical but objective, at
least conventionally so. God is not presented as immoral for
having changed the terms of the Davidic covenant. He is, rather,
amoral. The divine end justifies the divine means. Or does it?
The result is a narrative presentation of divine action in human
history that is very much like that of the exodus narratives, in
which God does things that would be reprehensible if performed by a human and yet comes away with clean, amoral
hands.
For an interpreter such as Noth, who hears the Dtr redactor
speaking through the voices of the characters in the narrative,
there is an obvious self-contradiction in this story between
what the Dtr says through the voice of Yahweh in ch. 9 and
180
70
"Dtr siebt die Gestalt Salomons in einem Zwielicht stehen" (Noth 1968:199).
181
CHAPTER 6
THROUGH THE F I R E
And they caused their sons and their daughters to pass through
the fire, and used divination and enchantments, and sold
themselves to do evil in the sight of the Lord, to provoke him to
anger (2 Kings 17:17).
Introduction
n quantity of explicit narratorial evaluation 2 Kings 17 stands
almost alone. The chapter presents one of the most difficult
Ipassages
in the entire narrative. Only once before (Judg 2:1114) has the narrator heaped up a similar, though smaller collection of explicit evaluations all seemingly critical of the Israelite
people's behaviour. Much reading space and story time has
passed since Judges 2, which turned out to be more neutral than
it first seems; the reader staggers under the weight of the authoritative evaluations with which the narrator burdens him in
ch. 17.
The result is, in terms of the reading history of this chapter, a
rhetorical failure. Without exception, so it seems, readers have
understood the evaluative commentary in 2 Kgs 17 as an
unconditional condemnation of Israel. This censure is read as
the author's (narrator's/redactor's) etiology of Israel's demise
in the Assyrian exile (e.g. J. Gray 1970:646-50; P.M. Cross
1973:281; J. Van Seters 1983:315).
Grown accustomed, through the books of Samuel and Kings,
to the narrator's expository reserve, especially when it comes
to evaluative commentary on the behaviour of the general Israelite populace, the reader is brought up short by the evaluative torrent in 2 Kgs 17:7-23. What does it mean? Has the narrator changed his mind about his story? Is he dropping his
objective guise just here, near the end, because now he really
wants to blame Israel when ever since the rise of the monarchy
184
1
2 Kgs 13:1-7 is reminiscent of the descriptions in the book of Judges of cyclical
apostasy in Israel. It differs in attributing a strong apostatizing leadership to Kings Jehoahaz (v. 2) and Jeroboam (v. 6, a continuing effect of his reign).
2 A. Sanda (1912:221) is an example of a reader who hears the breathless rhetorical effect ("langatmigen Schilderung"), but he neglects the ironic incongruities between the
rhetoric and the narrative realities to which it refers and so the force of the rhetoric is
lost on him: "Der Schreiber ringt bier mil dem Ausdruck. Er mdcbte den Abfall
Israels recht eindringlich scbildern und strebt nach Effekt. Er ziebt desbalb alle
mdglichen termini und Ideen herbei."
185
186
5 Robert Polzin's suggestions about the ideology of the Dtr narrative apply just as well
in 2 Kings as they do to the narrative in Joshua-Judges: "... we have attempted to show
how the Deuteronomistic History, contrary to the prevalent view of scholars, is not
representative of an orthodox retribution theory carried to its most mechanistic extreme ..." (1980:126-7). I would extend Polzin's remarks on the narratorial subversion of
what he calls "authoritarian dogmatism" to cover examples such as 2 Kgs 17:7-23 In
such passages, as Polzin has demonstrated for the book of Joshua and its relationship to
the book of Deuteronomy, the stock theological phrases and conventional piety are
undercut by a narrative that presents such views as though they were its own but sets
them in a context that exposes their hollowness.
It might appear an arbitrary distinction to say that the context preceding 2 Kgs 17:723 describes the actual events in the story world while the verses in question are
presented only as summary evaluations of those same events. But what distinguishes 2
Kgs 17:7-23 as evaluative commentary is the fact that it is a compressed overview, a
summary rehearsal that does not attempt to describe events as they happen and lead on
to other, future events. Here the narrator stops the flow of story world time to review the
past in order to explain the significance of an event that is just then current in the ongoing plot of the narrative. Here, Israel's history of convenantal defection is reviewed
to explain why the Assyrian exile occurs. The difference in time ratio too, between the
events described and the space of narrative that is expended in their description, shows
that here the narrator engages in abstract exposition rather than blow by blow description Ccf. Sternberg 1978:19-34).
A different objection might be based on S. Sandmel's suggestion that the ancient
mind was less troubled by apparent contradiction that the modern and that it was a
common enough practise for subsequent interpreters such as redactors to allow contradictions to stand as creative elements in the on-going life of sacred tradition (1972).
The contradictions between 2 Kgs 17:7-23 and its preceding context, then, could be explained as unexceptional differences between one or another of the Dtr redactors and
the traditional material, their ancient minds being so much more accommodating than
ours. What this resolution would mean, however, is the impossibility of irony, for them
or us, in ancient writing. I would submit that there is ample evidence of irony and of
187
What is most difficult about the narrator's evaluative commentary in 2 Kgs 17 is the manner in which its overt, overbearing rancour controverts the subtle implication and objective
tone that inspires the narratorial voice both before and after 2
Kgs 17. Here, nearly finished his story, the narrator seems to
step out into the open, shamelessly flaunting views that he has
kept so private up to this point. Having avoided such a direct
confrontation with the reader since Judges 2, he spews an inflammatory tirade that targets the Israelite people as cause for
the exile.
Many readers have drunk this draught to the dregs, allowing
their intoxicated perceptions to blur the subtle and sobering
implications that precede. Under the influence of this evaluative
grog the reading consciousness becomes foggy and memories
of delicate, theologically indelicate implications fade away.
Here at last, it has seemed, is an interpretive framework of conventional theological lineage (Polzin's "authoritarian dogmatism
[1980:132]) within which all the unorthodoxy and uncertainty
evoked by the narrative can be subsumed. It is, so the
conventional reading, simply the harsh reality of a world filled
with sinners and ruled by an exacting Judge who administers
the beating that Israel so richly deserved.
For those readers able to resist the temptation of an easy
inebriation that assuages uncertainties about sin, exile, and divine justice in this story, there are here as in Judges 2 some
submerged, but strong underlying contextualizations of the bald
evaluative statements. The implicit undertones of the explicit
evaluations are provided through allusions to prior events in
this story and especially through linkages to Judges 2, which set
the implicit agenda for 2 Kgs 17. When these prior events are
implicated through the allusions, the evaluations take on a very
different coloration from the black hues in which they are
explicitly cloaked. The rhetorical ploy of the narrative here is
no different from that already played in Judges 2, to which 2
Kgs 17 is so closely tied by conceptual and vocabulary linkages.
There are two main buttresses supporting an ironic reading
of the evaluative statements of 2 Kgs 17: a. the literary linkage to
Judg 2, in which the narrator used a similar vocabulary to ex-
188
189
that dominates the narrative in 2 Kings. Over and over the narrator introduces the reign of a king with the description that
introduces Hoshea's reign here: 'In the * year of King X, King
Y, son of Z became king and reigned
years. And he did evil
in the sight of Yahweh ....' Unlike the book of Judges, in the
books of Kings, with one mitigated exception,9 it is the kings
who offend Yahweh by their own behaviour and who lead Israel to similar offence.10 But the narrator does not even show
any pressing concern to evaluate even the kings. His aim,
rather, is to show that throughout the monarchic period the irritation that provokes Yahweh to impose the exile is located in
the monarchy; the behaviour of the general populace, described
so fully here in ch. 17, is almost totally ignored. So he has not
blamed the kings for the exile and far less provided a chronicle
that pin-points the people for the disaster. If he had, in 2 Kgs
17, made the kings target to his vituperations it would be far
easier for the reader to accept the claims; the fact that it is the
people whose presence has been less than obvious all the way
through the narrative is the key to the irony of the presentation
in this chapter.
Chapter 17 opens with a description of monarchic offence to
Yahweh that follows a combined genealogical-evaluative pattern
encountered many times before in the books of Kings. A major
development in this instance is that the historical consequence
of the offensive behaviour is exile (v. 6). This turn of events
touches on the event towards which the entire narrative has
been moving: the exile and its implications for the covenant.
The implication of this formulaic description of royal offence to
Yahweh is that Hoshea's action and the action of his monarchic
predecessors provoked God to send Israel into exile: it is the
monarchy, not the people, that has a history of doing what is
9
In 1 Kgs 14:22-24 the whole tribe of Judah did evil in the sight of the Lord through
apostasy and syncretism; see below, pp. 196-98.
10
Cf. Von Rad (1962:338, 339, 344-5). The central formulaic description in the books
of Kings sets responsibility for Israel's waywardness right on the kings' doorsteps. "The
king is now regarded as the responsible person to whom has been entrusted the law of
Moses and who has the duty to see that it is recognized in his kingdom" (Von Rad
1962:339). Von Rad is correct in his understanding of the key role played by the kings
according to the predominant formulaic expression of the books of Kings. He errs,
however (as does Gerbrandt [1986:190, 192-94]), in attributing this requirement to the
narrator rather than to the character, God. In every case, the king's aberrant behaviour
is described as offensive to God; the narrator dissociates himself from the evaluation.
His goal, rather, is to explain the dynamics of the relationship between God and Israel,
culminating in the exile.
190
evil in the eyes of the Lord. This implication has been building
through the narrative to this point. Every time another
formulaic introduction to a new king appears the offence to
Yahweh grows and with it the likelihood of a confrontation. By
the time the reader hits 2 Kgs 17 and the connection between
yet another formulaic introduction and the Assyrian exile, the
reader is so prepared that the simple combination of the
formula and the paratactically joined description of the Assyrian
assault is enough to convey the idea that God has finally
responded.
There is no strong evaluative tone to the description. The
offence to God and its consequence are presented as a simple
fact: this is what Hoshea did and that is what it lead to. The perspective, as before, is dispassionate and analytical: the narrative
looks like good historiography should, even though the action
described is leading to the ultimate disaster.
The formulaic connection between Hoshea's and his predecessors' provocation suggests that the kings of Israel, they who
made Israel sin against God (jhebetf3 3et-yi$r33el1 Kgs 14:16; 15:26,
30; 16:2, 25, 30; 21:22; 22:51-3; 2 Kgs 3:2-3; 10:29-31; 13:3, 11;
14:24; 15:9, 18, 24; 16:2-3) are the human agents who provoked
God to impose the capital penalty. This implication gains its
strength not by shouting at the reader, but through a long, reiterated description of a repeated pattern of actionsthe sinning
leadership of Israel's kingsthat culminate in the exile. As a
result the reader's comprehension of the human provocation
for the exile grows naturally out of the historiography of the
narrative description. It is a logic to which the reader is habituated. The reader's assent is won, not by coercion or browbeating, but by a subtle camaraderie built slowly but surely
between reader and narrator. And nothing in the preceding
context has been introduced to subvert this understanding.
Verses 7-23 present a disquieting contradiction between the
new explanation in these verses"and it was because the sons
of Israel sinned Q)ate3u) against Yahweh ..." and that of the formulaic opening of ch. 17the sin of the kings provoked the
exile. 11 What has happened to the notion that the kings
11 Whether the kings are blamed by the narrator or not is an entirely different question. One needs to decide whether or not the descriptive verb "to sin" Qtt*) is neutrally
descriptive or pejorative and in what circumstances one can be sure in which sense it is
used. Given that the formula always appears in conjunction with a tagged attribution
191
"brought Israel to sin" (hel)eti3 3et-yi$ra3el)?12 Conventional theology and reading might not see the contradiction here: kings of
Israel or sons of Israel, what does it matter? All togetherone
massae perditushave sinned and come short of the glory of
God. This is the comforting theological brew under the influence of which a reader may overlook the contradiction.13
But if the reader reflects on what has been narrated about Israel's behaviour as he imbibes the tirade in w. 7-23 a sobering
realization begins to dawn.
The narrative description that precedes the tirade provides
no assuring echos, allusions, or vocabulary linkages to support
the assertions of the tirade. One might reasonable expect some
broad support for such a condemnation in the preceding context, something at least as important, say, as the formulaic introductions to the wayward monarchs. To the contrary, there has
been almost no attention paid to Israel's behaviour, good, bad,
or indifferent. All eyes have been directed toward the actions
of the kings of Israel and the events in which they are involved.
The Israelites, where they have played a repeated role, have
only done so as the objects of the kings' action, "making Israel
sin" (hel)eti3 3et-yir53eD. A review of the narrative since the inauguration of the first king, Saul, quickly reveals how little attention the narrator has paid to the people. Were the rolling rebuke of the tirade actually the narrator's own heart and soul
belief, one would expect that he might have had a little more to
say in the course of telling his story about these despicable actions and why Israel engaged in them. Sending one's children
through the fire is not something to be treated lightly (v. 17), yet
nowhere has the reader heard anything of it in the preceding
narrative description.14
"king X did evil in the sight of Yabweh and walked in the way of [king] Y and in his sin
which he made Israel to sin"it seems safest to assume that the description of monarchic sins is objective, in keeping with the conventional objectivity that reigns the narratorial perspective throughout.
12
T.R. Hobbs (1985:231) notes that the beginning phrase of v. 7 (.wayy'hi kfl
tremely rare, it introduces the following explanation, and makes it dependent on the
preceding recitation of the events of the fall of Samaria." The phrasing is designed, it
seems, to foreground the incongruity between the two different explanations for the exile found in w. 1-6 and w. 7-23.
13 Comforting, because it maintains a just God who, so long as the mechanisms for
atonement are in place, can be relied upon to save repentant readers and damn and
destroy wanton sinners like Israel.
14 In fact, the only one to have done such a thing prior to 2 Kgs 17 is King Ahaz, just
before in 2 Kgs 16:3. And subsequent to 2 Kgs 17 the only documented cases are those
192
9%
18%
29%
12%
32%
100%
of Sepharvaim (2 Kgs 17:31) and Manasseh (21:6). That fact that Ahaz's commission of
this abhorrent crime comes just before the assertion that the Israelites did such a thing
is a sure indicator of the narrator's subtle use of contradiction to subvert the assertions
made in the tirade. It was a king, not the common people, who did this thing; the attribution to the people is ironic.
193
Judges
In 2:11-13, 17, 19 the narrator presents a thematic introduction to the entire book, showing why Israel goes astray, why
there are nations left in the land, and why God punishes Israel.
This explanation is given to the reader as an interpretive key (cf.
D. Jobling 1986:47) illuminating all that follows, especially the
subsequent occasions within the book15 when the narrator uses
the same phraseology to supply supporting allusions back to
this critical chapter. When the same language surfaces again in 2
Kgs 17:7-23 there is a strong contextual argument, supported by
the standard Hebrew narrative technique of commentary by
associative comparison (Alter 1981:180-1; Sternberg 1985:365440), for bringing the associations and perspective of Judg 2 to
bear on the new occasion of its use. The consequent distancing
from the evaluative tone of 2 Kgs 17:7-23 is supported by the
intervening disconfirmation through the factual description of
events, which transforms 2 Kgs 17 one step further, from the
dispassionate comprehension of Israel's waywardness manifest
in Judges 2 to an ironic reversal of the common reaction to the
exile.
1 Samuel
In 7:3-4 we read that the sons of Israel serve the Ba'als and
Ashtaroth. This is a non-evaluative description from the narrator, who includes an extensive description of the mitigating circumstances that led Israel to this behaviour. (Yahweh seems to
have abandoned them and this is their reluctant [cf. 7:2] response.)16
In 10:27 some Israelites are described as "renegades" Q)ene
beltyScal), who spurn Saul. This description has usually been
interpreted as a negative evaluative term, but the contexts of its
occurrence suggest a neutral, descriptive usage (Eslinger
1985:356-8). Even leaving this reading of the term aside, the action in question in 10:27 is not action directly against God as is
all action evaluated in 2 Kgs 17:7-23.
15
Judg 3:7, 12; 4:1; 6:1; 10:6; and 13:1, all repeat the language of 2:11-13 and thus imply
the same explanation as it.
16 The arguments to support this assertion are presented in my study of 1 Sam 1-12
(1985:55-8, 65-236).
194
The rest of 1 Samuel contains nothing to support 2 Kgs 17:723. What is most strange about 1 & 2 Samuel as the pretext for 2
Kgs 17:7-23 is that no attention at all is paid to the general religious behaviour of the people. Were the narrative the theodicy
by way of confession that so many scholarly readers have seen
in it, the rhetoric of plot could hardly be more poorly planned.
If the intent were to support the evaluative remarks of 2 K17:723, why leave the actions of the sinning populace so hidden
from view? David and Saul, Saul and Davidall eyes are on this
pair and nothing else matters. Surely the religious behaviour of
the people could not have changed so dramatically without such
an important event coming to light (whether in history or story
world). Why has the narrator laid things out in such a way as to
leave Israel's behaviour out of view and then, in 2 Kgs 17:7-23,
to bring it so strongly into view?
Among scholarly readers of the Bible, such inconsistency
usually leads to suggestions of multiple authorship in the diachronic perspective of historical criticism. From a narratological point of view, however, it suggests ironic juxtaposition at the
expense of the evaluation's credibility.
2 Samuel
2 Samuel describes many wrongs and injustices, all committed by members of the royal family or court of David. In 2 Sam
11 the narrator presents the story of David & Bathsheba. It is
the only case thus far in 2 Sam of someone doing something terribly wrong and the culprit is none other than King David! In 2
195
Sam 13, Amnon, son of David, rapes his sister. In 2 Sam 13,
Absalom, son of David, murders his brother. In 2 Sam 15, Absalom, son of David, conspires against his father. In 2 Sam
18:14, Joab murders Absalom. And in 2 Sam 20, Sheba revolts
against David. Even though turpitude prevails17 the general
populace comes away clean if only because its actions go unmentioned. The narrator chooses to leave them aside. Immorality does indeed abound but only in the house of David,
the house that Yahweh has promised to perpetuate forever!18
There is one apparent exception to this absence of wrongdoing on Israel's part. In 2 Sam 24:1 the narrator reveals that
Yahweh's anger burns against Israel (wayyGsep 3ap-yhwh lahardt
beyi^ra3ef). The involuntary response of the pious biblical
reader, operating within the conventions of religious psychology in which God is angry with no one who has done no
wrong, is that Israel must have sinned. Such a response to apparent divine wrath is exemplified by Job's three friends. But
when the reader looks for an explanation of the divine wrath in
the context preceding 2 Sam 24:1, there is none. Israel has done
no wrong. Why does God punish them with the curses of Deut
28?19 The only hint is found in the divine choice of David,
whose family difficulties have occupied so much of the book.
Perhaps David is a mechanism by which to afflict Israel. More
analysis is required but it seems that Israel suffers evil at the
hand of Yahweh here ("Yahweh repented on account of the
evil," wayyinnahem Yahweh 3el-haracS, 24:16) because of his displeasure with the house of David.20 Far from being the source
of divine provocation, Israel is the innocent scapegoat. There is
nothing in the narrative context to controvert David's appraisal
of the situation; everything, in fact, supports it.
17 The development of decadence in the character of David, the king chosen for his
psychological profile (1 Sam 16:7), and the troubles that his reign brings to Israel have
been carefully traced by Fokkelman (1981).
1 The turn that Israel's leadership takes beginning with David himselfYahweh's
hand-picked kingsuggests that David's waywardness may itself have played a not unforeseen part in the divine scheme of Israel's history. It is not beyond belief that Yahweh might provide Israel with some institution or holder of that institution in order to
lead it astray, the deviation being an integral part of his plan for Israel's historical existence (cf. Hos 13:11; Ezek 20:25).
*9 Compare v. 13 with the curses in Deut 28:21, 25.
20 Cf. 24:17, [David speaking] "Lo, I have sinned, and I have done wickedly: but these
sheep, what have they done? Let thine hand, I pray thee, be against me, and against my
father's house."
196
197
Reign of Rehoboam
Reign of Jeroboam
Introductory description of
14:21
Jeroboam's reign (12:2013=34, extended because of
the connection between it
and the story of the partition
of the kingdom).
Basis of indebtedness to Yahweh:
election of Jerusalem, the
election of Jeroboam and
grant of the major portion of place where Yahweh chose
David's kingdom (covenantal to put his name (v. 21).
phraseology, 14:7-8).
Sins described:
Jeroboam's (v. 9), Israel's (v. Judah's (w. 22-4).
15 [Asherim]), Jeroboam's
(leading to Israel's) (v. 16).
Punishment:
defeat at the hand of Egypt
destruction of Jeroboam's
(by implication, w. 25-8).
dynasty and exile of Israel
(w. 10-11, 14-16).
Concluding formula:
w. 29-31.
w. 19-20.
The parallelism between the accounts of the two reigns suggests
that the sin of the Judahites should be viewed, like the sins of
their northern counterparts, as occurring under the aegis of
monarchic leadership. The same logic underlies the punishment
for the sin, which is a punishment that strikes against and is responded to by Rehoboam, king of Judah. The narrator's omission of any explicit description of Rehoboam's leadership
stands in stark contrast to the description of Jeroboam's, but
that difference is a product of the large role that is played by
Jeroboam as the paradigmatic wayward leader. Rehoboam, on
the other hand, plays a lesser role, local to the business of the
secession of the north. The vocabulary linkages between 1 Kgs
14:23 and 2 Kgs 17:8,10 should be weighed along with a similar,
though weaker linkage between 1 Kgs 14:23 and v. 15 of the
198
21
In addition the word "Asherim" also harks back to Judg 3:7, where the Israelites
served (rather than built) "Asherot" and Judg 2:13 (also serving "Ashtarot"). There is
no doubt that the people did engage in this particular cultic practice, at least in the
story world of the narrative. But because of the context of occurrences in the book of
Judges, just after the narrator has explained why Israel goes astray, there can be no
doubt about the neutral, rather than negative, nature of this description there and here
in 1 Kgs 14. The variations, in Judges, between 'aStSrdt and *SSr6t (cf. "Serfm in 1 Kgs
14:15, 23) are explained as indications of unharmonized redactional variants by Doling
(1975:74).
199
2 Kings
The book of 2 Kings differs little from the pattern established
in 1 Kings. In 2 Kgs 3:2-3, Jehoram, son of Ahab, does evil in
the sight of Yahweh, clinging to the way of Jeroboam, the sins
that he did, and the sins that he made Israel to sin. In 2 Kgs
8:16-19, Jehoram becomes king of Judah and walks in the way
of the kings of Israel, doing evil in the sight of Yahweh. But
God, for David's sake, spares Judah. In 2 Kgs 8:26-7, Ahaziah
walks in the way of the house of Ahab and does evil in the sight
of Yahweh. In 2 Kgs 10:29-31, Jehu walks in the way of
Jeroboam, the sins that he did, and the sins that he made Israel
to sin. In 2 Kgs 12:2-3, Jehoash does right in the eyes of
Yahweh, only the high places are not taken down and the people still sacrifice and burn incense on the high places. In 2 Kgs
13:2-3, Joash does evil in the sight of Yahweh, walking in the
way of Jeroboam, the sins that he did, and the sins that he made
Israel to sin. In 2 Kgs 13:3 the narrator describes another
historical presage of the exile, once again closely linked to a description of a monarch leading the people astray (v. 2). In 2 Kgs
13:1-7 the cycles of the Judges are revived, along with all of the
implications of those cycles from the book of Judges, where the
logic of Israel's sin was explained (see above, "A New Generation In Israel"). In 2 Kgs 13:11, Joash, does evil in the sight
of Yahweh, walking in the way of Jeroboam, the sins that he did,
and the sins that he made Israel to sin. In 2 Kgs 14:3-4, Amaziah
does right in the eyes of Yahweh, only the high places are not
taken down and the people still sacrifice .... In 2 Kgs 14:24,
Jeroboam does evil in the sight of Yahweh, walking in the way
of Jeroboam, the sins that he did, and the sins that he made
Israel to sin. In 2 Kgs 15:3-4, Azariah does right in the eyes of
Yahweh, only the high places weren't taken away and the
people still sacrificed at the high places. In 2 Kgs 15:9,
Zechariah does evil in the sight of Yahweh, walking in the way
of Jeroboam, the sins that he did, and the sins that he made Israel to sin. In 2 Kgs 15:18, Menachem does evil in the sight of
Yahweh, walking in the way of Jeroboam, the sins that he did,
and the sins that he made Israel to sin. In 2 Kgs 15:24 Pekiah,
does evil in the sight of Yahweh, walking in the way of Jeroboam, the sins that he did, and the sins that he made Israel to
sin. In 2 Kgs 15:34-5, Jotham does right in the eyes of Yahweh,
only the high places weren't taken away and the people still sac-
200
rificed at the high places. In 2 Kgs 16:2-3, Ahaz does evil in the
sight of Yahweh, walking in the way of Jeroboam, the sins that
he did, and the sins that he made Israel to sin. And finally, in 2
Kgs 17:2 Hoshea does evil in the sight of Yahweh, only not like
the kings who were before him.
The list includes all descriptions of sinful wrong-doing in 2
Kings. The description leaves no doubt about who God holds
responsible for the covenantal waywardness. The people do
sin, but it is their monarchic leadership that leads them to it.
The View of the People from the Database22
A review of all cases of narratorial evaluation of Israel in the
narrative reveals a remarkable state of affairs. Aside from the
two prominent evaluative spikes in Judg 223 and 2 Kgs 17, the
narrator is conspicuously silent on the matter of Israel's behaviour.24
22 For more information on the database cataloguing evaluative language in the narrative, to which I refer here, see ch. 7, "Explicit Evaluation in the Dtr Narratives."
23 There is, in the book of Judges, a continuation of the same evaluative language in
chs. 3, 8, and 10. In all cases the same language and tone are used as introduced by the
key passage in ch. 2 (see. Judg 3:7; 8:27, 33-5; 10:6). And in all cases the subsequent descriptions are coloured by the implications that attend ch. 2. This is also true of 2 Kgs
21:9, which shares the language and implicit contextual coloration of 2 Kgs 17.
24 The narrator's explicit evaluative silence between Judg 2 and 2 Kgs 17 is broken only
in 1 Sam 14:32 and again in 1 Kgs 14:23 (v. 22 being attributed to Yahweh). In both
cases the narrator's comments are more in the way of description, albeit of actions
reprehensible to Yahweh, than explicit negative evaluation. Nothing in either context
betrays narratorial animosity toward the action described. In the case of 1 Sam 14:32 it
is questionable whether there is any evaluation at all. I included in the database so as to
err on the side favouring maximal narratorial evaluation, a view that any student of
narratorial situations in this particular narrative cannot favour.
201
202
2 Kings 17
And it was because the children of Israel sinned against
Yahweh (v. 7),
the rhetorical ploys of his prayers (cf. Israel's hypothetical repentant remarks in 1 Kgs
8:47). Athaliah is critical of Israel's behaviour in 2 Kgs 11:14, but then she is about to
lose her life at their hands.
There is no voice in the narrative that presents a reliable negative evaluation of the
Israelite people's conduct in the narrative between the two great gateways of narratorial
evaluative remarks: Judges 2 and 2 Kgs 17. The narrator's own additional negative
evaluations of Israel are found in Judg 3:7; 8:27, 33-5; 10:6, and in 1 Sam 14:32. The instances from the book of Judges all fall under the mitigating shadow of the narrator's
explanation in Judges 2. And it is doubtful whether the sole case in 1 Sam should be
called a negative evaluation at all. But even if all these cases were allowed to stand, the
bulk of the narrative would not support the heavy condemnation that the narrator levels
in 2 Kgs 17:7-23.
27 A detailed historical-critical analysis of some of the linguistic parallels, viewed
within the context of Deuteronomistic speech patterns in general, has been made by
R.D. Nelson (1981:49-65). Von Rad (1962:335; cf. Noth 1981:6) noticed the parallelism
between the evaluations of 2 Kgs 17:7ff and evaluation of the book of judges but did not
pursue it, suggesting only that the linguistic connection betrayed the Dtr redactor speaking his own mind.
203
204
The parallelism of the events and the phraseology used to describe them, while not exact, does reveal the narrator's effort to
engage the reader in a stereoscopic view of the two scenes, two
complementary perspectival lenses that shape the viewer's
perception of all the material intervening between them. Most
important is that these linguistic linkages and the general structural parallelism (similar plot sequences) are used to bring
Judges 2 and all of the associations developed in reading it to
bear on the reading of 2 Kgs 17:7-23. This is, as M. Sternberg
has shown, the normal expositional effect of sequentiality in
narrative literature (1978:183-235). The reverse of this linking
strategy is that the similar implications of 2 Kgs 17:7-23 reinforce the understanding of Judges 2. The connection makes the
implication of both passagesthe inclusive ironic brackets that
envelope the narrativethat much stronger.29
28 The parallel is in the fact that whatever God sends to turn Israel, whether judges or
prophets testifying testimonies, is rejected.
29 Menakhem Perry describes a reading situation in which an implied meaning survives to the end of a work simply because it is not contradicted by anything intervening
(1979:48). And even if there is a piece of information that intervenes to modify, replace,
or subvert the original implication and the interpretive frame that a reader has constructed, such original hypotheses, as for example Judges 2 encourages the creation of,
still influence the reading of a text (Perry 1979:49). How much more so, when they are
reinforced at the end of a narrative by a similarly implicative text such as 2 Kgs 17:7-23.
205
Notes On 2 Kings 17
Verse 7 begins with a ki clause that presents the material that
follows as an explanation for what precedes: the exile of the
northern kingdom occurred because of the sin of the children
of Israel (wayeM ki-haie3u bene-ytira*el lyhwti).30 This explanation
for the exile conflicts with that offered previously, by implication in w. 2-3 and explicitly in w. 4-5. This contradiction
is exacerbated by another, more wide-ranging conflict: few of
the charges listed in w. 7-12 are confirmed by the preceding
context in the narrative. Only the observations regarding the
high places, the Asherim, and the incense are confirmed and
then each supporting instance is closely bound and credited to
the wayward leadership of the king at that time.
Taken one at a time, the charges and their connection to the
preceding context are as follows.
2 Kings 17:7
The Israelites "sinned" (hat^u ) against Yahweh, their God (a.
divine accusation of sin on Israel's part: Josh 7: II;31 b. Israel's
own confession of having sinned: Judg 10:10, 15; 1 Sam 7:6; 12:10
(Samuel alluding to Judg 10 confession);32 12:19, the confession
extorted from Israel; c. anonymous report of Israel sinning by
"eating with the blood" (the report evinces no comment from
either the narrator or God) 1 Sam 14:33). By way of contrast
there are a number of narratorial reports of a king "leading Israel to sin" QietftP 3et-yi$ra3el) (1 Kgs 14:16; 15:26, 30, 34; 16:2, 1
*" The reading of the Septuagint (adopted by J. Gray [1970:645, note a], who inserts 'ap
yhwh 'al-yHrS'Sl after way*hf) makes explicit what is implied by simple consecution in the
Hebrew (cf. J. Montgomery [1951:4781; according to C.F. Keil [1982:414; cf. Montgomer
p. 468] the apodosis only comes later in v. 18"Yhwh was very angry"). But v. 18 only
makes explicit what is already quite implicit in w. 1-6. The connection between the first
discussion of the exile and the explanation of it is also marked by an inclusio, which
links the two sections:
v. 7 wayyegel *et-ytfrS*el }aSStir
v. 23 wayyigel yiirS'Sl mfal 'admStd >aS$Qra
31 An accusation that is strongly mitigated by its narrative context. See ch. 2, "These
Nations That Remain."
32 The confessions in the book of Judges are governed by the narrator's opening exposition in Judg 2. Though the Israelites do, indeed, commit the sins that they confess,
their actions are made comprehensible by the narratorial exposition and the reader is
led to understand that the narrator reports the act and its confession neutrally, not to
reprehend.
206
19, 26; 21:22; 22:52; 2 Kgs 3:3; 10:29, 31; 13:2, 6, 11; 14:24; 15:9, 18,
24, 28).
The balance of evaluative discourse regarding the Israelites'
sin in the Dtr narrative is heavily weighted in favour of narratorial neutrality. It is far from demonstrating that the narrator
holds a strong, negative view of its quantity or severity. On the
contrary, the twenty-one-fold repetition of the summary expositional report that the kings led Israel to sin by the narrator
suggests just the opposite: that the narrator seeks to exculpate
the Israelite people.
The Israelites "feared other gods" (wayy//tf ^iGhfm ^berini): (a.
contrariwise, Israel fears God or his representative: Josh 4:14; 1
Sam 11:7; 12:1833; b. subsequently foreigners, imported by the
Assyrians (presumed agents of the wrathful Yahweh), do not
fear Yahweh (2 Kgs 7:25) but are persuaded to do so (2 Kgs
7:28, 32-5). The charge is ungrounded.34
In addition to the unfounded and hence ironically voiced
charges in v. 7, the narrator supplies an explanation of the
continuing misunderstanding between Yahweh and Israel in this
same verse. It is the same explanation that he drew at length in
Judg 2 (esp. v. 10); v. 7 only alludes to the fuller account. Israel's allegiance to Yahweh, supposed by God to exist on account of the exodus, has long disappeared.35 Even if Israel
were guilty of the charges of v. 7 the grounds for culpability
have evaporated.
According to Keil (1982:414), "... to show the magnitude of
the sin, the writer recalls to mind the great benefit conferred in
the redemption from Egypt, whereby the Lord had laid His people under strong obligation ...." Keil is correct to notice that
the allusion to the exodus is set as a reminder to the reader
here, but he errs in thinking that it reminds the reader of Israel's obligation. Any allusion to the exodus after Judg 2:10 can
only remind the reader of the futility of Yahweh's attempts to
33 A case mitigated by the fact that this attitude is extorted by God and Samuel (see Eslinger 1985:412-14).
34 Even if the charge is extended to include instances of following, serving, or going awhoring after other gods the support from the preceding context is weak: a. "following
other gods" Judg 2:12, 17, 19; 10:13: all subordinate to the narratorial exposition in ch. 2;
1 Sam 8:8: mitigated by God's bias (Eslinger 1985:264-7). By way of contrast, royal
commissions of such actions are described (by the narrator himself) in 1 Kgs 11:4 and
charged (by God) in 1 Kgs 14:9.
35 See "A New Generation In Israel," n. 14.
207
3" Cf. v. 23, where he goes so far as to give the remaining nations "rest," (wayyannat))
something Israel, not the nations, was supposed to get (cf. Exod 33:14; Deut 3:20; 12:9-10;
25:19; Josh 1:13; 22:4; 23:1; "A New Generation," p. 78.
" if the reader responds by accepting any description of sinful apostasy as evidenc
in support of this charge the problem of the mitigating narratorial explanation in Judges
2 remains. Given the established narrative techniques of repetition with significant
variation the probability is that the lack of congruity between narrative description and
evaluative summary is an intentional disparity. See Alter (1981:88-113) on the rhetoric
of biblical repetition.
38 Cf. "A New Generation," pp. 67-68.
208
The narrator continues his ironic exploration of a past supposed to justify the Assyrian exile with another assertion contrary to the past and this time, to the entire rationale of Israel's
ensconced theocracy. (The monarchy began and remained in
absolute subordination to the divinity, at least in narrative fact.)
The suggestion that Israel walked (in the statutes) of the kings
that they made is controverted by the repetitious formulations
that it was the kings who led Israel astray and by the strong emphasis that Yahweh and his servants have placed on the notion
that Yahweh and Yahweh alone had the right or the power to
confer the royal office on an individual.39 There is, of course,
the case of Jeroboam (as 2 Kgs 17:21 reminds us, wayyamliku 3et-
209
** A divine claim, unsupported even within the context of the oracle, which suggests
that Jeroboam is responsible for leading the people astray.
210
42 The rise of prophecy in Israel, usually connected in historical studies with the rise of
the monarchy, is explained, then, by the demise of the exodus experience as an effective
psychological force in the national psychology of ancient Israel.
211
2 Kings 17:7-13
The children of Israel sin
against Yahweh, their God,
who brought them out of the
land of Egypt from under the
hand of Pharaoh (v. 7).
Israel apostatizes (w. 8-12).
God sends the prophets to
testify against Israel, telling
them to keep the commandments and statutes
"according to all the law
which I commanded your fathers, and which I sent to
you by the hand of my servants, the prophets" (v. 13).
The situation is nearly the same but now it is the prophets and
their testimony that are supposed to oblige Israel to God and
which form the basis of his claim to just punishment.
43 Judg 2:1-3 are, in terms of the passage of time in the story world, temporally subsequent to 2:10-12. See ch. 3, "A New Generation," p. 87.
212
The structure of 2 Kgs 17 contains this entire record of revelation (through the exodus), obligation, apostasy, and new revelation within itself:
1. The exodus and its burden of obligation.
2. Apostasy.
3. The new prophetic revelation and its new vehicle of
obligation.
4. Unrelenting apostasy.
V. 7.
Vv. 7-12
V. 13
V. 14 (15-17)
213
2 Kings 17:15
With v. 15 the narrator seems to loop back for another run at
the same material already presented in w. 8-14. The reiterated
vision is marked by the opening words of v. 15, "they rejected
his statutes (3et-huqq5yw)" which picks up the opening phrase
of v. 8, "they walked in the statutes (behuqq6t')of the nations."
The reiteration is continued in the sequential parallelism between w. 15-18 and w. 8-14. The pattern is roughly as follows:
1. Introductory description of apostasy, keyed by the word
"statutes" (w. 8,15).
2. Allusions to past covenantal history, specifically the conquest
(v. 8b) and the early monarchy (v. 15).
3. Descriptions of apostasy (w. 9-12, 15b-17).
4. Divine response to apostasy (w. 13, 18).
5. Israel's response to God's response.
together as those who have bent the knee to Baal. In 2 Kgs 9:6-10 a word comes
through Elisha anointing Jehu, son of Jehoshaphat, because of Ahab's wickedness. In 2
Kgs 14:25 a prophet delivers a message of relief for the Israelite people, not one of
condemnation.
2 Kgs 17:13 seems, therefore, a narratorial assertion, not much supported by story
world reality (cf. v. 23). In 2 Kgs 21:10-15 there is another divine interpretation, which
says that prophets were sent to warn Israel. Here, however, God does admit that it was
the king, Manasseh, that led Israel astray. Finally 2 Kgs 24:2 contains another narratorial
assertion that Yhwh had sent prophets ahead to warn of the impending disaster of the
exile. Here too, assertion must be weighed against the factual evidence that precedes.
214
*6 Gray (1970:648) simply overlooks the wrong attribution and says that it is the specific sin of Jeroboam that is stigmatized.
47 Keil (1982:417) exemplifies the pious reader who notices that the Israelites have not
worshipped the "host of heaven" and seeks to apologize for the ironic assertion that
they did so.
215
them, 'Ahab served Baal a little; but Jehu shall serve him
much'").
In the light of the preceding context w. 17-18 are pure fabrication. The assertion made in these verses is probably the
most obvious clue to the expositional strategy of 2 Kgs 17:7-23
There is no place in the preceding context where the Israelites
do what the evaluator says they do here. Rather, and this is
supported through Leitw&rt connections, it was Ahaz (2 Kgs
16:3-4), son of Jotham, who did these things (cf. Manasseh, later
in 21:6-7). Enforcing the attachment of this behaviour to the
royal houses, 2 Kgs 16:3 prefaces a description of Ahaz's firewalking son with the note that Ahaz's behaviour was typical of
the royal house of the northern kingdom: "He walked in the
way of the kings of Israel." And it is Ahab, not Israel, who Elijah says has "sold himself to do evil in the sight of Yahweh" (1
Kgs 21:20).
2 Kings 17:18
What the reader sees in v. 18 is exactly what he has already
seen in 1 Sam 4: the Israelite people suffer for the sins of their
divinely appointed leadership. But the emphasis of 2 Kgs 17:723 is not so much on the sinfulness of the kingsthat is taken
for granted and is presented in an objective, dispassionate voice.
The narrator is not concerned to judge the kings, only to point
out that their actions were the source of provocation that led
Yahweh to exile Israel. It is Yahweh, not the narrator, in whose
eyes almost all have done evil. The point of 2 Kgs 17:7-23,
rather, is to subvert the conventional wisdom, so exhaustively
pilloried here, about the national sin.
2 Kings 17:19-20
With v. 19 the narrator loops back a third time to repeat,
roughly, the same sequence of description that he has gone
through twice already (vv. 8-14, 15-18). The repeat performance is marked, once again, by a primary reference to
"statutes": "they walked in the statutes of Israel, which they did"
(cf. v. 15, v. 8). Just as Israel had walked in the statutes of the
nations (v. 8) Judah takes its turn to walk in the statutes of Israel,
which has now assumed the role formerly held by the nations.
Verse 20 alludes to Judg 2:14"by the hand of the spoilers"
(yvayyittnembeyad-$6sTm)but with the difference that the pun-
216
217
218
with one exception (2 Kgs 13:6), only kings who do this.48 The
phrase "they departed not from them [the sins of Jeroboam]"
returns like results.49 The rhetoric has the same ironic logic as
the entire review.
2 Kings 17:23
In v. 23 the narrator says that Israel continued in its wayward
course until God removed Israel from his sight "as he spoke
through all his servants, the prophets." The summary conclusion leads the reader to expect that there had been a series of
figures trying to warn Israel away from its folly in the manner
of an Isaiah, a Jeremiah, or an Ezekiel. Given the pattern of
incongruity that prevails between this evaluative review and the
preceding context, it should come as no surprise that the reader
will reflect or re-read in vain if he looks for the expected
repetitious warnings from "all his servants, the prophets."
There are, in fact, none.50
Conclusion
As the database of evaluative language in the Dtr narrative reveals, Judg 2 and 2 Kgs 17 are parallel evaluative spikes in the
narrative. Both are distinguished by the fact that the narrator
breaks his characteristic silence to voice some strong and considerable evaluative remarks about the behaviour of the characters, especially the Israelites, in the story. The parallelism between these two outbursts extends beyond a simple count of
^8 Abijam, son of Rehoboam, "walked in all the sins of his father" (1 Kgs 15:3); Nadab,
son of Jeroboam, walks "in the way of his father, and in his sin wherewith he made Israel
sin" (1 Kgs 15:26); Baasha "walked in the way of Jeroboam, and in his sin wherewith he
made Israel sin" (1 Kgs 15:34); Jehu "walked in the way of Jeroboam, and in his sin
wherewith he made Israel sin" (1 Kgs 16:2); Omri "walked in all the way of Jeroboam,
and in his sin wherewith he made Israel sin" (1 Kgs 16:26); Ahaziah "walked in the way of
... Jeroboam, and in his sin wherewith he made Israel sin" (1 Kgs 22:52); Jehoram
"walked in the way of the kings of Israel" (2 Kgs 8:18); Ahaziah "walked in the way of the
house of Ahab" (2 Kgs 8:27); Jehoash "departed not from all the sins of Jeroboam the
son of Nebat, who made Israel sin: but he walked therein" (2 Kgs 13:11); and Ahaz
"walked in the way of the kings of Israel" (2 Kgs 16:3).
4
9 "Departed not from them": Jehoram 2 Kgs 3:3; Jehu 2 Kgs 10:31; Jehoahaz 2 Kgs 13:2;
Israel 2 Kgs 13:6; Jehoash 2 Kgs 13:11; Jeroboam 2 Kgs 14:24; Zachariah 2 Kgs 15:9;
Menahem 2 Kgs 15:18; Pekahiah 2 Kgs 15:24; Pekah 2 Kgs 15:28.
50 The closest thing to such a warning of exile to come is a private revelation made
directly by God to Solomon (1 Kgs 9:7). But the Israelites are not privy to that.
219
CHAPTER 7
EXPLICIT EVALUATION
IN
THE DEUTERONOMISTIC
NARRATIVE
Computer-Assisted Biblical Studies
and
The Deuteronomistic Problem
ore and more biblical scholars are using computers in
their work. Though the most common application remains
M
word processingan invaluable advance for all academic writersa few individuals have advocated, from time to time, the
use of computers to assist the progress of conventional historical-critical research. Statistical analysis of literary works, especially in attribution studies of authorship, is an established way
of using computers in studies of the Bible.1 But the results have
often been ignored or given only a passing glance. Often it
seems that only a statistician could interpret such analyses, biblical scholars not included. And some statisticians who have
looked at the work that has been done have faulted it for lack of
a sufficient data sample or for questionable statistical methods.
From a literary point of view, the problem with a computerbased statistical approach to the Bible is that the questions it can
address are constrained by the concordance-like orientation of
the work. The proliferation of KWIC (Key Word In Context)
concordances, at least in biblical studies where good concor1
E.g. the studies of Y.T. Radday (e.g. "Genesis, Wellhausen, and the Computer," ZAW
94 (1982) 467-81). For more detailed descriptions of the kinds of computer-assisted
analysis of the Bible that have been tried see J.J. Hughes (1987:491-602).
222
dances have been available for many years, has only increased
the ease and speed of concordance work. Such gains do not
necessarily advance, methodologically speaking, beyond work
done with a bound copy of a printed concordance. Frequently
the application of sorting and counting tools, the strength of
computer assisted analysis of large bodies of text, directly to the
naked words of the text results in "answers" that only a computer would find interesting. Before we set our silicon assistants to work that we might regularly find interesting we must
provide them with some descriptive categories derived from a
hypothesis and set of questions that we are interested in getting
information about.
Such categories, informed by any hypothesis one might wish
to explore, are at hand in the data "fields" that almost every
database program requires before data can be input. Using
database software rather than concordance-oriented software,
the biblical researcher can create a software research environment that is orented to the specfics of any hypothesis from the
very beginning. This framework, supplied by the researcher
and not dictated by the structure or abilities of the computer or
software, can make for a more exact union between the questions of the researcher, the data available in the biblical texts,
and the computer's remarkable capacity for fast and accurate
data manipulation. Of course electronic concordance tools are
still useful to assist in the work of analyzing the text for entry
into the database.
During the years 1985-86 I worked on a research project2
using database software to assist in the literary analysis of biblical texts. Database software for micro-computers, though not
usually written with the needs of humanistic scholars in mind,
can be adapted to abstract an interesting and comprehensive
collection of literary data from the massive detail of the biblical
text. The advantage of database software over simple concordance routines such as sorting, collating, and counting is that the
data structure is determined by the questions that the scholar
wishes to put to the text. Whereas the analyzed data of the concordance program is almost formless, a distillation of the text
unstructured except for having been sorted or counted, the data
structure of a data base is already based on a question or ques2 The project was supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
of Canada and the Calgary Institute for the Humanities.
223
tions that the researcher puts to the text. The record structure
of the databasethe various categories (called data "fields") that
one uses to describe the literary textis an input requirement
of the software that at the same time allows for abstract, second
order categorizations of textual phenomena. As a result the researcher can enter abstract descriptions of the text, which can
then be manipulated in the same ways that a concordance program deals with the raw literary data of the text. The difference
is that what the computer sorts and counts can now be interpreted data, much of which may not be explicit in the text.
Hypotheses and Database Record Structures
Compared to literary research without the use of a computer,
database assisted research has the advantage of requiring that
one be very specific about the questions addressed to the text.
Before any data can be entered into a database one must create a
record structure. Of course, this tight focus also means that the
answers one is able to reach will also be tightly circumscribed;
it also tends to make the researcher more conscious of the limitations of presuppositions that accompany any interpretation of
a text. But the clear focus that is achieved and the greater quantity of data available for analysis offer a research potential not
readily available to a scholar working without the assistance of a
computerized database.
Each record is a collection of fields; each field, a distinct description of some feature of the text. A record is a collection of
related data residing in the interrelated descriptive categories
called fields. Each record is a construct derived from the questions that the researcher bring to the text and the raw data in the
text itself. Before creating a descriptive analysis of the text one
must know quite clearly what features of the text one wishes to
analyze. This greater precision and directedness does have
practical limitations. Though not impossible, it may not be easy
to adapt the database you create to answer questions other than
those to which the original data structure was directed. And, if
your questions are not carefully drawn it is possible to finish,
after many hours of analysis and data input, with an unapt collection of descriptions that cannot meet the original objectives.
A well-thought plan is the prerequisite of any successful use of
database software.
224
3 The trick is to include a numeric field with a value of "1 in each record. Reflex
can then be instructed to use that numeric field as the basis for its graphing calculations
on related textual data in the non-numeric fields. See R. Person (1986:112-13).
* The Y-axis must be numeric.
225
226
227
arating the privileged [the narrator and reader] from the nonprivileged [the characters within the story]not to mention the
variability within the latter group itselfmakes for the clearest
divergence in representation and interpretive cogency,
amounting to an antithesis between the objective and the subjective views of the world" (1985:160). Yet even Sternberg,
whose training is in literary theory, not biblical studies, is susceptible to confusion over the question of the stance of the narrator vis-a-vis the divine character, who is, as the preceding
chapters try to show, also ontologically subordinate to the narrator in the conventions of this narrative situation.6
The conceptual result of reading that ignores the fundamental
narratological notions of voice structure and narrative ontology
is now accepted as common knowledge about the Dtr. Historical-critical scholarship finds the narrator of the deuteronomistic
history to be a strong dogmatic exponent of a rather conventional theological position (e.g. G. von Rad 1966:206), a heavyhanded puritan firm in belief and forthright in expression. He
[they] (the Dtr redactors]) is the great evangelistic preacher
who surveys the past with scathing condemnations for sins accomplished, duty denied. His purpose: to convict his audience
in the hope that their contrite heart might open the door to reconciliation with the God who had inflicted the exile upon Israel
(cf. J. Gray 1970: 37-43). Or he might be the clever propagandist, striving through his "official" version of Israel's history to
legitimate the potentiary that has commissioned the work (e.g.
P.M. Cross 1973:284). Either way the Dtr is seen to present a
view of Israel's past that is not more privileged than any normal
human perspective aside from the privilege of retrospection.
Such readings are primarily the result of taking evaluative commentary from characters such as Moses or Samuel and reading it
as though it were offered by the narrator: the resulting equation
creates a narratorial perspective that is, in fact, fully as limited
and conditioned as that of the characters with whose views the
narrator's have been confused.
On this reading, a major vehicle for the expression of the
Dtr's theological convictions is found in several extended orations given by major characters at strategic points in the narrative. The list of speeches, broken down by attribution, is as
" This apparent confusion seems to run throughout Sternberg's recent book (1985) but
is most visible in ch. 3, "Ideology of Narration and Narration of Ideology."
228
follows:
Josh 1:11-15
Josh 12
Josh 23
Judg2:ll-23
1 Sam 12
1 Kgs 8:14-61
2 Kgs 17
Joshua
the Dtr narrator
Joshua
the Dtr narrator
Samuel
Solomon
7 Of course those who discover multiple Deuteronomists will disagree with the suggestion of a singular understanding in the Dtr history. But they do not differ as much as it
first seems in this respect from those who favour a single Deuteronomist. Depending
on how the redactional layers are divided and then aggregated as Dtri.2,3 or DtrN, G,
P
they will have the speeches associated with one or the other layer and will find all
the speeches therein to reflect the conventional wisdom of that redactional layer. The
fact that some have even divided some of the speeches between redactional layers, as in
Levenson's work on Solomon's prayer (1981), has not changed this perception of
agreement between narratorial and character speeches at all.
8
Cf. D.J. McCarthy (1978:131), "In the one case as in the other the content is a kind of
meditation on Israel's history ... They call attention to the significant changes in Israel's circumstances and serve to explain how these things have come to be." According to Noth (1981:6) the speeches, whether from the narrator or a character express "a
simple and unified theological interpretation of history."
229
Naturally I am speaking of a fundamental set of values and beliefs that span the histdry of biblically based religions and the religions that gave rise to them. I doubt that
anyone would deny such commonality.
230
231
232
1 Kgs 8:14-61
2 Kgs 17
Evaluative Spikes
Josh 12
Josh 22-3
Judg 2:11-23
1 Sam 2:1-10
1 Sam 12
2 Sam 22
1 Kgs 8:14-61
2 Kgs 17
2 Kgs 19
The correlation between the great orations identified by scholarly readers and the evaluative spikes by the database suggests a
relationship more than coincidental. The question is, what is the
relationship and why have scholars included some of the evalu-
233
ative spikes within the collection of orations while omitting others. It is reasonable to assume that explicit evaluation has been
a key factor in forming scholarly readers' impressions that here
we find mediated authorial opinion. The database, after all, with
which the isolated "great orations" so frequently align, records
only that feature of the narrative.
The "Spikes" and the Narrator's Point of View
Read in context, however, and with an awareness of the critical concept of narrative ontology, the great orations assume
their inherently lower position on the scale of authority within
the narrative. Samuel's speech, for example, is less the august
oration of the detached author, more the carping censure of a
deeply involved character. Samuel's rehearsal of events preceding is in glaring contradiction with prior eventsevents and
a contradiction presented by the authoritative narratorin an
ill-concealed (thanks to narratorial privilege) effort to lord it
over the Israelites who have nearly replaced God (and Samuel)
with a human king. In no way can the narrator (and so the Dtr
redactor) be understood to speak through the voice of Samuel
in 1 Sam 12 when the narrative context so clearly undermines
Samuel's speech. To assume that he does so is to ignore the hierarchical voice structure of the narrative in favour of assumptions about the function of the evaluative spikes in the
narrative. This misreading is augmented by the lack of obvious
explicit narratorial exposition. Only recently have biblical
scholars begun to appreciate the fact that much or most exposition in biblical narrative is implicit (cf. Alter 1981:184).
Character Spikes
234
words, one needs to see and describe evidence that shows that
the author/narrator allys himself and his overall narrative
description with the views of the character voicing the evaluative remarks in question. Otherwise the normal framing effect
of narrative discourse will limit and relativize the quoted material; this is a privilege that the narrative genre automatically accords to a narrator of the external, unconditioned type that we
find in these narratives.
The Larger Overview
235
10 The miscellaneous category in this graph accounts for a variety of fifteen different
evaluative voices in the narrative whose total number of evaluations amounts to twenty-
236
evaluations attributed to Hannah are located in 1 Sam 2. The result is an evaluative "spike" in the narrative, a localized concentration of evaluative discourse far above the norm.
Evaluative "Spikes"
In all books but Deuteronomy there are one or two outstanding passages in which the database reveals an abnormally
high quantity of evaluative language. Deuteronomy, though
laced with a heavy dose of evaluative discourse from one character, Moses, exhibits a more even profile. But Deuteronomy as
a whole constitutes one such spike in comparison to the remainder of the Dtr narrative. The high profile of Mosaic
rhetoric and evaluative discourse does not necessarily mean that
the narrator agrees with Moses and gives him the floor. Moses
is given the floor only so that the position he voices so strongly
can be explored and understood in context in the subsequent
narrative episodes.
Graphs by Book
The results, presented book by book, are as follows:
1. Deuteronomy
237
2. Joshua
11
"The oven function of the narrator's direct utterances in Deuteronomy is to represent to his readers the word of Moses as pre-eminent, and Moses himself as the greatest
prophet in Israel's history" (1980:30).
238
239
the author is supposed to speak his own mind through the voice
of a distinguished character. Quantity of evaluation and readers' perceptions of important, authoritative statements voiced by
a hero of the story overlap. Needless to say the qualities of the
accumulated evaluations and their supposedly heroic author
Qoshua) have also promoted their authoritative reception in
combination with the abnormal quantities.
3. Judges
The graph shows a spike in ch. 2. In 2:1123 the narrator offers his famous preview of the "cycles of the judges." The
manner in which these evaluations of the Israelites stand out
from other evaluative remarks in the book formally marks their
pivotal role within the book and within the story of the conquest of the land. The evaluations look both forward and
backward to appraise Israelite behaviour in both directions. It
is no surprise scholarly readers have marked this section as an
important one for understanding the authorial point of view in
the narrative. The graph supports their perception; but the interpretation of the passagethe matter of how the reader is to
take these evaluative commentsis another matter.
240
4* 1 Samuel
241
its exile, imminent or pastthey have been prone to the assumption that Samuel's is the narrator's voice.
5. 2 Samuel
242
6. 1 Kings
243
7. 2 Kings
244
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1978 On The Margins of Discourse. The Relation of Literature
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Hertzberg, H.W.
1959 Die Bucherjosua, Richter, Ruth (2"d ed; ATD 9;
Gottingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht).
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Hobbs, T.R.
1985 2 Kings (WBC 13; Waco, TX: Word Books).
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1987 Bits, Bytes and Biblical Studies (Grand Rapids:
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Hyatt, J.P.
1971 Exodus (NCB; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, London:
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Bibliography
251
Ingarden, R.
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Isbell, C.
1982 "Exodus 1-2 in the Context of Exodus 1-14: Story Lines
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1977 "batach," TDOTvol. 2, 88-94.
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Kasher, M.M.
1967 Exodus (Encyclopedia of Biblical Interpretation; Vol. VI
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1970 Exodus (Encyclopedia of Biblical Interpretation; Vol.
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Kaufer, D.S.
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Keil, C.F.
252
Klein, R.W.
1983 1 Samuel (WBC 10; Waco, TX: Word Books).
Konig, F.E.
Bibliography
253
254
Moulton, R.G.
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Mowinckel, S.
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Muilenburg, J.
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1968 "The Intercession of the Covenant Mediator (Exodus
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Nelson, R.D.
1981 The Double Redaction of the Deuteronomistic History
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1985 The Death of the Old and the Birth of the New. The
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1988 "Repetition as a Structuring Device in 1 Kings 1-11," JSOT
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Payne, J.B.
1972 "Saul and the Changing Will of God," Bibliotheca Sacra
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Peckham, B.
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Perry, M.
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255
Person, R.
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Polzin, R.
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Porten, B.
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1977 Toward a Speech-Act Theory of Literary Discourse
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1983 Narrative Fiction. Contemporary Poetics (London &
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256
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Visser, N.W.
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1982 Elements of Old Testament Theology (tr. D.W. Stott;
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1929 The Composition of Judges II11 to 1 Kings II46 (Leipzig:
Hinrichs).
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1946 "The Literary and Historical Problems of Joshua 10 and
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259
Wurthwein, E.
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Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht).
Zakovitch, Y.
1972 "ypth = bdn," VT22, 123-5.
Zimmerli, W.
1968 Der Mensch und seine Hoffnung in alien Testament
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Atlanta: John Knox).
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am Yahweh (tr. D.W. Stott; Atlanta: John Knox) 29-98,
143-54.
INDEX OF AUTHORS
A
Abrams, M.H. 32
Albright, W.F. 26
Alter, R. 10, 17, 86, 120, 193, 207, 225,
233
B
Bakhtin, M. 53
Bal, M. 13, 15, 18, 185
Baltzer, K. 95,96
Bar-Efrat, S. 125
Benzinger, I. 159
Birch, B. 88, 92, 95, 99, 105, 109, 114
Boecker, H.-J. 21,82, 89,92,96,103,
105,106,107,114,115, 117, 118
Boling, R.G. 33, 37, 41, 43, 44, 46, 58,
64,65,67,69
Booth, W. 20,53
Bronzwaer, W.J.M. 13
Buber, M. 59, 85, 91, 92,98, 107,109,
117
Budde, K. 89,117
Burney, C.F. 160
c
D
Damrosch, D. 12
De Vries, S.J. 124, 127,131, 139,141,
159,176
Delitzsch, F. 90,91, 92,100,106
Dhorme, E. 86
Dolezel, L. 27
Driver, G.R. 92,95,97,100,116
Driver, S.R. 58
Dus.J. 44
E
Ehrlich, A.B. 91, 92, 97, 107, 112, 119,
171
Eichrodt, W. 93
Emerton, J.A. 8
F
Fitzmyer, J.A. 69
Fokkelman.J.P. 10,125,126,195
Fowler, A. 96
Friedemann, K. 12
Friedman, N. 15
Fritz, V. 82
G
Camper, A. 164
Gehman, H.S. 126, 128, 130,132,152,
156,176, 205
Genette, G. 11,13, 15
Gerbrandt, G.E. 82, 132, 189
Gooding, D.W. 130
Gray, J. 126, 129,160, 183, 205, 225,
227
Gressmann, H. 35
Gunkel, H. 3
Gunn, D.M. 10, 23, 38, 87, 88,116,
120,131,194
Gutbrod, K. 87,89,114, 116
H
Halpern, B. 4,8-10, 46, 60, 68, 78,
119,128,139, 157
Harrelson, W. 108
Herrnstein-Smith, B. 27
Hertzberg, H.W. 35, 101,109, 117
262
ai
Ingarden, R. 2
aj
Jepsen, A. 102, 171-72
Jobling, D. 103, 193
QK
Kaufmann, Y. 32
Keil, C. F. 90, 91, 92, 100, 106
Keil, C.F. 132,146, 153, 159,164,176,
205, 206, 212
Keller, C.A. 40
Kenik, H.A. 127,131, 133,134,136,
137
Kitchen, K.A. 152
Klein, R.W. 82
Konig, F.E. 95
Kuhl, K. 66
aL
Labuschagne, CJ. 86
Langlamet, F. 87
Levenson, J.D. 159,173-74,228
Lind, M. 41
Liver, J. 45
Long, B.O. 66
aM
Malamat, A. 46
Mayes, A.D.H. 82
McCarter, P.K. 87, 88, 91, 92, 95, 97,
99,114, 119
McCarthy, D.J. 36, 41, 62, 89, 92, 95,
96,99,104,105,106,107,114,118,
145,167, 228
McKenzie, J.L. 37
Mettinger, T.N.D. 82, 135
Meyers, C. 136, 150
Millard, A. 152
Miller, J.M. 25, 26, 54
Miller, P.O. 93
Mohlenbrink, K. 29
Montgomery, J.A. 126,128,130,132,
152,156,176, 205,
Moore, G.F. 58,64,67,69
Moulton, R.G. 3, 8
Mowinckel, S. 34
Muilenburg, J. 94, 95, 96, 105, 107,
117,119
N
Nelson, R.D. 126
Noth, M. 82, 92,100, 124,126,129,
131, 133, 141, 158,176,177,180,
228
ao
Olson, D.T. 68
P
Parker, K. 132,147
Payne, J.B. 119
Peckham, B. 35, 43
PedersenJ. 125
Perry, M. 204
Person, R. 224
Polzin, R. 3, 5, 10,17, 28, 31-33, 66,
79,99,124,186, 187, 237
Porten, B. 164
Pratt, M.L. 188
Press, R. 109
Prince, G. 11
R
Rabinowitz, I. 157
Rad, G. von 189,227
Radday, Y.T. 221
Rimmon-Kenan, S. 31
Rost, L. 125
S
Sanda, A. 176, 184, 208, 212
Sandmel, S. 186
Schneidau, H. 23
Schulz, A. 89, 102
Seebass, H. 109
Segal, N. 18
Smith, G.A. 112
Smith, H.P. 90, 92, 99, 101, 102
Soggin.J.A. 26,45
Speiser, E.A. 109, 148-49
Stanzel, F. 5,11,13, 14, 15, 16, 20, 21
Sternberg, M. 17-18, 57, 130, 138-39,
155,186,193, 204, 225, 226
Stoebe, H.J. 90, 92, 95, 97,99,104,
114,117
Index of Authors
QT
Talmon, S. 50, 66
Tucker, G.M. 34, 35
U
Uspensky, B. 32-33
V
VanSeters, J. 183
Vannoy, J.R. 86, 87,89, 91, 92, 93, 94,
95, 96, 99, 100,101, 103, 106, 108,
114,115
Veijola, T. 82, 87, 88, 89, 92, 94, 97,
103,107,114, 115,118
Visser, N.W. 13
Vogt, E. 32
QW
2
Zakovitch, Y. 100
Zimmerli, W. 93
263
INDEX OF SUBJECTS
QA
Achan 43-44
Allusion, literary 37, 45, 58, 70-71,
92,108, 133,140-41,146,148, 152,
206, 209
Ambiguity,
in characterization 154
oracular 135-36
Anti-monarchism 112
Authorship,
hypotheses of multiple 7-8, 54,
194
C
Characterization,
through dialogue 125
Characters,
bias of human 31, 103, 104
Samuel 85-86
Conquest,
conflicting reports of 25-26, 54
failed 52
Contradictions,
narrative 191-92
Covenant,
historical reviews of 94-103,
158-59
literary forms 62, 95-96
Covenantal duties,
failure to fulfill 41, 43, 77-80, 93,
98
D
Database software 222, 224
Deuteronomistic phraseology 106,
123-25, 164-65
Dtr,
interpretation of Israel's history
65-66,68, 72-73,80
key speeches in 84, 227-28, 23233
E
Evaluation,
"spikes" and authorial point of
view 230
"spikes" in 230, 233-34, 236, 244
explicit 231
normal quantity of in narrative
230, 235
Evaluations,
negative, God's 151
negative, narrator's 151, 184,
187, 201
Events,
historical 6
Exile,
narrative explanation of 180-81,
189-90
responsibility for 190-91, 198
exodus 39
as mechanism of covenantal
obligation 62, 67, 68, 97,
eyewitnesses to 67, 68, 69-71, 75
Exposition,
author through character voice
228
by incongruity 130-31, 149,
by phraseological implication
193, 204
by structural implication 47-48,
function of gaps in 132
gaps in 52, 56-58
implicit 42, 51, 124, 127, 129, 130,
152-53, 233
structural 137
versus description of story world
186
266
H
Historical criticism 1-2
literary theory 4
perceptions of contradictions
29
Historiography 68-69, 180
tendentious 94-103, 158-59
ai
Irony 28, 30, 52, 54, 55, 131-32, 14344,153,175,178,185-88,194, 206,
214, 217-19
difficulty of demonstrating 3233, 231
dramatic 42, 128-29, 151
Israel,
characterization of 63
mitigation of actions 68
motives for sinning 64-65
aj
Judges,
cycles of 74
QL
M
Mimesis 27
aN
Narrative situations 12
epistemological properties of
15, 16-21
0
Omniscience,
divine 17-18, 23-24
Ontology,
narrative 4-6, 82, 83, 225-26
P
Point of view,
character 90
character versus narrator 103
evaluative 2-3
reader versus character 115-16,
118
Prophets,
as replacements for the exodus
experience 210-12
Q
Quotation l6l, 174
R
Reader,
complicity 58, 103, 153
privileged 46, 78, 125
Readers,
Judeo-Christian 229
Repetition 144, 147, 163-64, 190, 193
Index of Subjects
resumptive 50-51, 66, 72, 73, 75,
143, 213, 215
Reputation,
divine 170
protection of 157
Rhetoric,
character 123-24, 142
structurally conceived 168
as
Sequence,
narrative as vehicle of
characterization 141
of narration versus story world
time 72
Story world,
realities within 27-28, 186, 192,
215
Structures,
data 222-23,231-32
Pivot pattern 94
Symbolism,
of crossing Jordan 40
of Egypt 130, 148
of Pharaoh 70, 129, 169
of Red Sea 40
Synergism,
divine-human 42, 43, 45, 47, 52,
58, 79, 216
T
Theodicy,
Dtr narratives read as 37, 80, 99,
183, 194, 217, 225, 227, 228-29
Samuel's 98, 107
V
Verisimilitude 37
Voice structure 53-54, 82, 102-103,
225, 230-31
Voice,
narrator versus character 231,
233, 234
W
Warfare,
Israel's ideology of 58
Wordplay 105
267
I N D E X OF CITATIONS
Genesis
2:25
2:30-33
1:1
16
1:1-26
15
16-17
17-18
135
135
15
141
141
3
141
141
1:2
1:3-4
3:22
3:5
6:6
15:18
22:17
25:34
32:12
32:21
Exodus
1:11
1:6
1:8
2:24
3:9
6:5
7:3-5
14:9
15
15:14-16
19:5-6
148
70
70
74
74
74
22
148
39
150
166
Leviticus
26:19
4:34
7:2
7:3-5
8:1
11:17
11:2
11:7
12
17
17:14-20
17:16
17:17
20:10-18
20:17
25:1-3
28
28:21-22
28:23
28:25
28:38
28:49
29
29:21
29:22
29:23-26
31:3-8
32
32:8-9
Joshua
166
Numbers
1:1
13-14
14:29
27:15-23
35-36
68
56-57
Deuteronomy
1:39
1:9-16
135
134
39
38, 39, 150
169
33, 36, 42
129, 154
59-60
166
67,69
67
132
134, 152
149
148, 152
153
45
33
164
146, 156, 176
167
166
42, 165
167
173
68
167
168
146
56
79
166
1:18
1:2
1:6
1:7
1:9
2
2:1
2:10
2:11
34
56-57
36
35
35
35
35
34
35
38
38, 49-50, 150
270
2:12
2:1-8
2:2-3
36
36
2-6
3-5
33-44
49
40
1 Samuel
2
2:25
7:5
8:11-18
5:1
6:17
6:25
6:2-5
43
51
42
8:22
8:5-8
237-38
7:1
33
44
8-12
12
15
7:12
7:4-12
9
9:1
9:10
9:14
9:1-5
9:24
9:27
9:3-4
11:20
11:23
13:1-6
17:16-18
21:41^8
21:43-45
22
22:4
22:5
23
23:14
23:7-8
24:28-31
24:31
8:6
42,43-44
44-48
50-51
38
45-47
46,47
48
48,51
2 Samuel
7
7:6-7
11
22
51
38,41
31,52
29-30
58
28
31, 174
238
30
129
238-39
30,174
125
137,161
152,161
139-^0
2:12
2:4
3:14
3:28
5:3
8
14:22-24
14:23
61
17:10
24-25
25:27-30
1:1
55-58
58-59
23-24, 202-204
69-71, 206
2
2:10
2:11-14
2:11-23
2:12-19
2:14
2:1-3
2:21
2:23
2:6
2:6-7
2:8-9
21:44
23:1
183
239
211
215
17
1:1-5
1:8-12
14
23
Nehemlah
18
18
66
1:1
1:2-3
1:4-11
2:12-15
69-71
148
148
214
243
209
20
134
Job
66,76-77
67
143
242
196-98
209
2 Kings
10:29
1:19
156
158
155
241
1 Kings
129
66
67
Judges
235, 240
22
113
148
86
21
85
7, 21-23
238, 240
18
13
18-21
19
19-20
20
14
20
1 Chronicles
28:2-3
143
132
271
I N D E X OF H E B R E W T E R M S
*met
=ms
bth
grS
henlah
we'att$
herem
yde
yrS
maca$eh
mss
mtisar
nahal
nuah
C
ad-hayy6m hazzeh
qereb
qSh
r'h
rdp
toM
36
38
101-102
63
30
94-95
43,44
67,69
58-60, 66
69
38
67
30
78
48
44,48
38
67,69
49
117