Book-Twelve-New-Form-Criticism 10 PDF
Book-Twelve-New-Form-Criticism 10 PDF
Book-Twelve-New-Form-Criticism 10 PDF
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Centro de Estudios de Historia del Antiguo Oriente. Facultad de Ciencias
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Boda, Mark J., Michael H. Floyd and Colin M. Toffelmire, eds. The book of the twelve and the new form criticism [en
línea]. Ancient Near East Monographs = Monografías sobre el Antiguo Cercano Oriente 10. Buenos Aires : Society of
Biblical Literature ; Centro de Estudios de Historia del Antiguo Oriente, Universidad Católica Argentina, 2015.
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THE BOOK OF THE TWELVE AND THE NEW FORM
CRITICISM
Society of Biblical Literature
~
Ancient Near East Monographs
General Editors
Ehud Ben Zvi
Roxana Flammini
Alan Lenzi
Juan Manuel Tebes
Editorial Board:
Reinhard Achenbach
Esther J. Hamori
Steven W. Holloway
Rene Kruger
Steven L. McKenzie
MarUi Nissinen
Graciela Gestoso Singer
Number 10
THEBOOKOFTHETWE~EANDTHENEW
FORM CRITICISM
Edited by
Mark J. Boda, Michael H. Floyd, and Colin M. Toffelrnire
SBL Press
Atlanta
Copyright © 2015 by SBL Press
All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form
or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by
means of any information storage or retrieval system, except as may be expressly permit-
ted by the 1976 Copyright Act or in writing from the publisher. Requests for permission
should be addressed in writing to the Rights and Permissions Office, SBL Press, 825 Hous-
ton Mill Road, Atlanta, GA 30329 USA.
The Book of the Twelve and the new form criticism / edited by Mark J. Boda, Michael H.
Floyd, and Colin M. Toffelmire.
pages cm. -- (Ancient Near East monographs; volume 10)
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Summary: "Contributors to this volume explore the theoretical issues at
stake in recent changes in form criticism and the practical outcomes of
applying the results of these theoretical shifts to the Book of the
Twelve. This volume combines self-conscious methodological reflection
with practical examination of specific texts in an effort to demonstrate
the practical consequences of theoretical decisions and the value of
certain methodological stances"-- Provided by publisher.
ISBN 978-1-62837 -060-7 (pbk. : alk. paper) -- ISBN 978-1-62837-062-1
(hardback: alk. paper) -- ISBN 978-1-62837 -061-4 (electronic)
1. Bible. Minor Prophets--Criticism, Form. I. Boda, Mark J., editor.
II. Floyd, Michael H., editor. III. Toffelmire, Colin M., editor.
BS1560.B5752015
224:90663--dc23 2015014546
Abbreviations Vll
Introduction
Michael H. Floyd
"I Will Make Her Like a Desert": Intertextual Allusion and Feminine and
Agricultural Metaphors in the Book of the Twelve 37
Beth M . Stovel!
- v-
vi New Fonn Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
New Form Criticism and the Prophetic Literature: The Unfinished Agenda 311
Robert R. Wilson
Bibliography 323
Ancient Sources Index 347
Modern Authors Index 361
Abbreviations
AB Anchor Bible
ABR Australian Biblical Review
AcBib Academia Biblica
AIL Ancient Israel and Its Literature
ANEM Ancient Near East Monographs
AOAT Alter Orient und Altes Testament
ApOTC Apollos Old Testament Commentary
ARM Archives royales de Mari
ATD Das Alte Testament Deutsch
AzTh Arbeiten zur Theologie
BBR Bulletinfor Biblical Research
BEATAJ Beitrage zur Erforschung des Alten Testaments und des antiken
Judentum
BETL Bibliotheca Ephemeridum Theologicarum Lovaniensium
BHQ Biblia Hebraica Quinta. Edited by Adrian Schenker et al. Stuttgart:
Deutsch Bibelgesellschaft, 2004-
Bib Biblica
BJS BrownJudaic Studies
BKAT Biblischer Kommentar, Altes Testament
BLS Bible and Literature Series
BSac Bibliotheca Sacra
BSOAS Bulletin qf the School qf Oriental and African Studies
BZAW Beihefte zur Zeitschrift fUr die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft
CBET Contributions to Biblical Exegesis and Theology
CBQ Catholic Biblical Quarterly
CC Continental Commentaries
CHANE Culture and History of the Ancient Near East
Colloq Colloquium
COS 7he Context qf Scripture. Edited by William W. Hallo. 3 vols. Leiden:
Brill, 1997-2002
CTR Criswell 7heological Review
DJD Discoveries in theJudaean Desert
EvT Evangelische 7heologie
- VII -
Vlll New Fonn Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
ExAud Ex Auditu
FAT Forschungen zum Alten Testament
FOTL Forms of the Old Testament Literature
FRLANT Forschungen zur Religion und Literatur des Alten und Neuen
Testaments
GMTR Guides to the Mesopotamian Textual Record
HBAI Hebrew Bible and Ancient Israel
HBM Hebrew Bible Monographs
HBS History of Biblical Studies
HCOT Historical Commentary on the Old Testament
HdO Handbuch der Orientalistik
HS Hebrew Studies
HSM Harvard Semitic Monographs
HThKAT Herders Theologischer Kommentar zum Alten Testament
HTS HTS Teologiese Studies/7heological Studies
HUCA Hebrew Union College Annual
IBS Irish Biblical Studies
lET Interpreting Biblical Texts
ICC International Critical Commentary
IECOT International Exegetical Commentary on the Old Testament
Int Interpretation
JANESCU Journal qf the Ancient Near Eastern Sociery qf Columbia Universiry
JAOS Journal qf the American Oriental Sociery
JBL Journal qfBiblical Literature
JETS Journal qf the Evangelical 7heological Sociery
JHebS Journal qfHebrew Scriptures
JNES Journal qfNear Eastern Studies
JNSL Journal qfNorthwest Semitic Languages
JSNT Journal qf the Study qf the New Testament
JSNTSup Journal for the Study of the New Testament Supplement Series
JSOT Journalfor the Study qfthe Old Testament
JSOTSup Journal for the Study of the Old Testament Supplement Series
JSS Journal qf Semitic Studies
JTS Journal qf7heological Studies
KAT Kommentar zum Alten Testament
LAI Library of Ancient Israel
LBS Linguistic Biblical Studies
LCBI Literary Currents in Biblical Interpretation
LHBOTS The Library of Hebrew Bible/Old Testament Studies
LSAWS Linguistic Studies in Ancient West Semitic
LSTS The Library of Second Temple Studies
MGWJ M onatschrifl fur Geschichte und Wissenschafl des Judentums
Abbreviations IX
Michael H. Floyd
The essays gathered here confine themselves to the corpus of prophetic literature
that the title of this volume calls The Book of the Twelve. This nomenclature
reflects the idea that the twelve Minor Prophets constitute an entity which is in
- I -
2 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
I Ehud Ben Zvi and James D . Nogalski, Two Sides ifA Coin: Juxtaposing Views on Interpreting
the Book if the Twelve/The Twelve Prophetic Books, Analecta Gorgiana 201 (Piscataway, NJ:
Gorgias, 2009).
2 Nogalski takes the same position as Boda and Sweeney on this point, but his article is
not mainly concerned with demonstrating it.
Introduction 3
here as well as others elsewhere,3 show various affinities and levels of affinity
a mong the prophetic books that make up the collection. Could the results of
these studies be synthesized in a way that would better describe the Twelve as
prophetic literature sui generis a nd more closely define the possibilities and limits
for reading the Twelve holistically?
3 E.g., Paul L. Redditt and Aaron Schart, eds., Thematic Threads in the Book if the Twelve,
BZAW 325 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2003); also James Nogalski, "Recurring Themes in the
Book of the Twelve: C reating Points of Contact for a Theological R eading," Int 61
(2007): 125-36.
4 The classic work is Claus Westermann, Basic Forms if Prophetic Speech, trans. Hugh C .
Most scholars believe that prophetic books were not entirely invented by those
who wrote them in their present form and that they were somehow related to
previous prophetic activity. There are widely differing opinions, however,
regarding the nature of that previous prophetic activity and how much we can
know about it. Three of the essays in this collection address this issue.
Erhard Gerstenberger argues that our perspective has been
anachronistically skewed by the modern assumption that books are written by
authors for the edification of individual readers. He sees the prophetic books in
the Twelve as the result of a different sort of process with a different end. The
beginning of the process was prophetic proclamation, but that is no longer
recoverable as such from prophetic literature. The earliest stage that can be
detected is the recording and collection of anonymous prophecies, which were
then augmented and adapted for liturgical use. The first of these two textual
layers is evident in the short, pithy oracular sayings addressed to particular
situations, which are now often found clustered together in series. The second
layer is evident in accusatory, exhortative, and hymnic language that draws out
the didactic implications of the oracles, generalizing and applying them to the
common life of a community gathered for worship. Gerstenberger views a
liturgical setting, in which prophetic writings are read in order to renew and
strengthen the relationship between the community and YHVVH, as the
formative matrix for prophetic literature, and he emphasizes the anonymity of
the overall process. The original oracular sayings themselves came from
anonymous speakers ofYHWH's word, and they were compiled and augmented
for liturgical use by anonymous scribes and cultic functionaries. The
identification of each book of the Twelve with a particular historical figure, by
means of a superscription naming it after a supposedly great prophet from the
past, was the last stage in the process of literary production, coincident with its
being incorporated into the Book of the Twelve. The data in the
superscriptions-including the names of the prophets themselves-thus have no
real biographical implications, and no substantial bearing on either the contents
or the formation of these books.
James Nogalski takes as his starting point the same anonymity emphasized
by Gerstenberger, and ends up taking a position very similar to Gerstenberger's.
Nogalski works in reaction to a theory of Karl Budde about the lack of
biographical information concerning the prophets named among the Twelve.
Budde argued that more biographical material, especially narrative material,
had once been included, but most of it-except Amos 7: 10-17, Hos I and 3,
and Mic 3: I-was removed in a redaction of the entire Book of the Twelve,
intended to make its contents more generally applicable to later readers.
Nogalski finds little to commend this theory, but he finds the questions with
which Budde wrestled still worthy of attention. What is the nature of the
Introduction 7
redactional processes that shaped each of the books of the Twelve, as well as the
collection as a whole? And why have the books in this collection included so little
biographical information in their present form?
Nogalski accepts the traditional assumption that, at least in most cases,
prophetic literature was ultimately rooted in prophetic proclamation, perhaps on
the part of the prophets for whom the books in the Twelve were named. In any
case, however, all that can now be recovered from prophetic literature are the
rhetorical elements with which its writers worked. Like Gerstenberger, Nogalski
attempts to identify these elements a nd describe the patterns of their
interrelationships, but he gives a somewhat different inventory: headings,
a nthologies a nd sm all collections, source blocks, longer redactional
compositions, and shorter editorial comments. Source blocks have a variety of
functions: They can be used as building blocks for extended passages or entire
books, as complementary enhancements of already existing anthologies and
collections, and as intertwined textual threads. When one considers how such
elements are interrelated in the formation of the various books that comprise the
Twelve, a reason for the absence of biographical information becomes evident.
The writers of these prophetic books were primarily interested in the liveliness of
YHVVH's word, not the lives of the prophets.
Nogalski does not say much about the setting of this redactional activity, but
one of his general conclusions leaves him very much open to the kind of
liturgical context described in detail by Gerstenberger:
Significantly, the function of the source texts that are involved in the
compilation and framing of the writings reflect more cultic associations than
biographical material .... This cultic flavor has been underappreciated in
prophetic studies and it requires more consideration in the development of the
Twelve since it probably sheds more light upon the process of editing than the
biographies of the prophets.6
recorded oracles that were elaborated in the process of forming prophetic books,
but he does not see this connection as the impetus for their formation.
Gerstenberger seems to imply that the impetus for recording and collecting
anonymous prophetic sayings would have been their potential for present
liturgical use, not their connections with the past. I would argue that their
connections with past prophets were precisely what made prophetic sayings
adaptable for the uses to which their redactors may have wanted to put them.
Gerstenberger believes that the ostensibly biographical connections of the
Twelve with past prophets were late, superficial inventions because the
superscriptions, in which the biographical connections are largely made, were
added late in the redaction of the Twelve. But even if the superscriptions were
added last-and Gerstenberger may well be right about this-it does not
necessarily follow that the biographical connections came late in the
development of the tradition. These sharp differences of opinion show the need
for more discussion of the formation of prophetic books.
Along with new form criticism's insistence on beginning with the text m its
present form comes the assumption that it is not a hodge-podge, but rather an
entity whose writers gave it this form in order to communicate a particular,
comprehensible message. The initial challenge is to discern on the basis of
synchronic analysis what the writers of prophetic texts wanted to communicate
to their contemporary readers, before considering whether there is any reason to
believe that they drew on previously existing records or traditions, in which case
it may also be appropriate to undertake diachronic analysis.
It is hard for biblical scholars to break the habit of giving priority to
diachronic concerns, so two of the essays in the present volume set out to show
the advantages of doing so. Anthony Petterson argues that major differences in
the interpretation of Zech 6:9-15 stem from the methodologically mistaken
approach of first considering diachronically what this prophecy might have
meant for the prophet in relation to his contemporaries instead of first
considering synchronically what it might mean for the writer in relation to his
contemporaries. D. C. Timmer argues that ostensible discrepancies in
Zephaniah are understandable if they are read synchronically in terms of the
message of the book as a whole, rather than diachronically in terms of different
redactional layers. Because Timmer draws on linguistic theory his essay will be
treated below, along with others that similarly employ concepts from linguistic
and literary theory. Here we will consider Petterson's thesis.
Does the prophecy concerning n7J~ in Zech 6:9-15 refer to Zerubbabel and
the completion of the Second Temple, or does it refer to a future messianic
figure and the completion of another more glorious, even eschatological temple?
In addition to the problem of who n7J~ is, this text contains several cruxes that
lO New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
must somehow be resolved in the course of its overall interpretation, all of which
Petterson takes up in his survey of opinion. Here we are mainly interested in his
argument about the central question-a messiah, Zerubbabel, or the Messiah?
He says that the answer depends largely on two things: (1) Is the text read as if
addressed to the prophet's contemporaries, or to the writer's contemporaries? (2)
Is the text read as having a message that is coherent with the message of
Zechariah as a whole, and also coherent with the royal ideology of the wider
prophetic corpus? Those who regard Zech 6:9-15 as a prophecy addressed to
the prophet's contemporaries tend to take it as a legitimation of Zerubbabel's
messianic status because he completed the Second Temple. Such a reading
raises the question of whether this is not then a failed prophecy-for Zerubbabel
nevertheless failed to attain a kingly crown-and what ongoing significance it
could possibly have as such. It also creates a discrepancy between the way n7J::l is
used as royal terminology here and elsewhere in other prophetic literature (i.e. ,
Jer 23:5; 33:15-18), as well as a discrepancy between the way kingship is
conceived here and elsewhere in Zechariah (e.g., Zech 9:9-lO). Those who
regard Zech 6:9-15 as a prophecy addressed by the writers of Zechariah to their
readers tend to take it as foretelling the advent of a future king-a prophecy yet
to be fulfilled-in a way that is consistent with other messianic prophecies.
Petterson prefers the latter alternative as less problematic.
Petterson's analysis raises the question of just what the synchronic reading of
a prophetic book entails. Some advocates of new form criticism assume, as he
does, that it means treating the text as temporally one-dimensional, as if it
addresses its readers only with respect to their present circumstances and as if it
projects the future only with respect to their time. It is correspondingly assumed
that any diachronic analysis is an imposition of modern historical criticism that
has no warrant in the text itself. But what if the text itself expresses a historical
perspective on its own prophetic past? In that case, wouldn't a synchronic
reading of the text involve a consideration of how the book as a whole
reconstructs the past-as opposed to the historical-critical practice, often abetted
by earlier form criticism, of dismembering the text in order to read it in relation
to the way modern scholars reconstruct the past? Some unexplored issues seem
to be lurking in the approach represented by Petterson.
Earlier form critics had literary as well as historical interests. Hermann Gunkel,
in particular, showed a profound aesthetic appreciation for as well as a historical
interest in biblical texts. Because of the analytical practices that their historical
interests entailed, however, the pioneers of form criticism often did not have an
opportunity to take their literary interests very far. In the quest for original layers
of material, the text had to be dissected in search of small, self-contained,
conceptually homogenous, and historically datable units. The only literary
Introduction 11
features taken seriously into account were those on which such dissection was
based. '!\lith the text so dismembered, many of its other literary features were
often lost from view. This state of affairs led James Muilenburg in 1969 to call
for going beyond form criticism into what he called rhetorical criticism, making
room in the analysis of texts for a fuller delineation of their aesthetic
dimensions.? Newer form criticism makes it possible to take this call all the more
seriously, particularly in its insistence that any type of analysis must begin with a
comprehensive view of the text as a whole in its present state. This opens up the
possibility of a fruitful cross-fertilization, in which the categories of literary and
form-critical analysis are allowed to interact.
Just when form criticism began opening up to literary-critical concerns,
literary criticism itself was taking a linguistic turn. Structuralism provided the
theoretical framework for this trend, but the usefulness of linguistic categories for
purposes of literary analysis has proved itself pragmatically without necessarily
resorting to any particular ideological justification. It should thus be possible for
form-critical concerns to be addressed in creative ways using analytical practices
developed by linguists as well as literary critics.
Four of the essays in this collection illustrate the various ways in which form
criticism can interact with literary and linguistic analysis. Beth Stovell allows the
literary-critical concept of metaphor to interact with the form-critical concept of
genre in order to better understand how similar metaphorical imagery can have
different connotations in different generic contexts. Using Amos as an example,
Tim Bulkeley seeks to refine the genre category of prophetic books by analyzing
the rhetorical flow of the book as a whole in relation to its redactionally
identifiable components, synthesizing the results in terms of the literary-critical
distinction between fictionalized history and historicized fiction. D. C . Timmer
uses the linguistic distinction between semantic coherence and semantic
cohesion to resolve a long-standing crux in the form- and redaction-critical
analysis of Zephaniah. And Colin Toffelmire draws upon Systemic Functional
Linguistics (SFL) to refine the conventional form-critical notion of Sit,;: im Leben or
setting.
Stovell's starting point is the realization that the definition of generic and
metaphorical structures is not an end in itself. The usefulness of identifying a
recurring verbal generic structure, such as a prophetic lament, lies in noting the
diverse and variable ways it can figure in particular instances. Similarly, the
usefulness of identifying a recurring metaphor, such as God compared with a
shepherd, lies in noting the diverse and variable ways it can figure in particular
instances. Moreover, genres and metaphors-in all their diversity-are
interactive. Stovell attempts to map out the ways in which particular genres and
metaphors can vary in relation to their context, as well as the ways they can
affect one another in the process.
prophecy once spoken by the prophet for whom a book is named might
substantially affect the way in which the admittedly non-biographical book-as a
prophetic fiction-rhetorically functions.
D. C. Timmer starts with a tension in Zephaniah's description of the
nations. Throughout that book they are generally portrayed in a negative light,
as the object of YHWH's punishment. However there are two references, in
Zeph 2: 11 and 3:9, which portray them favorably as having become devotees of
YHVVH. Because of this tension scholars have long regarded these verses as the
result of secondary additions and theorized about the kind of redactional process
that might explain how they came to be where they presently are. Timmer
proposes that instead of jumping immediately to such diachronic conclusions the
text might be approached in line with the new form-critical principle of first
attempting to read it as comprehensively as possible, on the assumption that the
writer was attempting to communicate a comprehensible message to readers by
shaping the text into whatever form it now has. Can inconsistencies like those
that are evident in Zephaniah's description of the nations be understood as part
of the total message of a text, rather than as incomprehensible disruptions? How
can you tell the difference?
Timmer resorts to a distinction made in semantics between coherence and
cohesion. Cohesion refers to the harmony of a text's surface features like
vocabulary, grammar, and syntax, et cetera. Coherence refers to the infratextual
conceptual system that informs readers' understanding of the text as a whole. In
terms of this distinction it is not problematic if a single text includes more than
one perspective on a subject, thus stretching its cohesiveness, as long as there
exists a unifying conceptual basis that accommodates the particularities of the
various occurrences of that subject in the text. In the case of Zephaniah, is there
a unifying conceptual basis that coherently accommodates both the negative and
the favorable perspectives on the nations? Or are these differences still best
understood as incohesive inconsistencies indicating secondary redactional layers?
Timmer finds a unifying conceptual framework that encompasses
Zephaniah's contrasting perspectives on the nations. The book opens with
YHWH's cosmic judgment of the whole world, including Judah and the nations.
This sets in motion a process in which contrasting perspectives on Judah also
become readily apparent. First YHWH will destroy Judah, then he will save a
faithful remnant, and finally he will use them to restore Judah. Within the
context of worldwide judgment Timmer finds a similar progression in the destiny
of the nations. First YHVVH will destroy them, then he will save a righteous
remnant, and finally he will use them to create a gentile community faithful to
YHVVH. The perspectives on the nations are different because they describe
different stages in this process. Timmer's article thus provides a good example of
how the new form-critical approach can draw on linguistic theory in a way that
affects the interface between form and redaction criticism.
14 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
8 For a tour deforce in this regard, see Ehud Ben Zvi, Signs ofJonah: Reading and Rereading in
Ancient Yehud,jSOTSup 367 (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 2003).
Introduction 15
Michael H . Floyd
I NTRODU CTION
Over the last couple of decades there has been a decisive shift in the form-critical
study of prophetic literature. The discipline of form criticism, which focuses on
questions of genre and social location, emerged in the modern era as a mea ns of
interpreting what the prophets said to their contemporaries. As that quest
proved elusive, the goal has now shifted to interpreting what the a uthors of
prophetic books wrote for their contemporaries. I Scholars are recognizing that
the Bible's prophetic literature, as well as other types of canonical scriptures,
resulted primarily from the formative role played by a small scribal elite in the
emergent Judaism of the Persian period. These scribes were endeavoring to
mediate "the word of YH\J\TH" to their colleagues through the creation,
continual study, and expository interpretation of prophetic books. 2
I Ferdinand E. D eist, "The Prophets: Are We Heading for a Paradigm Switch?" in Prophet
und Prophetenbuch: Festschrift fur Otto Kaiser zum 65. Geburtstag, ed. Volkmar Fritz, K arl-
Friedrich Pohlman, and Hans-Christoph Schmitt, BZAW 185 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 1989),
1-18; Michael H . Floyd, "Basic Trends in the Form-Critical Study of Prophetic Texts,"
in The Changing Face if Form Criticismfor the Twenty-First Century, ed . Marvin A. Sweeney and
Ehud Ben Zvi (Grand R apids: Eerdmans, 2001 ), 298-311; Colin M . Toffelmire, "Form
Criticism," in Dictionary if the Old Testament: Prophets, ed. Mark J. Boda and J. Gordon
McConville (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity and IVP Academic, 2012), 257-71.
2 Ehud Ben Zvi, "The Prophetic Book: A Key Form of Prophetic Literature," in Sweeney
and Ben Zvi, Changing Face if Form Criticism, 276-97; Ehud Ben Zvi, "The Concept of
- 17 -
18 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
In this essay I wish to probe this emerging consensus at one particular point:
the eclipse of the prophet.3 Earlier form-critical scholarship emphasized the
original prophetic message at the expense of the scribes who produced the
prophetic books. I believe that some current scholarship similarly emphasizes the
work of these scribes at the expense of the original prophetic message . I a m not
advocating a return to form criticism as it was formerly practiced, using it to
reconstruct the supposed ipsissima verba of the prophets. That project has clearly
reached the point of diminishing returns. Nor a m I challenging the basic insight
of form criticism as it is currently practiced, that our prima ry focus has to be first
of all on the evidence that we actually have in front of us, namely, the prophetic
books themselves and, by direct implication, the scribes that produced them. 4 I
propose here that we affirm this insight as the only way forward a nd attempt to
go beyond it by raising the question of whether these scribes were not m aking
historical claims a bout the prophets who preceded them, of whom they wrote. In
other words, were the writers of the prophetic books in some sense
historiographers?5
The new form-critical study of prophecy finds itself in the midst of a
scholarly trend which asserts that we have no direct access to the prophets as
such, a nd which doubts the historical veracity of the biographical incidents
narrated in the prophetic books. According to this view, the biblical prophets are
not historical personages in their own righ t, but only characters in the books that
scribes wrote a bout them. Moreover, the scribes have told their readers precious
Prophetic Books and Its Historical Setting," in The Production if Prophecy: Constructing
Prophecy and Prophets in Yehud, ed. Diana V. Edelman and Ehud Ben Zvi (London: Equinox,
2009), 73-95; Michael H . Floyd, "The Massa' as a Type of Prophetic Book," JBL 121
(2002): 401-22; Floyd, "The Production of Prophetic Books in the Early Second Temple
Period," in Prophets, Prophecy and Prophetic Texts in Second Temple Judaism, ed. Michael H .
Floyd and Robert D . Haak, LHBOTS 427 (New York: T&T Clark, 2006), 276-97 .
3 As foreseen by J am es M . vVard, "The Eclipse of the Prophet in Contemporary
Prophetic Studies," USQR 41 (1988): 97-104.
4 Odil H annes Steck (Die Prophetenbucher und ihr theologisches Zeugnis: Wege der Nachfrage un
Fiihrten zur Antwort [Tubingen: Mohr Siebeck, 1996], 9-10): "Unser Beitrag in dieser
Studie redet nicht dem Defatismus das Wort, als blieben die ursprunglichen
Prophetengestalten und ihr Wirken under der Last der Tradition in J edem Fall
unaffindbar verborgen. U nd ebensowenig ist ihm am Verzicht auf die Nachfrage nach
dem Propheten selbst gelegen ... . Sind die ursprunglichen Propheten nur in der
gegebenen Uberlieferung von Prophetenbuchern anzutreffen, dann muB man mit der
Untersuchung dieser gegebenen Quellen einsetzen."
5 "I would like to see some argument .. . about the historiographic intentions of the
biblical writers as well as some evidence against alternative suggestions that they might
have been writing for ideological or propagandist purposes (not to mention inventive
literary or epigonic commentary reasons)." Robert P. Caroll, "Whose Prophet, Whose
History? Troubling the Interpretive Community Again: Notes to a R esponse to T. W .
O verholt's Critique," JSOT 48 (1990): 41.
New Fonn Criticism and Bf!Jond 19
little about the prophets for whom their books are na med, making only cursory
references to a few biographical data and relating very few prophecies to specific
historical contexts of the prophets' own lifetimes. The scribes have left us no
clues as to how they might have known anything about prophets who lived
centuries earlier and, in any case, judging from the scan t information they have
passed on to their readers, they seem not to have known very much. The naming
of particular prophets in the introductions to prophe tic books thus appea rs to be
merely a pro Janna gesture having little to do with the contents of the book itself,
a nd the few stories that we have a bout biblical prophets appear to be largely the
inve ntions oflater writers. 6
These are points more or less well taken, but they stand in need of
qualification. The assertion that the prophets are literary characters is certainly
true as far as it goes. As this assertion is usually stated, however, it often entails a
false either I or that results in a questiona ble conclusion. It is typically assumed
that being a litera ry character implies being fictional, and that a truly historical
figure would be represented in some more " real" way. This assumption is a
vestigial remna nt of the "old" form-critical method, based on the principle that
true history involves m aking direct contact with persons from the past. This idea
was presupposed in the project of attempting to recover the original speeches of
the prophets. It was thought that by means of identifying their own words we
could, as it were, put ourselves in the real presence of these men. H aving
recognized that this is not what the prophetic books do, some schola rs have now
conversely jumped to the conclusion that these texts are therefore a historical.
However, contemporary historiographical theory has reminded us that
history a nd fiction a re not a nti thetical in this sense. ' J\Te have no direct access to
a ny figures from the past. 'J\T e know them only as they are characterized by
historians in narration. In some cases we have ar tifacts or documen ts that are
directly connected with persons who lived ages ago-Julius Caesar 's account of
his exploits in TIe Gallic Wars, Bolivar 's sword, Mozart's m a nuscripts,
6 Robert P. Carroll has been the main advocate for this view in, e.g., "Inventing the
Prophets," IBS 10 (1988): 24-36; Carroll, "Prophecy and Society," in The World if Ancient
Israel: Social, Anthropological and Political Perspectives, ed . R. E. Clements (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1989), 203-25; and Carroll, "Whose Prophet, Whose
History," 33-49. See also Roy F. Melugin, "Prophetic Books and the Problem of
Historical Reconstruction," in Prophets and Paradigms: Essays in Honor if Gene NJ. Tucker, ed.
Stephen Breck Reid, JSOTSup 229 (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 1996),63-78; Martti
Nissinen, "The Historical Dilemma of Biblical Prophetic Studies," in Prophecy in the Book if
J eremiah, ed . Hans M. Barstad and Reinhard G. Katz, BZAW 388 (Berlin: de Gruyter,
2009), 103-20; Philip R. Davies, "The Audiences of Prophetic Scrolls: Some
Suggestions," in Reid, Prophets and Paradigms, 48-62; Davies, "Why Do vVe Know abou t
Amos?" in Edelman and Ben Zvi, The Production if Prophecy, 55- 72; and James M. Bos,
Reconsidering the Date and Provenance if the Book if Hosea: The Case for Persian-Period Yehud,
LHBOTS 580 (London: Bloomsbury, 2013).
20 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Columbus's dia ries, et cetera. However, such remains do not put us in contact
with these persons in any mea ningful sense until they are used by historians to
produce narrative characterizations of them. The difference between historical
figures-insofar as we know them at all-and fictional figures is not that the
latter are literary characters and the former a re not. Both are literary characters.
The difference is that the characterization of fictional figures is based solely or
la rgely on the writer's imagination. In contrast the characterization of historical
figures is based on, a nd also constrained by, the actually available sources of
information. 7
Historical literary characterizations depend upon how writers evaluate the
relia bility of their sources and how they imaginatively interpret them. Because
Carl Sandberg and D avid Herbert Donald weigh a nd interpret the sources of
information about Abraha m Lincoln somewhat differently, their literary
characterizations of him differ in m a ny respects-but this does not m ake
Abraham Lincoln a fictional figure .8 Similarly, the mere fact that the biblical
prophets are literary characters in prophetic books does not necessarily imply
that they are fictional figures. It all depends on whether or not the writers of the
prophetic books were basing their characterizations of the prophets on what
could be reasonably imagined about them from reliable sources of information.
What sources of information might the writers of the prophetic books have
used? Since they have left no explicit clues, we have to look at the few biblical
data in light of a ncient Near Eastern culture at large, to get some idea of what
sort of records were typically kept about prophecy. Resorting to this sort of
comparison does not necessarily imply that biblical prophecy was directly
connected with or imitated any of the other a ncient prophetic traditions that
have left sporadic traces in the ancient Near Eastern archaeological record . It
only claims that biblical prophecy is a manifestation of the same phenomenon of
divinatory intermediation that pervaded antiquity as a whole. 9 The ways in
7 Hans M . Barstadt, "What Prophets Do: Reflections on Past Reality in the Book of
J eremiah," in Barstad and K atz, Prophecy in the Book qf]eremiah, 10-32.
8 Carl Sandburg, Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years and the War Years (New York: Harcourt
Brace Jovanovich, 1970), and D avid Herbert Donald , Lincoln (New York: Simon &
Schuster, 1995).
9 There is no need to enter here into the debate abou t whether the term prophecy properly
applies to forms of divination that existed in preexilic times. (See A. Graeme Auld,
"Prophets through the Looking Glass: Between Writings and Moses," ]SOT 27 [1983]:
27-42; repr. along with responding articles by Robert P. Carroll, H . G. M . Williamson,
and Thomas Overholt in The Prophets, ed . Philip R . Davies, Biblical Seminar 42
[Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 1996] ). For present purposes it is sufficient to recognize
that although prophecy came to be used at a relatively late date to synthesize and critiqu e
the traditions concerning various theologically diverse forms of divination that had been
practiced earlier, these forms of divination-insofar as we can reconstruct them-all seem
related in some way to the phenomenon that contemporary anthropology calls
New Fonn Criticism and B f!Jond 21
which this phenomenon was expressed in other times a nd places m ay thus shed
some light on the possible ways it was expressed in the prophetic traditions
inherited by postexilic Yehud. Such compa rison must be attentive to differences
as well as similarities, a nd there must be some telling indication in the present
biblical text of dependence on the kinds of sources that a re hypothesized by
means of the comparison.
'!\lith regard to the biblical data, for present purposes it does no t matter
whether they come from texts of doubtful historicity because the comparative
evidence shows them to be generally verisimila r, realistically reflecting the ways
in which prophecy a nd writing were interrelated in the a ncient Near Eastern
context. 10
The comparative evidence comes mostly from the Mesopotamian cities of Mari
a nd Nineveh a nd from classical Greece, with a few scattered sources from other
times and places. I I In the vast m ajority of cases the texts are evidently written
reports or transcriptions of oracles that were originally spoken. It is conceiva ble
that a prophet could have also been a scribe a nd could thus have written the
revelations that he himself received . In the case of Jeremiah, however, he
complied with YHWH's command to "write! " his oracles (Jer 30:2) by dictating
them to a scribe (Jer 36). 12 Some scholars have proposed that oracles were
transmitted orally by "disciples" of the prophet until they were eventually
recorded, but there is little evidence of this. 13 It appears that whenever
intermediation. In addition to the articles by Overholt in the Biblical Seminar volume cited
above, see R obert R. Wilson, Prophecy and Society in Ancient Israel (Philadelphia: Fortress,
1980), and David L. Petersen, The Roles if Israel's Prophets, JSOTSup 17 (Sheffield: JSOT
Press, 1981 ).
10 Barstadt, "What Prophets Do."
II The ancient Near Eastern texts are conveniently gathered in Martti Nissinen, Prophets
and Prophecy in the Ancient Near East, W AW 12 (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2003).
For the Greek sources, see Armin Lange, "Literary Prophecy and Oracle Collection: A
Comparison between Judah and Greece in Persian Times," in Floyd and Haak, Prophets,
Prophecy, and Prophetic Texts, 248-75.
12 In Isa 30:8 and Hab 2:2 the prophet is also commanded to write the revelations
received . Cf. ARM 26 no. 414:29-42 (Nissinen, Prophets and Prophecy, 75).
13 Most notably Sigmund Mowinckel, Prophecy and Tradition: The Prophetic Books in the Light if
the Stu4J if the Growth and History if the Tradition (O slo: Dybwad, 1946), esp. 36-71. Isaiah
8: 16 is often cited as a reference to prophetic disciples, but see Casbah Balogh, "Isaiah's
Prophetic Instru ction and the Disciples in Isaiah 8:16," VT 63 (2013): 1-18. James L.
Crenshaw ("Transmitting Prophecy across Generations," in J;j1ritings and Speech in Israelite
and Ancient Near Eastern Prophecy, ed. Ehud Ben Zvi and Michael H. Floyd, SBLSymS 10
(Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2000],44) and Karel van der Toorn (Scribal Culture
and the Making if the Hebrew Bible [Cambridge: Harvard U niversity Press, 2007], 195) have
22 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
prophecies were preserved in writing, this was primarily due to the more or less
immediate intervention of scribes, which could be instigated by the prophet
himself or by others.
There were various reasons for transcribing prophecies: to deliver them to
intended recipients who were absent; 14 to document that the message had indeed
been delivered even when the recipient was present;15 to preserve oracles that
we re thought to have unresolved implications for the future, et cetera. 16 Only
recently revived the theory of the oral transmISSIOn of prophetic traditions. Van der
Toorn does not argue- as Mowinckel and some other early form critics did-that
prophetic oracles were transmitted in an exclusively oral form, but rather that
"recollections abou t the prophet ... were shared among his followers and ad mirers" in a
way that complemented written transmission. Neither he nor Crenshaw offer any
evidence, however, of any setting in which what they propose could happen, nor any
explicit examples of the oral transmission of prophetic oracles being practiced in other
cultures. For a more extensive critique see M arti Nissinen, "How Prophecy Became
Literature," SlOT 19 (2005): 170-72.
14 ARM 26 no. 414:29-42 (Nissinen, Prophets and Prophecy, 75) andJer 29.
15 E.g., SAA 9 3.2, i 27-ii 9 (Nissinen, Prophets and Prophecy, 119), describes a prophet
addressing to an assembly an oracle occasioned by a royal victory and then depositing a
written copy of it before the image of a god. Similarly in Isa 8: 1-4 the inscription onto a
tablet of the name M aher-Shalal-Hash-Baz seems to attest the delivery of the oracular
message, "the spoil speeds, the prey hastens," through the prophetic sign of giving this
name to the prophet's son.
16 Isaiah and Jeremiah were motivated to record their oracles because of the popular
rejection of their as yet unfulfilled predictions of disaster. Similarly Habakkuk is to "write
the revelation" (H ab 2:2b), because it will take time to be fulfilled . In the meantime its
promise will be communicated through ongoing study and interpretation of the text in
view of unfolding events. Joachim Schaper argues that the purpose clause in Hab 2:2bj3
indicates that the written text is to be read aloud in a public place by a town crier (" Exilic
and Post-exilic Prophecy and the Orality/ Literacy Problem," VT 55 (2005): 330, 33 1;
Schaper, "On Writing and R eciting in J eremiah 36," in Barstadt and Katz, Prophecy in the
Book qf]eremiah, 143-45). I agree with his grammatical analysis (the participle ~11j7 is the
subj ect and 1::1 r11' is the predicate (see Michael H . Floyd, "Prophecy and Writing in
Habakkuk 2,1-5," .('AW 105 [1993], 471-81 ), but I find the semantic analysis
problematic. Biblical Hebrew has several terms for functionaries whose role is to orally
publicize noteworthy information. The :m:!1 is stationed at a vantage point to keep watch
and report what he sees (2 Sam 18:24-28; 2 Kgs 8:17-20; Isa 7:8; cf. Isa 21 :6). The 1~ill is
stationed at gates and doorways ITer 35:4; 1 Kgs. 14:27; Neh 13:22) and at other key
points around the city (Isa 62:6; Ps 127: I; Cant 3:3, 5:7), and it is also his job to keep
people informed about current developments (Isa 21 : 11-12). The 1ill::1~ is a messenger
who comes bringing good news (lsa 40:9; 41:27; 52:7; Nah 2:1 ). All of these functionaries
typically give their reports orally, and none is described as reading anything from tablets.
The verb ~1j7 is one of the verbs used to describe their oral reporting, but the participle is
nowhere used as a substantive that denotes someone doing this sort of thing. In 2 Chr
30: 1-12 "runners" (tl':!11) take written docu ments announcing Hezekiah's Passover
New Fonn Criticism and Bf!Jond 23
those prophecies that were deemed to have significance a bove a nd beyond the
immediate situation in which they originated were a rchived for preservation,
a nd some of these we re selected for recopying in a more substantial libra ry
format. 17 Archives were concentrated in two institutional contexts, royal courts
a nd temples. Household libraries also existed in the homes of some wealthy
persons and scribal families. IS Tra nscribed prophecies could have been collected
in any a nd all of these settings.
If much of biblical prophetic literature was based on records of prophetic
activity in mona rchic times, the question a rises as to how such records could
have been preserved despite the overthrow of Juda h 's monarchy in 586 BeE.
Such a great social dislocation would have brought a n end to most of the
institutional contexts in which documents could have been archived. However , a
limited number of texts could have been taken to Babylon by the entourage of
the deported King Jehoiachin l9 or stored in the household libraries of scribal
families outside Jerusalem. As the Qumra n discoveries show, the region's climate
m ade it possible to keep treasured m a nuscripts in desert caves in a time of crisis,
in hope of retrieving them at some later date. '!\lith rega rd to the preservation of
possible written sources for biblical books, we have no specific evidence one way
or the other, but in any case the fall of Jerusalem need no t be considered a
disruption that would necessarily have obliterated all mea ns of preserving
documents.
Once archived, oracular texts could be cited in other writings and studied
for their deeper meanings. If a controversial prophecy came to pass, this would
m ake it particularly worthy of preservation a nd intensive study. In a ncient
scribal culture reflective analysis was primarily expressed in the form of
compiling lists-lists of signs, words, natural phenomena, proverbs, omens, et
cetera. 20 By means of lists items were juxtaposed in a series so as to show their
affinities and differences, thus implying an underlying connection. In the case of
prophecies, too, oracles were compiled and listed on the basis of traits that were
perceived to show some commonality-thematic links, similar rhetorical
patterns, correspondences to ritual sequences, a nd so on. Prophecies delivered
by the same prophet were also compiled and listed in series on this basis. 21 By
virtue of their interconnections listed prophecies came to have implications
transcending the situations to which they were initially addressed, a surplus of
meaning that scribal interpreters lea rned to apply to their own situations. The
collection and listing of oracles created the potential for them to become what
Armin Lange calls literary as opposed to merely written prophecy. Because such
prophecies are thus recontextualized they can be understood in new ways, above
a nd beyond what they mea nt in their original context. 22
The potential for collected prophecies to interact with one another a nd
generate new insights is evident in letters from Mari that contain several oracles
along with comments of the persons sending these letters to the king. Such
comments are based on connections that become apparent only when the
oracles are juxtaposed .23 Generally, however, Mesopotamian scribes do not
seem to have been interested in the systematic reinterpretation of the prophecies
they archived. Although they typically a nnotated the lists they compiled with
commentary of various kinds,24 particularly the lists of omens,25 such a nnotations
20 Wolfram von Soden, The Ancient Orient: An Introduction to the Stu4J if the Ancient Near East,
trans. Donald G. Schley (Grand R apids: Eerdmans, 1994), 145-72.
21 The Neo-Assyrian texts include three oracle collections, SAA 9, nos. 1, 2, and 3
(Nissinen, Prophets and Prophecy, 101-24). The oracles in one of these, no. 3, are all by the
same prophet. The Deir 'Alia inscription provides another sort of example (Nissinen,
Prophets and Prophecy, 207-12), as doesJ er 36.
22 Lange, "Literary Prophecy and Oracle Collection," 248-75. Nissinen maintains that
the kind of recontextualization which characterizes literary prophecy is evident in the
Mesopotamian texts ("Spoken, Written, Quoted and Invented," 254), but Lange argu es
that M esopotamian prophecy, in contrast with biblical and Greek prophecy, remains
merely written.
23 E.g., A. 1121 + A. 2731 (Nissinen, Prophets and Prophecy, 17-21 ); ARM 26, nos. 199 and
237 (Nissinen, Prophets and Prophecy, 30- 32 and 67- 69). See furth er Aaron Schart,
"Combining Prophetic Oracles in Mari Letters and J eremiah 36," ]ANESCU 23 (1995):
77-88.
24 Joachim Krecher, "Kommentare," Reallexikon der Assyriologie und Vorderasiatischen
Archaologie, ed. Erich Ebeling et al. (Berlin: de Gruyter, 1980-1983),6: 188-9 1.
New Fonn Criticism and Bf!Jond 25
scarcely appear in their lists of oracles. 26 In contrast, the biblical prophetic books
show not only the annotation of collected oracles with scribal additions, but also
the integration of such interpre tive commentary within the text of compiled
prophecies- a phenomenon paralleled only in Greek rather than Mesopotamian
oracle collections. 27
LISTS AR E CLOSED SERIES OF ITEMS, BUT AT THE SAME TIME THEY ARE, IN A
SENSE, OPEN-ENDED
The word list is etymologically descended from an old Ge rma nic root-meaning
border, edge, or boundary. Lists are bounded in the sense that they contain just
certain item s and not others. However, because the relationships a mong these
item s are not m ade explicit, a list naturally gives rise to the question of what
other item s might (or migh t not) also be included. Lists thus lend themselves to
getting a provisional hold on immense m atters about which not enough is
known, a nd m ay never be known. The compiler of a list gives some examples or
specimens that are evocative of a large, unfathomable totality, a nd leaves it to
readers to imagine the rest.
With regard to the biblical corpus of prophetic books, the unfathoma ble
totality in question was something like this: What does prophecy as a whole
teach about exile a nd restoration? Looking back from a postexilic perspective,
what divinatory insights should be considered truly prophetic, a nd how do they
illuminate the collective experience of several centuries? The introduction to the
book of Zechariah poses this question (1: 1-6), noting that former prophets had
called former generations to repent, but they did not heed the prophets' call, and
thus YHWH fulfilled their predictions of downfall. Now that the presen t
generation is learning the lessons of this past history a nd responding more
31 In particular, see Jack Goody, TIe Domestication if the Savage Mind (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1977),74-111 ; Liam Cole Young, "Un-Black Boxing the
List: Knowledge, Materiality, and Form," Canadian J ournal if Communication 38 (2013):
497- 516; Young, "On Lists and Networks: An Archaeology of Form," Amodern 2:
Network Archaeology, http: //amodern.net/article/ on-lists-and-networks/ , and the
works cited in these two articles by Young. More generally see Umberto Eco, TIe Infinity
if Lists, trans. Alastair McEwen (New York: Rizzoli, 2009); and Robert E. Belknap, TIe
List: TIe Uses and Pleasures if Cataloguing (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2004), esp. 1-
35.
New Fonn Criticism and Bf!Jond 27
35 Steck, Die Prophetenbiicher und ihr theologisches Zeugnis, 127-204; Armin Lange,
"Interpretation als Offenbarung: Zum Verhaltnis von Schriftauslegung und Offenbarung
in apokalyptischer und nichtapokalyptischer Literatur," in Wisdom and Apoca[ypticism in the
Dead Sea Scrolls and in the Biblical Tradition, ed . F. Garda Martinez, BET L 168 (Leuven:
Peeters, 2003), 17-33.
30 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
their primary readerships) not necessarily, and not always in a narrow linear
manner.36
In light of the foregoing discussion, I would describe Ben Zvi's "branched modes
of reading" as readers looking for typological connections in the text in order to
make typological connections with the text, and note that this approach is rooted
in the phenomenon of listing prophetic oracles.
A list is not only a strategy for getting ahold of a vast and unwieldy subject. It is
also a strategy for defining the authoritative approach to such a subject. The
particular ideational network generated by a list implies a particular social
network that makes use of the list in a particular way. In the production of
prophetic books we see a multifaceted attempt by Yehud's scribal elite to assert
their power in the context of the early Persian period. They redefined prophecy
in terms of the records of past revelations rather than oracles currently being
spoken, and they reshaped the prophetic tradition by delimiting the prophets
and oracles that make up the prophetic canon.37 In the way that they integrated
interpretive commentary with the oracle collections that provided the raw
material for the prophetic books, they also modeled and thus defined the right
way of interpreting this canon. Only if just these books were read in just this way
would the authentic "word of YHWH" be revealed for the present time. In
claiming such authority, the writers of the prophetic books were initially backed
by the power ofYehud's civic and religious institutions, but as emergentJudaism
expanded beyond the bounds of provincial Yehud the authority of their claims
came to depend upon the persuasiveness of the literature they had produced.
That lists of oracles were the literary raw material for prophetic books is
thus not just a hypothetical possibility that should be considered only because
such collections happen to exist in other ancient sources. It is also a hypothesis
that helps to explain major definitive characteristics of the finished product:
prophetic literature's lack of narrative sequence; its webs of textual
interconnections based on all sorts of ideational similarities, differences, and
ambiguities; its scrambled temporal perspectives; and its integration of
36 Ehud Ben Zvi, "Is the Twelve Hypothesis Likely from an Ancient Readers'
Perspective?" in Ehud Ben Zvi and James D. Nogalski, Two Sides qf A Coin: Juxtaposing
Views on Interpreting the Book qf the Twelve/TIe Twelve Prophetic Books, Analecta Gorgiana 201
(Piscataway, NJ: Gorgias, 2009), 93.
37 Armin Lange argues that this was done in an attempt to resolve "inter-prophetic
conflict" (Vom prophetischen Wort zur prophetischen Tradition: Studien zur Traditions- und
Redationsgeschichte innerprophetischer Konflikte in der Hebraischen Bibel, FAT 34 [Tubingen: Mohr
Siebeck, 2002] ).
New Fonn Criticism and Bf!Jond 31
How might these generalizations about the formation of prophetic books play
out in the analysis of a particular text? Let us take, for example, Mic I: 1-16,
entering into dialogue with Ehud Ben Zvi whose treatment of this text is
representative of the approach of the new form criticism that this essay generally
affirms, but also questions with respect to the prophet's historicity.38 Ben Zvi
observes that this passage systematically plays upon ambiguities with respect to
such factors as the role of the nations (Mic I :22), the identity of Israel (Mic 1:5,
13, 14, and IS), who is addressed, and who is speaking, most notably blurring
the distinction between the voice of the reporter/writer and the voice of the
prophetic figure. Such ambiguities are reinforced by the presence of word play,
sound repetitions, and other sorts of thematic associations that link the
constituent sections of the passage in sequence, and conversely by the absence of
the sorts of markers that could clear up the uncertainties. He concludes that
these are characteristics of a fictive, literary world, and that there is no direct
historical referentiality here, neither with regard to any particular events nor to
any actual prophet. Thus the figure of the prophet Micah is a once-upon-a-time
pretext used by the writer to convey his own notion of "the word of YH\I\TH" to
his readers. I would agree with most of Ben Zvi's observations but question
whether they necessarily lead to this conclusion.
Let us review the passage in question with this possibility in mind, beginning
with the superscription in I: I. It heads the entire book and thus necessarily
frames how we read I :2-16. From this heading we learn that this document
purports to be "the word of YH\I\TH" ; that it is somehow related to a prophetic
figure named Micah from the town of Moresheth, who prophesied during the
reigns of the three Judahite kings, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah; and that his
revelations concerned both Samaria and Jerusalem. This introduction clearly
distinguishes between the writer of the book, who presents it to his readers as
"the word of YHWH," and the prophet Micah about whom he writes. It
therefore confronts us with the question of how the writer is related to this
prophetic figure. In light of the forgoing discussion we can assume that the writer
is not a reporter who has simply compiled and arranged for his readers the
records of various prophetic speeches that this Micah once made. This leaves
38 Ehud Ben Zvi, "Micah 1:2-16: Observations and Possible Implications," ]SOT 77
(1998): 103-20; Ben Zvi, Micah, FOTL 2lB (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2000), 1-41; for
others who hold similar views about the prophetic books in general, see n. 5 above.
32 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
two possibilities: (1) Is he a purely creative author who has invented a fictional
prophetic figure named Micah, or perhaps adapted legendary references to the
existence of such a prophet, so as to address his own prophetic message to his
readers in the guise of revelations received by a prophet of long ago? Or (2) is he
an imaginatively collaborative writer who has taken records of Micah's
prophecies and elaborated on them, presenting his own divinatory insights as
extensions of those first seen by the former prophet? In the latter case we might
further ask, if the writer was indeed working with records of Micah's prophecies,
how was he dependent on them?
Now let us take a look at 1:2-16 to see if the text provides us with any
reasons to opt for either of these two possibilities. There is obviously no narrative
sequence but, as Ben Zvi has observed, there are thematic sequences that give an
overall coherence to this passage. First, there is a progression from a cosmic
perspective to a local perspective. The reference to "the earth and all that fills
it," including all the peoples (v. 2a), together with the description of YHWH's
ground breaking theophanic appearance (v. 3-4) puts the ensuing description of
YHVVH's judgments on specific cities of Israel and Judah into the context of a
global crisis in which the world order is being violently transformed both
geologically and geopolitically. In the following chapters subsequent references
to the international context (especially 4: 1-5 and 7: 16-1 7, and also 4: 11-12 and
5:7-9 [Eng. 6-8] ), seen as connected to one another in terms of Ben Zvi's
"branched mode of reading," make this the dominant frame of reference for the
book as a whole. Other thematic sequences in this particular passage include a
progression that is typical of the prophecy of punishment, from accusation (v. 5)
to announcement of punishment (v. 6-7), and also a progression from a
description of YHWH's judgment (v. 2-7) to various descriptions of lamenting
response (v. 8-16).
As these sequences unfold there is the kaleidoscopic shifting of temporal
perspectives that has previously been noted as a common characteristic of
prophetic literature. From the standpoint of the announcement of punishment in
verses 6-7 the downfall of Samaria lies in the future. '!\Then the lamentation gets
underway (v. 8), however, it is not because this has come to pass. The
lamentation is a response to the fact that the same fate now threatens Jerusalem
(v. 9 and 12b) because "she" is guilty of the same transgressions that brought
judgment on Samaria (v. 13b). Then comes a series ofJudahite towns that are
anticipating the negative effect on them of the adversity befalling Jerusalem (v.
10-15). Within this series there are more references to "Israel" (cf. v. 5) which
presuppose that the northern kingdom still exists-references to "kings of Israel"
being "deceived" (v. 14b) and to "the glory ofIsrael" (v. 15b). Such terminology
is vague and highly ambiguous, but its range of possible connotations may be
somewhat narrowed by the global-international dimensions of the book's overall
frame of reference (mentioned above with respect to v. 2-4). '!\Then viewed in
this context the kings in question could be those that followed one another in
New Fonn Criticism and Bf!Jond 33
rapid succeSSlOn as the northern kingdom was approaching its end, and the
deception in question could be the political and diplomatic treachery in which
they were chaotically embroiled, both among themselves and with Assyria (2
Kgs 15-17). Israel's "glory" (kiibod) could be its wealth, its prestige, its army, its
strength, or even its relationship with its god YHVVH.39 The coming of anyone
of these things to the ill-fated Judahite city of Adullam (v. 15b) would portend
that thing's demise (1 Sam 4:21; cf. Isa 16: 14, 21: 16). In any case, in verses 6-15
passages reflecting the temporal perspective of the northern kingdom under
threat of destruction are intertwined with passages reflecting the temporal
perspective of the southern kingdom under threat of destruction, thus presenting
these two chronologically distinct situations as analogous developments within
one and the same historical process.
The conclusion in verse 16 is ambiguous as to which of these situations it
applies. An unidentified feminine singular figure is addressed, calling on her to
lament because her children have gone into exile. This is consistent with the
mode of address used throughout the passage, according to which each city
and! or its inhabitants are personified as female individuals. Thus it is not
possible to tell which city is addressed here-Samaria, or Jerusalem, or maybe
even one of the other Judahite towns? In light of Ben Zvi's observations
regarding the ambiguities that pervade this text on every level, it is probable that
this conclusion intentionally applies to any and all of the cities mentioned in 1:2-
15 and is operative in relation to both of the temporal perspectives that are
evident in verses 6-15. 40
At this point another thematic sequence becomes evident, one which
underlies and is more fundamental than the others mentioned above, the
progression from prophecy to fulfillment. This progression, in turn, points to a
typological comparison on which the entire passage is based: YHVVH'sjudgment
upon Jerusalem and the fall of Judah happened in much the same way, and for
much the same reasons, as YHVVH's judgment upon Samaria and the fall of
Israel. 41 Ben Zvi claims that "the text does not provide its readers with any clear
marker to anchor it to any historical event."42 This is true in the limited
technical sense that there are no dates or other specific chronological indicators,
nor even any explicit references to the identity of the forces that are executing
YHVVH's judgment, et cetera. However, when one considers the gist of this
passage as a whole, namely, that Jerusalem has been defeated just as Samaria
was defeated, in the midst of YHVVH's reconfiguration of the world order, the
text clearly points to the conclusive demise that wiped first the northern and then
the southern kingdom off the map. As the text unfolds, readers might be
prompted by the ambiguous description at anyone point to recall previous
similar but less extreme crisis situations- as Ben Zvi says the text would allow
them to-but in the end such events would be seen as having happened on the
way to the final destruction of " Israel. " 43
With rega rd to the typology that informs the text there are two salient points
related to our present concerns: (I) It is predicated on the fulfillment of a
prophecy. If the prophetic prediction of the fall of Samaria had not come to
pass, there would have been no basis on which to construct the typology in the
first place. And (2) with respect to YHWH's condemnation of Sa m aria the
typology is formulated prospectively, while with respect to the destruction of
Jerusalem it is formulated retrospectively. Thus the typology spans about 150 years.
It had to have been constructed by someone who knew that, like Samaria,
Jerusalem had fallen-a n event that the person who m ade the original
prediction could not have witnessed.
On the basis of these observations we can now revisit the two alternatives
posed above, between a purely creative writer who has created a fictional
prophetic figure a nd a collaborative writer who has imaginatively elaborated on
the records of a prophet from the past. We can eliminate the first possibility. If
the writer had wanted to invent a fictive Micah out of whole cloth, the literary
culture of Second Temple Yehud and of the ancient Near East in general would
have offered him various ways of writing pseudepigraphical vaticinia ex eventu, and
none of them look a nything like what we have in this passage from Micah .44 In
fact, in its preoccupation with narration in chronological sequence most of the
a ncient literature featuring vaticinia ex eventu is exactly the opposite of the biblical
prophetic books. 45 Rather, it appears that we have here a text which presupposes
collaboration between a prophet, whose oracles were compiled a nd preserved
because they included predictions that were fulfilled, a nd a later writer who
elaborated on those oracles, making comparisons with subsequent events so as to
draw out the portentous implications for himself and his readers in their own
time.
43 Ben Zvi ("Observations," 116-18; Nlicah, 30- 3 1) notes that the references to "Israel" in
this passage can refer to the northern kingdom and at the same time to Jud ah understood
theologically as the successor to what the northern kingdom once represented in its
complementary relationship with Judah. Such double entendre is rooted precisely in the
typological analogy that informs the passage as a whole.
44 M atthew Neuj ahr, Predicting the Past in the Ancient Near East: Mantic Historiography in Ancient
Mesopotamia, Judah, and the Mediterranean World, BJS 354 (Providence, RI: Brown Judaic
Studies, 2012).
45 Jonah is, of course, the major exception to such generalizations. For its place in the
prophetic corpus, see Ehud Ben Zvi, TIe Signs if Jonah: Reading and Rereading in Ancient
Yehud, JSOTSup 367 (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 2003).
New Fonn Criticism and Bf!Jond 35
Thus the "contract" of the author of Micah with his readers, as it is
expressed in the superscription that heads the book, is that he is addressing to
them a "word ofYH,J\TH," that has a basis in historical reality. It is derived from
what a real prophet once claimed about YHWH's involvement in real events,
which was a uthenticated in the way those events turned out. The readers also
fully understand that the a uthor has put his own spin on whatever m aterials
we re handed down to him, reformulating them and adding to them in ways that
show their implications for subsequent events, and in ways that show readers
how to discern their implications for a ny situation-showing readers how to look
for typological connections in the text in order to make typological connections
with the text, as this way of rereading was summarily described a bove. This
rereading strategy does not entail distinguishing the words of Micah himself
from the words of the anonymous a uthor-which in any case, as we have now
discovered, cannot be done-but it does presuppose that the words of this
"former" prophe t stand behind the book. 46
Did the writer actually draw upon the recorded oracles of a prophet na med
Mica h from Moresheth who lived in the days of Jo tha m , Ahaz, and Hezekiah,
kings ofJudah? The composition of the book of Micah is predicated on this fact,
but we have no way of independently verifying it. We can say that if someone of
that sort did not prophesy that Sa m aria would be destroyed because of its
infidelity to YHWH, a nd perhaps also that Jerusalem was heading in the same
direction, it would be difficult to explain why the book is as it is. 'J\Te can also say
that the cultural milieu m akes it altogether conceivable that the oracles of such a
prophet could h ave been preserved in writing until they were reworked by
scribes from Yehud in the early Persia n period. The book gives us no reaso n to
undertake a quest for the historical Micah, but it also gives us no reason to doubt
that he existed. 'J\Te have to be content with what little we can know a bout him
because the writer and readers of this prophetic book were content with so little.
The only biographical information that they cared much about-which was also
perhaps the m ain piece of biographical information that they had-was the fact
that Micah rightly discerned "the word of YHWH" in his day, because they felt
that this had something to teach them about what YH,J\TH was doing in their
day.
46 I see this conclusion as compatible with Ben Zvi's observation that there is "a blurring
of the differentiation between direct and indirect modes in the presentation of speeches
assigned to different characters in the text. This confu sion of modes of representation
associates the voice reporting a speaker (a character in the book) said so and so with the
speaker himself (or herself), while at the same time acknowledging their separate existence"
("Observations," 111-12).
36 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
CONCLUSION
The results of this one case study can hardly be generalized to apply to the entire
biblical prophetic corpus, but such a view of how this prophetic text was
produced could arguably be extended, mutatis mutandis, to include several if not
most of the prophetic books, particularly those named for prophets from the
monarchic era. On that basis we can give a partial, tentatively positive answer to
the question posed at the outset: Were the writers of the prophetic books in some
sense historiographers? In the case of Micah and several other such books, yes,
but only in a limited sense. They appear to have worked with reliable
documentation of what was once said by the prophets of whom they wrote, but
they reworked and amplified this documentation to fashion for their readers a
richly typological literary world. Ben Zvi and those who take a similar approach
have rightly seen that prophetic texts are characterized by all-pervasive
metaphor and ambiguity, but it does not necessarily follow that these texts have
therefore lost all historical referentiality. Prophetic literature is not historical in
the way that earlier form critics assumed, as they attempted to segment the text
and date each segment in relation to a specific event. \;\Te must think, not in
terms of pieces of text referring to separate events, but in terms of the text as a
whole referring to a historical process happening over a span of time. And the
text can be referential in this way precisely because of its metaphorical nature,
not in spite of it. \;\Then viewed comparatively in light of the broader cultural
milieu in which they worked, the literary achievement of the scribes who wrote
prophetic books like Micah appears highly original and creative, but they could
not have produced such literature if they were not building on the recorded
insights of real prophets who in earlier crisis situations prophesied things that
really happened.
2
Beth M . Stovell
Among the major issues facing form criticism throughout its development is the
relationship between the definitions of " form " and "genre. " U sing linguistic
terminology, one m ay differentiate these two concepts as "instance" vs.
"system ." l This topic has been a common one among new form critics. In The
Changing Face qf Form Criticism, Antony Campbell distinguishes between literary
genre (or type) as "the typical, the matrix for a text" a nd literary form (or
structure), which is the text itself "in all its individuality." As Campbell notes,
matrixes are all very well, but the biblical texts are the only certain realities we
have. It may be important to know the class or type to which a text belongs. It
is equally or more important to know what the communication is that this text,
of this particular class or type, is articulating. .. . The communication of a
2012 based on the categories of M. A. K. Halliday and Ruqaiya Hasan. See Halliday,
Language as Social Semiotic: TIe Social Interpretation if Language and A1eaning (Baltimore:
University Park Press, 1978); Halliday, An Introduction to Functional Grammar, 2nd ed . (New
York: Edward Arnold, 1985); Halliday and Ruqaiya Hasan, Cohesion in English (London:
Longman, 1976); Halliday and H asan, Language, Context, and Text: Aspects if Language in a
Social-Semiotic Perspective (Geelong, Australia: Deakin U niversity Press, 1985).
- 37 -
38 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
particular text may be typical .. . but as a particular text it will have its own
particular communication to make.2
These notions of the typical a nd the particular are especially valuable as one
addresses the issue of intratextual allusion. When one text utilizes a nother text,
the second text may both build on preexistent types or classes from that original
text and also create elements unique to the secondary text, because "it will have
its own particula r communication to m ake. "3
These concepts of particularity versus generality a nd specific instance versus
system have a similar evaluative function in cognitive theories of metaphor:
Cognitive approaches assume, on the one ha nd, that schola rs can describe
concepts in terms of large systems.4 '!\Then speaking of conceptual metaphors,
scholars can articulate a general descrip tion of the given metaphor (e.g., Israel as
woman, God as Shepherd, etc.) that they could identify as present throughout
the Hebrew Bible, or throughout a particula r corpus like the Book of the
Twelve. On the other ha nd, scholars must also examine specific instances of
these concepts/metaphors and note how they are used within a particula r
framework in new and unique ways (e.g., how Israel as woman is depicted in
Hosea compared to Jeremiah or how God as Shepherd is depicted in Isaiah
compared to Ezekiel, etc.). This second step of a nalysis highlights the "instance"
a nd "particular" side of the form/ genre equation. The theories of Giles
Fauconnier and Mark Turner (among others) demonstrate how typical
metaphors m ay be joined together ("blended") to create something new and
innovative that did not occur previously.5 Thus, a n examination of the way
2 See Antony F. Campbell, "Form Criticism's Future," in The Changing Face if Form
Criticism for the Twenty-First Century, ed. Marvin A. Sweeney and Ehud Ben Zvi (Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 2003), 29.
3 Like Campbell, Buss speaks of this as particularity versus generality. See Martin]. Buss,
The Changing Shape if Form Criticism: A Relational Approach, HBM 18 (Sheffield: Sheffield
Phoenix, 2010). Similarly M elugin speaks of the relationship between the "typical" and
the "uniqu e" in Roy Frank Melugin, "R ecent Form Criticism R evisited in an Age of
Reader Response," in Sweeney and Ben Zvi, Changing Face if Form Criticism, 47 . See also
Melugin's list of his previous works exploring this subject in Melugin, "Recent Form
Criticism Revisited," 48, n. 7.
4 This is evidenced in cognitive approaches such as George LakofPs work. See George
Lakoff, Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things: What Categories Reveal About the Mind (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1987); Lakoff, "Conceptual M etaphor: T he Contemporary
Theory of Metaphor," in Cognitive Linguistics: Basic Readings, ed . Dirk Geeraerts, Cognitive
Linguistics Research 34 (Berlin: de Gruyter; New York: Mouton, 2006); George Lakoff
and MarkJohnson, Metaphors We Live By (Chicago: U niversity of Chicago Press, 1980);
George Lakoff and M ark Turner, j\IIore Than Cool Reason: A Field Guide to Poetic Metaphor
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1989).
5 This idea is evidenced throughout Gilles Fauconnier and Mark Turner, The Wqy We
Think: Conceptual Blending and the Mind's Hidden Complexities (New York: Basic Books, 2002).
"/ Will Make Her Like a Desert» 39
metaphors are constrained in their particula rity and how this relates to their
generality-in other words, how any particular instance of metaphor works
within the broader system of metaphors- also allows one to think carefully
a bout how insta nce and system work in terms of form and genre. Thus, the
constraints placed on metaphorical analysis prove valua ble for categories
common to form criticism. Further, such a n a nalysis can prove pa rticularly
helpful when applied to intratextual allusion as this chapter will demonstrate
through a n a nalysis of the use of agricultural a nd feminine metaphors within the
generic structures of the books of Hosea and Mica h.
For these reasons, this chapter discusses the relationship between genre
a nalysis within new form- critical approaches and modern metaphor theories.
Rethinking issues of instance a nd system , or form and genre, in light of
conceptual metaphor theory provides new insight on the constraints that impact
a specific instance of metaphor or a specific use of "form" as compared to a
wider system or genre. This chapter identifies four ways that genres and
metaphors are constrained: (I) cultural and temporal constraints, (2) the
partiality of any use of metaphor or genre a nd the desire for innovation creating
constraints on "system " descriptions, (3) linguistic constraints based on the
particular needs of a given passage or discourse, a nd (4) theological constraints
stemming from adjustments of theological concerns from one context to another.
After describing the utility of such a comparison between constraints in genre
a nd metaphor analysis, the subsequent section of this chapter will demonstrate
the direct impact this approach has on texts like those found in the Book of the
Twelve. To illustrate the value of this approach, the final section of this chapter
demonstrates these four kinds of constraints on metaphors a nd genres by
a nalyzing the intra textual allusions found in Hosea and Micah in their respective
uses of feminine a nd agricultural metaphors.
6 Hyun Chul Paul Kim examines the value of ancient Near Eastern texts to genre studies
of form criticism. See Hyun Chul Paul Kim, "Form Criticism in Dialogue with Other
Criticisms: Building the Multidimensional Structures of Texts and Concepts," in Sweeney
and Ben Zvi, Changing Face if Form Criticism, 90-91. He notes other scholars in the volume
using similar texts including Tremper Longman, III, "Israelite Genres in Their Ancient
Near Eastern Context" ; Martin Rosel, "Inscriptional Evidence and the Question of
Genre," and Margaret S. Odell, "Ezekiel Saw What He Said He Saw: Genres, Forms,
and the Vision of Ezekiel 1," in Sweeney and Ben Zvi, Changing Face ifForm Criticism, 177-
95, 107-21 , and 162-76 respectively.
40 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
metaphors are integral to genre forms . Specifically in the case of Hosea and
Micah, scholars have m ade assumptions about how genre forms in Hosea and
Micah related to their metaphors. For example, when considering genre
questions in Hosea related to the allegory of the promiscuous wife as idolatrous
nation, many scholars have identified idolatry rituals behind the metaphors,
suggesting that some elements that m ay appear as figurative were actually non-
figurative a nd implicitly linked to ritual practices.7 In this sense, Religionsgeschichte
approaches a nd form-critical approaches that focus on cultic practice provide
one way of examining the passage that allows for insight into cultural systems
a nd diachronic development. However, this approach can be aided by
synchronic readings that allow for a careful awareness of the metaphors at hand
a nd how they function across the book as a litera ry whole.
Genre studies in Hosea and Micah provide concrete examples of the
strengths a nd weaknesses implicit in linking genre directly to metaphor without a
solid approach to the instance in comparison to the system. Analysis of ancient
Near Eastern legal documents, marriage contracts, a nd other ancient Near
Eastern texts related to childbirth have proved helpful to genre studies in Hosea
a nd Micah a nd their rela tion to metaphors (particularly feminine metaphors). As
noted by some scholars, the feminine and agricultural metaphors in Hos I and 2
a re impacted by a ncient Near Eastern marriage contracts, where agricultural
goods a re explicitly part of the marriage contract.8 This creates a link between
agricultural goods a nd marital relations. 9 Some scholars have further drawn a
link between covenant language, such as is found elsewhere in Hosea, a nd
marriage contracts. IO Thus, the genre of m arriage contracts creates a partial
explanation for how metaphor works in Hosea. However, both the
Religionsgeschichte and traditional Formgeschichte approaches demonstrate their
limitations in this a nalysis as they only allow one to compare and contrast within
the system, but not to delineate a way of differentiating the form from the genre
7 For example, there have long been scholarly disputes over what role grain, wine, etc.
play in Hosea and to what degree Gomer should be considered a literal example of a
temple prostitute or some other kind of adulterou s or unfaithful wife. For discussions on
the role of grain, etc. in ancient Near Eastern sou rces in relation to Hos 2, see Brad E.
K elle, Hosea 2: Metaphor and Rhetoric in Historical Perspective, AcBib 20 (Leiden: Brill, 2005),
67-69. For debates on Gomer as temple prostitute or adulterous wife, see Sharon
Moughtin-Mumby, Sexual and NIarital Metaphors in Hosea, J eremiah, Isaiah and Ezekiel, OTM
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008), 49-79,206- 68.
8 K elle provides a helpful survey of these ANE sources. See K elle, Hosea, 67- 69.
9 See the section on Hos 1-2 in Beth M . Stovell, Minor Prophets I (Hosea-Micah), SGBC 21
(Grand R apids: Zondervan, forthcoming). See also Gerline Baumann, Love and Violence:
Marriage as Metaphor for the Relationship between YHWH and Israel in the Prophetic Books
(Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2003), 59-67 .
10 See Gordon Paul Hugenberger, A1arriage as a Covenant: A Stucfy of Biblical Law and Ethics
Governing Marriage, Developedftom the Perspective ofMalachi, VTSup 52 (Leiden: Brill, 1993).
"/ Will Make Her Like a Desert» 41
a nd instance from the system as one examines Hosea's metaphors and genre.
This becomes particularly evident when one moves from study of Hosea to study
of intratextual allusion with Micah.
What one finds if one examines Micah's use of Hosea closely is something
akin to Bakhtin's definitions of genre as sameness yet change. I I In Micah one
might a rgue that the same metaphorical blending of feminine a nd agricultural
metaphors occurs as in Hosea, which lends as much to the structure of Micah as
it does to Hosea. Yet, while these metaphors are the same in their basic
blending, they are also modified in unique ways in this new setting when shifted
from Hosea to Micah. These metaphors also exist within different frameworks of
genre within Micah compared to Hosea. These changes appear to have
historical a nd contextual moorings and these metaphors appear to move toward
development and innovation as they move from Hosea to Micah.
This awareness of the limitations of past approaches suggests that a new way of
thinking of genre and form m ay be helpful to continuing recent trajectories of
new form criticism and as a way of better understanding the relationship of
intra biblical allusions such as Micah's use of Hosea. Recent shifts in form
criticism provides the first steps in this direction. For example, scholars like
Hyun C hul Paul Kim have provided new approaches including integrating
literary a nd linguistic approaches to answer "form " and "genre" questions in
new ways.12 The use of conceptual metaphor theories may provide a nother
synchronic approach that can be used alongside p ast literary a nd linguistic
approaches to find better refinements of the mea ning of "form" and "genre."
Similar to some of the weaknesses of traditional types of form criticism, early
approaches to conceptual metaphor theory demonstrated a tendency to over
generalize positions on systems of thought surrounding metaphor or concep ts.
For example, in the early work of Lakoff, there is frequently the suggestion that
II See M . M . Bakhtin, Speech Genres and Other Late Essays, ed . Michael Holquist and Caryl
Emerson, University of Texas Press Slavic Series 8 (Austin: University of Texas Press,
1986). For furth er discussion on the impact of Bakhtin in biblical studies, see Roland
Boer, Bakhtin and Genre 77zeory in Biblical Studies, SemeiaSt 63 (Atlanta: Society of Biblical
Literature, 2007); Barbara Green, Mikhail Bakhtin and Biblical Scholarship: An Introduction
(SemeiaSt 38; Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2000); William R. Millar, "A
Bakhtinian Reading of Narrative Space and Its R elationship to Social Space," in
Constructions if Space 1: 77zeory, Geography, and Narrative, ed . Jon L. Berquist and Claudia V .
Camp, LHBOTS 481 (New York: T&T Clark, 2007); Carol A. Newsom, "Bakhtin," in
Handbook if Postmodem Biblical Interpretation, ed . A. K. M Adam (Atlanta: C halice, 2000);
Seth Sykes, Time and Space in Haggai-Zechariah ]-8: A Bakhtinian AnalYsis if a Prophetic
Chronicle, StBibLit 24 (New York: Peter Lang, 2002).
12 See Kim, "Form C riticism in Dialogue with Other Criticisms."
42 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
particular views of metaphor are based on ways that human brains work, with
little differentiation based on culture, time period, or other aspects of context.
Subsequent to these initial attempts at developing theories of conceptual
metaphor in the 1980s, schola rs have critiqued this overgeneralizing or overtly
"system" focus by creating more data driven and culturally specific a nalyses. 13
These corrections to conceptual metaphor theory in terms of instan ce in relation
to the overall system provide a helpful analogy for the a nalysis of form and
genre. This section will highlight four constraints on metaphor coming from
recent metaphor analysis that provide helpful parallels with genre analysis in
new form criticism a nd will end with a suggestion for how this may impact the
examination of intra textual allusion.
13 See Terrell Carver and J ernej Pikalo, Political Language and Metaphor: Interpreting and
Changing the World, Routledge Innovations in Political Theory (New York: Routledge,
2008);]. Charteris-Black, Corpus Approaches to Critical Metaphor AnalYsis (New York: Palgrave
Macmillan, 2004); Gilles Fauconnier and Mark Turner, "Rethinking Metaphor," in The
Cambridge Handbook if Metaphor and Thought, ed . Raymond W. Gibbs (New York:
Cambridge University Press, 2008), 53-66; R aymond W. Gibbs, "Taking Metaphor Out
of Our Heads and Putting It into the Cultural World," in Metaphor in Cognitive Linguistics,
ed. Raymond W Gibbs and Gerard Steen, Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 4
(Philadelphia: ]. Benj amins, 1999), 145-66; Zoltan K6vecses, Metaphor in Culture:
Universality and Variation (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005); Neil Smith and
Cindi Katz, "Grounding Metaphor: Toward a Spatialized Politics," in Place and the Politics
if Identity , ed. Michael Keith and Steve Pile (London: Routledge, 1993), 66-81 ; Anatol
Stefanowitsch and Stefan Thomas Gries, Corpus-Based Approaches to Metaphor and Metonymy
(Berlin: de Gruyter, 2006).
14 These kinds of studies exist both in cognitive linguistics, in ancient metaphor studies, as
well as in literary metaphor studies and have been widely critiqued by scholars such as
J anet Martin Soskice, Metaphor and Religious Language (Oxford: Clarendon, 1985);
Stefanowitsch and Gries, Corpus-Based Approaches, Trends in Linguistics 171 (Berlin: de
Gruyter, 2006).
15 For an overview of many of these approaches and for a developed theory of metaphor
and culture, see K6vecses, Metaphor and Culture. R ecent work on the impact of culture on
metaphors in the Hebrew Bible include P. van Heeke, Metaphor in the Hebrew Bible, BETL
"/ Will Make Her Like a Desert» 43
locating a p a rticular metaphor within its specific culture and time is often
a ugmented by exploring the metaphors in neighboring cultures as a mea ns of
greater illumination. However, as with the critique of a fixed or stable view of
metaphor as if it were universal, there are necessary constraints on examining
surrounding cultures to the Hebrew Bible in an analysis of their metaphors.
Among the constraints to consider are as follows: (I) There will be similarities
a nd differences between metaphors in other surrounding cultures and metaphors
within the biblical text. (2) Establishing the original cultural context of a
metaphor is key prior to comparisons with other cultures. (3) Temporal
similarities to other metaphors create a higher likelihood of similarity. (4)
Geographical a nd linguistic proximity allows for greater likelihood of simila rity
between metaphors in surrounding cultures.
Scholars like Tremper Longman have demonstrated that genres are no t
"pure or fixed" as Gunkel suggested with his neoclassical approach. R ather,
genres have a great level of fluidi ty that is in part impacted by cultural and
temporal factors. 16 Longma n a rgues that the methods used to describe
comparisons with a ncient Near Eastern literature playa key role as one a nalyzes
biblical texts. The cultural factors impacting genre in comparisons between the
a ncient Near Eastern literature a nd the biblical text are both similar a nd
dissimilar. Longman pushes for the necessity of methodological controls in
comparative genre study as a means to create more sound and fruitful
comparative a nalysis. Several of the methodological controls that Longman
suggests parallel the constraints on metaphor described a bove. For example,
contrasts and simila rities must be noted in comparing cultures. "The genres
being compared must be understood as thoroughly as possible in their original
cultural context before being compared," just as metaphors must be understood
within their original cultural context before they are compared to those within
other cultures. Longman asserts that that temporal, geographical, a nd linguistic
proximity create a greater likelihood for influence of genre from one culture to
a nother. 17
'!\Then applying this to the relationship between Hosea and Mica h, one
finds that when looking at the overall shape of the Book of the Twelve one can
see that whether we look at the MT ordering or the LXX ordering, Hosea is
always read prior to Mica h in the scrolls. It is thus canonically prior. This
priority of Hosea may provide us with a clue toward how other books of the
187 (Leuven: Peeters, 2005); Paul A. Kruger, "A Cognitive Interpretation of the Emotion
of Anger in the Hebrew Bible," ]NSL 26 (2000): 181-93; Zacharais Kotze, "A Cognitive
Linguistic Approach to the Emotion of Anger in the Old Testament," HTS 60 (2004):
843-63 .
16 Longman, "Israelite Genres in their Ancient Near Eastern Contexts," 183.
17 Ibid ., 193- 95.
44 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Scholars who study how metaphor works often speak of the concept of
metaphorical entailments. Entailments a re the specific elements used to connect
A to B in a pa rticular metaphor. For example, in Mic 4:9-10 when Micah
describes Israel ("Daughter Zion") as a woman who is a mother in la bor, he is
focusing on particular aspects of mothers a nd not other aspects to describe
Israel's experience. The entailments he chooses to highlight a re the sounds of
groaning and the pain associated with a mother giving birth in order to
emphasize the crisis that is occurring to D a ughter Zion. IS
Entailments demonstrate that metaphors are never creating a full or
complete link between the target and the source in the metaphor. Israel is not
like a mother in every possible facet, but rather Mic 4 is highlighting particular
entailments of motherhood to connect to Israel. This is evidenced by a
comparison of the reuse of the metaphor of Israel as birthing mother in Mic 5:2.
Whereas Mic 4 focuses only on entailments related to the sounds a nd experience
of the pain associated with childbirth, Mic 5:2 focuses on the hope of new life
associated with childbirth. 19 Thus, the relationship is necessarily partial for the
a nalogy between the target and source to work. 20
Understanding how metaphors function partially and can be taken apart
also allows us to fo cus on ways that these metaphorical entailments can be
blended in unique ways.21 For example, in Mic 4:10 the entailments related to
the sounds and pain of childbirth follow the description of the people crying out
in Mic 4:9. The sounds of crying out due to grief a nd crying out due to p ain
provide a place for blending the idea of exile with the idea of childbirth.22
Claudia Bergmann has argued that these kinds of conceptual blends allow
childbirth to become a metaphor related to distress in the Hebrew Bible. 23
Similarly, it is helpful to describe partial a nd blended genre structures.
Longma n explains that genre exists at different levels of abstraction. '!\That
scholars describe as typical genres are eclectic in their very nature because they
are drawn from a variety of different sources. 24 Thus it is reasonable to speak of
genre entailments, or the specific p a rts of the "ideal" or prototypical genre
structure, that one may see instantiated in a particular text. One may also speak
of genre blending, where these partial genre elements are blended in new ways
to create new generic structures. Melugin's study of Jeremiah demonstrates this
blending of partial genre elements to create a n innovative and artistic new
literary form. Speaking of Jer 2, Melugin states, "the combining of the trial
speech in the mouth ofYH'!\TH (v. 2-3) a nd a woe utterance as a huma n voice
(vv. 4-9) shows how artistically reshaped conventional speech forms can be
juxtaposed for creative purposes.. . . Two different linguistic conventions a re
artfully juxtaposed by creatively combining similar themes a nd by the skillful use
of poetic imagery."25 In this chapter, we will see similar blending of genres in
Hosea and Mica h to create a rtistic and rhetorical effect.
The location of metaphor within its linguistic context deeply impacts its
meaning. Unfortunately, there has long been a tendency a mong m a ny scholars
to disconnect metaphor from its linguistic context in many studies as a way of
connecting it to other cultures or to other parts of Scripture. While many
metaphors in the Bible are allusions to prior uses of a simila r metaphor
elsewhere in the Scriptures, these metaphors by their very nature are never the
same metaphor, but are given new mea ning in their new linguistic setting. Several
recent studies have worked to reintegrate metaphors into their linguistic context,
affirming the a bsolute necessity of metaphorical interpretation within a
context. 26
Warrior, Like Woman: D estru ction and Deliverance in Isaiah 42: 10-17," CBQ. 49 (1987):
560-71.
23 See Bergmann, Childbirth as a Metaphor for Crisis, 109-11 .
24 Longman, "Israelite Genres in their Ancient Near Eastern Contexts," 183.
25 Melugin, "Recent Form Criticism R evisited," 50.
26 Some recent studies have demonstrated the relationship between linguistic structures
and metaphorical analysis including Beth M. Stovell, Mapping Metaphorical Discourse in the
Fourth Gospel.· John's Eternal King, LBS 5 (Leiden: Brill, 2012); Beth M . Stovell, "Seeing the
Kingdom of God, Seeing Eternal Life: Comparing Cohesion and Prominence in John 3
and the Apocryphal Gospels in Terms of Metaphor Use," in The Language of the New
Testament: Context, History and Development, ed. Stanley Porter and Andrew Pitts, LBS 6
46 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Similarly genre structures are impacted not only by their culture, time, and
the partial nature of structure itself, but are also constrained by linguistic
contexts. Genre does not exist separately from linguistic contexts, but is always
contextualized by linguistic frameworks that provide clarity on genre's meaning
in a given passage. Recent shifts in genre a nalysis have started to acknowledge
the need for linguistic contextualization as pa rt of genre theory. 27 Specifically,
Antony Campbell identifies this awareness as part of the future of form
criticism. 28 In subsequent sections, this chapter will demonstrate how both genre
a nd metaphor in Hosea and Micah are constrained by their linguistic context.
(Leiden: Brill, 2013), 439-67; Beth M . Stovell, "Yahweh as Shepherd-King in Ezekiel 34:
Linguistic-Literary Analysis of Metaphors of Shepherding," in Modeling Biblical Language:
Papers flom the McMaster Diviniry College Linguistics Circle, ed . Stanley Porter, C hristopher
Land, and Gregory Fewster, LBS (Leiden: Brill, forthcoming).
27 Sweeney and Ben Zvi describe the impact of text linguistics on the writings of Wolfgang
Richter and Klau s Koch as examples of recent shifts in Form Criticism, noting the fo cus
on syntax and semantics in their work. See Sweeney and Ben Zvi, "Introduction," in
Sweeney and Ben Zvi, Changing Face if Form Criticism, 3, n . 7.
28 While Campbell does not use the language of "linguistics" specifically, he does note the
need to see genre and form as located in the context of their specific biblical passage and
repeatedly states that the future of Form Criticism lies in examining what exists before us
rather than the hypothetical. See Campbell, "Form Criticism's Future," 15-3 l.
29 See Roy Frank Melugin, "Muilenberg, Form C riticism, and Theological Exegesis," in
Encounter with the Text: Form and History in the Hebrew Bible, ed . Martin]. Buss (Philadelphia:
Fortress, 1979), 91-100.
30 See Moshe Weinfeld, Deuteronomy and the Deuteronomic School, (Oxford: Clarendon, 1972;
repr. Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 1992).
"/ Will Make Her Like a Desert» 47
Studies of metaphor a nd genre are also impacted directly when one text alludes
to another text as part of its development. In the past form criticism tended
toward examining the role of allusion primarily to a nswer diachronic questions
related to the Book of the Twelve.33 However, some recent studies within New
form criticism have begun to identify key themes developed within the Book of
the T welve through intratextual allusion among the books. 34 As with the other
This section demonstrates how the four major constraints discussed in metaphor
and in genre are present and impact Hosea's and Micah's use of feminine and
agricultural metaphors. To provide focus for this study, this chapter will analyze
on the depictions of feminine and agricultural metaphors in Hos 2 and 9 and
draw connections with Mic 1 and 4, grouping together Hos 2 and Mic 1 as
depictions of Israel as adulterous wife/prostitute and Hos 9 and Mic 4 as
depictions of Israel as mother. 35 First, comparing Hosea's depiction of Israel as
adulterous wife/barren mother in relation to Israel as a land of loss and waste to
Micah's depiction of Israel as prostitute/mother and Israel as land in its
Form and Intertextualily in Prophetic and Apocafyptic Literature; Richard L. Schultz, "The Ties
That Bind: Intertextuality, the Identification of Verbal Parallels, and Reading Strategies
in the Book of the Twelve," in Thematic Threads in the Book if the Twelve, ed. Paul L. Redditt
and Aaron Schart, BZAW 325 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2003).
35 The metaphors ofIsrael as wife and mother run throughout Hosea. For more on Israel
as wife in Hosea, see Richtsje Abma, Bonds if Love: Methodic Studies if Prophetic Texts with
Marriage Imagery, Isaiah 50:1-3 and 54:1-10, Hosea 1-3, J eremiah 2-3, SSN 40 (Assen,
Netherlands: Van Gorcum, 1999); Baumann, Love and Violence; F. Charles Fensham, "The
Marriage Metaphor in Hosea for the Covenant Relationship between the Lord and His
People (I-Ios 1:2-9)," JNSL 12 (1984): 71-78;]. GeraldJanzen, "Metaphor and Reality in
Hosea 11 ," Semeia 24 (1982): 7-44; Joy Philip Kakkanattu, God's Enduring Love in the Book if
Hosea: A Synchronic and Diachronic Anafysis if Hosea 11, 1-11, FAT 2.14 (Tubingen: Mohr
Siebeck, 2006).
"/ Will Make Her Like a Desert» 49
experience of judgment allows us to explore how constraints on metaphors and
genres are related to culture a nd temporality. Second, examining the feminine
a nd agricultural metaphors in Hosea a nd Micah in terms of the differing specific
entailments used in each case a nd examining the partial generic structures used
in both books allows us to analyze how metaphors a nd genres are p a rtial and
blended in Hosea and Mica h . Third, locating the metaphors a nd genres in
Hosea and Micah within their linguistic contexts demonstrates the constraints
that linguistic contextualization places on feminine and agricultural metaphors
in these books as well as on generic structures. Finally, in Hosea metaphors of
loss, unfaithfulness, a nd a lack of fecundity will be explored in contrast to the
positive metaphors of fruition a nd God's relationship of love with Israel. Micah
uses very similar metaphors to Hosea, likely built upon Hosea's metaphors via
intra biblical allusion. However, Micah's theological purposes differ, which is
reflected in Micah's use of generic structures. Analysis of the theological
constraints on each passage allows for a greater awareness of how theology
constrains metaphor a nd genre.
36 M any have located the shift from Hos I to Hos 2 as a marked change, but they usually
locate this change as part of the unit beginning at Hos 2:4. In contrast to the majority of
scholars, K elle argu es for reading Hos 2 in its entirety as a single unit, see K elle, Hosea 2,
169-200.
37 The language ofIsrael becoming like a desert incorporates agricultural metaphors with
marriage metaphors as a means of demonstrating the totality of YHVVH 's potential
judgment and its impact on the land. See Gert Kwakkel, "The Land in the Book of
50 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
thorns (Hos 2:8 [Eng. 2:6] ). When YHWH puts an end to her idolatrous and
unfaithful practices, it is described not only in terms of the practices themselves,
but as laying waste to her vines and her fig trees. These vines and fig trees a re
also described as the wages of Israel's prostitution, which YHVVH will m ake into
a forest that wild a nimals shall devour (Hos 2: 14 [Eng. 2: 12]).
As the emphasis shifts from judgment on Israel for her actions to a restored
relationship with Israel, the metaphors of agriculture move from images of loss
a nd destruction to positive images echoing the creation story itself. In a n
intertextual journey back into the wilderness that echoes the Exodus acco unt,
Israel's vineyards a re returned to her (vv. 16-17 [Eng. vv. 14-15]) as YHWH
allures her back into relationship with him. Using an allusion to Genesis,
YHVVH m akes a covenant with Israel that involves all of the natural world (v. 20
[Eng. v. 18] ) including the heavens and earth joining in a chorus (vv. 23-24
[Eng. v. 21-22]). This vision culminates in sowing Israel in the la nd (v. 25 [Eng.
v.23] ).
Mica h 1 appears to build on the feminine and agricultural metaphors
established by Hosea. Mica h 1 describes the idolatry of Samaria. In Mic 1: 7, the
means of Samaria's idolatry will be destroyed . Idols, temple gifts, a nd images (of
false gods) will be broken a nd burned. Following in the metaphors of Hosea,
Micah describes these in terms of prostitution. Picking up on the language of
Israel's wages as a prostitute in Hos 2: 14 (Eng. 2: 12) a nd desolation of the vines
that were her pay, Mic 1: 7 speaks of the wages of prostitution and the desolation
of her images. 38 In both Hos 2 and Mic 1, YHWH lays waste the items that were
associated with the pay ofIsrael for her unfaithfulness,39 yet in Hos 2 this action
of desolation is followed relatively shortly in verse 14 with YHWH's seeking
restoration of his relationship with Israel. In contrast, Mic 1 follows this
depiction of prostitution a nd desolation with the weeping, wailing, howling, and
moa ning of a la ment.
Two questions arise from these blendings of agricultural a nd feminine
metaphors: (1) '!\That is the cultural a nd temporal background for these
metaphors? and (2) How does this cultural and temporal background shape
one's understanding of Hosea? These questions lead to a subsequent question
Hosea," in 77ze Land of Israel in Bible, History, and 77zeology: Studies in Honour of Ed Noort, ed.
J acques Ruiten Edward Noort and J acobus Comelis D e Vos, VTSup 124 (Leiden: Brill,
2009), 169-71.
38 Ben Zvi notes that this language "activates (among other things) the 'traditional' yet
problematic biblical topos of the unfaithful city/woman, the polemic associations of
prostitution and cult in Samaria (e.g., Hosea)." Ehud Ben Zvi, Micah, FOTL 21B (Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 2000), 32.
39 Several scholars have noted that Micah's language is reminiscent of Hosea in this
passage. See Jan A. Wagenaar,]udgement and Salvation: 77ze Composition and Redaction of Micah
2-5, VTSup 85 (Leiden: Brill, 2001 ), 56; Ben Zvi, Micah , 32 .
"/ Will Make Her Like a Desert» 51
that is crucial for this study: How do cultural and temporal shifts in turn impact
the genres represented in Hos 2 and Mic I?
As noted previously, rather than beginning with metaphors from other
cultures, it is helpful to begin by establishing the original cultural context of a
metaphor prior to making comparisons to other cultures. The blending of
agricultural a nd feminine metaphors found in Hos 2 is able to occur because of
the cultural assumptions developed a mong the Hebrew people found in prior
sections of the Hebrew Bible. These conceptions develop in several ways. First,
God's covenant with Abraham to give a particular land to the people of Israel
ultimately leads the la nd itself to become associated with the name "Israel. " This
creates a dynamic in which " Israel" is used to refer to both a people a nd a land.
For this reason, it is not surprising to find this concept of covenant as a key
theme throughout Hosea. For example, Hos 1: 10 alludes to God's covenant with
Abraham in Gen 22: 17, repeated to J acob in Gen 32: 12, that Israel's promise
will still be fulfilled and she will still be "like sand on the seashore, which cannot
be measured. " By echoing the promises given to their ancestors, Hosea is
tapping into the entire tradition of the Old Testament and to God's faithfulness
to his promises to his chosen people .40
When this association between Israel as a people and as a land is depicted in
metaphorical terms, Israel becomes depicted as a wife to God a nd as a woman
defiled by her unfaithfulness. This defiling has two extensions: Israel are a people
who defile their la nd and Israel are a people who defile themselves by their
idolatrous actions. 41 This locates Israel metaphorically as both Israel a la nd
defiled and Israel a people defiled, blending the people-focused metaphor of a
woman with the land-focused metaphor of agriculture, blurring the lines of
people- a nd la nd-focus.
These concepts of la nd defilement a nd huma n defilement as metaphors of
Israel's unfaithfulness come from a nother metaphorical link between covenantal
contracts and m a rital contracts. There were stipulations for the vassal king and
the wife, respectively, in both covenantal and m arriage contracts.42 Both the
vassal king a nd the wife in these contracts must swear loyalty to maintain their
contractual relationship with the suzerain or the husband. If they violate this
loyalty-whether by foreign military alliances in the case of the covenantal
contract or by marital infidelity in the case of the marriage contract-the forged
relationship could end either in dissolution of the contract or in public
METAPHORS AND GENRES IN HOSEA AND MICAH ARE PARTIAL AND BLENDED
Lord" as found in other prophetic works. See Buss, The Prophetic Word if Hosea: A
Morphological Study, 35- 36. Wolff argu es in many cases that Hosea is a complex mixing of
genres. For example, see WolfPs discussion of Hos 2 in Hans Walter Wolff, Hosea,
Hermeneia (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1974), 47.
48 William D . Whitt, "The Divorce of Yahweh and Asherah in Hos 2:4-7,l2ff," SJOT6
(1992): 31-67 .
49 K elle demonstrates the problems with arguments surrounding a divorce court scene as
the primary genre in Hos 2. See K elle, Hosea 2, 172-73.
50 Several scholars have noted the blended genres in Mic 1. See Ben Zvi, Nlicah, 31-33;
Wagenaar, Judgement and Salvation, 54- 57; Charles S. Shaw, The Speeches if Micah: A
Rhetorical-Historical Ana{ysis,lSOTSup 145 (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 1993), 33-41 .
54 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
children to the slayer." The result of this action is the expectation of what the
Lord will give them: "wombs that miscarry a nd breasts that are dry." Again,
Hosea is using the metaphors associated with mothering. Instead of bodies that
do not become pregna nt, this description in verse 14 focuses on the potential for
life (via giving birth) and the nurturing of life (via nursing) that is instead emptied
of its ability to complete these actions. Their wombs cannot hold the children
they try to birth, their breasts cannot provide the milk that they are biologically
supposed to provide. These descriptions utilize only some of the possible
entailments of childbirth or motherhood. Notably they do not focus on the
possibilities of life and fruition that can also be associated with childbirth a nd
motherhood.
These negative depictions of childbirth a nd motherhood can thus be
blended with metaphors related to agriculture that focuses on the potential for
growth that ultimately ends in loss. The hope that the Lord had of Israel a nd its
a ncestors described in verse 10, as like "finding grapes in the desert," "like seeing
the early fruit on the fig tree" a re quenched when they consecrated themselves to
a n idol,51 Similarly in verse 13, Ephraim was "pla n ted in a pleasant place," but
they brought their children to the slayer a nd caused their potential as pla nted
ones to be removed, not only for themselves, but for their next generation as
well. Because of the sin described in verse 15, in verse 16 the judgment of
Ephraim is described in terms of both agricultural loss a nd the loss of children:
Ephraim is described like a diseased plant whose roots are withered and cannot
bear fruit. Pa rallel to this description a re the deaths of Ephraim's beloved
offspring of their wombs.
Mica h 4 also uses metaphors related to childbirth to describe the experience
of judgment, but unlike in Hos 9, this judgment is placed in the context of the
hope of restoratio n. As noted above in Mic 4: 10 it is the sound of the mother's
birthing and the pain of childbirth that are the primary entailments rather than
conception, pregnancy, miscarriage, a nd the death of children as in Hos 9. The
difference in the entailments related to the metaphors of mothering and
childbirth allows for different me taphorical blends. 'l\Thereas in Hos 9 Israel is
the childless mother and thus is the pla nt that had the potential to grow, but
instead could not bear fruit, in Mic 4, the moment of pain in childbirth
a nticipates a hopeful conclusion of a new birth, which allows for the agricultural
metaphors to likewise focus on restoration a nd new life as "everyone will sit
under their own vine and under their own fig tree" (Mic 4:4). Micah 4 also
51 Macintosh has noted how this description of YHWH catching sight of Israel in v. 10
emphasizes the intimate relationship between Israel and YHvVH. This intimacy is
destroyed in the subsequent verses. Thus, Macintosh links these agricultural metaphors
with the feminine metaphors found in Hos 2 of Israel as YHWH's unfaithful wife as well
as the mothering metaphors found in this passage. See A. A. Macintosh, A Critical and
Exegetical Commentary on Hosea, ICC (Edinburgh: T &T Clark, 1997), 362- 63 .
"/ Will Make Her Like a Desert» 55
locates itself within the larger tradition of describing Israel in terms of Daughter
Jerusalem and Daughter Zion. 52 In comparison, Hosea makes no direct
reference to Daughter Zion or Daughter Jerusalem, despite the many
associations by scholars to the contrary.53 Discussion of Daughter Zion and
Jerusalem draw additional metaphorical links between the mothering metaphor
a nd the experience of the people leaving the city to their exile in Babylon in
verse 10.
Metaphors are not the only element blended in Hosea and Micah; genres
a re also blended in notable ways based on their partial entailments/structures.
Many scholars have commented that Hosea itself seems more like a mixture of
several genre forms interspersed than following particular set patterns
throughout. 54 Scholars have debated the genres comprising Hos 9. Many
scholars have seen Hos 9 to be comprised of at least two units. These scholars
often locate Hos 9: 1-9 dating back to the prophet Hosea addressing his
community related to the Sukkot festivals, separating this from the divine speech
in Hos 9: 10-1 7. 55 D avies suggests the first unit in verses 1-9 is a prophetic
diatribe, while verses 10-17 are a prophetic oracle. 56 Ben Zvi a rgues for reading
Hos 9: }-} 7 as a single unified prophetic reading, arguing against an oral
component to this unit. However, to deal with the complexities of genres present
in Hos 9, Ben Zvi explains that "prophetic readings are fluid units, a nd that the
intended a nd primary readerships are allowed to develop different but
complementary structures of the book, each with its own set of slighdy different
'prophetic readings."'57 Scholars generally note the shifts between Hos 9:9 and
9: 10. The reason for this acknowledgement lies in the shift in time, person, and
tone in verse 10 compared to what proceeds it.58 Scholars have identified
52 For more on the debates surrounding the figure of D aughter Zion, see Carleen
Mandolfo, Daughter Zion Talks Back to the Prophets: A Dialogic 77zeology of the Book of
Lamentations, SemeiaSt 38 (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2007); Mark J. Boda,
Carol D empsey, and LeAnn Snow Flesher, eds., Daughter Zion: Her Portrait, Her Response,
AIL 13 (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2012); Christl Maier, Daughter Zion, Mother
Zion: Gender, Space, and the Sacred in Ancient Israel (Minneapolis: Fortress, 2008).
53 Scholars like Cheryl Kirk-Duggan and Carleen Mandolfo refer to the woman/Gomer
in Hosea as D aughter Zion when putting together their depiction of D aughter Zion
despite the prophet's lack of utilization of this title. Cheryl A. Kirk-Duggan, "Demonized
Children and Traumatized, Battered Wives: Daughter Zion as Biblical Metaphor of
Domestic and Sexual Violence," in Mark J. Boda, Carol Dempsey, and LeAnn Snow
Flesher, eds., Daughter Zion, 243-68; M andolfo, Daughter Zion Talks Back, 31-36 .
54 See n. 47 above.
55 Marvin A. Sweeney, 77ze Twelve Prophets, vol. I , Berit Olam (Collegeville, MN:
Liturgical Press, 2000), 93-98; Wolff, Hosea, 152-53.
56 Graham I. D avies, Hosea, NCB (Grand R apids; Eerdmans, 1992), 211.
57 Ehud Ben Zvi, Hosea, FOTL 21a (Grand R apids: Eerdmans, 2005), 195.
58 See Wolff, Hosea, 161.
56 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
59 Ibid ., 153 . See also Mays who locates this specifically in Bethel inJam es Luther M ays,
Hosea: A Commentary, OTL (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1969), 125.
60 Wolff, Hosea, 161. See also Douglas Stuart, Hosea-Jonah, WBC 3 1 (Waco, TX: Word
Books, 1987), 150-5 1.
61 For distinctions between divine speech and prophetic speech in Hos 9, see Wolff, Hosea,
161; Mays, Hosea, 132; Stuart, Hosea-Jonah, 150-5 1.
62 Ben Zvi's assumption that textuality explains the complexity of genre form s in what he
calls "prophetic readings" would tend to lend itself to agreeing with my position. Ben Zvi,
Hosea, 195 .
63 Because of these interspersing of interj ections, Mays divid es the passage into four
sections rather than two. See Mays, Hosea, 124-37 .
64 See Ben Zvi, Micah , 92.
65 D ecisions regarding the genre of Mic 4: 1-5 are often determined in part by how one
deals with the intertextual allusion to Isa 2:2-5. See Wagenaar, J udgement and Salvation,
262.
"/ Will Make Her Like a Desert» 57
METAPHORS AND GENRES EXIST IN THE DISCOURSE OF HOSEA AND MICAH AND
ARE LINGUISTICALLY CONTEXTUALIZED
66 Among those describing parts of this passage as an oracle of salvation or restoration, see
Mays, Hosea, 94-95; Bernard R enaud , Laformation du livre de Nlichee: Tradition et actualisation
(Paris: J. Gabalda, 1977), 207-9; Hans Walter Wolff, Micah: A Commentary, CC
(Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1990), 85, 88; Delbert R . Hillers, Micah, Hermeneia
(Philadelphia: Fortress, 1984), 51; Wagenaar, Judgement and Salvation, 273; Marvin A.
Sweeney, King Josiah if Judah: The Lost M essiah if Israel (New York: Oxford University
Press, 200 I), 291.
67 See Mays, Hosea, 29.
68 See M acintosh's discussion of langu age related to intimacy and rejection. See
Macintosh, Hosea, 362-63.
58 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Ephraim/Israel is the source of this metaphor, described like a bird flying away
from a triple repeated form of words in the semantic range of childbirth. The
potential posed in the piel imperfect of verse 12a is met with the bereavement of
the piel perfect of verse 12b: what they might have obtained (third person plural)
is taken away by YHWH (first person singular). Again YHWH stands in
grammatical opposition to the "they" of Israel. This opposition recurs in verse
13. YHWH expresses a desire to see Ephraim be planted only to be met with
Ephraim bringing sons to the slayer. This verbal opposition between YHWH's
desires cast in the first person and Israel's actions cast in the third person reaches
a head for the prophet, apparently observing, who speaks up in verse 14. The
prophet's voice comes in the form of imperatives, asking the Lord to continue
the course of action that Ephraim began in verse II and the Lord continued in
verse 12: to remove the ability to procreate and the ability to tend to a baby. The
loss of fecundity in childbirth is teamed with the loss of agricultural fecundity in
verse 16 as Ephraim is blighted . No longer is YHWH the clear agent of this
action as the verb changes to the hophal perfect third person singular. Similarly,
the roots are dry and they cannot bear fruit, but the agent of this dryness and
barrenness appears absent until the final clause. YHW'H reappears as the one
who puts to death their cherished ones, echoing the final plague on Egypt.69
The same linguistic structures that impact the use of metaphors in Hos 9
constrain the genres. As noted previously, it is the shift from prophetic voice in
verse 9 to divine voice in verse 10 that creates the marked divide in this passage
at times attributed to two genres. Yet the smaller linguistic shifts create troubles
for suggesting a consistent genre covering all of verses 10-17. These shifts in
focus from Israel's actions to YHWH's response, along with the response of the
prophet in verse 14, create linguistic structures that break with the prototypical
models of genre, suggesting a greater complexity than a single genre and
creating a diversity of opinions of scholars wrestling with this passage.
The childbirth and agricultural metaphors and the genres in Mic 4 are
constrained by their linguistic context. The agricultural metaphors of hope
appear in Mic 4:4 amidst a description of a reinstitution of peace. This picture is
drawn linguistically as well as metaphorically. The framing of person and
number vary greatly within Mic 4 leading up to Mic 4:4. Micah 4: I shifts from
identifying the coming day and the actions of the Lord to reports of the people
speaking of what they will do via first person plural forms in verse 2. The Lord's
actions in verse 3 lead to Israel's weapons of war being dismantled via a series of
repeated prepositional phrases. This leads to a more generalizing statement in
Mic 4:4 that universalizes this experience of peace by describing what everyone
will do with this peace once in place: because peace is restored, agricultural
attainment endures. The land is returned to fruition and to the people. In Mic
69 Thomas Jemielity, Satire and the Hebrew Prophets, Literary Currents ill Biblical
Interpretation (Louisville: W estminster John Knox, 1992), 116.
"/ Will Make Her Like a Desert» 59
4: 7, the Lord is depicted as king over Zion forever. Yet the metaphors in Mic 4:9
a nd the linguistic structure surrounding it suggest that this story of perfect peace
has not yet been realized by the people of Israel. This sense of uncertainty and
tension is depicted linguistically through the use of interrogatives a nd the
repetition of the adverb ;'1lJ~ (" now").70 The height of this crisis comes as
Daughter Zion is commanded via an imperative to writhe and groan as in la bor
pains. Thus, the metaphors of childbirth used to depict the experience of crisis
are layered upon a linguistic structure that echoes this crisis 71 providing a
structure that promotes greater clarity to interpreting the metaphors themselves.
The genres ofMic 4 itself are also constrained by its linguistic structure. The
liturgical style of Mic 4: 1-5 is constrained by the movement back and forth
between the use of the third person and first person, making the genre less like
the prototypical understanding of the liturgical genre. Similarly, the evoking of
the crisis of childbirth in verse 9 a midst the oracles of salvation through
interrogatives creates some tension in the usual forms present in salvation oracles
based on the universal models of such genres. This in part explains the
complications over whether verse 8 should be located with verses 6-7 or verse 9
to the end of the chapter. The linguistic context provides the framework for
locating the linking structures between the generic structures in the passage.
The connection between Israel as people and Israel as la nd, which echoes in the
blending of agricultural and feminine metaphors in Hosea a nd Mica h, m ay be
roo ted in an intertextual allusion to Deut 28, which describes Israel's promise in
terms of fruition of bodies as well as the land. The cursing of bearing fruit and
bearing children in Hos 9 m ay be an inversion of the promises in Deut 28:4 and
11 . In contrast, Mic 4 uses the metaphor of childbirth leading to new life to
positively expect fruition of the land, which may echo this expectation in
Deuteronomy. Many scholars have noted the use of Deuteronomy in the Book
of the Twelve extensively and in Hosea and Mica h specifically.72 This includes
drawing connections between pa rticular themes, metaphors, and genres in
70 Waltke points out this interrogation following Renaud and Wolff. See Bruce K. Waltke,
A Commentary on Micah (Grand R apids: Eerdmans, 2007), 238-39.
71 See Bergmann, Childbirth as a Metaphorjor Crisis, 109-11 .
72 For discussion of the scholars who have noted Hosea's use of Deu teronomy, see
Gordon J. vVenham, "The D ate of D euteronomy: Linch-Pin of Old Testament
Criticism," Themelios 10 (1985): 18-1 9; Gary Harlan H all, Deuteronomy, College Press NIV
Commentary (Joplin, MO: College Press, 2000), 21. For Micah's use of Deuteronomy,
see Shaw, The Speeches of Micah, 80-81 , 169-70; R enaud, La jormation, 319-26; J ack R .
Lundbom, Deuteronomy: A Commentary (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2013), 35.
60 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Hosea and Micah and the la rger Deuteronomic tradition. Thus, the
Deuteronomic tradition m ay function as theological pattern influencing Hos 9
a nd Mic 4 in different ways based on the unique theological message each book
is intending to share with its audience, while more broadly one can also argue
that the frequent allusions to Deuteronomy and its themes throughout the Book
of the Twelve provides a level of theological cohesion. 73
The covenant a nd new exodus a re a mong the prima ry theological themes in
Hosea alongside the obvious themes of Israel's return to God a nd God's
fai thfulness to Israel despite their recurring sin. In Hos 2, the promise of return
a nd restoration that YHWH gives to Israel is dependent on the allusions to
promises to Israel from the beginning of creation,74 the continued faithfulness of
YHWH in his liberation of Israel from Egypt,75 a nd YHWH's purposeful time
for Israel in the wilderness.?6 These theological themes constrain Hosea's use of
the marital metaphor in Hos 2 in a different direction than Micah's use in Mic 1.
In comparison, Mic 1 focuses on the coming destruction YHVVH will carry out
against Samaria because of their idolatry. Micah 1 calls the earth to judge
against Israel a nd then expresses lament over the judgment that is at hand .?7
Thus, while Hosea uses a more developed relational metaphor to depict Israel's
unfaithfulness a nd God's judgment as well as his eventual restorative love,
Mica h 's use of these feminine and agricultural metaphors focuses more
extensively on the destructive elements of this judgment by explicidy connecting
these feminine and agricultural metaphors to metaphors of warfare and natural
disaster. '!\Thile these depictions differ in their respective emphases, the repeated
blending of similar feminine a nd agricultural metaphors in Hosea and Micah
demonstrates continuity betwee n the metaphorical depictions of God's
relationship to Israel in the Book of the Twelve. This continuity of metaphorical
depiction m ay provide fruit for further exploration if expanded to a
metaphorical study of the Twelve.
73 Elizabeth Achtemeier notes the impact of Deu teronomy on Haggai, Malachi, and
Obadiah in Elizabeth Achtemeier, Preaching flom the iV/inor Prophets: Texts and Sermon
Suggestions (Grand R apids: Eerdmans, 1998), 52, 106, 127. John Barton locates parts of
D eu teronomic tradition in the theology of Amos. See John Barton, 77ze 77zeology if the Book
if Amos, OTT (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2012). Weinfeld argu es for a
similar usage in Amos. See Weinfeld, Deuteronomy and the Deuteronomic School, 91. Similarly
Sweeney notes the use of Deu teronomy in Hosea and Amos. See Sweeney, Twelve
Prophets, 31-32, 45 , 9 1, 256.
74 Mark E. Rooker, "The Use of the Old Testament in the Book of Hosea," CTR 7
(1993): 52-53.
75 Francis I. Anderson and David Noel Freedman, Hosea: A New Translation with Introduction
"Prophetic Lawsuit" in the Preexilic Prophets," ]BL 102 (1983): 563- 74; a good, brief
summary of the history of the identification of the genre is provided in Dwight R .
D aniels, "Is There a 'Prophetic Lawsuit' Genre," ZA W99 3 (1987): 339- 60.
2 A number of other texts have been variously identified as prophetic lawsuits (see, for
example, Claus vVestermann, Basic Forms if Prophetic Speech, trans. Hugh C. White
[Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1967; 199 1] , 199-200), but these three are the most
commonly proposed examples from the Book of the Twelve.
- 63 -
64 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
original oral audience of Hosea and Micah, but whether or no t these texts would
have been read as lawsuits by Persia n period Yehudite readers.
Since it lies outside the prima ry focus of this a nalysis, it is unnecessary to give a
detailed account of the history of the old form-critical analyses of these texts. 3 A
few key highligh ts concerning differen t proposed Sit;:, im Leben will suffice here.
Following the lead of H. Gunkel, m a ny schola rs have located the origins of the
genre in secular legal practice in ancient Israel. In this reading, there is a
distinction be tween the original setting, which Gunkel interpreted as legal
activities at the city gate, and the later, formal setting in the cult. E. Wurthwein
collapsed these two settings by proposing that the genre was no t borrowed from
secular legal practice, but had its origin in the cult as a judgement on the
behaviour of nations, in the case of Israel, a judgment on the nation's covenant
faithfulness. 4 H . Huffmon developed the insight of the connection with covenant
traditions further in relation to the Hittite vassal treaty forms. In his view, these
texts were covenant lawsuits that reflect some of the same elements found in
vassal treaties. These elements can also be identified in other covena ntal texts. 5 J.
Harvey carried the insight of the connection with international treaty forms
m ade by Huffmon further. Harvey proposed that the Sit;:, im Leben of these texts
was the practice of international law connected with these treaty formulations. 6
There are significant difficulties with all of these proposed genre identifications
a nd social settings in the context of eighth century Judah a nd Israel, as has been
indicated by de Roche a nd Daniels. 7 The a nalyses of de Roche a nd D a niels,
indicating the difficulties in identifying a prophetic lawsuit genre contemporary
with the activities of the eighth century prophets, not only challenge the proposal
that these oracles we re heard in this way at the time, but also raise serious
questions a bout the possibility that they were interpreted in this way in later
periods as they circulated in oral a nd! or written form . That they should have
been read as prophetic lawsui ts once they had been incorporated into written
prophetic books becomes an even more problematic assertion.
3 A very good overview of that history has already been provided by: Kirsten Nielsen,
Yahweh as Prosecutor and Judge: An Investigation if the Prophetic Lawsuit, JSOTSup 9 (Sheffield:
University of Sheffield Press, 1978), 5-26.
4 Ernst Wurthwein, "D er Ursprung der prophetischen Gerichtsrede," ZTK 49 (1952): 1-
16.
5 Herbert B. Huffmon, "The Covenant Lawsuit in the Prophets," JBL 78 4 (1959): 285-
95 .
6 Julien Harvey, "Le 'Rib-Pattern,' requisitoire prophetique sur la rupture de I'alliance,"
Biblica 432 (1962): 172-96.
7 De Roche, "Yahweh's Rib against Israel," 563-66.
Reading the "Prophetic Lawsuit" Genre 65
Even if the problematic assertion that these texts represent a prophetic
lawsuit genre in their original sociohistorical setting is granted, there is no extant
evidence of the continued use of this proposed genre after the late sixth century,
Jer 2:2-4 likely representing the latest possible example.S By the time these texts
had become integrated into and read as portions of prophetic books in the
Persian period, it is highly unlikely that Persian period readers would have read
them in the same way as the individual, oral oracles were heard by the eighth
century audiences of the prophets. As written texts, contextualized within larger
written documents that were read in a later and dramatically different
sociohistorical context, it is necessary to reflect on the way in which both the
changed literary and sociological settings would have shaped the reception of
these texts. Specifically, in regard to the question as to whether or not these texts
would have been read as lawsuits, prophetic or otherwise, by Persian period
readers, it is necessary to examine Persian period legal texts and practices. Is
there sufficient correspondence between legal practices and genres from the
Achaemenid period and the structure, language, and content of these texts to
support the assertion that they would have been read as lawsuits by Persian
period readers?
8 Julia M . O 'Brien has presented a case for reading Malachi as an adapted (extended)
version of the prophetic lawsuit genre which could represent a later adaptation of the
genre. Since the argument depends on the identification of these earlier texts as prophetic
lawsuits, the case for Malachi as an adaptation of the genre rests entirely on the judgment
made about these earlier texts. See Julia M. O 'Brien, Priest and Levite in Nlalachi, SBLDS
121 (Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1990), 63-81 .
66 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
9 Simo Parpola, "International Law in the First Millennium," in A History if Ancient Near
Eastern Law, ed . Raymond Westbrook (Leiden: Brill, 2003), 105l.
10 Remko Jas, Neo-Assyrian Judicial Procedures (Helsinki: The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus
Project, 1996), 4-5 .
II Sophie Demare-Lafont, 'Judicial Decision-Making: Judges and Arbitrators," in TIe
Oxford Handbook if Cuneiform Culture, ed. Karen Radner and Eleanor Robson (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 2011 ), 34l.
12 J as, Neo-Assyrian Judicial Procedures, 5-6.
13 Ibid., 17-18, 21-23.
Reading the "Prophetic Lawsuit" Genre 67
In the Neo-Babylonian period, lawsuits were heard in the courts (bft dzm). They
were often tried before royal judges (dayyiine sa RN). Royal courts usually
consisted of three to five judges. Local matters were handled by local courts that
consisted of provincial officials a nd judges. 14 Depositions could be taken locally
in preparation for trial at a higher court. These were recorded under the format:
"These are the witnesses before whom (PN stated . . . )" (annuli mukinnu sa ina
piinzsunnu). 15 Documents which record court proceedings generally have a
tripartite structure: address by one of the parties to the judges, the judges'
inquiries, and the judgment. 16 The recording of direct speech represents one
significant variation as compared with the Neo-Assyrian legal texts discussed
previously. After judgment, the judges could draft a document, sealed with their
seals, that would be given to the successful litigant. 17
In his recent book, Neo-Babylonian Court Procedure, S. E. Holtz offers a
reconstruction of the "tablet trail" associated with legal proceedings in the
period. IS Due to the high degree of continuity in the legal textual record across
the Neo-Babylonian and Achaemenid periods, Holtz defines the "Neo-
Babylonia n" of his title broadly to include texts from the time of
Nebuchadnezzar II to the end of the reign of Darius ILI 9 As a result, his
reconstruction of legal practices a nd genres provides an excellent window into
the way in which these matters would have been understood by the literate elites
within these imperial systems.
Holtz proposes a "functional typology" that locates the various legal
documents within the different phases of legal proceedings. His a nalysis provides
a very good overview of the different types of extant legal texts from the period
a nd their function within the legal processes. Decision records a re those texts
which record the details a nd outcomes of a particular case . Holtz identifies
different styles of decision records, associated with different venues, but notes
that the consistent fun ction of these records is to prove the occurrence of the
lawsuit a nd its outcome as a mea ns of preventing further claims and! or changes
to the ruling. 20 Holtz also discusses three additional text types that are related to
resolution of disputes: conclusion of disputes, memoranda including decisions,
a nd settlements. While serving somewhat different functions, each of these types
History ofAncient Near Eastern Law, ed. R aymond Westbrook (Leiden: Brill, 2003), 918-19.
15 Ibid ., 922.
16 Michael Jursa, Neo-Babylonian Legal and Administrative Documents: 7);pology, Contents and
Archives, GMTR I (Munster: Ugarit-Verlag, 2005), 16-17.
17 Oelsner, vVells, and Wunsch, "Neo-Babylonian Period," 923.
shares in common with the decision records that they record the resolutions of
disputes after the fact. 21 In addition to these text types which relate to the
resolution of disputes, Holtz identifies preliminary protocols that describe the
events that occurred before a trial and serve as memoranda of the actual
proceedings. The protocols functioned as the scribe's record of events, rather
than the official record a nd did not include an indication of the outcome of the
proceedings. 22 All of these text types analysed by Holtz "narrate activities in
court during the course of a trial." 23 They share common features: identification
of the parties and the issue, address by one or both litigants, the judges' inquires,
and, where appropriate to the genre, the resolution of the dispute in the form of
a settlement or legal judgment. H. H. Figulla already identified all of these key
elements in legal texts in his translation a nd discussion of a text recording legal
action concerning the theft of temple property at Eanna during the second year
of Cambyses. 24
Holtz identifies a range of text types which function as summonses or
guarantees for an individual(s) to argue a case, present evidence in a case, be
present at a judicial proceeding, or guarantee the presence of someone else. 25
These text types include: dabiibu summonses to argue a case, qutta summonses to
end a case, summonses to establish (kunnu) a case, guarantees for testimony,
summonses to present or bring (abiiku) a n individual, and guarantees for an
individual's presence. In distinguishing between summonses and guarantees,
Holtz notes, "Both summonses and guarantees may impose a penalty for failure
to perform the action. The major difference between the two is that the
guarantees explicitly use the phrase puta nasa ("to assume responsibility") while
the summonses do not use this phrase."26 These are all legal text types which
relate to specific preparatory aspects of legal proceedings. They contain little in
the way of information regarding the parties or the issue in dispute unless it is
necessa ry to support the specific purpose of the document. As a result, these text
types are certainly not relevant to the discussion of prophetic lawsuits. Holtz also
identifies a small number of much less common text types, but those identified
above represent the predominant components of the "tablet trail" in Neo-
Babylonian and Achaemenid period legal processes. As will be noted further
below, there are no strong parallels between any of these known legal texts of the
period and the texts from the Hebrew Bible identified as prophetic lawsuits.
21 Ibid ., 69-83.
22 Ibid., 85-116.
23 Ibid ., II 7.
24 H . H. Figulla, "Lawsuit concerning a Sacrilegious Theft at Erech," Iraq 13.2 (1951):
100.
25 Holtz, Neo-Babylonian Court Procedure, 117-95.
26 Ibid ., 133.
Reading the "Prophetic Lawsuit" Genre 69
As is the case with most of our knowledge about the ancient Near East, the
quality a nd qua ntity of the evidence for legal practices under the Achaemenid
Persians varies significantly both chronologically and geographically. There is,
however, very substantial textual evidence of legal practices during the Neo-
Babylonian and Achaemenid periods from Mesopotamia. In light of the fact that
Juda h had been a colony of the Neo-Babylonian empire for decades before its
incorporation into the Achaemenid empire as p a rt of the territory that would
eventually become the satrapy, Ba bylon and Beyond the River (Babilu u ebir nan),
the legal texts that have been preserved from the Mesopota mian cultural
heartland of the satrap y are likely to provide the best insight into the legal
practices and procedures that were in place in Achaemenid Yehud. As was
indicated a bove, Holtz has provided significant evidence of continuity across the
Neo-Babylonian a nd Achaemenid periods. In addition, J. Oelsner and others
note that this continuity can be detected even into the Hellenistic period: "As
rega rds the law, the traditional concept of a ncient Near Eastern kingship
embraced by Ba bylonia n kings not only continued into these later empires but
also held true for the Hellenistic kings."27 This is pa rticula rly fortuitous, since
this is a time from which there are very substantial textual resources. "The
documentation is especially rich in the sixth and the early fifth centuries, m aking
that period one of the best known in Mesopotamian history."28 In fact, the
influence of cuneiform legal traditions a nd formulae on cultural regions further
to the '!\Test is already identified in a n earlier historical period by Kwasman, who
notes the major role of the Neo-Assyrian Empire "in the transformation of
cuneiform legal formulary into Aramaic."29
The Achaemenid conquest of the Neo-Babylonian Empire resulted in very
little immediate change to the normal functioning of the existing administrative
a nd social institutions, including legal practices and texts. The creation in 535
BCE of the satrapy, Babylon and Beyond the River (Babilu u ebir nan), with a
Persian governor, Gubaru, resulted in more direct Persian imperial oversight of
a nd involvement in these institutions, but there were no major changes to their
functions a nd operations. 30 "Sometime after 486 BC the enormous satrapy of
Babylon a nd Across-the-River, comprising almost all the territory of the former
Neo-Babylonian empire, was split in twO. 3 1 In the Herodotus list (3.91-92) of the
satrapies of the Achaemenid Empire these countries appear as different
provinces, namely Babylonia and 'the rest of Assyria' which constituted the ninth
satrapy, while the lands beyond the Euphrates formed the fifth satrapy."32 Apart
from this major geographical reorganization of the satrapies, there were mainly
only gradual changes to the administrative system with an increasing use of
Persian administrative and legal terms in Babylonian documents. The increasing
use of Persian terms seems to have originated with the changes instituted by
Darius I. 33 On the whole, however, the changes represent a gradual evolution
resulting from Persian cultural influence, rather than a drama tic excha nge of
one system for another. In fact, there is far more continuity than difference in
legal practices across the periods of Neo-Ba bylonia n and Achaemenid rule.
Dandamaev and Lukonin, for example, begin their discussion of legal systems
and institutions in the Achaemenid Persia n Empire by noting tha t some diversity
existed across the empire, but they also highlight the continuity of legal practices
before and after the arrival of the Persians in conquered territories. 34 In
particular, they attribute this continuity to the central role of Mesopotamian
legal traditions in the legal institutions and practices of the Achaemenid Empire.
"Under the Achaemenids, Babylonian law reached its pinnacle. It was the model
for the legal norms of the countries of the Near East and began to spread to the
West."35
Dandamaev and Lukonin identify a wide range of evidence that indicates
that the influence of Achaemenid imperial legal language and practice
permeated the empire, including the western satrapies. Royal judges are
mentioned by Herodotus (3.14) as being present in Egypt with Cambyses. 36
Satraps were the highest judicial officials in the satrapies, with substantial textual
evidence from both Babylon and EgyptY Persians were sent throughout the
empire to function as judges, according to the Greek sources and supported by
the evidence of the Babylonian legal documents. 38 Persian legal terms are also
present in documents from across the empire. They note that across the empire,
"Not infrequently during lawsuits the parties would give 'the oath of the king' or
swear by the Babylonian gods or the Persian kings."39 Although there was no
centrally imposed uniformity in legal practices, there is evidence of centuries of
common legal culture tha t can be found in Neo-Babylonian and Achaemenid
sources.
32 Ibid ., 229-30.
33 Ibid., 230-3l.
34 Muhammad A. Dandamaev, Vladimir G . Lukonin, and Philip L. Kohl, The Culture and
Social Institutions ofAncient Iran (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989), 116.
35 Ibid ., 12l.
36 Ibid., 118.
37 Ibid., 122, 125-26.
38 Ibid., 122-23.
39 Ibid ., 123.
Reading the "Prophetic Lawsuit" Genre 71
The other m ajor source of information a bout legal practices and legal genres
during the Achaemenid period is Egypt. Since much of this information derives
from the ethnically Juda hite garrison at Elepha ntine, it is a potentially highly
valuable resource for this examination. Some legal m atters at Elepha ntine were
dealt with by a "court of the Jews" (AP 45).40 Other m atte rs, however, were
considered by a royal court which consisted of at least two royal judges plus the
commander of the garrison (AP 6).41 B. Porten provides a useful summary of the
range of individuals and groups who regularly heard cases at Elephantine:
judges, the military commander with the judges (designated 'j udges of the
king"), a nd either or both of these groups plus other local officials ("the judges of
the province").42
In relation to litigation, Porten notes a few texts which exemplify the use of
oaths in the names of different gods as evidence regarding the central matter in
the dispute. 43 Specifically, there are three texts from Elepha ntine which clearly
relate to legal disputes, all of which employ oaths (TAD B 7.1-7 .3). All of these
texts date from the late fifth century BCE.44 TAD B7.1 and 7.2 are similarly
structured, noting the date, place, parties, accusation, interrogation, oath, and
indication of consequences of not swearing the oath. B 7. 1 also contains the
possibility of a counter-oath a nd consequences, the penalty that will result, and
finishes with the name of the scribe a nd place. B 7.2 is broken after the indication
of consequences of not swearing the oath, so m ay have originally contained the
additional elements. B7. 3 is a brief text which indicates the parties, the point of
contention a nd a n oath by the defenda nt denying the claim in the contention.
Holtz, in his discussion of oaths found in legal texts from Eanna, notes that they
served two functions. Oaths could be used for evidentiary purposes to establish
the basis for a decision in a case . In other instances, oaths had an exculpatory
function by which individuals would attempt to clear themselves of charges. 45
B 7. 1 and 7.2 from Elephantine are best interpreted as examples of the latter
function . Both of these texts record a formal proceeding that includes accusation
a nd interrogation. The oaths in both texts function as an effort by the accused to
be cleared of the accusation. The function in B 7.3 is less clear due to the brevity
of the text. It does, however, correspond more closely to the evidentiary
40 Ibid., 128.
41 Ibid ., 128-29.
42 Bezalel Porten, "Elephantine," 111 vVestbrook and Beckman, History if Ancient Near
Eastern Law, 869.
43 Ibid., 869.
44 Bezalel Porten and Ada Yardeni, Textbook if Aramaic Documents flom Ancient Egypt:
Contracts, vol. 2 (Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 1989), 141 .
45 Holtz, Neo-Babylonian Court Procedure, 290.
72 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
function, providing evidence that might decide the case in favour of the oath
taker.
A number of fragmentary court records have also been recovered from
Saqqarah. These texts all date from the mid-fifth century. One of these records
contains a summary of three cases written in three different hands.46 "The
formula seems to be 'PN spoke against PN as follows .. . . Afterwa rds, it was given
to PN and his colleagues' (TAD B8.6)."47 Another text records court proceedings
in terms of the interrogation of the litigants, "'PN 1 was interrogated in light of
the words of PN2 and he said . . . ' Two horizon tal lines enclose this statemen t.
There follows cross-examination: 'PN2 was interrogated in light of the words of
PN 1 and he said . . . ' (TAD B8.7; cf. B8.8)."48 The other legal texts in this
collection a re even more fragmentary. As a result, it is difficult to a rrive at clear
determinations of their genres a nd functions. The three summaries contained in
TAD B8.6 are closest in form to the memora nda including decisions identified by
Holtz. 49 They contain much less detail than the full decision records. The
recording of decisions one after a nother in different ha nds on the same
document may suggest the same function, proof of the occurrence of the lawsui t
to preve nt further claims, as the memoranda including decisions.
The limited and fragmentary nature of the documents requires a degree of
caution in regard to conclusions. Overall, however, the evidence indicates
similarity with the legal genres a nd practices of Mesopotamia in the same period.
The texts indicate dates and participants, report statements on the litigated issue
in the first person, a nd conclude with the outcome of the proceedings. There
appears to be very few similarities between the content a nd form of these texts
a nd the so-called prophetic lawsuits of the Hebrew Bible.
So, in light of the availa ble evidence regarding first millennium legal practices,
particularly those found in areas dominated by the cultural and political
influence of the Neo-Babylonian a nd Achaemenid Persian empires, is it likely
that Hos 2:3-25; 4: 1-3; a nd Mic 6: 1-8 would have been read as prophetic
lawsuits by Persian period Yehudite readers? Such a reading appears highly
unlikely for a number of reasons.
It seem s very unlikely that these three texts would have been read as a single
genre by readers in this period. Of the three key features commonly proposed as
m arkers of the prophetic lawsuit genre by modern interpreters, (1) a call to hear
CONCLUSION
There is a substantive body of textual evidence regarding the legal genres and
procedures in the geographical areas controlled by the Neo-Babylonian and
Achaemenid Persian empires. These texts reflect a significant commonality in
the legal texts and practices across this period in all the areas controlled by these
empires, from Mesopotamia to Egypt. These texts provide an excellent insight
into the likely expectations of a Persian period Yehudite reader regarding the
form and content of legal texts in this period. On this basis, it is possible to
conclude that such a reader would not have read Hos 2:3-25; 4: 1-3; and Mic
6: 1-8 as examples of a lawsuit or any other legal genre. In fact, the Neo-Assyrian
evidence strongly indicates that earlier readers of these prophetic texts would not
have read them as lawsuit genres either. The focus of the new form criticism on
the reception of texts by readers in specific settings, particularly on the basis of
the extant evidence regarding generic features and their use in the contemporary
social contexts, provides extremely valuable insights for modern readers of these
ancient texts.
53 Ibid., 569-71.
4
Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer
I NTRODU CTION
The present article explores the genre category of vision report, with focus on
the textual relationship within a pericope between the acco unt of the visual
impression a nd the accompanying divine oracles.
Five books in the Latter Prophets feature vision reports: Amos 7-9; Isa 6;
Jer 1; 24; Ezek 1; 8-11; 37; 40-48, and Zech 1-6. In a ddition, there a re vision
reports in the Former Prophets (2 Kgs 22) a nd in the Writings (Dan 7; 8; 10, a nd
12). My investigation here is limited to the two sets of vision accounts in the
Book of the T welve, namely, the sequence of five vision reports in Amos 7: 1-3;
7:4-6; 7:7-9; 8: 1-3, and 9: 1-4, a nd the eight vision reports in Zech 1:8-6:8.
Several scholars have used arguments that draw on form criticism in their
attempt to (dis-)prove a m atter related to redaction-criticism. In particular , they
have a rgued that the form of the vision accounts in the book of Amos can shed
light upon the redaction-critical formation of Zechariah 's vision report. l As each
of Amos's vision account ends with a divine word, the a rgument goes, so should
1 Most recently, see Michael R . Stead, "The Interrelationship between Vision and Oracle
in Zechariah 1-6," in '1 Lifted A1Y Eyes and Saw': Reading Dream and Vision Reports in the
Hebrew Bible, ed . Elizabeth R . Hayes and Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer, LHBOTS 584 (London:
T&T Clark, 2014), 149-68. See also M ark J. Boda, "Writing the Vision: Zechariah
within the Visionary T raditions of the Hebrew Bible," in '1 Lifted My Eyes and Saw,' 101-
18, for a slightly different approach.
- 75-
76 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Zechariah's. It follows, these same schola rs m aintain, that the oracular material
within Zech 1-6 is the natural and integral continuation of the preceding vision
acco unt, without which the vision acco un t cannot be properly understood . In
this article, I hope to demonstrate that this type of comparison is partly flawed.
Form-critical a nd redaction-critical considerations must go ha nd-in-hand when
seeking to determine the textual development of a given text. Form-critical
considerations shed light upon the ways in which readers read the (final form of
the) text, while redaction-critical concerns tell us about the gradual formation of
the same text and the reasons behind the continuous textual growth. On this
latter matter, I shall seek to show that the two sets of vision reports in Amos and
Zecharia h display the same type of relationship between vision a nd oracle. In
both cases, the oracular material constitutes a later addition, which interprets
a nd in some cases also redefines the message of the earlier account of the vision.
HISTOR Y OF RESEARCH
This a rticle builds upon the insights of a long list of scholars who have explored
the form of the vision report genre in order to define (I) what parts constitute a
vision report a nd (2) what rhetorical goals each p ar t plays.2 These schola rs tend
to be uninterested in the experience behind the scene a nd! or of a ny oral
prophetic communication, and focus instead on the written reports. How are the
reports constructed? What a re their defining literary features? Moreover,
exegetes have long sought to categorize the vision reports in the Hebrew Bible
into subgroups. There is, however, no agreement as to the criteria employed for
defining those subgroups. Should thematic or structural concerns carry the day?
Moses Sister's article from 1934 is one of the earliest studies. Sister's
discussion revolves around questions such as: How are the visions structured?
'!\That kinds of literary-stylistic tools are used? ' !\That sha red and distinct features
do the different vision reports have in the different prophetic books?3 Sister
further compares the biblical vision reports with the biblical drea m reports. Due
to the form- critical simila ri ties between the two genres, Sister postulates that the
form of the drea m report served as the prototype for the (later) form of the vision
report.4 On the basis of this conclusion, Sister detects three different types of
vision reports:
2 What follows is a survey of a selection of significant scholarly work. See also the studies
by Christian J eremias, Die Nachtgesichte des Sachmja: Unters. zu ihrer Stellung im Zusammenhang
d. Visions- berichte im Allen Testament u. zu ihrem Bildmaterial, FRLANT 117 (Gottingen:
Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1977), 51-61, 100-108, and G. Heinzmann,
"Formgeschichtliche Untersuchung der prophetischen Visionsberichte" (Ph.D. diss.,
University of Heidelberg, 1978).
3 Moses Sister, "Die Typen der prophetischen Visionen in der Bible," MGW] 78 (1934):
399.
4 Ibid. , 422-25 .
77ze Vision Report Genre 77
I. Visions in the form of a drea m, the content of which is a n appearance
of God or an angel (theophany) (e.g. , Amos 9: 1-4).
2. Visions in the form of a dream, the content of which is a picture which
is immediately understandable (self-explanatory images) (e.g. , Amos
7:1-3; 7:4-6; Zech 3:1-7).
3. Visions in the form of a dream, the content of which is a picture which
needs to be interpreted (images demanding interpretation) (e.g., Amos
7:7-9; 8: 1-3; most of Zecharia h 's eight vision accounts; cf. Jer I: 11-12;
1:13-16; 24:1-10).5
One weakness of Sister's model is that his typology is keyed exclusively to the
hypothetical original literary model of dream reports. 6 Another weakness is that
aspects of each type may overlap in anyone vision. In addition, some of the
decisions as to which vision report belongs in which groups appear to be rather
subjective .7
Friedrich Horst's a rticle from 1960 adva nced the discussion in more than
one aspect. Focusing on the interplay between word a nd image in the vision
report, Horst differentiates between three types of visions: 8
Few scholars have adopted Horst's categorization. Niditch, for instance, points
out that the substantial variation within each of Horst's categories makes it
5 Ibid. , 425-29.
6 Burke O. Long, "Reports of Visions Among the Prophets," ]BL 95 (1976): 353.
7 Susan Niditch, The Symbolic Vision in Biblical Tradition, HSM 30 (Chico, CA: Scholars
Reimers's scheme is both too detailed and too rigid to be useful. The fact that
the "speech part" of a single vision account may fall into several subcategories
begs the questions as to whether these structures really are conscious literary
patterns. For instance, Reimer categorizes Zech 2:6 as a "question dialogue"
while Zech 2:8a constitutes a "commissioning speech."
In the same year, Burke O. Long wrote an influential article devoted to the
structure of the vision reports in the Hebrew Bible. He suggests that most vision
reports consist of three basic parts Oer 38:21 b-22 being a typical example
thereofj:
Long divides the vision reports in the Hebrew Bible into three categories:
19 Long, "R eports of Visions," 357- 58. Long states further that "the association between
image and oracle is casual and unpredictable. .. . The visionary image is merely the
occasion for oracle, and the vision report is opportunity for proclamation .... Nor does the
oracle interpret or explain the image, which otherwise would remain esoteric and
mysterious . There is nothing to be explained, but everything to be proclaimed ."
20 Ibid., 359- 63 .
21Ibid., 363- 64.
22 Niditch, Symbolic Vision , 6.
23 Ibid ., 6.
80 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
tradition met and mutually influenced one another in Ezekiel. The current
vision report in Ezek 1-3 is thus a redactional combination of two different
traditions (Ezek I: 1-2:8 and 2:9-3:9). At an even later stage, the genre
underwent further changes, the result of which we can see in Zech 1-6 and D a n
8-12.28
While there is much to commend Behren's proposed structure, I am not
convinced by his two part structure. In the case of Zech 1:8-1 7, for instance,
Behrens's distinction between the Visionsteil in verse 8 and the Dialogteil in verses
9-15 is not in line with the extant textual evidence (see below).29 Further, we
cannot put the divine oracles which, for example, end Zechariah's eighth vision
(Zech 6:8) on p a r with the Interpreting Angel's concluding speech in 4: 14 and
5: I [.30 They do not share the same literary form a nd they fill different rhetorical
functions within the pericope. Finally, his claim that the message of the
concluding speech is supported by the preceding images is only partly true.
Again, as we shall discuss below, the concluding divine speech often singles out
one meaning of the preceding visionary part. 31
In this section, we shall survey the structure of Amos's and Zecharia h 's vision
reports in detail, with the aim of discovering whether or not they share the same
overall structure.
The structures of Amos's vision accounts are relatively simple: 32
28 Ibid., 38 1-85.
29 Ibid ., 35.
30 Ibid ., 276.
31 For additional critique of Behrens's proposal, see M artin Probstle, "Review of Achim
Behrens, Prophetische Visionsschilderngen im Alten Testament," RBL 09 (2004).
http: / hV\vw.bookreviews.org/pdfl3984_4081.pdf. Probstle criticizes Behrens for circular
reasoning. Behrens discountsJ er 4:23-26 and 38:21-23 from his discussion, because they
lack a dialogue part. He likewise refrains from discussing Dan 7, because it does not
conform to the proposed form of a prophetic vision report. Probstle furth er points out
that Behrens ignores the possibility that the varying forms of vision reports are du e to the
prophetic visionaries' real experiences. A prophetic author might deviate from the literary
conventions of the vision report genre because he wished to give as accurate a description
as possible of what he had experienced.
32 The division of the individual verses follows the Masoretic accents. So, v. Xa is always
the text before the ethnachta, and v. Xb is always the text following the ethnachta.
82 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
TEXT UAL UNIT VISUAL SCENE SPEEC H DIVINE A CTION DIVINE SPEEC H
Amos 7: 1-3 God shows the In response, In response, In response,
seer a scene Amos speaks God acts God speaks
(v. 1). God is to God (v. 2). (v. 3a). (v. 3b).
part of this
scene (v. l a~ ,
.,,,1' :U:1).
Amos 7:4- 6 God shows the In response, In response, In response,
seer a scene Amos speaks God acts God speaks
(v. 4). God acts to God (v. 5). (v.6a) (v. 6b).
in this scene
(v. 4a~, :1):11
~"jI) .
Amos 7:7- 9 God shows the Dialogue God speaks
seer a scene between God (vv. 8b, 9).
(v. 7). God acts and the seer
in this scen e (8a).
(v. 7b, 'J1~ :1):11
:m).
Amos 8: 1-3 God shows the Dialogue God speaks
seer an image between God (vv. 2b, 3).
(v. 1). and the seer
(v. 2a).
Amos 9: 1-4 The seer sees a God speaks
scene. God is (vv. l a~-4) .33
part of this
scene (v. l ao,
J,,) 'J1~) .
33 The first person divine speech ends in v. 4 and recommences in vv. 7-10, 11-1 5. The
intermediate vv. 5- 6 refer to YHWH in the third person and is therefore unlikely to be
part of the divine speech. Instead, they form a doxology (cf. also 4:13; 5:8- 9) which in all
likelihood was attached second arily to the vision report. See furth er Hans W. Wolff, Joel
and Amos, trans. Waldemar Janzen, S. Dean McBride Jr. , and Charles A. Muenchow,
Hermeneia (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1977),2 15-1 7, 341 ;Jason R adine, TIe Book if Amos in
Emergent J udah, FAT 2/45 (Tubingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2010), 213, and Tchavdar S.
Hadjiev, TIe Composition and Redaction if the Book if Amos, BZAW 393 (Berlin: de Gruyter,
2009), 13 1-33 . As to the divine oracles in verses 7-10, 11-15, it is possible that they form
a sequence of oracles which seek to extract insights from the visionary scene in verse 1ao
and also to continue on from the oracular material in verses l a~-4 . There are, however,
no clear verbal or them atic connections between the visual scene in v. l ao and the
oracular material in verses 7-1 5. See furth er Hadjiev, Composition and Redaction, 68- 73,
111-23.
77ze Vision Report Genre 83
1. Amos always sees one single scene. In the first, second, third, and fifth
accounts, this scene features a n action which is described by the use of a
participle (7:1, 4, 7; 9:1 ). The exception is the fourth vision account
which contains a static image.
2. God and the seer are the only actors/interlocutors.
In contrast, the relation between the visual scene a nd the divine speech changes
a nd develops throughout the vision report sequence:
The structure of the individual vision accounts in Zech 1:8-6:8 (henceforth Zech
1-6) is significantly more complicated than in Amos 7-9, yet the relationship
between visual scene a nd oral speech in Zech 1-6 is in many respects
comparable to that in Amos 7-9. 34
34 I use the term "dialogue" in the following chart to indicate a discussion between two
interlocutors. In contrast, I employ the term "speech" to denote the utterance of a single
person that is not followed by an apparent reply.
84 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
TEXT UAL UNIT VISUAL SCENE DIALOGUE ANGELIC DIVINE SPEEC H
WITHIN SCENE SPEECH
Zech 1:8- 17 The seer sees Conversation The Angel of God speaks
a scene (v. 8). between the YHWH (vv. 13, 14-
seer, the laments (v. 17).
Interpreting 12).
Angel, and the
characters in
the visionary
scene
(vv.9- 11 ).
Zech 2: 1-4 The seer sees Conversation
a scene between the
(vv. 1,3). seer and the
Interpreting
Angel / God
(vv. 2,4).
Zech 2:5- 9 35 The seer sees Conversation An Angel God speaks
a scene between the speaks (v. 8b). (v. 9).
(vv. 5- 8a). seer and the
different
Angels
(vv. 6, 8a).
Zech 3: 1-10 The seer is Conversation The Angel of God speaks
shown a scene between the YHWHspeaks (vv. 8- 1O).
(vv.I - 5). seer, the (vv.6- 7)
Adversary,
and the Angel
ofYHWH .
Zech 4: 1-1 4 The seer sees Conversation God speaks
a scene between the (vv. 6af3-I Oa).
(vv.2- 3). seer and the
Interpreting
Angel
(vv. 4- 6aa,
IOb-1 4).
Zech 5: 1-4 The seer sees Conversation Additional God speaks
a scene between the speech by the (v. 4).
(vv.I - 2). seer and the Interpreting
Interpreting Angel (v. 3).
Angel (v. 2).
35 The oracular material in Zech 2: I 0-1 7 is not discussed here as it is only loosely
connected to the preceding vision account(s). For the same reason, I have chosen not to
interact with the material in Zech 6:9-1 5 here.
77ze Vision Report Genre 85
Zech 5:5-11 The seer sees Conversation
a scene between the
(vv. 6, 8a~-9). seer and the
Interpreting
Angel (vv. 5-
6, 8aa, 10-11 ).
Zech 6: 1-8 The seer sees Conversation God speaks
a scene between the (v. 8).
(vv. 1-3, 7). seer and the
Interpreting
Angel
(vv.4- 6).
When we compare the text in Z ech 1-6 with that in Amos 7-9, we discover
many shared features. First, the overarching structure of most of the individual
accoun ts in Z ech 1-6 accou nt is similar to that found in the individual accoun ts
in Amos 7-9.
1. In both sets of reports, the seer "sees" or someone else "shows him" a
visual scene.
2. In both sets of reports, th ere is a conversation between the seer and
another person about the scene.
At the same time, two sets of reports differ in important ways, both in terms of
content and in terms of form:
Secondly, in both Z ech 1-6 and Amos 7-9 the relation between the visual scene
a nd the divine speech does not remain the same throughout the whole vision
report sequence:
I. The angelic speeches in Zech I: 12 (first); 2:8b (third), and 5:3 (sixth) are
to a large extent integral to the preceding scene. They relate closely to
the preceding visionary scene and add a layer of interpretation to it. In
this respect, they fill the same fu nction as the divine speech in Amos 7:8
and 8:2 .
86 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
2. In contrast, the divine speeches in Zech 1: 13, 14-17 (first); 2:9 (third);
3:6-7, 8-10 (fourth); 4:6a~-10a (fifth); 5:4 (sixth), and 6:8 (eighth)
explicate the vision account to which they are attached. In some cases,
they also reinterpret the scenery and also draw out possible practical
consequences from them. As such, they have a supplementary role. In
this respect, they fill the same function as the divine speech in Amos 7:9
and 8:3.
After having established that (1) many of the oracular sayings in both Amos 7-9
and Zech 1-6 are at best tangential to the immediately preceding visionary
scene, and that (2) in both sets of texts the oracles often fill an interpretative
function, namely to tease out possible interpretations and practical implications
from the visionary scene, we are in a position to explore the redaction-critical
repercussions of these insights. On this issue, Stead has pointed out that many of
those scholars who distinguish between vision and oracle in Zech 1-6 are
inconsistent. Instead of treating all oracular material as later additions, they
consider some oracles to be secondary (e.g., Zech 4:4-6aa, IOb-14) whilst
treating others as integral to the vision report (e.g., Zech 5:4).36 In view of
Stead's apt critique, I shall endeavour to find a compatible model which treats
equally all the oracular sayings in Amos 7-9 and Zech 1-6.
AMOS
Beginning with Amos's five vision accounts, the oracular material imbedded into
the first and the second vision account definitely must be an integral part of the
earliest layer of the account. Without God's speech in 7:3b and 6b, neither vision
account makes sense.
The situation in the third and the fourth vision account differs in this
respect. As in the case of the first and the second account, God's speech in 7:8b
and 8:2b is necessary for comprehending the third and the fourth account. In
contrast, the divine speech in 7:9 and 8:3 respectively do not relate immediately
to the imagery in the visionary scene, and they do not share significant
vocabulary with the preceding account. It is thus, at least theoretically, possible
that these two verses are later additions. They explicate the vision account to
which they are attached, and they draw out possible practical consequences from them.
Many scholars have noted the explanatory character of 7:9 and 8:3. Mays,
for example, notes that verse 7:9 and 8:3 form "an element which stands outside
the common structure [of the four vision reports]." He is therefore open to the
possibility that these two verses were either written by Amos or by a later
redactor, in order to "make clear the consequences of Yahweh's withdrawal of
forbeara nce."37 Soggin likewise assigns a n interpretative quality to Amos 7:9,
suggesting that it shows the consequences of the demolition, that is, the
judgement. 38 Wolff develops this thought further, noting that Amos 7:9 is set off
from its context by reason of its prosodic form as well as by its content. He
concludes that the verse was inserted into its present context in order to facilitate
the transition from 7:7-8 to 7: 10-17.39 As to the oracle in Amos 8:3, Wolff
suggests that it was added by the same redactor who added 7:9. This verse serves
to illustrate the preceding oracle as it conjures up a scene of mass dying, thus
suggesting that the "end" envisioned in the preceding vision is the end of life.4o
Along similar lines, Anderson and Freedman treat the oracle in Amos 7:9 as a
later added bridge which forms a n enveloping structure together with verse
17bj3.41 They further view 8:3a and 3b as separate exclamations or even
fragments that do not belong in the present context at all. Although these two
half-verses a re connected thematically, their formal, logical, a nd syntactic
connections to the preceding vision report a re vague.42 Jeremias even goes so far
as to discuss Amos 7:7-8; 8:1-2 43 separately from 7:9 a nd 8:3. As the
aforementioned scholars, he sees Amos 7:9 as a later addition.44 He likewise
views Amos 8:3 as a bridge between the fourth visionary account in Amos 8: 1-2
a nd Amos 8:4-14. The latter offers a commentary on the fourth vision acco unt,
37 James Luther M ays, Amos: A Commentary, OTL (London: SCM, 1969), 124. M ays
suggests that the narrative in Amos 7: 10-17 was placed in its current place because of the
similarity between the connection between 7:9 and 7: II (p. 123).
38 J. Alberto Soggin, TIe Prophet Amos: A Translation and Commentary, trans. John Bowden,
OTL (London: SCM, 1987), 117. Soggins suggests that this verse forms a
"D euteronomistic-type addition, the aim of which seems to have been ... to provide a
transition to vv. IOff."
39 Wolff,Joel and Amos, 295, 30 1.
40 Ibid., 3 18-20.
41 Francis 1. Anderson and D avid Noel Freedm an, Amos: A New Translation with Introduction
and Commentary, AB 24A (New York: Doubleday, 1989), 794 (translation), 754-55
(commentary).
42 Ibid ., 797-99.
43 JorgJeremias, TIe Book ofAmos: A Commentary, trans. Douglas W . Scott, OTL (Louisville:
Westminster John Knox, 1998), 124 (translation), 130- 34 (exegesis). J eremias points out
that v. 9 contains unique vocabulary within the book of Amos while, at the same time,
these unique features are shared with the book of Hosea. Based on this observation,
J eremias suggests that the tradents of the book of Amos established this connection
between the books of Amos and Hosea in order to emphasize that the readers should read
the two books together in order to comprehend fully the measure ofIsrael's sin, as well as
the limits to God's patience with this people. As to the timeframe of the insertion,
Jeremias points out that v. 9 appears to presuppose the fall of the Northern kingdom.
441bid ., 142.
88 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
seeking "to make comprehensible for its readers the enigmatically brief, ha rsh
a nnouncement of the fourth vision."45 Most other critical schola rs, among them
Bergler, W6hrle, Riede, Hadjiev, Radine, and, somewhat surprisingly, Behrens
follow suit. 46 Slightly differently, Clements notes that verse 9 "ela borates upon
the initial interpretation of Amos's third vision" and "presents a fuller
explanation of its mea ning."47 He postulates that in the earliest layer in 7:7-8,
Amos predicted a nonspecific catastrophe. A later author, mindful of the
instability caused by the overthrow of the Jehu dynasty, wrote 7:9 in a n attempt
to a nchor the original vision acco unt to a historical event and to draw out its
fuller mea ning.48
A scholarly minority treat Amos 7:7-9 and 8:1-3 as original textual units.
Niditch, for example, sees no need to exclude 7:9 from the pericope on thematic
or structural grounds or on grounds related to content. As a result, she interprets
all of 7:8b-9 as one divine oracle which explains the object which Amos saw in
his vision. 49 According to Niditch, God's word is revealed in verse 8b and
reemphasized in verse 9. 50 The symbol of the plumb-line is reused and nua nced
by the divine oracle in verse 8b in order to reveal its deeper meaning. The theme
of judgement, in turn, is reemphasized in verse 9. 51 Likewise, she regards Amos
8:2b, 3 together as God's explanation of the objects seen by the seer in his
vision. 52 Along similar lines, Gese argues that there is no thematic contradiction
between 7:9 and 8:3 respectively and the preceding vision account. R ather they
serve to put the threat in concrete terms.53 Hayes states that in both Amos 7:9
45 Ibid ., 143-46.
46 Siegfried Bergler, '''Auf der M auer-auf dem Altar': Noch einmal die Visionen des
Amos," VT 50 (2000): 448; J akob Wohrle, Die ftiihen Sammlungen des Zwolfprophetenbuches:
Entstehung und Komposition, BZAW 360 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2006), 102. Wohrle singles out
Amos 7:1-8 and 8:1-2 as the four original vision reports. H e treats Amos 7:9 as a linking
verse (pp. 110, 242-43), and argu es that Amos 8:3 belongs with the following Amos 8:4-
14 (p . 105). See also Peter Riede, Vom Erbarmen zum Gericht: Die Visionen des Amosbuches (A.m
7-9*) und ihr literature- und traditionsgeschichtlicher Zusammenhang, WMANT 120 (Neukirchen-
Vluyn: Neukirchener Verlag, 2008), 157-68; H adjiev, Composition and Redaction, 78-79,
97- 98; R adine, Amos in EmergentJudah, 38- 39, and Behrens, Visionsschilderungen, 78-88,89,
102.
47 Ronald E. Clements, "Amos and the Politics of Israel," in Storia e tradizioni di Israeli.
Festschrift J.A . Soggin, ed. D aniele Garrone and Felice Israel (Brescia: Paideia, 199 1), 49-
64; repr. in Old Testament Prophecy: From Oracles to Canon, ed. Ronald E. Clements
(Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1996), 25.
48 Ibid ., 28, 32- 34.
49 Niditch, Symbolic Vision , 22-23 .
50 Ibid ., 27.
51 Ibid., 28.
52 Ibid., 37.
53 H artmut Gese, "Komposition bei Amos," in Congress Volume Vienna 1980, ed . John A.
Emerton, VTSup 32 (Leiden, Brill, 198 1),78-83.
77ze Vision Report Genre 89
and 8:3, YHVVH "spells out the consequences of the vision's imagery," yet he
treats 7:8b-9 and 8:2b-3 as internally coherent textual units. 54 Paul likewise
maintains that the "poetic description" of the forthcoming destructive
punishment in Amos 7:9 and 8:3 is integral to the text. Thus these verses are not
later interpolations.55 Along similar lines, '!\Tood interprets 7:7-9 and 8:1-3 as
two internally coherent pericopes56
In my view, it makes exegetical sense to distinguish between 7:7-8 and 9
and between 8: 1-2 and 3 insofar as verses 9 and 3 each provides an additional
layer of interpretation to the original vision account which precedes them. It is,
however, not strictly necessary to postulate different authorship. '!\Te might
rather be dealing with the same author. He originally saw and interpreted the
third and the fourth vision. At a later point, he realized its full historical
significance or, alternatively, wished to elaborate further on the repercussions of
God's judgement, perhaps for rhetorical effect.
Turning to Amos's fifth vision account (9: 1-4), we are actually dealing with
the same, interpretative relationship between the visual image and the ensuing
divine oracle. The link between the image of the altar in verse lau and the
message of the ensuing oracle in verses laB-4 is opaque. Notably, the words n~m
and Y:lJ, central to the image in verse 1au, are never mentioned in the
subsequent oracle. '!\Te appear to have the report of what Amos saw, together
with the report of God's words which sought to explicate the meaning of the
image seen. It is significant to note, however, that the divine elucidation is one
possible explanation of the visual imagery. It is definitely not the only feasible one.
The image in itself is meaningless or, expressed more positively, multivalent. No
reader would have batted an eye-lid, had God delivered a different oracle. At the
same time, it is reasonable to assume that verse 1au never existed independendy
from (at least parts of) the ensuing oracle.
As to the text-historical rela tionship between the fifth vision account and the
preceding four ones, there is no scholarly consensus. For a recent discussion of
the matter, see the survey by HadjievY Hadjiev himself argues that Amos 9: 1-4
forms a single textual unit,58 and he demonstrates that there is no thematic
discontinuity between the four preceding accounts and the one in Amos 9: [-4.
54 John H . Hayes, Amos the Eighth-Century Prophet: His Times and His Preaching (Nashville,
TN: Abingdon, 1988), 199, 206, 208. See also Aaron W. Park, TIe Book if Amos as
Composed and Read in Antiquity, StBibLit 37 (New York: Lang, 2001 ), 95-96, who treats
7:8b-9 and 8:2b-3 as the speech part of the vision report, subdivided into two parts:
punishment (vv. 8b / 2b) and substantiation of punishment (vv. 9 / 3).
55 Shalom M . Paul, A Commentary on the Book if Amos, Hermeneia (Minneapolis: Fortress,
1991 ), 224 (including footnote 21 ).
56 Joyce L. Rilett Wood, Amos in Song and Book Culture, lSOTSup 337 (Sheffield: Sheffield
Academic, 2002), 38-43.
57 Hadjiev, Composition and Redaction, 60-61.
58 Ibid ., 62-65.
90 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
In addition, although there are significa nt differences between the two sets of
texts, nothing precludes shared authorship. He concludes that Amos 7-9 is based
on an original five-pa rt vision report found in Amos 7: 1-8; 8: 1-2; 9: 1-4.59 From
a different perspective, R adine m aintains that all the five vision accounts are
integral to the earliest layer of the book of Amos. 60
ZECHARIAH
As in the case of Amos's first two vision accounts, Zechariah's second account
(2: ]-4) must be read as a whole in order to m ake sense. Unless read in
conjunction with verse 4, it is not possible to comprehend the message of the
acco un t. Further, from a syntactical perspective, it is preferable to treat this
speech as being uttered by the Interpreting Angel and not by YHWH. As to the
seventh vision account in Zech 5:5-]] , it contains no divine speech a nd thus falls
outside the p a rameters of this enquiry. In the remaining six acco unts, however,
there are two good reasons to distinguish between the visionary and the oracular
material on redaction-critical grounds: (]) the vision report m akes sense on its
own, and (2) the oracular material reinterprets and modifies the message of the
vision report. The message of the final text thus communicates a new message
that is different from the message of its earliest layer.
First There are good reasons to differentiate between the vision account
v l SlQn (vv. 8-11 ), the initial angelic/divine words (vv. 12-1 3), and the later
added oracular material. Read on its own, the first vision account
provides a glimpse of the entrance to the Divine Council. YHvVH's
equine servants have just returned from their reconnaissance trips across
the earth and they report to the Angel of YHWH that the whole earth is
at peace. The material in vv. 12-1 3, 14-17 do not relate to the visual
imagery of the vision at all. Instead they expand on and/or modify
primarily the oral statement in v. II. Verses 12-14aa (and probably also
v. 17a j3-bj3)61 reinterpret the last statement (v. II ) abou t the world-wide
peace.62 The divine oracles in Zech I: 14-16 furth er build upon v. II , as
well as on the first layer of interpretation (vv. 12-14aa, 17a j3-bj3) and
spell out their historical implications.
59 Ibid ., 65-77.
60 R adine, Amos in Emergent Judah, 37- 38.
61 Cf. WCihrle, Frilhe Sammlungen, 326- 32 .
62 Cf. Holger Delkurt, Sacharjas Nachtgesichte: Zur Aufoahme und Abwandlung prophetischer
Traditionen, BZAW 302 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2000), 55-56.
77ze Vision Report Genre 91
Third There are good reasons to differentiate between the vision account
VISIOn (vv. 5-8a), the initial angelic/divine words (v. 8b), and the later added
oracular material (v. 9). R ead on its own, the third vision account speaks
about measuring J erusalem. The oracular material in vv. 8b and 9
provides additional information about the future situation in J eru salem or,
as J eremias suggests, corrects the message of the vision account concerning
his plans for J eru salem. While the visionary impression in v. 6 betrays the
hope of a steady plan and of safety behind walls, the oracle speaks of an
increase of population and offuture freedom and peace.63
Fourth There are good reasons to differentiate between the vision account
VISIOn (vv. 1-5), the initial angelic/divine words (vv. 6-7), and the later added
oracular material (vv. 8-10). R ead on their own, vv. 1-5 describe how
Joshua is made fit to perform the duties of the High Priest. The oral
statement of the Angel of YHWH in vv. 6-7 interprets the preceding visual
scene and , by assigning tasks toJoshua, seeks to give it practical relevance.
The oracles in vv. 8a, 9 likewise explain the actions in vv. 1-5 as they
connect Joshu a's cleansing with the Day of Atonement. The even later
material in vv. 8b and 10 transforms the original oracle from a political
and cui tic message into an eschatological prediction. 64
Fifth There are good reasons to differentiate between the vision account
VISIOn (vv. 1-6aa, lOb-14) and the later added oracular material (vv. 6af3-lOa).
Read on its own, the fifth vision account speaks of God's omnipotence
and omniscience, symbolized by the lamp-stand, the seven eyes (God's
scouts), and the two olive trees (God's divine servants).65 The two oracles
in Zech 4:6af3-10a interpret the surrounding vision account. In particular,
they identifY one of the "sons of oil" in v. 14 with Zerubbabel, and they
encourage the reader to und erstand the image of the lamp-stand as
symbolizing the temple.
Sixth There are good reasons to differentiate between the vision account
VISIOn (vv. 1-2), the initial angelic explanation (v. 3), and the later added
oracular material (v. 4). R ead on their own, vv. 1-3 identify the scroll as
the curse which is currently in the process of going out in order to deal
with the thief and the perjurer who as yet are unpunished. The
concluding oracle in v. 4 changes the perspective from present to past (:1'nKln:1,
perfect), it adds details about the divine origin of the scroll/curse (:1'n Kln:1,
"I have sent it forth") , and it clarifies that "those swearing" (17:lillJ:1 '7:11, v. 3)
have in fact committed perjury (1j1ill'7 '~ill:l17:lillJ:1, v. 4).
COMPARISON
When we explore the relationship in Amos 7-8 a nd Zech 1-6 between (I) the
acco unt of the visual image, (2) the explanation of this imagery offered by the
divine being responsible for showing the image, a nd (3) YHWH's concluding
speech, we encounter significant affinity in terms of both structure a nd exegetical
relationship. First, Amos's third a nd fourth vision account share the same form
as Zecha riah's first, third, fourth, and sixth vision acco unt. In all six cases, we
have a four-part structure:
This basic structure appears in modified forms also in Zecharia h 's fifth and
eighth vision account. While these accounts do not contain any initial
explanation of the visual scene, the imbedded (fifth account) and the concluding
(eighth account) divine speeches reinterpret the visual scene to which they are
attached .
These results, in turn, show that form-critical a nd redaction-critical
considerations must go ha nd-in-ha nd. To note that most biblical vision reports
in their final form contain a divine oracle and, on that basis, to conclude that the
divine oracle forms a n integral pa rt of the vision report, or even that it is a
defining feature of the genre of vision reports, does not show the whole picture.
'I\T e need also to explore the purpose of this divine oracle. This divine oracle, in
both Amos's and Zecha ria h 's vision accounts, reinterprets either the visionary
66 Cf. Michael H . Floyd, Minor Prophets, vol. 2, FOTL 22 (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,
2000), 401, and Henning G. Reventlow, "Tradition und Aktualisierung in Sacharjas
siebentem Nachtgesicht Sach 6,1-8," in Alttestamentlicher Glaube und biblische 77zeologie:
Festschrift jiir Horst Dietrich PreujJ, ed . Jutta Hausmann and Hans-Jurgen Zobel (Stuttgart:
Kohlhammer, 1992), 188-89.
77ze Vision Report Genre 93
scene and! or the initial explanation of the scene . Furthermore, not every vision
report contains a divine oracle, as attested by Amos's first and second account
a nd by Zecha riah's second and seventh account. 'l\Te thus cannot speak of one
basic vision-report-form that all vision reports in the Hebrew Bible share.
Instead, there are multiple vision-report-forms, most of which feature one or
more interpretative oracles but some of which do not.
JEREMIAH 1 AND 24
The three vision reports in Jeremia h (1; 24) present interesting comparative
cases:
The first vision report in J er 1: 11-12 has a similar form to Amos's first and
second account (Amos 7:1-3,4- 6). They present an image and the immediate
expla nation of that image.
The form of the second vision report in J er 1: 13-1 9 differs from the first
one. Instead it resembles the form of Amos's third a nd fourth vision account in
that there a re multiple divine expla nations of the same scene.67 The image of the
pot, the opening of which faces away from north ( ;'J1~::l 'J~7J l'J~l, i. e. towards the
south), emphasizes the threat of danger. In response, God offers several
interpretations. The divine oracle in verse 14 decla res, in line with the image,
that evil will break out from the north upon all the inha bita nts of land (i.e. ,
Juda h). The following verses 15-16 shift the focus sligh tly from Judah's fate to
that of the kingdoms of the north. The focus shifts again m verses 17-19 to
Jeremiah's prophetic role in this matter. In a sense, the oracular sayings in verses
15-16, 17-19 add information to God's initial speech in verse 14. This
complementary character is not necessarily a sign of different and! or later
authorship; rather it highlights the task of the oracles to exemplify, to render in
concrete terms, and furthermore also to nuance the meaning of the initial
visionary image. For instance, verse 15a, though its use of the term 7:1 /'11n~tzm
rm7IJIJ ;'1Jl~~, is suggestive of a threat from the northern kingdom Israel, while
verse 16b makes it clear that the threat from the north in verses 13-14 in fact
constitutes the attack of the Babylonians. It is possible that verse 15a forms one
layer of interpretation of the visionary image, while verses 15b-16 form a
second, later one, and verses 17-19 yet another one. 68
The third vision report inJer 24 attests to yet another type of vision-report-
form . It features only one explanation of the visual imagery, yet this explanation
stretched across six verses. In this respect, the vision report in Jer 24 brings
Amos's fifth vision account to mind: one image and one extended and internally
coherent explanation of that imagery. Verses 5-7 present the interpretation of
the good grapes, while verses 8-10 present the corresponding interpretation of
the bad grapes. 69
CONCLU SION
After surveying the two sets of vision reports in the Book of the Twelve, and also
comparing them with the set of three vision reports in Jeremiah, we are m a
position to draw some conclusions.
68 Cf. William L. Holladay, J eremiah, vol. 1: A Commentary on the Book if the Prophet J eremiah:
Chapters 1-25, Hermeneia (philadelphia: Fortress, 1986), 23-25 .
69 Ibid ., 655-56.
77ze Vision Report Genre 95
gradual growth of a given vision report. Rather, they need to focus more on the
interpretative relationship between the visual imagery and the ensuing oracles.
On the positive side, form-critical considerations can shed significant light
upon the impact that a vision report has upon its readers. The different types of
vision-report-forms influence the readers of the final form in distinct ways. Put
succinctly, a vision report without a concluding oracle will inevitably be read
differendy than a vision report with a concluding oracle. Fewer oracles will result
in a more polyvalent final text, while a series of oracles will restrict the message
of the final text to one or more interpretations and also anchor it to specific
historical contextsJo For example, Zechariah's seventh vision account (Zech 5:5-
11), which does not attest to a concluding oracle, is open-ended insofar as it can
be interpreted in many different ways. A brief glance at the history of
interpretation reveals a staggering lack of consensus. Does the seventh vision
speak of social justice or idolatry? Is the ephah or the woman inside it its salient
symbol? Does the ephah symbolize ommsCience or guilt, and whose
omniscience! guilt does it speak of? These are merely some of the many
questions that exegetes have asked of Zechariah's seventh vision accountJI In
contrast, as discussed above, most readers of Zechariah's fifth vision account
(Zech 4) will intuitively identify one of the two "sons of oil" (Zech 4: 14) with
Zerubbabel whom the oracular material in Zech 4:6aj3-10a refers to by name.
Expressed differently, the two oracles in verses 6aj3-10a control the readers'
interpretation of the images in the surrounding vision account and connect its
message to the sixth century BeE. Moreover, the interpretations of the vision
account found in the oracular material are treated as authoritative in the final
form of the text. '!\Then readers approach a textual unit which consists of vision
account + oracles, they expect a certain degree of cohesion.
Turning from the realm of readers to the realm of authors!redactors, the
people responsible for the text had a choice whether to present the vision report
on its own or accompanied by a series of oracles. Given the scarcity of the vision-
report-form without an adjacent oracle, I suggest that the addition of an
interpretative layer to any given vision accounts may have been a standard and
accepted procedure . I might even go so far as to say that a later redactor would
have understood it to be his obligation to add one or more interpretative oracles
to any given vision account, in this way using the existing vision account as the
hook upon which to hang the divine oracle that he wanted to convey.
Zechariah and His Visions: An Exegetical Study if Zechariah's Vision Report, LHBOTS 605
(London: T&T Clark, 2015).
5
Carol]. Dempsey
1 See Hermann Gunkel, The Legends if Genesis, trans. W. H . Carruth (Chicago: Open
Court Publishing, 1901 ); Ehud Ben Zvi, "The Prophetic Book: A Key Form Of Prophetic
Literature," in The Changing Face if Form Criticism for the Twenty-First Century, ed. Marvin A.
Sweeney and Ehud Ben Zvi (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2003), 276-97; and Martin J.
Buss, The Changing Face if Form Criticism' A Relational Approach, ed . N. Stipe, HBM 18
(Sheffield: Sheffield Phoenix, 20 I 0).
- 97 -
98 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Unlike classic form criticism, the new form criticism takes as its starting
point the text as it stands. This newer way has no interest in attempting to
determine when various prophecies were originally written down. Newer form
critics look at when a book was likely to have been collected and edited into a
literary whole. Only then do these critics consider how a text or book functioned
in relation to a theoretical community that, most likely, received, reread, and
recopied a text. The new form criticism focuses on not only the readers and
rereaders of the text but also the social settings in which texts would have been
read.
Ben Zvi has chosen his rereaders of the text to be primarily those living
during postexilic times, specifically during the Persian period, when the J udeans
were resettling in the land. Ben Zvi, however, understands the texts' rereaders to
be many different communities down through history such as the Early Church
during the time of Paul, the church fathers and others during the Patristic Era,
and also contemporary communities today who may tend to reread the texts
from vanous postmodern perspectives which would include feminist,
liberationist, and postcolonial perspectives, among others. With Ben Zvi, this
study explores how the various woes and promises would have functioned
among the ancient rereaders of these texts during the Persian Period, but then
the study stretches the thought of Ben Zvi to include how the various texts
function for contemporary rereaders today. The methodological approach to
this study is holistic and synchronic; the orientation to the text is primarily
literary. 2
New form criticism takes into account the work of classic form criticism and
moves it forward. One element common to classic and new form criticism is the
study of genre, especially with regard to prophetic literature. Classic form
criticism talked about the forms and genre of prophetic speech; new form
criticism discusses the forms and genre of prophetic texts and prophetic
literature. Classic form criticism focused on diachronic issues and thus identified
woe proclamations as authentic prophecy and weal proclamations as later
additions. This study stretches the traditional understanding of woe and weal
and now understands woe to be anything that casts a judgment or a curse, and
thus, anything that creates a negative and foreboding message that does or does
not necessarily begin with '1;'. Weal is anything that expresses promise and sheds
a positive light on a situation. New form criticism looks at woe and weal
2 For a full discussion on the development of form criticism see Colin M . Toffelmire,
"Form Criticism" in Dictionary if the Old Testament: Prophets, ed. Mark J. Boda and J.
Gordon McConville (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity and IVP Academic, 2012), 257-
71; see also Ehud Ben Zvi, "Prophetic Book," 276-97; Michael H. Floyd, "Basic Trends
in the Form-Critical Study of Prophetic texts," in Sweeney and Ben Zvi, Changing Face if
Form Criticism, 298-311.
Harrowing Woes and Comforting Promises 99
3 For a more traditional and narrower discussion on the genre and function of woes in
prophetic literature, see W . j anzen, iV/ouming Cry and Woe Oracle, BZAW 125 (Berlin: de
Gruyter, 1972); Richard J. Clifford, TIe Use if Hoy in the Prophets, " CBQ 28 (1966): 458-
64; james G. Williams, "The Alas-Oracles of the Eighth Century Prophets," HUCA 38
(1967) 75-91; and Erhard S. Gerstenberger, "The Woe-Oracles of the Prophets," ]BL 81
(1962): 249-63 among others. T hese authors and texts consider woe peri copes to be only
those that begin with '1:1.
4 A classic text that has not only influenced form criticism but also isolated some of the
basic forms of prophetic speech in prophetic literature is the work by Claus Westermann,
Basic Forms if Prophetic Speech, trans. Hugh C. White (Louisville: Westminster john Knox,
199 1).
100 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
This study engages the thought of the new form criticism and takes as its
starting point the texts as they stand in their "final form " of the prophetic books.
With Ben Zvi, the study accepts that the texts are polyvalent, and that a very
small intellectual elite group were involved in the composition, editing, reading,
rereading, study, preservation, a nd transmission of these various prophetic texts
a nd the books in which these texts appear. Ben Zvi identifies this elite group as
the postexilic literati of Achaemenid Yehud who were probably living and
working inJerusalem.5
In addition to being culturally elite, this group would have had considerable
religious and social authority. They produced documents, namely the prophetic
books, that claimed to be "the word of YHVVH" to enable themselves and later
rereaders of the prophetic texts and books to understand their own past, present,
a nd future in light of its divine revelation, this "word ofYHWH."6 Ben Zvi also
m akes clear that the basic genre of the prophetic books is revelation, a n
understanding that guides the study of the selected texts in this essay. This
understanding of prophetic literature as "authoritative" served a n important role
in building and defining community and identity then and nowJ
For the sake of m aking this essay accessible to a wide readership, the study
uses the New Revised Standard translation of the Bible. Texts are approached
synchronically a nd read holistically. In this way we discover that a ncient
prophetic texts that once informed and shaped ancient readers and communities
still have the potential to be instructive and transformative for later and present
day rereaders whose own insights and cultural realities pose new questions to the
prophetic texts a nd books. This helps to move the entire prophetic tradition
forward with new understandings that keep prophetic literature prophetic a nd
revelatory today and deep into the future.
HARROWING WOES
'I\Tithin the Book of the Twelve, a series of woes appears. These woes are
directed not only toward Israel a nd Juda h but also toward other nations as
symbolized by the word against Nineveh. Collectively the woes reveal the
people's various transgressions, their abuse of power, and nations' desire for
supremacy on the geopolitical landscape. Life in ancient Israel a nd life lived in
the context of the ancient Near Eastern world had its m a ny challenges. The
woes reflect and reveal some of Israel's past experiences. They teach invalua ble
lessons to Israel's postexilic communities who read a nd reread these texts while
trying to reshape and redefine their lives after the trauma of the Exile. For later
5 See Ben Zvi, "Prophetic Book," 294-95; Floyd, "Basic Trends," 303.
6 Floyd, "Basic Trends," 303.
7 Ben Zvi, "Prophetic Book," 296; Floyd, "Basic Trends," 304.
Harrowing Woes and Comforting Promises 101
rereaders of the texts, the woes continue to generate new lessons as the texts are
read in new social, political, and religious contexts a nd times. Thus, the woes
function as warnings and lessons and provide readers with insights into how life
should be lived in right relationship with God a nd with one another.
The book of Amos describes life in the first half of the eighth century BeE.
Israel's king at that time was Jeroboa m II (786-746 BeE). Judah's king was
U zzia h (783-742 Be E). During Jeroboam II's reign, Egypt, Assyria, a nd
Babylon were not yet formidable nations or threats to Israel. Jeroboa m II had
successfully subdued the Arameans who were Israel's most powerful enemy (2
Kgs 14:25-28). At this time, no strife existed between Israel a nd Judah.
According to the world within the text, Israel during the first half of the eighth
century BeE enjoyed a time of prosperity that brought with it, unfortunately,
the exploitation of the poor and defenseless by the wealthy a nd the powerful.
With a new economic order came excessive wealth for some Israelites, which, in
turn, led to a leisured upper class, many of whom became involved in decadent
lifestyles (2:8; 4: 1; 6: 1-6). Judicial corruption also took roo t (5:7-12) along with
religious hypocrisy. Both woe proclamations capture the dynamic relationship
that existed between God a nd God's people, and these procla mations teach
invaluable lessons.
Two harrowing woe poems found in the book of Amos are Amos 5: 18-27
a nd 6: 1-14. Both proclamations speak of divine judgment that is a bout to befall
the people of Israel because of their egregious injustices.
Amos 5: 18-27, which focuses on the condemnation of the cultic leadership
of Israel, is one of the most gut-wrenching texts in the entire book of Amos.
Verses 18-20 describe the Day of the Lords as a foreboding one filled with
terror. The rhetorical question posed in verse 20 highlights the dreadful day.
Verses 21-24 describe divine dissatisfaction with the Israelites' rituals (v. 21 ).
Moreover, God rejects the people's burnt offerings, grain offerings, and well-
being offerings (v. 22). God demands that all song a nd music to be silenced (v.
23) a nd then calls for justice a nd righteousness to roll down like waters a nd like
a n ever-flowing strea m , respectively (v. 24). The speech concludes with a threat
to exile the people to a place beyond D a m ascus. Because of their hypocrisy-
their empty religious rituals that did not bespeak of right relationship and ethical
8 T he D ay of the Lord (YHWH) is a motif that appears often throughout the prophetic
literature (c£ Isa 2; Ezek 30: Joel 2; Zeph 1:14-18; 2: 1-3). For further discussion on this
motif, especially as it appears within Amos 5: 18-27, see M arvin A. Sweeney, The Twelve
Prophets, Berit Olam (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2000), 238-39.
lO2 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
9 In his article '''In God We Trust?' The Challenge of the Prophets" (Ex Aud 24 [2008]:
18-33), R. W. L. Moberly makes the point that "Integrity in public life is the sine qua non
of true worship" (p. 22). Here, ethical praxis is linked to worship. Israel lacked not only
ethical praxis in the social sphere but also fidelity to God in the religious sphere. Thus,
the people stand condemned by their God.
Harrowing Woes and Comforting Promises 103
indulgence and decadence on the part of a privileged few can lead to the demise
of an entire community and everything that it holds as sacred. The woes also
shed light on the function of a prophetic text and prophetic persona, both of
which have the power (1) to awaken people out of their self-complacency; (2) to
point out the corruption that exists within the human condition; and (3) to
communicate YHVVH's sentiments toward members of the community who are
guilty of injustices. Finally, the two woes offer an instruction on the relationship
that needs to exist between worship and ethical praxis, reveal the economic
disparity that existed in the first half of the eighth century BCE make clear how
the abuse of power and wealth can lead to the demise of a community, and
underscore the point that Israel's God will not tolerate injustice. Consequences
will occur for the failure to live in right relationship with God and with one
another.
For those who would have read these texts in postexilic times when Israel
was redefining itself as a community and reestablishing its relationship with God
and with each other, Amos 5:18-27 and 6:1-14 point the way to a life of
wholeness and holiness lived in right relationship. The day of the Lord is, then, a
time when justice rolls down like waters and righteousness like an ever-flowing
stream, when worship and ethical praxis go hand in hand, and when economic
prosperity does not lead to self-indulgence and aggrandizement that turns justice
into poison and the fruit of righteousness into wormwood (6: 12). Thus, these two
woes serve as a reminder to the elite within Israel's postexilic community (and
later communities), that they have ethical responsibilities as members of a
community called to be holy like the Holy One of Israel who desires justice and
righteousness for all (5:24).
For contemporary rereaders of the text today, Amos 5:18-27 and 6:1-14
invite people to work for transformation of a global economy where the rich are
getting richer and the poor getting poorer, and where some who are wealthy,
with little concern for the needs of others, are becoming richer at the expense of
the poor. Finally, these two texts reveal to readers then and now that the fate of
the human community often rests in the hands of the community itself,
especially in the hands of the powerful and wealthy who can either help
transform the human condition or bring about its demise. One needs only to
ponder the peril of the planet today to understand the full import of these two
timeless texts that condemn the self-serving, self-centered lifestyles of the past
that, unfortunately, continue to be part of today's global reality.
The book of Habakkuk reflects the historical times of the seventh century BCE
when the southern kingdom Judah and its inhabitants stood on the brink of ruin
and exile and when the fall ofJerusalem and the destruction of the Temple were
imminently on the horizon. During this time, Judah's greatest threat was the
lO4 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Babylonia ns whom God, ironically, roused up against the Judahites (1:6). The
Babylonia ns became God's mea ns of chastising Judah for its injustices that
included greed, extortion, theft, embezzlement, debauchery, a nd idolatry.
H a bakkuk 2:6-20 contains five woes. Each of the woes offers a foreboding
message . The recipients of these woes a re not clear from the text. Possibilities
include the Ba bylonia ns, Juda hites, other foreign countries, or the wicked in
general. The first four woes present a picture of how some people have used
their power to benefit themselves at the expense of others (2:6-17). The fifth woe
(2: 18-20) condemns idolatry and is thus differen t from the other four woes.
The five woes appear in a taunt song (vv. 6b-20).10 The first woe is a word
of doom for robbers, thieves, embezzlers, and deceivers (vv. 6-8). The second
woe is doom for exploiters and extortionists (vv. 9-11 ). The third woe condemns
evil and violence (vv. 12-14). The fourth woe casts judgment on debauchery (vv.
15-17). 'J\Tithin this fourth woe, verse 16 uses a cup as a powerful metaphor. No
doubt it is the cup of God's wrath (see Obadiah). Iniquity will not be the final
word; justice will prevail. The fifth woe is different. People a re upbraided for
their trust in idols (vv. 18-20). Undergirding the expression of justice is the law
of retaliation, lex talionis. G uilty parties will suffer the same ha rm they have
incurred. The taunt song, in which these five woes appear , closes on an
explanatory note: Israel's God is Lord of creation a nd history. This God is the
ultimate power of the universe before whom all should remain silent in the
presence of such awesomeness that resides in the Temple-in the heavenly
a bode a nd in Jerusalem, both of which a re the "center" of all that exists. I I Here
silence is a n expression of profound respect.
10 The notion of a "taunt" (Hab 2:6a) usually refers to a song or poetic composition (see,
e.g. , Num 21 :27-30; I Kgs 4:32; Ps 49:4; 78:2).
II The call for silence in the presence of God is also found in Ps 46: 10; Zeph 1: 7; and
Zech 2:13.
Harrowing Woes and Comforting Promises 105
gold and silver plated creations are devoid of Spirit and life and are thus nothing
more than the mere artifacts made by human hands.
For those who would have read this text in postexilic times, Hab 2:6-20
clarifies how power and wealth are to be used, namely, for building up the
common good which implies not taking advantage of other people or nations
even when the opportunity arises or is with in one's power to do so. Readers are
also encouraged and challenged to remain faithful to the God of Israel who
remains at the center of all life-the still point that has the capacity to draw all
into that abiding Presence which no other god can do.
For contemporary readers and rereaders of the text today, the five woes in
Hab 2:6-20 serve as reminders that justice will prevail over injustice, that those
who have achieved success through injustice will themselves become objects of
derision. Rereaders learn that violence stands condemned down through the
ages and that trusting in any kind of idols is foolish because in the end, all comes
to naught.
Having looked at texts that feature harrowing woes in a pericope, focus now
shifts to those passages that contain both a woe and a promise. \l\Tithin the Book
of the Twelve, and particularly in the books of Micah and Nahum, both the
genres of woe and comfort are part of the books' literary fabric and help to flesh
out the prophetic tradition. Even though a people may experience pain and
suffering and live under threat, hope remains alive through divine promise.
Restoration, liberation, and salvation are the final word and not destruction or
annihilation. Harrowing woes give way to comforting promises that continue to
unfold and move toward fulfillment down through the ages, in new times and
circumstances, with new lessons still to be taught and learned by readers and
rereaders of this ancient, ageless, and wondrous text.
As a literary work, the book of Micah can be divided into three sections: Mic 1-
3, 4-5, and 6-7. The book describes the Israelite community during the latter
half of the eighth century BCE during the reigns of Jotham (742-735 BCE),
Ahaz (735-715 BCE), and Hezekiah (715-686 BCE). Even though the "story" of
Mic 1-7 makes the prophet's career seem expansive, the prophet's activity was
probably confined to the last quarter of the century during Hezekiah's reign.
The book itself reflects a period in Israel's and Judah's history that was plagued
by Assyrian military invasions. These invasions began with the Syro-Ephraimite
War (734-732 BCE) and continued down through Sennacherib's invasion of
Judah in 701 BCE. In the midst of such unrest, Judah did experience religious
reforms and an economic revolution. These changes allowed the wealthy
lO6 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
12 For further discussion on Mic 2: 1-2 and the topic of land, see Marvin A. Sweeney,
"Micah," in The Twelve Prophets, 359-60. Additionally, the Torah forbids the coveting of
land (see Exod 20:17; 34:24; Deut 5:21 ).
13 According to Israelite social law, if a cloak is taken in pawn from a neighbor, then it
must be restored before sunset since it would be needed as a covering during the night
(see Exod 22:26-27).
Harrowing Woes and Comforting Promises 107
provide no resting place for the guilty. The land has become unclean, defiled by
the guilty party's wickedness (see Lev 18:24-25). The prophecy closes on a note
of sarcasm, which is God's final response to the objection raised by the
opponents in verse 6 who do not want to hear an honest word proclaimed.
The message changes in verses 12-13 which is a comforting promise, a
word of future salvation. These verses promise divine care to the exiled ones of
the remnant of 'Jacob. " Here 'Jacob" does not refer to the northern kingdom;
instead, 'Jacob" refers to Judah as the remnant ofIsrael.
For the literati composers ofMic 2:1-13, these two genres serve (1) to reveal
to readers and later rereaders the function of the prophet and prophetic
literature which was not only to expose transgression but also to provide hope;
(2) to show that hope did a nd does exist for those who remain(ed) faithful; (3) to
make known to prima ry and later readers that God is ultimately the one in
power who, as king over all, did a nd will continue to lead the people out of exile
(see Isa 45: 1-7).
For those who would have read this text in postexilic times, Mic 2: 1-13 a nd
especially verses 1-5 and verses 12-1 3, functions as a n instruction: if one chooses
to use power inappropriately, then one more powerful, namely the God ofIsrael,
will assert divine power to destroy all that has been gained unjustly. Readers,
a nd especially those a mong the elite social a nd economic classes, are forewarned
a bout re tributive justice: what goes around comes around. Furthermore, they
are instructed in the reliability of God's word and lea rn that injustice will not be
tolerated. They are called to live a life of justice and righteousness- to respect
what belongs to others in the community, a nd if they enjoy positions of power,
then those positions are to be used to safeguard the property and well being of
others in the community so that all may live securely in the la nd a nd in right
relationship with their God whose promise to free those exiled has already been
partially fulfilled. The postexilic community themselves are the living testament
to the certainty of God's divine promise m ade centuries earlier. Finally, the woe
a nd promise reveal the world of the past, one that has been mired by
transgression, and the world of the future in the here and now, one that is full of
hope with life being lived in the presence of God.
For contemporary readers a nd rereaders of Mic 2: 1-13, the text becomes
a n instruction on huma n and divine power and how, in the end, justice on
behalf of the disenfranchised, inclusive of women a nd children, will ultimately
rule the day. Finally, the text reveals that divine promise of salvation a nd hope is
meant for those who have suffered unjustly at the hands of others. God does a nd
will act on behalf of those people who survive perilous situations. Israel's God is
a God of liberation who is both pastoral and regal a nd who remains faithful to
the divine word uttered. 14
Like the book of Micah, the book of Nahum contains both a woe (3:1-7) and a
promise (1: 12-15). The promise, however, occurs before the woe. The promise
concerns good news for Juda h; the woe, part of a la rger procla m ation (3: 1-17),
describes what is a bout to befall Nineveh, the primary concern of the book.
Nineveh falls to the Ba bylonians a nd the Medes in 612 BeE. The book as a
14 For furth er discussion on Mic 2:1-13, see Ehud Ben Zvi, Micah , FOTL 21b (Grand
15 On the use of'1:1 in this passage, Duane L C hristensen notes that "though hoy is the
GENRE, FUNCTION, AND INTENTION OF NAH 1:12-15 AND 3:1-7. The promise
a nd woe in the book of Nahum serve to advance the book's overarching theme,
na mely, that one nation is not to lift up a sword against another nation, a nd if
such a situation does occur, then the conquering nation will endure grave
consequences from Israel's God who is sovereign over all.
Through the use of these two genres, the literati composers of N ah 1: 12-15
a nd 3: 1-7 reveal to their readers that Judah's earlier suffering and loss were
divinely orchestrated (1: 12); that Israel's God was responsible for liberating
Juda h from its yoke and bonds; 18 a nd that any people who oppresses another
people will not be victorious. They will be a people forgotten, cut off, destined
for the grave, a nd considered worthless. A powerful people, once feared , will be
put to shame, treated with contempt, and brought low without any comfort. The
story of the demise a nd fall of Nineveh, the city of bloodshed, becomes a symbol
of depravity a nd the poster child for the strength of God's power.
For those who would have read Nah 1:12-15 a nd 3:1-7 in postexilic times,
the promise and the woe function as an instruction on God's sovereign power.
This God will not tolerate apostasy, idolatry, injustice of a ny kind, and especially
the inordinate use of power a nd politics by one people used to suppress a nother
people. The God of Israel will act on behalf of the oppressed to level the playing
field in an attempt to establish peace a mong the nations (cf. Isa 2:1-5; Mic 4:1-
5). The passages also function to remind the Juda hites and Israelites who are
reestablishing their community that even though they live under the threat from
other nations, they also live, ultimately, under divine promise which is being
fulfilled in their midst.
For contemporary readers a nd rereaders of Nah 1: 12-15 and 3: 1-7, the
texts point out the folly of the assertion of human power over others, and that
the quest for supremacy ultimately leads to he demise of a people a nd a nation.
Furthermore, even though a people a nd a nation m ay experience oppression at
the ha nds of another, such a n experience will not be one that lasts forever.
Liberation will come in time-a divine promise made and a prophetic word that
will come to pass, all symbolized by the demise of the great and powerful
"Nineveh."
17 For furth er discussion on the rich imagery in Nah 3: 1-7, see ibid . 442-44 and Michael
H . Floyd, "Nahum," in Minor Prophets, Part 2, FOTL 22 (Grand R apids: Eerdmans, 2000),
69-70.
18 The oppressor who had Jud ah in yoke and bonds may refer to either Assyria that
opposed Israel with the rod and staff (see Isa 10:5-34) or to Babylon (seeJer 27-28).
Harrowing Woes and Comforting Promises III
The superscription of the book of Zecharia h indicates that the book was set in
the second and fourth years of the reign of King D a rius of Persia (522-486
BCE). Similar to the historical times of Haggai, this timeframe is when the
construction of the second Temple had begun. The book presents an account of
Zechariah's visions concerning the significance of the temple's reconstruction
a nd points to a time when the corrupt shepherds, that is, the Persia n monarchs,
will be removed so that Israel's God can become sovereign over all nations, and
indeed, over the entire cosmos.
The book of Zecha ria h contains both words of woe and words of promise. 20
In Zech 7: 1-9:8, the interplay between woe and promise becomes apparent.
Zech 7:1-14 can be divided into two units: verses 1-7 and verses 8-14. In verses
1-7, Zecharia h poses a question a bout mourning and practicing abstinence that
has been practiced for many years past. The response that God gives to
Zechariah is a reminder that past fasts were self-centered a nd self-serving. Carol
L. Meyers and Eric M . Meyers rightly observe that:
The prophetic answer redirects the question. It is not a matter of should you or
shouldn't you fast. R ather, the issue is one of recognizing what that fasting and
its complement, the feasting, have accomplished in the seventy years. At this
critical moment, with local authority and quasi-autonomy being reestablished,
and with the seventy years of destruction nearly at an end , the emphasis on
awareness of continuity with the pre exilic state offers support and
encouragement to those for whom self-rule is without the revival of a D avidic
monarchy might be difficult to conceptualize and accept. The prophet thu s
reminds them that they have been behaving in certain public ways, to their own
benefit in sustaining community identity, even without dynastic rule or temple
focus. The people had inaugurated fasts in response to certain events. Yahweh
had not commanded the people to fast nor would he tell them to stop fasting:
God was not the beneficiary of such acts. 21
Verses 8-14 are la rgely a retrospective message of woe that recalls the plight of
those who have acted unjustly in the past. First a word of divine advice is offered
(vv. 8-10) followed by a divine statement of Judah's disobedience a nd God 's
punitive action against the unruly people. These two messages set the stage for
the promises that follow in Zech 8: 1-23.
19 With M arvin Sweeney, I read Zech 7:1-14:21 as a literary unit that contains the
"Pronouncements of Zechariah of which Zech 7: 1-9:8 is a part." See Sweeney,
"Zechariah," Twelve Prophets, 634-36.
20 See, e.g., Zech 9:9-1 5; 10:3-12; 13:7- 9 for additional words of promise.
21 See Carol L. Meyers and Eric M . Meyers Haggai, Zechariah 1-8, AB 25B (New Haven:
Yale University Press, 2004), 394.
112 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
GENRE, FUNCTION, AND INTENTION OF ZECH 7:1-9:8. For the literati who
composed Zech 7: 1-9:8, the genres of woe and promise served as an instruction
to help inform their postexilic readers of the text about how they should live
their lives. The texts also offer an instruction on the fullness of what was divinely
promised which included not only the rebuilding of the Temple but also the
restoration of Jerusalem, the land, covenant, and even the people themselves.
Through the use of promise, the composers of the text are able to assure their
readers that God's presence is among them and that God's intentions are being
communicated through the prophet whose word is to be taken authoritatively.
For those reading Zech 8: 1-1 7 in postexilic times, the promises contained in
these verses should become the motivating factor to live a life of justice and
righteousness as proscribed in verses 16-17. The promise of restoration also
communicates to them God's desire for "a new day" when divine chastisement
and punishment will be an experience of the past and not become an experience
of this new community being reconstituted. For contemporary readers and
rereaders of Zech 7: 1-9:8, the recalling of past experiences serve as a warning of
dire consequences when one does not live in right relationship with God and
with one another. The promises, however, shed light on how wondrous life can
be when a people, a community heeds the ways of God who longs to bless them
abundantly. 23
COMFORTING PROMISES
Having considered sample passages that contain both the woe and promise
genre, focus now shifts again but this time to comforting promises. Within the
Book of the Twelve, a series of promises complement the series of woes. These
promises offer readers then and now a sense of hope while revealing the ultimate
vision of the Divine that is for the restoration and transformation of all life on the
planet. As a genre, the promises served as reminders of God's fidelity to the
human condition and became sources of hope in the midst of trials and traumas.
For later readers and rereaders of the texts, the promises continue to be a source
of hope while challenging people to remember that the source of all life
continues to be present even when that Presence is least felt or experienced. We
have only to wait for our efforts to be brought to completion and the Divine
promise to be brought to fruition "on that day."
The rise of the Assyrian Empire in the mid-eighth century IS the historical
backdrop to the book of Hosea. The text reflects the time following the death of
Jeroboam II and the days just prior to the Assyrian assault in 735-732 BCE. The
book's primary focus is on the religious state of affairs of Israel and Judah. The
text also reveals that life during the mid-eighth century BCE was fraught with
idolatry, apostasy, and a myriad of transgressions.
The book of Hosea features two promises. The first one, Hos 1: 10-11,
appears between two judgment speeches against Israel (I :2-9 and 2: 1-13). Here
the countless or measureless "sand of the sea" is a common image for abundance
in the Old Testament (see, e.g., Gen 41:49;Josh 1l:4;Judg 7:12; 1 Sam 13:5; 1
Kgs 4:20).24 The second promise occurs toward the end of the book in Hos
14:4-7 and is situated between a divine plea (14: 1-3), a divine confession (14:8),
and the book's epilogue (14:9).
In the context of the book of Hosea as a whole, the first promise functions as
a word of hope and a reminder to the Israelites that all of the impending
disasters they are about to experience on account of their apostasy, idolatry, and
waywardness will not be the final lot of the community. Israel's God will not
break covenant. Israel's and God's estrangement from each other will eventually
be reversed, and someday a new kingdom will emerge, one that combines both
23 For an excellent synchronic discussion on Zech 9: 1-8, see Paul L. Reddit, Zechariah 9-
14, IECOT (Stuttgart: Kohlhammer, 2012).
24 See]. Andrew Dearman, The Book ifHosea, NICOT (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans), 104.
114 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
the northern kingdom Israel and the southern kingdom Judah. Covenant
renewal will happen.
The second promise, Hos 14:4-7, gives the people of the day a reason to
return to God (14: 1-3) and assures the people of God's tender love for them and
God's compassion that will become the impetus for their healing. Despite all of
the people's transgressions heard throughout the book of Hosea, God's people
are still desirable to their God and worthy of their God's enduring healing,
restorative love. Thus, these two promises are words of hope for people who are
soon to lose everything and serve as a word of encouragement to return to their
God, which is one of the book's central themes.
GENRE, FUNCTION, AND INTENTION OF HOS 1: 10-11 AND 14:4-7. Through the
use of these two promises, the literati who composed the book of Hosea reveal to
their readers the importance of remembering God's steadfast love despite
human waywardness. For later readers and rereaders of the text in postexi1ic
times and down through the centuries into contemporary times, these two
promises reveal who Israel's God was and is: the sustainer, nurturer, and
transformer of life who offers hope to all, who remains faithful to all, and who
heals and restores not only human life but also the natural world.
Most scholars date the composition of the book of Joel to postexilic times, a
period that involved many challenges and struggles for the returnees of the exile
who were now reconstituting their life in Judah. The book of Joel reflects two
importa nt events in the life of the community at this time: (1) the threat to the
land by the invasion of the locust (1:2-20) and (2) the threat to the community
itself by enemy invasion (2: 1-14). The rest of the text records God's response to
the people (Joel 2: 15-20); offers a word of reassurance to both nature and the
people (Joel 2:21-3:8); and records the prophet's call to the nations to gather for
judgment because Israel's God is about to carry out the divine promise to restore
the land and the nation (Joel 3:9-21 ).
Joel 2:18-32, part of two larger units (2:15-20 and 2:21-3:8) is a promise in
response to a divine call to have the people return (2:12-14) a nd the prophet's
call to lament (2: 15-1 7). The promise describes all the wonderful things that
God will do on behalf of the people, the land, the animals, and the fauna. The
grand promise is compelling that ends with the intended outpouring of God's
Spirit upon all flesh and the salvation of all who call upon God's name (2:28-32).
the spirit and will of the postexilic community and to reveal to them that in spite
of all threats, their God was in their midst and would respond positively to their
efforts of lament. The promise also teaches the value of remaining faithful to
God who in turn will remain faithful to the people . For the postexilic community
reading this text, the promise offers a foundation for their lives, a reason to
return to their God, a nd a hope for future days. The promise also reveals God's
graciousness and benevolence toward them-the faithful remnant-and the
na tural world, both living under the threat of invasion. For contemporary
readers and rereaders of Joel 2:18-32, the promise functions as a reminder that
even in the midst of terrifying threats to one's life and livelihood, God's promise
of sustainability and ongoing transformation of life through God's Spirit remains
constant.
The book of Zephaniah reflects the time of the Babylonian crisis just prior to the
fall ofJerusalem in 587 BCE. The overall tone of the book is foreboding with its
proclamation of judgment and imminent disasters (1:2-2: 15), its statement of
reproach against Jerusalem (3: 1-7), and its statement of impending punishment
and eventual purification of both the nations and God's people (3:8-13). Yet, the
book is not without a vision of hope, a word of promise (3: 14-20).
The last part of the book of Zephaniah is a promise (3: 14-20) that functions
as a word of hope, salvation, and restoration, to a people on the brink of exile
who are about to lose their land, their kingdom, their temple, and their God's
Holy City, Jerusalem. The God who condemned Judah and who is about to
make the J udahites suffer at the hands of an enemy nation, the Ba bylonia ns, will
in time remove disaster from among the people, will deal with the J udahites'
oppressors, and will return the people to their land and restore their fortunes.
The promise foreshadows the end of the Babylonian exile and the return of the
Juda hites to their land.
and trauma. Better days are on the horizon because the God of all remains in
the midst of all and will continue to act positively on their behalf. 25
According to its superscription, the book of H aggai is set in 520 BeE, the second
year of the reign of King Darius. This year marks the construction of the second
Temple in Jerusalem begun under Zerubba bel ben Shealtiel, governor ofJudah,
and Joshua ben J ehozadak, the high priest. The central focus of the book is the
building of the temple that the prophet H aggai insists is God's will. Two
significant promises that appear in the text are 2:10-19 and 2:20-23, among
others. These promises constitute the third and final part of the book. Haggai
2: 10-19 describes God's promise of fecundity to the land. Haggai 2:20-2 3
describes God's promise of kingship to Zerubbabel. In the context of the book as
a whole, these two promises function as the conclusion to the book. Hope is the
prophet's final word. Furthermore, the prophet is the one who, acting in accord
with God, has the task of bringing good news. Here the recipients of this good
news are the community members themselves (2: 19) and Zerubbabel (2:23).
Finally, these two promises delivered by H aggai further attest to the dialogic
relationship that God has with Haggai who acts in service if God's word (1: 1-
2:9).
GENRE, FUNCTION, AND INTENTION OF HAG 2:10-19 AND 2:20-2 3. For the
literati who used the genre of promise, H ag 2:10-19 and 2:20-2 3 enabled them
to communicate to the postexilic community that the prophet H aggai was
indeed doing and saying all that God had commanded him to do and say with
respect to the rebuilding of the Temple. These texts help to prove to the people
that God's word was divinely revealed to Haggai and is thus reliable, and that
the rebuilding of the Temple was divinely ordained. For those reading these
texts in postexilic times, these two promises function to confirm God 's active role
in the rebuilding of the Temple and that, in fact, this second Temple is an edifice
divinely willed and divinely inspired. The texts offer a word of hope: not only
will the temple be rebuilt but also the monarchy will be reestablished someday as
well. Both promises serve to move the Temple restoration project forward. The
promises also help to garner support from the community for this building
project. For contemporary readers and rereaders of these two texts, the promises
function to show that God's word can be a source of inspiration to move persons
25 For an excellent study on the book of Zephaniah, see Adele Berlin, Zephaniah, AB 25
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 2007). Berlin notes that Zeph 3:14-20, the last
section of the book, "marks a reversal of previous parts .... God the destructive warrior is
now the protector; the searching out for purposes of punishment turns into the gathering
in for renewal. Fortunes are restored" (p. 148).
Harrowing Woes and Comforting Promises 117
and a community forward, and that the spirit of God remains active, restorative,
and transformative independent of religious and political institutions.
CONCLUSION
Within the Book of the Twelve, the genres of woe and promise playa significant
role in the books in which they appear and in the life of the communities who
read a nd reread these texts in different contexts down through the ages. Each
woe and promise adds to the overall theme and intention of the various
prophetic books, and each woe and promise when heard in different contexts
offers insights into the ways and vision of God and what the divine hope is for all
people. Together, the woe and promise genres provide a window into the
dynamism of the human-divine relationship that existed in ancient Israel and
that continues to exist today. Seeing the woe and promise genres and texts
through the lens of the new form criticism allows readers and rereaders of the
text to appreciate and critique the times that the texts reflect, to see the ways in
which these texts functioned in different communities that read and reread
them, and to discover how these ancient texts can continue to take on a life of
their own in new contexts so that they can inform, instruct, challenge, and
nourish the lives of those who encounter their messages today.
Finally, reading these texts from the perspective of the new form criticism
also reminds readers that the biblical text is theologically, politically, historically,
and ideologically conditioned. Thus, the work of the new prophet is to reread
the biblical text, especially the prophetic texts, not only in dialogue with the
newer methods of biblical inquiry but also in dialogue with the many
communities that continue to read and reread these texts in new contexts. The
genres of woe and promise, when heard in new contexts, offer the possibility of
helping communities today to articulate a new social ethic for the full flourishing
of all life on the planet. These two genres also beckon communities today to live
in right relationship with one another and with the Divine Source of all life
whose Spirit waits to inform, inspire, and transform. Like the communities of
old, many human and nonhuman communities today have lived through and
will continue to live through crises and traumas, especially natural disasters,
military conflicts, and wars. Furthermore, many communities are now faced
with having to redefine life in relation to the main crisis facing the planet
today-global climate change. Thus, the prophetic woe genre remains ever
important but so does the word of promise that provides hope and vision for all
if only we humans, we readers and rereaders of the biblical text, are willing to
ponder those texts of promise and make choices that lead to their fulfillment.
6
Erhard S. Gerstenberger
PRELIMINARIES
Research in various text-groups and topics of the Book of the Twelve over the
past decades has sufficiendy made clear, that the bulk of texts is of redactional
origin and that most of the biographical information about assumed authors is of
litde historical weight. Thus superscriptions ostensibly giving family genealogies
of prophetic preachers and! or references to their contemporaneous kings clearly
come from retrospective organizers of the literary heritage. And "biographical"
narration, as presumably found in Amos 7, Hos 1-3, and Jonah quite likely
contains very few brute facts which could be used to reconstruct the life and
mission of any of the "minor" prophets. In fact, even the best known "greater"
messenger of Yahweh, Jeremiah, comes along as a largely fictitious figure whose
historical profile remains in the dark. In the case of the Twelve we also must
concede the possibility that at least two of them, Obadiah and Malachi, seem
not to represent real persons at all but the generic titles "servant of Yahweh" and
"my messenger," respectively.
Given this overall picture of the state of our knowledge we should seriously
consider letting go of that nineteenth century mania to interpret prophetic words
in intimate connection only with their presumed authors. Ferdinand Deist,
among others, long ago proposed a necessary "paradigm switch" in Old
- 119 -
120 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Testament resea rch. l The former model imagined prophetic books with
"authors," gradually revised a nd edited until they formed a "canonical" body of
literature to provide general readers with written information. This may be a
misleading preconception that does justice neither to the quality and purpose of
a ncient traditions nor to insights gained in our times concerning the genesis and
use of literature in other cultural epochs. Alternatively, what could be more
pla usible than considering the bulk of biographical information within the
Twelve as a very last redactional step to organize this considerable assemblage of
quite different texts? We would then consequently try to understand the growth
of this particular tradition in terms of an a nonymous asse mblage of compositions
intended for communal use rather than private reading.
1 Ferdinand E. D eist, "The Prophets: Are We Heading for a Paradigm Switch?" in Prophet
und Prophetenbuch: Festschrift for Otto Kaiser zum 65. Geburtstag, ed . Volkmar Fritz, K arl-
Friedrich Pohlmann, and Hans-Christoph Schmitt, BZAW 185 (Berlin: de Gruyter,
1989), 1-18. Cf. Martti Nissinen, "The Historical Dilemma of Biblical Prophetic
Studies," in Prophecy in the Book ofJeremiah, ed . Hans M . Barstad and R einhard G. Kratz,
BZAW 388 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2009), 103-20.
Twelve (and Afore) Anonyms 121
to go forth into the public from Yahweh, the Lord of the said congregations.
Only a few explicitly employ an anonymous or vaguely identified prophetic
speaker as an intermediary of divine communication. Legitimizing formulas like
"Yahweh's murmur," "thus speaks Yahweh," and "the word of Yahweh came to
. . . " are not consistently applied and certainly come from different theological
backgrounds betraying varied conceptions of prophetic communication. 2 They
are to be cautiously evaluated. The best procedure, it occurs to me, is to abstain
from biographical interpretation at this stage and analyze forms, genres and
intentions of the small compositions of kerygmatic words in their own rights.
The presupposition previously in vogue in Old Testament scholarship, that the
books of the Hebrew Bible were written for a general, literate readership, can no
longer claim unquestioned validity. 'J\Tithin the Twelve references or even
implicit hints to reading (instead of hearing!) prophetic words are so scarce and
incidental that they can be ignored (e.g., Hab 2:2). As a rule, the smaller
collections give us spoken messages directed to communities, not to individuals.
It always has been a basic endeavor of form criticism to study the linguistic
a rticulations of (presumably) anonymous Old Testament literature in order to
understand its rootage in ancient life-situations. This interpretative principle is
still valid in our case, even if we concede that we are working with an advanced
stage of prophetic tradition. No longer are we dealing with the original moment
of prophetic preaching, as if the text of a given cluster of sayings were the
protocol of one person's single day's performance in a given historical situation.
On the contrary, the small collections of discourses already present the results of
extended accumulative and compositional labor of some figure other than the
original speaker. These unknown redactors, scribes or compositors must have
had a vital interest in preserving, interpreting, modifying, enlarging a nd
"editing" messages coming from Yahweh and going to those congregations
which are being addressed. The recipients are imagined and portrayed as
"listeners," not as "readers" of the 'J\T ord of God, as any close study of any of the
small collections of words within the Twelve will demonstrate. "Listening," of
course, may imply the public reading of a sacred text, as in Neh 8: 1-6 (which at
the same time refers to continuous translation a nd interpretation of the divine
discourse, vv. 7-8), Exod 24:7, Deut 29:23-28 (note the "we" response of the
congregation in v. 28), and Deut 31 :9-11. Our "editors," we m ay conclude,
have been functionaries of Yahweh-worshiping communities, not only selecting
a nd collecting texts, but also modifying a nd producing them for the edification of
such groups of believers. The modes of speech employed vary considerably, but
in general, as we will see immediately, they fit into the homiletical and
catechetical kinds of allocution. To specify all this we need to take up some
examples.
3 According to Jeremias (Der Prophet Amos, ATD 24.2 [Gottingen: Vandenhoeck &
Ruprecht, 1995] , 63), Amos 5: 1 alone makes chs. 5-6 the discourse of the prophet (in
distinction to God speaking in chs. 3-4), ignoring frequent introductory formulas and first
person speech of Yahweh.
4 Cf. Jeremias, Amos, XVI-XXI; 30-93 . But is it really an "artistic" (p. XIX) or rather a
liturgical composition?
Twelve (and Afore) Anonyms 123
God of old . And the first divine statement, without revelation formula, serves as
a headline for the whole redactional unit in Amos 3-6:
Only you have I known, of all the people [miSpebot] of the earth, therefore, I will
punish you for all your iniquities. (Amos 3:2)5
The wording is not exactly Deuteronomistic, but the spirit and content of the
announcement certainly are (cf. Deut 7). The assemblage of oracles and sayings
is to testify to the special relationship of Israel with Yahweh and the
responsibility of the people to keep strictly to ethical and cultic obligations of the
elected people. More restricted original meanings of the sayings against violence,
robbery, oppression, injustice now have to be understood in the light of this
opening declaration. The collector makes two more basic statements before
citing verbatim oracles to the community. He first justifies the pronouncements
of any and all messengers of Ya hweh, and thus gives a firm base to his texts
(Amos 3:7-8-God shares his plans with the prophets!); and secondly, he
summons international observers to witness the evil doings of Sama ria (Amos
3:9). Only then is the first more or less concrete oracle launched against the
people (Amos 3: 10-11), to be followed by Amos 3: 12 + 15 and 4: 1-3. According
to Jeremias the inserted verses in Amos 3: 13-14 appear to be a Deuteronomistic
interpretation of the function of prophecy throughout the history of Israel and a
special denunciation of the apostasies of Bet-El (cf. I Kgs 12:25-33).6
To single out neatly all the authentic prophetic sayings in the small
collection is not our task here. Suffice it to point out a few more vestiges of
secondary reworkings. Amos 4:6-11 sticks to the same pattern of five-fold
pedagogical punishments, applied in the hope of Israel's return, as we can find in
Lev 26: 14-32 and I Kgs 8:33-34, 35- 36, 37-40; cf. Deut 28:20-44. There is
not a trace of genuine "prophetic" discourse in these words. Rather, we have
elements of Deuteronomistic preaching. Jeremias justly states: 'The line of
reasoning found in Amos 4:6-13 is oriented towards a liturgy of repenta nce used
in the exilic community." 7
There are more peculiarities in the small collection Amos 3-6 which might
hint at additions of nonprophetic but community-directed catechetical speech.
Amos 5:2 is designated in verse I as a "lamentation," and later on seems to be
followed by three mourning cries (Amos 5: 18-20; 6: 1-3; and 6:4-7; cf. 5: 16-17)
reminiscent of funeral wailings. '!\That could be the prophetic message in this
form of speech? The book of Ezekiel uses lamentations extensively. The meaning
in prophetic contexts could be a special emphasis on unavoidable doom. But was
this intention an outright concern of divine messengers? Also in Amos 5 we find
5 Bible translations are according to the NRSV. However, the name Yahweh (Zebaoth)
has been consistently retained.
6 J eremias, Amos, 43 . He classifies the terminology as belonging to "worship language."
7 Ibid. , 52; see also his extensive treatment of the passage on pp. 49-56.
124 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
8 Amos purportedly preached in the eighth century in northern state of Israel. Even if
references to that situation in the collector's composition are authentic they were charged
with Judaic experiences in later transmission.
Twelve (and Afore) Anonyms 125
interesting in this regard. The first passage fixes the Feast of Booths (cf. Deut
31: 10) as the appropriate day when the formerly hostile nations may participate
in worshipping Yahweh thus reversing the prophetic verdict against the nations.
The second text is undated in terms of calendric determination, but it testifies,
like other witnesses, especially in Deuteronomistic literature, to a covenant
renewal ceremony, which probably was pa rt of regular Jewish ritual. Such
renewal of the religious alliance possibly implied commemoration of crises, and
the anonymous collections of relevant literary compositions may well have
served as matrixes for such liturgies.
The present book of Micah is personalized only by the late superscription Mic
1: 1 and the equally young verbatim quotation of Mic 3: 12 in Jer 26: 18.
Otherwise there is no reference to the name and birthplace of this particular
figure to which the "book" is attributed. There are only some personal pronouns
of the first person singular indicating a prophetic or homiletic speaker (Mic 1:8;
2:11 ; 3:1; 3:8; 7:7). We may safely assume, for this reason, that the smaller
collections of the present literary unit have been brought together anonymously.
What are the subunits of the "book"? Experts a re, as is good custom in
scholarship, divided in their opinion. And, in fact, there are no hard a nd clea r
structuring signals in the corpus of this writing. Following Rainer Kessler we
m ay recognize overlapping and partially contradicting principles of composition,
but assume as a possible solution and mainly for thematic reasons that the
partition into Mic 1-3; 4-5; 6-7 may come close to the delineation of earlier
collections. 9 The last section may well be the youngest part of the final product,
as it shows some characteristics that reflect the Persia n period. 10 There are
notable differences in the rhetorical set-up over against Amos 3-6, to be sure,
but the basic situation of a divine voice addressing a community remains
identical. The speaker often and quite naturally is Yahweh himself (cf. Mic 6:3-
5; 6:9-13), calling on his people directly without huma n mediation. Still, the
mediator is there, hidden between the lines, coming to the fore somewhat
timidly, as in Mic 6:8; 7:5, 7. In most cases the immediate respondent to the
summons of Yahweh is the addressed congregation, who reply in various ways.
There is the a nswer of each member in Mic 6:6-7, in the first person singula r
("\I\'ith what shall I come before Ya hweh"; v. 6). Next, the assembly as a whole
responds in the first person singular (Mic 7: 1), and a nother time, it is the same
community, but personified as the city ofJerusalem rebutting her female enemy,
that is, a rivaling power (Mic 7:8-1 0). At the very end of the little collection the
congregation even speaks out in the first person plural (Mic 7: 19-20), a very
special mode of discourse we will consider more closely below. In other words,
the traditional pattern of prophetic speech is all but given up in this part of the
Twelve. The only formula of divine legitimation, downgraded several degrees, is
Mic 6: la ("Hear, what Yahweh says"; LXX also forcefully interjects "Word of
Yahweh"). I I Instead, the forms of discourse used in Mic 6-7 are plainly
dialogical instead of revelatory, controversial and instructional instead of
doctrinal, liturgical and ceremonial instead ofliterary.
Judging from the speech forms alone, then, we already get the impression of
being in the midst of an early Judaic worship service in which the fate of the
surviving community is being debated. A closer look at the contents of charges,
confessions, instructions and prayers, as well as their theological backgrounds
confirms this notion. An unnamed speaker calls upon the assembly (Mic 6: la;
imperative plural) to stand up in court and listen to Yahweh's charges of
aberrancy against his "people" (Mic 6:3-5). The jury is composed of the
mountains around (Mic 6: 1b, 2; cf. Amos 3:9). That the plaintiff is rhetorically
asking about his own faults ("What have I done to you?" Mic 6:3a) is a refined
model of juridic-theological strategy (cf. J er 2:4-9; Isa 1:2-9; Ps 50). It heightens
suspense in expectation of the outcome. And it brings with it a good many
ancient Near Eastern theological conceptualizations of the near-equality
between God and humanity (cf. Gen 32:23-33; Ps 8:6-9; Job 9; 42: 1-9, etc.).
The enumeration of God's salviflc actions in history (Mic 6:4-5) obviously builds
on the Pentateuchal writings and the book of Joshua. The effect of the divine
sermon is the community's uncertainty of how to serve their God correctly (Mic
6:6-7). The same problem of the comparative value of sacrifices (even of the
firstborn son! v. 7) over against "obedience to the Torah" is also ventilated in a
number of other Old Testament texts (cf. Gen 22:1-19; Isa 1:10-17; Pss 40:7-
11; 50:7-23; 51:17-19; 119). This problem could become a matter of concern
only after the Torah had been assembled and become the norm of Jewish life
which, probably occurred in the fifth century BeE (Nehemiah; Ezra).
A new round of indictment and punishment takes up the rest of Mic 6,
namely verses 9-16. The notion is that Yahweh cries out loudly his accusations
of social ills over the city (of Jerusalem? vv. 9-12) continuing with punitive
measures like those encountered in Amos or, for that matter, in the curses
against disloyal covenant partners in Deuteronomy and Leviticus (Mic 6: 13-16;
cf. Deut 28: 15-44 and Lev 26: 14-39). Interestingly enough, the deviations of
kings Omri and Ahab of the northern state of Israel are mentioned as abhorrent
examples (Mic 6: 16), rather late if the passage was formed in the Persian Period.
Now, this fact does not warrant an ancient date of the text in question. Rather, it
testifies to the knowledge of historical traditions on the part of the composers of
our cluster (cf. 1 Kgs 18: 1-22:40). Micah 7 begins with a communal lament (vv.
1-2), which assumes accusatory (or penitent?) overtones (vv. 2-4; note the
II Cf. Mic 4:4, 6; 5:9: These verses still have strong word-formulas.
Twelve (and Afore) Anonyms 127
He will again have compassion upon us; he will tread our iniquities under foot.
You will cast our sins into the depths of the sea. (Mic 7: 19)
128 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Here is the proof for the communal "we" intoning the hymn. The change from
neutral third person allocution of God to direct address praise is in the Hebrew
text, but is not supported by ancient translations. They, in turn, grant second
person direct address to Yahweh only in verse 20, then in accordance with the
Hebrew text.
A preliminary evaluation of Mic 6-7 in regard to its genres and purposes is
in order. Forms of speech, literary structures, contents and theological
implications give reason to consider the small collection a compilation of texts to
be used, that is, read or recited, in ceremonies of the emerging Jewish
community of the Persian period. 12 When the biographical interpretation of the
Book of the Twelve is left aside-and there are practically no good reasons to
claim personal authorship for the large majority of the material assembled in the
Twelve-and if the theory of private reading habits in pre-Hellenistic times is
discarded, the only plausible explanation of an aggregation of such texts is that
of an archive or hand-book for ceremonial use in determined local faith-
communities of Yahwistic provenance. The process of collecting, reworking and
augmenting earlier and partially oral traditions may have taken several
centuries, let us say from 600 until 300 BCE. Before the final division into twelve
booklets took place we may expect that cui tic functionaries in Israel (prophets,
scribes, Levites, cultic singers, healers etc.) would, in execution of their
professional functions, bring into writing texts that they had inherited from their
forebears . The newly developing community of Yahweh-adherents after 587
BCE was the decisive ecclesiological body to produce and peruse these texts at
varied cultic-ritual occasions. The loss of political independence, of a native
dynasty, and, for some time, of proper national temple services made a new
formation of religious and social institutions necessary, and this traumatizing loss
had a great impact also on the cultic celebrations which were being performed,
adopted and freshly created for this new community.
The first part of the "book of Zechariah" (Zech 1-8) is most conspicuously
engaged in giving exact dates for some divine words communicated to the
prophet (cf. Zech 1:1; 1:7; 7:1; etc.; and likewise in the book of Haggai). Day,
month, year of the Persian royal calendar are adduced. Nowhere else in the
Twelve do we find a similar effort to historicize prophetic activity (although the
said individual datings formally do not constitute a "book of Zechariah"). The
latest attempts at biographical specificity, we may conclude, are the most precise
and forceful ones, but they probably still may be secondary to the material of
Zech 1-8. The remaining words now contained in "Zechariah" (Zech 9-14) are
Yahweh will become king over all the earth; on that day Yahweh will be [the
only?] one and his name [the only?] one.
13 Wilhelm Rudolph, Haggai, Sacharja 1-8, Sacharja 9-14, Maleachi, KAT 13.4 (Gutersloh:
Mohn, 1976), 159-64.
130 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
The famous passage Deut 6:4, Israel's prime confession, comes to mind:
"Hear, 0 Israel: Yahweh is our God, Yahweh alone." And there is a thematic
affinity to the Yahweh-kingship psalms (Pss 47; 93; 95-99) on the one hand and
a number of prophetic announcements of the reign of Yahweh on the other
hand. All these texts bear witness to an eschatological expectation which had
come up in nascent Judaism by contact with Iranian-Babylonian conceptions of
a day of final judgment for the whole world. 14 Other manifestations of such
eschatological and later apocalyptic thinking in ancient Israel can be found, for
example, in Isa 24-27; 60-62; Zeph 1-2; Zech 1:7-6:8;Jer 30-31; Ezek 36, et
cetera. Eschatological and apocalyptical proclamation is considerably different
from traditional prophetic speech as encountered in Hosea, Amos and Micah,
although some end-of-time conceptions also have crept into their "Books" (cf.
Hos 14:1-8; Amos 9:11-15; Mic 4-5).
Other intricate and very interesting details of Zech 12-14 cannot be
discussed here. One particularity, however, still should draw our attention.
Foreign and hostile nations that had oppressed the people of God will be terribly
punished (Zech 12:2-4, 6; 14: 12-15), but the survivors of Yahweh's campaign to
revenge and save Israel, and their descendants "shall go up year after year to
worship the King, Yahweh Zebaoth, and . .. keep the festival of booths" (Zech
14: 16). This very idea of all nations being obliged to adore Yahweh on Mount
Zion, also present in so many Psalms and other prophetic passages, is further
specified, in a prose commentary to verse 16: "If any of the families of the earth
do not go up to Jerusalem to worship the King, Yahweh Zebaoth, there will be
no rain upon them" (Zech 14: 17). A further elaboration explicitly includes Egypt
into the circle of nations under such obligation (Zech 14: 18-19). The
significance of these verses lies not only in its emphasis on the universal reign of
Yahweh and the claim of global dominance but also in the unique gravity they
place on the Feast of Booths (cf. Deut 3l:lO). Isaiah 2:2-4 only mentions
pilgrimages of nations to the Holy Mount to receive their share in Torah
instruction without explicitly referring to the autumn festival. Could the
threefold appearance of the Feast of Booths in Zech 14: 16-20 signal a liturgical
use of this text at this ceremonial occasion?
That question takes us back to the main issue we are pursuing: How can we
possibly get to determine the origin and purpose of Zech 12-14 at its precanonic
stage? Why have these eschatological texts been put together in the first place?
The vivid scenery of one mediatory voice calling out a message of God is no
longer present in our collection. A listening audience being directly challenged is
all but missing (cf. the remnants in Zech 12:5; 14:1,5). The text only partially
comes in poetic lines (Zech 12: 1; 14: 1-16). The larger part is set in careful prose
Books," in The Production if Prophecy: Constructing Prophecy and Prophets in Yehud, ed . Diana V.
Edelman and Ehud Ben Zvi, Bible World (London: Equinox, 2009), 111-30.
Twelve (and Afore) Anonyms 131
'I\Te have already touched upon passages in the Twelve, which ostensibly
introduce a first person plural voice in the midst of and as a response to divine
oracles. Furthermore, there are a good number of real hymnic passages
apparently evoked by prophetic/divine communication. 15 The first phenomenon
is well known also from the psalms, especially by communal laments and
petitions. There a re in the Old Testa ment Psalter fifty-three poems of different
genres that show first person plural phrases, a mong them are some containing
extensive passages (Pss 46; 47; 48; 79; 80; 90; 9S; 100; liS; 124; 136; 147).
Others contain smaller portions of collective speech (Pss 8; 33; 44; 60; 66; 74; 7S;
8S; 103; 106; 108; 118; 122; 123; 144). Psalm experts likeJosefScharbert and
15 Erhard S. Gerstenberger, "Psalms in the Book of the Twelve: How Misplaced Are
They?" in 77zematic 77zreads in the Book if the Twelve, ed . Paul L. Reddit and Aaron Schart,
BZAW 325 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2003), 72-89.
132 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Klaus Seybold l6 agree that for the most part the examples of "we"-discourse in
the Psalter are not rhetorical or stylistic devices but authentic group voices
reflecting the participation of a community in psalm singing. The same
conclusion is appropriate in the case of the Book of the Twelve, based on the
recognition of a number of hymnic poems representing authentic parts of
liturgies of the Jewish community of old. The second type of "insertion," that is,
hymnic poems, is treated concomitantly below but with less attention because I
have already dealt with them elsewhere (see note 15).
"We" -speech of the addressed or participating congregation occurs more
than once in the Twelve.
It is quite clear in the two cases of quoted prayer in Joel that such short
specimens do not correspond to real liturgical procedures. But the scribes,
authors or redactors of the written version of divine words were conscious of the
correct ritual sequence. By indicating the adequate spot for a communal prayer
they betray their involvement with the living liturgy and also suggest what
should be the content of the proposed intervention of the whole congregation.
16 Josef Scharbert, "Das 'vVir' in den Psalmen auf dem Hintergrund altorientalischen
Betens," in Freude an der J1feisung des Herrn: Eeitrage zur 77zeologie der Psalmen, Festgabe zum 70,
Geburtstag von Heinrich Gross, ed. Ernst Haag and Frank-Lothar Hossfeld (Stuttgart:
Katholisches Bibelwerk, 1986), 297-324; Klaus Seybold, "Das 'Wir' in den Asaph-
Psalmen: Spezifische Probleme einer Psalmgruppe," in Neue Wege der Psalmenforschung, ed.
Klau s Seybold and Erich Zenger, HBS 1 (Freiburg: Herder, 1994), 143-55 .
Twelve (and Afore) Anonyms 133
• The book of Amos does not contain prayers or "we" -discourse of the
community, but it includes some seemingly erratic fragments of a hymn
to Yahweh (Amos 4: 13; 5:8-9; 9:5-6) that have stirred much debate in
scholarshipY To our literary eyes they seem displaced but they possibly
make good sense in a liturgical context allowing for alternating voices
a nd the participation of the audience. The hymns in Amos highlight
God's creative powers-not a bad theological topic for a communal
response.
• The only occurrence of a first person plural form in Obadiah is of little
avail for our research (Obad 1: "We have heard "; cf. the parallel text
Jer 49:14).
The book of Micah has several communal responses inserted III their literary
contexts.
All these texts are strong indications for the affinity of the written verSlOn of
Micah's early collection to the life and worship of the faith-community. 18
Continuing the brief overview over the smaller collections in the Twelve, we
come to the books of Nahum and Habakkuk. There are no express "we"-
passages in these writings. Nevertheless, evidence for liturgical use of part or all
of the texts is overwhelming.
17 E.g., Aaron Schart (Die Entstehung des ZwoifProphetenbuchs, BZAW 260 [Berlin: de
Gruyter, 1998], 234-51 ) who laudably includes in his discussion also the hymnic parts of
Nahum and H abakkuk admitting their use in worship ceremonies (p. 247).
18 Kessler (Micha, 234) attributes three we-passages (why omitting Mic 4: 14?) to the
"whole of the community."
134 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the T welve
23 The largest part of the cycle of visions (Zech 1:8-6:8) has a different formulaic pattern,
including the dialogue with the angel-interpreter. Zechariah 1: 7 does not fit this visionary
scheme, it must have been imposed secondarily.
136 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
1 For discussion of the Book of the Twelve Prophets, see my The Twelve Prophets, Berit
Olam (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2000), esp. 1:xv-xlii; The Prophetic Literature, lET
(Nashville: Abingdon, 2005), 165-214. See also R ainer Albertz, J ames D. Nogalski, and
Jakob Wohrle, eds., Perspectives on the Formation if the Book if the Twelve: Methodological
Foundation~Redactional Processe~HistoricaIInsights, BZAW 433 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2012);
Ehud Ben Zvi, "Twelve Prophetic Books or 'the Twelve': A Few Preliminary
Considerations," in Forming Prophetic Literature: Essays on Isaiah and the Twelve in Honor if]. D.
HI: Watts, ed. James W. Watts and Paul R . House, JSOTSup 255 (Sheffield: Sheffield
Academic, 1996), 125-56; Barry Alan Jones, The Formation if the Book if the Twelve: A Stucfy
in Text and Canon, SBLDS 149 (Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1995); Jason T. LeCureux, The
Thematic Unity if the Book if the Twelve, Hebrew Bible Monographs 10 (Sheffield: Sheffield
Phoenix, 2012); J ames D . Nogalski and Marvin A. Sweeney, eds. Reading and Hearing the
Book if the Twelve, SBLSym 15 (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2000); James D .
Nogalski, Literary Precursors to the Book if the Twelve, BZAW 117 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 1993);
Nogalski, Redactional Processes in the Book if the Twelve, BZAW 118 (Berlin: de Gruyter,
1993); Nogalski, The Book if the Twelve, 2 vols., HSBC (Macon, GA: Smyth & Helwys,
- 137 -
138 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Prophets IS therefore also known as the Minor Prophets due to the relatively
shorter length of its twelve constituent prophetic works when compared to the
larger prophetic works of Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel. The manuscript
traditions of Judaism and Christianity generally present the Twelve Prophets as
a single work called tere 'aJar, "the Twelve," in Hebrew Masoretic manuscripts,
ton dodekapropheton, "the Twelve Prophets," in Greek Septuagint manuscripts, and
duodecim prophetarum, "Twelve Prophets," in Latin Vulgate manuscripts. The
Latin term prophetae minores, "Minor Prophets," first appears in Latin Patristic
sources, such as Augustine's City qf God. Although they are grouped as a single
work in Christian tradition, they are counted as twelve separate books among
the thirty-nine Old Testament books of Protestant tradition and the forty-six Old
Testament books of Roman Catholic tradition. Judaism counts them only as one
book among the twenty-four books of the Tanakh, although scribal practice calls
for a space of three lines between each of the twelve prophets in contrast to the
four lines normally left between biblical books (b. B. Bat. 13b). Selections from
the Twelve Prophets (with the exception of Nahum, Zephaniah, and Haggai) are
read as both weekly and festival Haphtarot in Jewish practice. 2 Passages from the
Twelve Prophets are likewise quoted throughout the New Testament.
The composite nature of the Book of the Twelve Prophets complicates
attempts to understand its formal character a nd its eschatological perspective,
particularly because each of its constituent works is a discrete book with its own
literary form, purported historical setting, and hermeneutical perspective. Is the
Book of the Twelve Prophets a single, discrete formal unit with its own generic
character? Or is it a collection or compilation of twelve discrete formal units,
each with its own generic character? In fact, the answer to both of these questions
appears to be "yes." And what implications does the apparendy composite
character of the Book of the Twelve Prophets have for understanding the generic
character of the prophetic book?
The issue is further complicated by the fact that the order of the twelve
prophetic books (and sometimes their chapters divisions) differs markedly in the
various traditions. Although early Patristic tradition displays a variety of orders,
modern readers of the Septuagint tradition ultimately settled on the following
order:
20 II ); Paul L. R edditt and Aaron Schart, eds. Thematic Threads in the Book of the Twelve,
BZAW 325 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2003).
2 See Michael Fishbane, Haftarot, JPS Bible Commentary (Philadelphia: J ewish
Publication Society, 2002), passim.
Form and Eschatology 139
THE DODEK4PROPHETON: THE TWELVE PROPHETS
(SEPTUAGINT ORDER)
3 For full discussion of the textual traditions of the Book of the Twelve, including LXX
and the Qumran manuscripts, seeJones, Formation if the Book if the Twelve.
140 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
particularly m relation to the LXX order of books since Hosea, Amos, and
Micah are all mid- to late eighth-century prophets; Nahum, Habakkuk, and
Zephaniah are all seventh-century prophets; and Haggai, Zechariah, and
Malachi are all Persian-period prophets.4 Such a claim does not hold up to
closer examination, however, because Joel, Obadiah, and Jonah are all ascribed
to ninth-century figures. Joel's reference to the Valley of Jehoshaphat in Joel
4:21 (=NRSV 3:21 ) suggests the defeat of Ammon, Moab, and Edom by the
ninth-century Judean King Jehoshaphat (r. 873-949 BCE; see 2 Chr 20).
Obadiah is traditionally identified as the servant of the ninth-century Israelite
King Ahab (r. 869-950 BCE) who hid the prophets of YHWH in the time of
Elijah (1 Kgs 18). Jonah is identified in 2 Kgs 14:25 as a prophet prior to the
reign of King Jeroboam ben Joash (r. 786-746 BCE). And Malachi is likewise
associated with the ninth-century prophet Elijah in Mal 3: 1, 23-24 (=NRSV 3: 1;
4:5-6), although Malachi himself (insofar as his identity as an individual prophet
is questioned) may be placed in the Persian period. Chronological problems
emerge even among the other prophets. Amos dates to the mid-eighth century
whereas Hosea dates to the latter portion of the eighth century. Zephaniah dates
to the early reign ofJosiah (r. 640-609 BCE); Nahum dates to the fall of Nineveh
in 612 BCE; and Habakkuk dates to the Babylonian subjugation ofJudah in 605
BCE. When these factors are considered, it becomes clear that a strict
chronological principle does not determine the order of the Twelve Prophets in
either the Masoretic or the Septuagint versions of the book.
Consideration of the contents of each of the twelve prophetic books and
their respective orders in the Septuagint and Masoretic versions of the Book of
the Twelve does point to the principles underlying the organization of each.
Ironically, both orders point to the respective eschatological perspectives of each
version as well, insofar as both versions are fundamentally concerned with the
destructions of northern Israel, Judah, and Jerusalem, and the ultimate
restoration of all three.
The LXX version begins with the three prophetic books that focus on the
downfall of northern Israel and its implications for Judah and Jerusalem. Hosea
condemns the northern Jehu dynasty for its alliance with Assyria and Egypt and
calls for the reunification of Israel and Judah under Davidic rule. Amos
condemns the Jehu dynasty for its failure to meet the needs of the poor, and
likewise calls for the restoration of Davidic rule over the north. Micah begins
with a critique of the northern Israel monarchy for instigating the events that led
to the Assyrian invasion of the land, but he also condemns theJudean house of
David on similar grounds. The following prophets then focus on Jerusalem and
Judah. Joel looks to the day ofYHWH when YHWH will deliver Jerusalem from
the threat posed by the nations. Obadiah also invokes the day of YHWH in
4 See my essay, " Sequence and Interpretation in the Book of the Twelve," in Nogalski
and Sweeney, Reading and Hearing, 49-64.
Form and Eschatology 141
II
Both the LXX and the Masoretic versions of the Book of the Twelve display
their own distinctive formal characters and eschatological concerns, but the
perspectives of each of the individual books must also be considered.
The book of Hosea is the first of the twelve prophets in both the Masoretic
and Septuagint sequences.5 The superscription for the book in Hos 1: 1 places
the prophet in the reigns of the late-eighth century Judean monarchs, Uzziah
(783-742 BeE), Jotham (742-735 BeE), Ahaz (735-715 BeE), and Hezekiah
(7 15-68716 BeE) as well as in the reign of the northern Israelite king, Jeroboam
ben Joash (786-746 BeE). Ironically, the superscription does not mention
Jeroboam's successors, although all of them overlapped with the above-
mentioned Judean kings. Given Hosea's calls for the overthrow of the Jehu
dynasty, of which Jeroboam was the fourth monarch, it is possible that Hosea
was compelled to leave northern Israel to seek refuge in the south where his
book was finally written and edited. Alternatively, either the prophet or his work
may have come south in the aftermath of northern Israel's destruction by the
Assyrians in 722/1 BeE
Hosea's eschatological perspective is determined by his calls for the
overthrow of the ruling dynasty of northern Israel throughout the book and the
statements envisioning Israel's return to righteous Davidic rule in the days to
come (Hos 3:4-5). Many interpreters presume that Hosea is concerned with
idolatry in Israel, particularly since he accuses his wife Gomer of adultery and
employs her as a metaphor for Israel's adultery against YHWH. But close
attention to Hosea's literary form, language and oracles indicates that Hosea's
understanding of such idolatry is tied up with northern Israel's alliance with
Assyria to open a trade passage to Egypt (Hos 12: 1-2). Indeed, the literary form
of the book indicates that it is organized to present Hosea's call for Israel's return
to YHWH:6
5 For discussion of Hosea, see esp. Sweeney, The Twelve Prophets, 1:1-144; Ehud Ben Zvi,
Hosea, FOTL 21A (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2005); G. I. Davies, Hosea, NCeB (Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1992); Francis Landy, Hosea , Readings (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic,
1995); A. A. MacIntosh, Hosea, ICC (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1997); Hans Walter Wolff,
Hosea, Hermeneia (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1974).
6 Sweeney, Prophetic Literature, 175.
Form and Eschatology 143
I. Superscription 1:1
II. Main Body of the Book: Appeal for Israel's Return 1:2-14:9
A. Narrative account ofYHWH's instructions to Hosea to 1:2-2:2
marry a harlot and give their children symbolic names
B. Hosea's speeches to Israel 2:3-14:9
1. Hosea's appeal to his children for their mother's 2:3-3:5
return
2.YHVVH's basic charges against Israel: Abandonment 4:1-19
ofYHWH
3. Specification ofYHWH's charges against Israel 5:1-14:1
4.Appeal for Israel's return to YHWH 14:2-9
III. Concluding Exhortation concerning YHWH's Righteousness 14: 10
7 Gerlinde Baumann, Love and Violence: Marriage as j1,;{etaphor for the Relationship between
YHWH and Israel in the Prophets (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2003), 85-104.
144 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
estranged wife, Israel or Gomer, to return to her husband. Although the passage
begins with Hosea's appeals for the return of Gomer, YHWH's appeals to Israel
emerge in the latter portions of the passage. References to Gomer's pursuit of
other lovers or Israel's pursuit of Baalim, the fertility gods of Canaan, reinforce
the notion that Hosea's complaints are essentially religious. But YHVVH's
instructions to Hosea to marry once again in Hos 3: 1-3 followed by the
statements that Israel will once again return to the rule of the house of David in
Hos 3:4-5 points to Hosea's view that religious repentance and righteous
political rule are coterminous. The use of the Hebrew term, bl'ahlirit hayyiimfm,
"in the later days," simply refers to the future, not to the end of time as some
presuppose. 8
Hosea's complaint against the house ofJehu becomes clear throughout both
YHVVH's and Hosea's charges against Israel. YHVVH's charges in Hos 4 focus
on the religious dimensions, particularly the failure of the priests and prophets to
teach the people properly concerning YHWH's will. Hosea's charges in Hos
5: 1-14: 1 likewise raise religious issues, but the character ofIsrael's rulers and the
nation's relationship with Assyria becomes a key issue throughout. Hos 5: 13-14
refers to Ephraim's (Israel's) sending of envoys to Assyria; Hos 7: 11-12 refers to
Israel's appeals to Egypt and Assyria; and Hos 12: 1-2 refers to Israel's covenant
with Assyria to carry oil to Egypt. Examination of ancient Near Eastern
historical records confirms Hosea's concerns. When Jehu overthrew Jehoram,
Israel was fighting a losing battle against the Arameans, but the house of Jehu
ultimately defeated the Aramean threat. Although biblical records mention only
Israel's victories over Aram under the Jehu monarchs (2 Kgs 13: 1-5,22-25; cf. 2
Kgs 10:32-33; 12:18-19), the Black Obelisk of the Assyrian monarch
Shalmaneser III portrays Jehu's submission to Assyria 9 and the Assyrian
monarch Adad Nirari III lists Joash the Samaritan (i.e., Jehoash ben Jehoahaz
ben Jehu) as one of his tributaries. 1o Indeed, it was the Jehu dynasty's alliance
with Assyria that ultimately checked the Aramean threat against Israel and
enabled Jeroboam ben J oash, the fourth monarch of the Jehu line, to rule over a
kingdom like that of Solomon that extended from Lebo-Hamath in the north to
the Sea of the Aravah in the south in peace (2 Kgs 14:23-29). Hosea viewed
such an alliance as abandonment ofYHVVH, particularly since Israel's ancestors
had come from Aram, YHVVH's prophet had led Israel from Egyptian slavery to
the promised land, and Jacob had found his wives in Aram. For Hosea, Israel's
return to YHWH entailed abandonment of its alliance with Assyria (and Egypt)
and a return to its past relationships with Aram. Indeed, his final appeal for
Israel to return to YHWH in Hos 14:2-9 notes that "Assyria will not save us,"
but that YHVVH is ready to forgive all guilt when Israel returns. Indeed, Hosea's
view of transformation calls for the overthrow of the Jehu dynasty and its policy
of alliance with Assyria.
The book of J oel appears second in the Masoretic sequence of the Twelve
Prophets and fourth in the Septuagint sequence. I I The superscription of the
book identifies the prophet only as Joel ben Pethuel, but it provides no
information concerning historical setting. Interpreters generally view it as a post-
exilic, proto-apocalyptic book, which is confirmed by its extensive references to
earlier biblical literature. The reference to the Valley ofJehoshaphat in Joel 4: 12
(=NRSV 3: 12) refers to the ninth-century Judean monarch, although it draws on
the account of Jehoshaphat's battle against the Ammonites and Moabites in 2
Chr 20:20-26. Nevertheless, the absence of historical setting, the metaphorical
portrayal of Jerusalem's enemies as a locust plague, and the retrospective
character of the reference to J ehoshaphat's victory contribute to a mythological
portrayal of YH'J\TH's deliverance of Jerusalem that can be read in relation to
virtually any setting, past, present, and future . The call to turn plowshares into
swords and pruning hooks into spears as YH'J\TH's warriors prepare to repel the
threat posed to Jerusalem recalls and reverses those by Isaiah (Isa 2:2-4) and
Micah (Mic 4:1-5) for the nations to give up their weapons, stream to Zion, and
learn YHWH's Torah or Instruction.
Joel's eschatological perspective is defined by its view of the Day ofYHWH,
viz ., the day of deliverance when YHWH will defeat the forces of the nations
that threaten Jerusalem. The literary form of the book indicates that it is
formulated as an account ofYHWH's response to Judah's appeals for relief from
the threat of attackers, metaphorically portrayed as a locust plague like the locust
plague that affiicted Egypt in the Exodus traditions (Exod 10: 1-20) 12:
II For discussion of Joel, see esp. Sweeney, Twelve Prophets, 1:145-187; John Barton, Joel
and Obadiah: A Commentary, OTL (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2001 ); Richard J.
Coggins, Joel and Amos, NCeB (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 2000); James L. Crenshaw,
Joel, AB 24C (New York: Doubleday, 1995); Hans Walter Wolff, Joel and Amos,
Hermeneia (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1977).
12 Sweeney, Prophetic Literature, 181.
146 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
1. Superscription 1:1
II. Body of the Book: YHWH's response to Judah's appeal 1:2-4:21
A. Prophet's call to communal complaint concerning the 1:2-20
threat of the locust plague
B. Prophet's call to communal complaint concerning the 2:1-14
threat of invasion
C. Prophet's a nnouncement of YHVVH's response to 2:15-4:21
protect people from the threat
Many interpreters maintain that the portents mentioned inJoel 3:4 in reference
to the Day of YHWH, that is, the sun turned to darkness and moon turned to
blood, indicate a fundamental transformation of creation that signals the end of
time and the beginning of a new age. Such a view is unjustified, however, insofar
as these features appear during the Sharav (Hebrew) or Hamsin (Ara bic), a sirocco
or strong, dry, desert wind, much like the Santa Ana winds of southern
California, that appears in the Middle East at times of seasonal transition. 13
When the Sharav appears, it darkens the skies, blocks the sun, a nd makes the
moon appear red due to the large qua ntities of blowing dust. In biblical
tradition, the Sharav is known as the East Wind that m a nifests YHWH's power,
as in Exod 14-15 when the wind splits the Red Sea allowing Israel to cross on
dry la nd. Nevertheless, the Day of YHWH tradition in Joel points to YHWH's
intervention in the world to redeem Jerusalem a nd Judah from threat.
The book of Amos appears as the third book of the Masoretic sequence and
the second book of the Septuagint sequence. 14 Because of the prophet's concern
with the rights of the poor, his condemnation of the Israelite mona rchy and the
Beth El sanctuary for trampling those rights, and the initial sequence of oracles
concerning the nations in Amos 1:3-2: 16, Amos is frequendy viewed as the
quintessential prophetic exemplar for universal social justice. Such a perspective
is reinforced by his reference to the Day of YHWH in Amos 5: 18-20, which is
directed against those who would deny the poor, and his anticipation in Amos
9: 11-15 of a future righteous D avidic monarch who would set the world aright.
The superscription of the book of Amos in Amos 1: 1 identifies him as a
"sheep breeder" from the Judean town of Tekoa during the reigns of King
Jeroboam benJoash ofIsrael (786-746 BCE) and King Uzziah ben Amaziah of
Juda h (783-742 BCE). The term "sheep breeder," Hebrew naqer!, does not refer
to a simple shepherd (Hebrew, ra'eh) but to more highly placed figure , such as a
king, chieftain, or officer, who functions as a sheep broker. Although this was a
13 For discussion of the Sharav, see "Israel, Land of (Geographic Survey)," EncJud 9: 189-
90.
14 For discussion of Amos, see Sweeney, Twelve Prophets, 1:189-276; Coggins, Joel and
Amos; Shalom Paul, Amos, Hermeneia (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1991 ); Wolff,Joel and Amos.
Form and Eschatology 147
period of security, prosperity, and wealth for northern Israel due to its alliance
with Assyria, Judah was a vassal to Israel during this period and Amos
apparendy appeared at the northern Israelite Beth El temple to pay a portion of
Judah's tribute to its northern Israelite suzerain. Throughout the book, Amos
condemns northern Israel and the nations for acting contrary to YHWH's will,
and calls upon its readers to seek YHWH. The formal literary structure of Amos
indicates that the book is formulated as an exhortation to seek YHVVH: 15
I. Introduction 1:1-2
A. Superscription 1:1
B. Motto: YHWH roars from Zion 1:2
II. Exhortation proper 1:3-9:15
A. Oracles against the nations (culminating in northern 1:3-2:16
Israel)
1. Damascusl Ara m 1:3-5
2. Gaza/Philistia 1:6-8
3. Tyre/Phoenicia 1:9-10
4. Edom 1: 11-12
5. Ammon 1:13-15
6. Moab 2:1-3
7.Judah 2:4-5
8. Israel 2:6-16
B. Indictment of northern Israel 3:1-4:13
C. Call for repentance of northern Israel 5:1-6:14
D. Amos's vision reports: call for destruction of Beth El 7:1-9:15
and rise of the house of David
Close attention to the form a nd contents of the book indicates that Amos acts
and speaks as a Judean who would condemn northern Israel for its harsh
treatment ofJudah and call for the overthrow of King Jeroboam ben J oash. The
initial motto for the book in Amos 1:2 portrays YHWH as a lion, the tribal
symbol of Judah (see Gen 49:8-12), roaring from Zion and prompting the
Carmel, the northern Israelite coastal range known for its fertility, to wither. The
oracles concerning the nations target the various enemies of Israel who fought
against Israel or who betrayed their alliances with Israel from the ninth a nd early
eighth centuries. Although Amos's northern Israelite audience would have
affirmed his condemnation of these nations for their past treachery against
Israel, the culmination of the sequence with Israel reveals his rhetorical intent to
target Israel itself as his main concern. 16 The indictment of Israel (Amos 3-4)
coupled with his exhortations for a return to YHWH (Amos 5-6) indicates his
fundamental goal to bring Israel back to YHVVH. The meaning of such a move
becomes evident in the final sequence of five visions in Amos 7-9. The first four
visions point to Amos's conviction that YH,I\TH has shown him the divine
intention to bring Israel down by visions of a locust plague, fire, a plumb line,
and a basket of summer fruit. The brief narrative in Amos 7: 10-1 7 indicates that
Amos's understanding of YH'I\TH's intent is the overthrow of King Jeroboam
ben Joash and the destruction of the Beth El sanctuary, that is, the royal
sanctuary of northern Israel. The final vision in Amos 9 then elaborates on this
intention by portraying YHWH standing by the temple altar calling for the
downfall of the capitals and thresholds that support the temple building itself.
Although many interpreters maintain that Amos's call for the restoration of the
fallen booth of David presupposes a postexilic setting when the house of David
was defunct, Amos's Judean identity and Judah's vassal status to Israel indicate
the prophet's object to restore Davidic rule over the north in order to reestablish
the moral standing and economic well-being of the nation Israel.
The book of Obadiah is the fourth in the Masoretic order of the Twelve
Prophets and the fifth in the Septuagint order. 17 The superscription in Obad 1
provides no indication of historical setting and identifies the work only as the
vision of Obadiah. Traditional exegesis identifies Obadiah with the royal officer
who assisted Elijah and protected the prophets ofYHWH from the threat posed
by King Ahab ben Omri ofIsrael and his Phoenician queenJezebel (1 Kgs 18).
Because of Obadiah's condemnation of Edom for its role in standing aside and
thereby in enabling foreigners to overwhelm Jerusalem and to exile its
inhabitants (cf. e.g., Ps 137; Isa 34:5-15; 63:1-6; Jer 49:7-22; Ezek 25:12-14;
35:2-15; Mal 1:2-5; Lam 4:21-22), modern interpreters date the book to the
exilic or postexilic periods. The literary structure of the book points to its
fundamental concern with condemning Edom for its actions against Jerusalem: 18
16 On the rhetorical characteristics and function of Amos, see now Karl Moller, A Prophet
in Debate: TIe Rhetoric if Persuasion in the Book if Amos, ]SOTSup 372 (Sheffield: Sheffield
Academic, 2003).
17 For discussion of Obadiah, see Sweeney, Twelve Prophets, 1:277-300; Barton, Joel and
Obadiah; Ehud Ben Zvi, A Historical-Critical Stuqy if the Book if Obadiah, BZAW 242 (Berlin:
de Gruyter, 1996); Paul R. Raabe, Obadiah, AB 24D (New York: Doubleday, 1996); Hans
Walter Wolff, Obadiah and Jonah, CC (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1986).
18 Sweeney, Prophetic Literature, 188.
Form and Eschatology 149
1. Superscription la
II. Oracle concerning the condemnation of Edom Ib-21
A. Prophetic messenger formula Iba 1-5
B. Oracle proper Iba 6-21
19 For discussion of jonah, see Sweeney, Twelve Prophets, 1:301-334; jack M . Sasson,
Jonah, AB 24B (New York: Doubleday, 1990); Uriel Simon,Jonah,jPS Bible Commentary
(Philadelphia: jewish Publication Society, 1999); Phyllis Trible, 'jonah," TIe New
Interpreters Bible, ed. L. E. K eck et al. (Nashville: Abingdon, 1996), 7:461-529; Wolff,
Obadiah and Jonah.
20 Sweeney, Prophetic Literature, 190.
150 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
21 For discussion of Micah, see Sweeney, TIe Twelve Prophets, 2:33 7-416; Ehud Ben Zvi,
Micah , FOTL 21B (Grand R apids: Eerdmans, 2001 ); Mignon J acobs, TIe Conceptual
Coherence of the Book of Micah, JSOTSup 322 (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 2001 ); Hans
Walter Wolff, Micah, CC (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1990).
Form and Eschatology 151
over the nations that once oppressed her. The formal literary structure of the
book appears as follows: 22
1. Superscription 1:1
II. Announcement ofYHWH's exaltation ofJerusalem proper 1:2-7:20
A. YHWH's punishment of Samaria as paradigm for 1:2-16
Jerusalem
B. Process of punishment and restoration for Jerusalem: 2:1-5:14
Babylonian exile, new Davidic monarch to punish
oppressive nations
1. concerning the process of punishment 2: 1-13
2.concerning YH'J\TH's plans to punish and exalt 3: 1-5: 14
Jerusalem
C. Appeal to IsraellJ udah for return to YHWH 6: 1-16
D. Liturgical psalm of confidence in YHWH 7: 1-20
reference to the fall of Thebes (No-Amon) in 663 BCE (Nah 3:8-10), but the fate
of Thebes only serves as a confirmation of YHVVH's power to bring down
Nineveh. The formal literary structure of the book appears as the prophet's
disputation or argument tha t YHVVH is the true power in the world: 24
Nahum's Argument that YHWH is the True Power of the World (Nah 1: 1-3: 19)
I. Superscription 1:1
II. Massa' Proper: Refutation of Contention that YHWH is 1:2-3:19
Powerless
A. Address to Judah and Assyria challenging their low 1:2-lO
estimation ofYHWH
B. Address to Judah asserting that the end of Assyrian 1:11-2:1
oppression is an act ofYHVVH
C. Address to Nineveh and the Assyrian king asserting that 2:2-3:19
the fall of Nineveh is an act ofYHWH
Although some interpreters decry the violence of the book or charge that it
represents J udean hostility to gentiles, such views miss an important point, viz.,
the book of Nahum celebrates the downfall of a n oppressor as an act of
YHVVH's power and justice in the world. Insofar as Nah 1:2 cites the litany of
YHWH's characteristics in Exod 34:6-7 with a special emphasis on YHWH's
justice, Nahum calls for a comparative reading withJonah.
The book of Habakkuk is the eighth book in both the Masoretic and
Septuagint sequences of the Twelve Prophets. 25 The superscription in Hab 1: 1
identifies the book simply as the pronouncement (Hebrew, massii j of Habakkuk
the prophet, and the second superscription in Hab 3: 1 refers simply to the
prayer of H a bakkuk the prophet. Although the superscriptions provide no
historical information, the reference to the rise of the Chaldeans (Hebrew,
kaSdzm) indicates that the book presupposes the neo-Ba bylonian subjugation of
Judah in 605 BCE. Although many interpreters mistakenly argue that the book
is designed to condemn Judah, close analysis of the literary form and content of
the book indicates that it is a reflection on theodicy insofar as it defends
YHVVH's righteousness and power by arguing that YHWH was the one who
brought the neo-Babylonian oppressors to Judah and that YHWH will also
ultimately deliver Judah from the oppressor. The literary form of the book
appears as follows: 26
27 For discussion of Zephaniah, see Sweeney, Twelve Prophets, 491-526; idem, Zephaniah,
Hermeneia (Minneapolis: Fortress, 2003); Ehud Ben Zvi, A Historical Critical Stu4J of the
Book of Zephaniah, BZAW 198 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 1991); Floyd, Minor Prophets; J.
Vlaardingerbroek, Zephaniah, HeOT (Leuven: Peeters, 1999).
28 Sweeney, Prophetic Literature, 200.
154 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
1. Superscription 1:1
II. Body of Book: Exhortation to seek YHWH 1:2-3:20
A. Announcement of the Day of YHWH against Baal 1:2-18
worshippers
B. Exhortation to seek YHWH 2:1-3:20
1. Exhortation proper 2:1-3
2. Substantiation: YHVVH's actions 2:4-3:20
a. Basis for exhortation: destruction of Philistine cities 2:4
b. Punishment of nations 2:5-15
c. Restoration ofJerusalem 3:1-20
29 For discussion of Haggai, see Sweeney, Twelve Prophets, 2:527-57; Floyd, lvlinor Prophets;
Carol L. Meyers and Eric M . Meyers, Haggai and Zechariah 1-8, AB 25B (New York:
Doubleday, 1987); David L. Petersen, Haggai and Zechariah 1-8: A Commentary, OTL
(Philadelphia: Westminster, 1984); Paul L. Redditt, Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi, NCeB
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1995); Hans Walter Wolff, Haggai, CC (Minneapolis:
Augsburg, 1988).
30 Sweeney, Prophetic Literature, 201.
Form and Eschatology 155
Haggai's eschatological perspective is defined in part by his view that the land of
Israel suffers drought because the Temple has not yet been rebuilt. As a result,
the offerings presented by the people at the altar are impure and unacceptable to
YHWH. He envisions that YHWH will shake the heavens and the earth, which
will prompt the nations of the world to recognize YHWH's sovereignty and to
bring offerings to YHVVH when the Temple is built. A messianic perspective also
plays a role insofar as Haggai maintains that Zerubbabel ben Shealtiel, the
grandson of King Jehoiachin ben Jehoiakim of Judah, will serve as YHWH's
"signet ring" or regent in the world once "the throne of the nations," that is, the
Persian empire, is overthrown. Such a move would signal the resumption of the
rule of the house of David over Judah on behalf of YHVVH, insofar as the royal
signet ring symbolized royal authority in the ancient world.
The book of Zechariah is the eleventh book in the Masoretic and
Septuagint sequences of the book of the Twelve. 31 The book focuses on the
significance of the restoration of the Jerusalem Temple, and the various
chronological statements in Zech I: I; I: 7; and 7: I place the book in the second
and fourth years of the reign of King Darius of Persia, that is, 520 and 518 BCE,
coinciding with the beginning of Temple construction in 520-515 BCE. The
superscription of the book in Zech I: I identifies the prophet as Zechariah ben
Berechiah ben Iddo. Insofar as Ezra 5: I and 6: 14 identify him as Zechariah bar
Iddo, scholars have speculated about problems in the transmission of his name.
But Isa 8: 1-4 identifies a Zechariah ben Yeberechiah (a variant of the name
Berechiah) as a witness to Isaiah's prophecies and the birth of his son, which
together with the many intertextual references to Isaiah throughout the book
indicates a deliberate effort to present Zechariah as the witness to Isaiah and the
arbiter of his message. Overall, the book of Zechariah presents the prophet's
visions concerning the significance of the rebuilding of the Temple in Jerusalem,
including the restoration of the Temple priesthood and the recognition of
31 For discussion of Zechariah, see Sweeney, Twelve Prophets, 2:559-709; Edgar Conrad,
Zechariah, Readings (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 1999); Floyd, Minor Prophets; Meyers
and Meyers, Haggai, Zechariah 1-8; Meyers and Meyers, Zechariah 9-14, AB 25C (New
York: Doubleday, 1993); Petersen, Haggai and Zechariah 1-8; Petersen, Zechariah 9-14 and
Malachi: A Commentary, OTL (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1995); Redditt, Haggai,
Zechariah, Malachi.
156 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
YHWH at the Jerusalem Temple by the nations of the world. Such a view builds
upon Isaiah's visions of restoration insofar as Zechariah envisions the overthrow
of gentile rule as the nations recognize YHWH's sovereignty.
Modern critical discussion of the literary form of Zechariah posits that the
authentic oracles of the prophet appear in Zech 1-8 but that Zech 9-14 (or 9-11
and 12-14) represent the proto-apocalyptic work or works of a later writer or
writers. Earlier scholars tended to date Zech 9-14 to the Hellenistic age on the
mistaken argument that the itinerary of the king and the reference to the Greek
in Zech 9 presupposed Alexander the Great's conquest of the Near East in 333-
332 BCE, but contemporary scholars tend to opt for the Persian period as the
setting for the composition of these chapters. Despite the compositional history
of the book, however, it is meant to be read as a single work in which the
account of Zechariah's visions concerning the building of the Temple in Zech
1: 7-6: 15 provide the foundation for understanding the account of Zechariah's
oracles which portray the world-wide recognition ofYHVVH's sovereignty at the
Temple in Zech 7-14. The literary form of the book then appears as follows: 32
Finally, the book of Malachi is the twelfth book in both the Masoretic and
Septuagint sequences of the Twelve Prophets. 33 The superscription of the book
in Mal I: I identifies it as a massa' or a prophetic pronouncement of YHWH's
word to Israel through Malachi, but interpreters are divided as to whether or not
Malachi is a proper name or simply a Hebrew term that designates the prophet
as "m y messenger" or "m y angel" (cf. Mal 3:1 ). Most interpreters date the book
to the late-fifth century, that is, the period immediately prior to the reforms of
Nehemiah in the latter fifth century a nd early fourth century, due to the
apparent neglect of the Temple and the need to organize the Jewish community
of early Persia n-period Jerusalem. Indeed, the litera ry form of the book indicates
that it is a series of disputation or argumentative speeches that a re designed to
call upon the priest and people to show proper reverence for YH'J\TH ,
specifically by doing justice, ensuring the sanctity of the Temple offerings, and
observing YH'J\TH's Torah: 34
1. Superscription I : II
II. Body of the Book: Pa renetic Address Proper 1:2-3:24
A. First disputation: YHWH loves the people 1:2-5
B. Second disputation: People a nd Priests have 1:6-2:16
Misha ndled Cultic Matters
C . Third disputation: Justice will be done on the Day of 2:17-3:5
YHWH
D . Fourth disputation: Call for proper treatment of 3:6-12
YHWH's tithes
E. Fifth disputation: YHWH's justice will be realized on 3: 13-21
Dayof YHWH
F. Concluding summa tion: observe YHWH's Tora h 3:22-24
33 For discussion of Malachi, see Sweeney, The Twelve Prophets, 711-52; Floyd, Minor
Prophets; Andrew E. Hill, Malachi, AB 25D (New York: Doubleday, 1995); Petersen,
Zechariah 9-1 4 and Malachi; Redditt, Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi.
34 Sweeney, Prophetic Literature, 207-8.
Form and Eschatology 159
YHWH's Torah and Elijah as the figure who will inaugurate the Day ofYHWH
when YHWH's sanctity will be restored.
III
The Book of the Twelve Prophets clearly appears in at least two distinct forms,
each with its own unique order of books and distinctive hermeneutical
perspective. In addition, each form of the Book of the Twelve comprises the
same twelve discrete prophetic books, each with its own individual formal
characteristics and unique set of concerns. '!\Then we consider the generic
character of the Book of the Twelve Prophets as a prophetic book, two
important issues emerge.
The first is the two-fold (or more) formal character of the book. Past form-
critical scholarship typically based its analysis of biblical books on the Masoretic
form of the text. But recent advances in text-critical scholarship have moved well
beyond the past practice of viewing textual versions of biblical works, such as the
Septuagint, Targums, or the Peshitta, simply as sources for allegedly improved
readings of individual passages in the Bible, toward a new view of versional
editions of books as formal and literary works, with their own distinctive
hermeneutical perspectives. Arie van der Kooij's study of Isa 23 in both its
Masoretic and Septuagint forms demonstrates how each text form construes the
chapter, viz., the Masoretic text construes Isa 23 as a condemnation of the
Phoenician city of Tyre, whereas the Septuagint version of the text construes Isa
23 as a condemnation of the Phoenician city of Carthage. 35
In the case of Jeremiah, the issue becomes even more complex when we
recognize that the book does indeed appear in two very different forms, the
longer Masoretic Hebrew form of the text and the shorter and very differently
arranged Septuagint Greek version. Indeed, the discovery of 4QJ er b among the
Dead Sea Scrolls indicates that there was a Hebrew Vorlage for the Septuagint
form of the text and that both proto-Masoretic and proto-"Septuagint" forms of
the texts therefore coexisted at Qumran without apparent problem. 36 Shelley
Long's recent Claremont dissertation therefore examines the portrayal of
Zedekiah in the Masoretic and Septuagint versions of the book and concludes
that they represent very different understandings of Judah's last sitting
monarchY The proto-Septuagint versIOn of the book employs the
Prophetenerzahlung genre to portray Zedekiah as a self-assured and despicable
35 Arie van der Kooij , TIe Oracle if 1jre: TIe Septuagint if Isaiah 23 as Version and Vision,
VTSup 61 (Leiden: Brill, 1998).
36 Emanuel Tov, 'jeremiah," in Eugene Ulrich et ai, Qjlmran Cave 4. X. TIe Prophets, DJD
15 (Oxford: Clarendon, 1997), 145-205, esp. 171-76.
37 Shelley L. Long, "The Last King(s) of Judah: Zedekiah and Sedekias in the Hebrew
and Old Greek Versions of Jeremiah 37 (44)-40(47):6" (ph.D. Dissertation; Claremont
Graduate University, 2014).
160 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
38See esp. Gerald H . Wilson, TIe Editing if the Hebrew Psalter, SBLDS 76 (Chico, CA:
Scholars Press, 1981).
Form and Eschatology 161
Peshitta version of Psalms includes Pss 151-155. Such observations also point to
the multifaceted character of the book of Psalms and raise the question; indeed,
as in the Book of the Twelve, we have multiple distinctive forms of the same
book.
It would seem, then, that the example of the Book of the Twelve Prophets
and the other works cited here point to a need to consider both multiple,
distinctive forms of the same book, each with its own set of formal features and
hermeneutical perspectives, and composite books that are simultaneously a
single literary work and a compilation of multiple literary works. Future form-
critical scholarship must be prepared to take account of both of these
phenomena. For the time being, form-critical scholars must content themselves
with the most basic generic definition of a prophetic book, viz., a prophetic book
is the literary presentation of the words of a prophet and! or the events of the
prophet's career. Apart from those basic and typical characteristics, prophetic
works may vary widely in form. 39
INTRODUCTION
In 1921 , Karl Budde published an article that begins with an astute observation
and then offers a flawed explanation for the phenomenon he observes. l He
observes that the Book of the Twelve offers very few biographical or
autobiographical accounts of the prophets in comparison to the other prophetic
books. Budde contends that these elements were systematically removed from
the Book of the Twelve by an editorial process. This proposal has received
virtually no followers because of its shortcomings. Nevertheless, his initial
observation is correct, though it has not been given enough consideration in
discussions of the redaction of the Book of the Twelve. It is at this point that the
discussion can benefit from the insights of new form criticism (or as I would
prefer to call it, a more mature form criticism). I will therefore summarize
Budde's article and offer a critique before offering another proposal as a step
toward explaining Budde's initial observation that takes account of some of the
insights of new form criticism.
- 163 -
164 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Karl Budde argues that traces of redaction can be found III the Book of the
Twelve which changed the cha racter of the scroll by eliminating narrative
elements that would have provided more information a bout the prophet. Budde
begins with a description of the problem of determining anything definitive
rega rding the prophets in the Book of the Twelve. The biggest problem,
according to Budde, is the chaotic state in which the books have been
transmitted:
But more than individual vocabulary, the problem belongs to the chaotic
condition of the transmission of the books as such: the undifferentiated and
untraceable stringing together of word to word, saying to saying, and speech to
speech; the complete lack of that which New Testament studies tends to label as
contextu alization. Consequently, with a few exceptions, the prophet never gains
form and personality. He rem ains a scheme, and his words sound to our ear as
though coming from empty space.2
Budde's a rgumen ts are based upon a n investigation of texts in the Book of the
Twelve, a nd in particular he deals with Hos 1 and 3, the book of Amos, a nd Mic
3.
Hosea 1 and 3 provide the only personal experience-according to
Budde-in the book of Hosea. Budde argues that the me taphors of Hos 2
represent an insertion a nd that the beginning of Hos 3 ("go again") attached
directly to Hos 1 before the addition of Hos 2. Moreover, Hos 2 does no t
continue Hos 1. 3 And yet, argues Budde, even chapter 3 does not follow well on
chapter 1 since it contains no indication of the prophet's discovery of his wife's
infidelity. Hosea 1 has nothing to say a bout the infidelity of Hosea's wife. The
births of the children all concern the children as metaphors for the people a nd
have nothing to do with the sin of the wife . Further, the report character of
chapter 1 has changed with chapter 3 where the prophet speaks in the first
person, but he h as never been introduced. For this reason, Budde argues that a
narrative must have continued that is no longer present which introduced the
2 Budde, "Folgenschwere R edaktion," 218: "Aber noch mehr als der Wortlaut im
einzelnen tragt die Schuld doch der chaotische Dberlieferungszustand der Bucher als
socher; die unterschiedlose und einhaltslose Aneinanderreihung von Wort an 'Nort,
Spruch an Spruch, Rede an Rede, das vollige Fehlen dessen, was man in der
Neutestamentliche Wissenschaft mit "Verumstandigung" zu bezeichnen pflegt. Dadurch
kommt es, von Teilausnahmen abgesehen, uberhaupt nicht dazu, dass der Prophet
Gestalt und Personlichkeit gewinnt; er bleibt ein Schemen, und wie aus dem leeren
R aume klingen seine 'Norte an unser Ohr."
3 Budde, "Folgenschwere Redaktion," 219.
U'here Are the Prophets 165
prophetic speech a nd explained how he came to know that his wife was
unfaithful. If this were the only time such contextualization is mutilated,
according to Budde, we could overlook the problem, but this mutilation is
characteristic of other texts in the Book of the Twelve.4
Amos offers a second case for Budde. He argues that the prophetic na rrative
in Amos 7: 10-17 offers a n exception to the Book of the Twelve's lack of
biographical detail, but also because its insertion into the vision cycle provides a
context by which to interpret the visions. 5 Nevertheless, he notes that not only
does 7: I 0-1 7 interrupt the third and fourth vision, but 7: I 0-17 also represents a
fragmentary narrative. It assumes one knows who Amos is; it neither introduces
him, nor explains why he was in Bethel. It does not indicate what happened to
the letter that Amazia h sent to Jeroboam , a nd it does not tell the end of the
story: what happened to Amos after Amaziah told Amos to leave the kingdom?
If one removes 7: 10-17 , again according to Budde, not only does one have a
better connection between the first four visions, but isolating 7: I 0-17
underscores that it is a fragmentary narrative . Budde explains this missing
material by arguing that the narrative fragment represents the only remaining
episode of a narrative collection of the appearance of Amos in the northern
kingdom. Budde believes this na rrative was kept because it "concludes" with a
YH\I\TH speech. The only other first person speech of the prophet in Amos
appears in the five visions, but there the prophet only serves as a vehicle by
which YHWH speeches a re conveyed . For Budde, 7:10-17 wo uld have
originally been part of a narrative collection that opened the book, but a
collection of which only 7: 10-17 remains.6
The third case study presented by Budde of a shortened biographical
narrative comes in Mic 3: I ff, where the prophet speaks for the only time in the
book.? This use of " I" in Mic 3: 1 has no clear connection to the preceding
materia l according to Budde. For Budde (who believes 2: 12-13 is a later
a ddition), the m aterial immediately preceding 3: I (2:6-11 ) is a unit that requires
4 Ibid. , 221 .
5 Ibid. , 221-22.
6 Budde thinks that an early version of the superscription (1:1 ) would have introduced this
narrative collection and the book, but 7: 10-1 7 was kept and moved to its current location
following the third vision report because of the pronouncement against J eroboam in the
third vision (7:9) that is also reported in the narrative (7: II ). Budde begins with a false
premise that the narrative must have existed in a collection that we still have (Budde,
"Folgenschwere Redaktion," 221 ). vVhatever source the narrative came from could just
have well contained other material, oracular and/or narratives. It need not have been
part of the current collection.
7According to Budde, "Folgenschwere Redaktion," 222 . Budde apparently does not
consider the I cs pronouns in Mic I :8-9 to be those of the prophet. By way of contrast, see
Jakob Wohrle, Die .fruhen Sammlungen des Zwo!fProphetenbuches: Entstehung und Komposition,
BZAW 360 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2006), 139-46.
166 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
a narrative account wherein the prophet's enemies would have responded to the
prophetic attack in 2:6-11. Budde assumes that a narrative, now lost, would
have recoun ted the resistance Micah received (along the lines of Amos 7: 10-17).
The prophet would have then responded to those charges beginning in 3: 1
("And I said").8 For Budde, unless one is willing to obliterate this first person
common singular reference a nd replace it with something else, then one is forced
to conclude that the unknown cause for this prophet's speech has broken away
from the preserved prophetic response in 3: 1. 9 In other words, for Budde the
na rrative account that motivates the prophet's speech has been removed a nd all
that remains is the YHWH speech which the prophet proclaims.
Budde explains these na rrative removals by arguing that the na rrative data
needed to understand the original setting has been deleted. He considers these
three cases definitive for his model that na rrative m aterial concerning the
prophet and the causes for speeches have been system atically removed from the
writings in the Book of the Twelve. He also mentions, however, several other
texts whose contextualizations are missing: Hab 1:5-11 ; Joel2; Zeph 1. 10 Budde
concludes that this fragmentary cha racter cannot be accidental, but represents a
thoroughgoing redactional process whose goal was to eliminate everything
except YHWH speeches in order to create a more holy book. I I He dates the
redactional activity to the third or fourth century BCE at the time when battles
were underway concerning which books constituted the canon, when the
Sam a ritans only accepted the Torah, but he also thinks there we re debates a bout
the prophets a nd the canon between the (precursors to) the Sadducees and the
Pharisees. 12
One must first differentiate between Budde's observations a nd his solution. His
proposal that a massive redaction of the entire Book of the Twelve sought to
8 See his fuller treatment in K arl Budde, "Micha 2 und 3," ZA W 38 (191 9-1 920): 2-22,
especially pages 6-7.
9 The majority of commentators since Budde take 3: 1 to be a response to 2: 11 including
Wilhelm Rudolph, Micha- Nahum-Habakuk-Zephanja, KAT 13.3 (Gutersloh: Mohn,
1975), 68-69; and Hans Walter Wolff, Micah , trans. Gary Stansell, CC (Minneapolis:
Augsburg, 1990), 95- 96; James L. M ays, Micah, OTL (London: SCM, 1976), 77-78
(though Mays does not think the two sayings necessarily come from a single speech but
were redacted together by the compilers ofMic 1-3); and Francis I. Anderson and D avid
Noel Freedman, Micah , AB 24E (New York; Doubleday, 2000), 349. See the more
complete listing of opinions in John Willis, "A Note on .,~!\, in Micah 3: 1," ZA W 80
(1968): 50-54.
10 Budde, "Folgenschwere R edaktion," 223-224.
II Ibid., 225.
12 Ibid ., 226.
U'here Are the Prophets 167
remove all human elements from the text has failed to receive any scholarly
support in the more than ninety years since he wrote the article, although a few
do acknowledge his a rguments for a missing narrative m ake sense for Mic 3: 1. 13
His arguments rest upon models of canon consciousness that are deemed
a nachronistic today, and with good reaso n. The so-called Samaritan schism
which he describes is far too reductionist an explanation for a complex social,
political, a nd religious phenomenon than his suggestion of a theological
discussion a bout which books to consider holy takes into account. 14
Nevertheless, Budde's basic observation deserves further consideration than
it has received. The Book of the Twelve constantly requires the reader to
provide explanations for a brupt changes of speaker a nd addressee. Often, texts
appea r to juxtapose disparate units with little notice to the reader, a nd Budde is
certainly correct that the Twelve contains little in the way of contextualization of
speeches, biographic accounts, or autobiographical na rratives. In fact, only five
of the Twelve mention the father's name and only three of the Twelve mention
the hometown of the prophet. So, what would account for this phenomenon? If
it is not p a rt of a n editorial process of deletions, but is part of the character of the
text, how does one account for this characteristic?
Elements of the discussion surrounding new form criticism can illuminate
the question at ha nd. New form criticism as practiced in this volume both
critiques a nd extends the form- critical project. 15 Two elements of this discussion
in particular offer a helpful lens by which to approach the question of the
missing prophets in the Book of the Twelve, na mely the idea of the relational
aspects of form a nd the impact of forms as rhetorical elements within texts.
Martin Buss distinguishes five different models of form with the first three
having roots that date back to G reek philosophy, including worldly forms as
impure reflections of heave nly forms, forms sharing an essential structure, the
particularist view of individual forms as belonging to a primary level of reality
that sees associations between these forms as accidents arising from the purpose
of those making the connections. 16 Buss refers to the fourth approach to forms as
Mark J. Boda and J. Gordon McConville (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity and IVP
Academic, 2012), 257-7l.
16 M artin J. Buss, "Form Criticism: An Introduction," in The Changing Shape qj Form
Criticism: A Relational Approach (Sheffield: Sheffield Phoenix, 2010), 98-10 l. Buss associates
the first category with Plato, the second with Aristotle, and the third he argues for a line
168 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
alerts the reader to a prophetic vision report, and creates expectations for what
follows.
Yet, other forms deserve to be considered as part of a discussion on the
nature of prophetic books, especially in the Book of the Twelve. These elements
concern the forms reflected in the text that have an impact on how the text came
to be and what they are intending to convey rhetorically. These forms concern
groupings of texts beyond the individual pericopes, but short of the entire
prophetic writing. Within the individual writings of the Twelve, several patterns
emerge (which are also shared with other prophetic writings). These patterns
point to groupings of texts that exhibit the kinds of generalist and particularist
relationships that constitute forms according to the relational definition of Buss.
At the same time, the nature of these forms deserves reflection upon how they
function rhetorically when reading prophetic literature.
AN ALTERNATIVE PROPOSAL
In my opmlOn, Budde's proposal has reversed the order of how the divine
character came to dominate the material in the Twelve. The biographical
material was not excised from the corpus; rather, it was never selected for
inclusion. The individual writings are not interested in the life of the prophet
because the prophet's message-the word from YH,I\TH comprising the
writing-is the key to the structure, rhetoric, and collection of material. Two
factors account for the lack of biographical material better than a redactional
process that removed these elements: (I) the nature of the collections that are
incorporated into the individual writings and (2) the repurposing of source
material in new contexts. The collections within the Book of the Twelve have a
history that needs to be considered carefully. 22 In most cases, the individual
writings contain significant blocks of material that were not written first for the
Book of the Twelve. In some cases, this means that an individual writing found
its shape primarily through a literary process that did not have the entire Book of
the Twelve in view. Nevertheless, some of the writings resonate more fully within
their literary context, which suggests that the material in the book has been
adapted for its context in the Book of the Twelve. The reuse of source material
in new and expanding contexts offers a better model in these instances. To
clarify these materials, it is important to consider the terminology we use
regarding the material found in prophetic books and then to ask about the
character of that material relative to the writings in the Book of the Twelve.
22 Here I differ from some practitioners of new form criticism who seek to limit the
discussion of the implications of form solely to the final form of the text. The question of a
text's presumed prehistory, while necessarily containing speculation, may offer plausible
rationale for explaining both the coherence of a text and its points of disjuncture. See
Odil Hannes Steck, The Prophetic Books and their Theological Witness, trans. James D . Nogalski
(St. Louis: Chalice, 2000), 17-114.
170 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
HEADINGS
23 For distinctions between incipits and superscnptIons, see John D.vV. vVatts,
"Superscriptions and Incipits in the Book of the Twelve," in Reading and Hearing the Book if
the Twelve, ed.Jam es D. Nogalski and Marvin A. Sweeney, SBLSymS 15 (Atlanta: Society
of Biblical Literature), 110-24. Superscriptions are titles that appear at the top of books,
psalms, or portions of books while incipits are sentences that begin narratives.
24 It should also not go unnoticed that most of the superscriptions in the Book of the
Twelve relate to neighboring writings in some way and most are interpreted as
introductions to the writings which they begin. For example, Joel's superscription is closer
to Hos 1: 1 than to any other superscription. Nahum and Habakkuk both use ~ill~ and a
form of :1m. H aggai and Zechariah share a chronicled form; while Zech 9: 1; 12: 1; and
Mall: 1 all three begin with the same words (:11:1'-"::11 ~ill~) , unattested elsewhere. Hosea,
Amos, Micah , and Zephaniah begin with superscriptions that mention kings ofJudah and
Israel, and three of those four also contain word-event formulas. Given that these four
likely formed a book of four at one point in the development of the larger corpu s, this
similarity originally would have involved writings that were transmitted on the same
scroll. See J ames D . Nogalski, TIe Book if the Twelve: Hosea-Jonah, SHBC (Macon, GA:
Smyth & Helwys, 2011 ), 5-6.
U'here Are the Prophets 171
a bout the wicked draw upon a form attested elsewhere. This form is
recogniza ble by the use of "woe" (2:6, 9, 12, 15, 19) followed by a description of
a group targeted for judgment.
(3) Finally, thematic sections within a book can be marked by headings of
collections or episodes. Here, one can mention the dated appearances included
in the vignettes of H aggai (1: 1, 15; 2: 1, 10, 20), the similar dates introducing the
m ajor sections of Zech 1-8 (1: 1; 1: 7; 7: 1) that mirror those of Haggai, a nd the
otherwise unattested headings (;"11;"1' i::l1 ~ izm) that set off the final sections of
Deutero-Zechariah (9: 1; 12: 1) and that mimic the heading of Mall: 1.
In most instances headings of the individual writings represent the source of
most of the biographical information we supposedly know about the prophet.
The collection's origins are (usually) otherwise unknown. Most scholarship
assumes that the information in these headings generally reflects historical
connections to a prophetic figure 's sayings or writings. I see no compelling
reason to doubt this is the case, but that does no t mea n that the superscription
always introduced the book as we now have it.
In all likelihood, some portion of the book contains material associated with
a prophet of the name mentioned in the superscription through some kind of
traditioning process: Hosea, Joel, Amos, Mica h, Nahum, H a bakkuk, Zephaniah,
Haggai, and Zecha riah all have superscriptions which the majority of scholarly
treatments have concluded a re associated with actual prophetic figures.
Obadiah,Jonah, and Malachi represent at least partial exceptions to this general
tendency. A number of scholars have posited that Obadiah and Malachi are
p seudonyms, and that the collections were given a na me by which to associate
the otherwise anonymous m aterial contained in the collection. The case is
particularly strong for Obadiah given that the opening qua rter of the book is
essentially a modified version of the Edom oracles from the book ofJeremiah. 25
Malachi contains a number of disputations, but a number of scholars have
a rgued that the na me Malachi comes from YHVVH's reference to "m y
messenger" (':I~lm) in Mal 3: 1. 26 Jonah's genre and content have long been
treated as a fictional narrative written in the late Persian or early Hellenistic
period based upon the eighth century prophetic figure from the northern
25 See Hans Walter Wolff, Obadiah and J onah, trans. Margaret Kohl, CC (Minneapolis:
Augsburg, 1986), 38-40; Paul R . R aabe, Obadiah, AB 24D (New York: Doubleday, 1996),
22-31; Jorg J eremias, Die Propheten Joel, Oba4ja, Jona, Micha, ATD 24.3 (Gottingen:
Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2007), 63-65; and Jeremias, "Zur Theologie Obadjas: Die
Auslegung von J er 49,7-16 durch Obadja," in Die Unwiderstehliche Wahrheit: Studien zur
Alttestarnentlichen Prophetie, ed. Rudiger Lux and Ernst-Joachim Waschke (Leipzig:
Evangelische Verlagsanstalt, 2006), 269-82.
26 See Helmut U tzschneider, Kunder oder Schreiber? Eine 77zese zurn Problem der 'Schrifiprophetie'
auf Grund von Maleachi 1, 6-2, 9, BEATAJ 19 (Frankfurt: Lang, 1989), 18-20; and Andrew
E. Hill, Malachi, AB 25D (New York: Doubleday, 1998), 15-18.
172 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
27 Wolff, Obadiah and Jonah, 81 , 98- 99; J eremias, Die Propheten, 83.
28 The chapters begin with a question posed to the prophet from a delegation from Bethel
(Zech 7: 1-3) regarding whether to continue the ceremonial fasts. His response concerning
the fasts does not come until the end of the collection (8: 19), thus essentially forming a
frame around the entire unit. See discussions inJames D . Nogalski, The Book if the Twelve:
Micah-Malachi, SHBC (Macon, GA: Smyth & Helwys, 2011 ),885-87,897-98.
29 Not all of these formul as introduce new sayings and some sayings do not exhibit the
formula, but all deal with statements about what will happen on the coming day of
YHWH when YHWH will intervene on behalf of Judah and J erusalem. See discussion in
Nogalski, Micah-Malachi, 969-81. A series of up to eleven units are arranged in five
thematic blocks that, together, provide both some sense of cohesion and thematic
progression.
U'here Are the Prophets 173
SOURCE BLOCKS
Source blocks are longer composItIons that were not originally delivered or
written with other building blocks of the book, but which now appear in a
prophetic writing with those other elements. The extent of editing on these
source blocks varies from the simple placement alongside another source to
transitional elements creatively interposed to provide guidance to the reader.
Source blocks can be used as the building material for the book/passage (Zech
9-14, Malachi, H a bakkuk, a nd Joel) or used to enhance the mea ning of existing
collections/narratives (Nah I; H a b 3; Jona h 2). Source blocks can be evaluated
for their purposes when they were first composed as an independent element
a nd for their function within their final litera ry context.
30 Note that the formula at the beginning of 4: 1 sets this expectation for the reader: "And
it will happen in the end of the days." Hence, J eru salem's fate with Babylon plays a
prominent role (4:9-10). While Assyria is mentioned (5:5- 6), the reference to eight
shepherds who will deliver "us" Gud ah) by the sword refers to the kings of Judah who
shepherd the country from H ezekiah to the fall of J erusalem (H ezekiah, Manasseh,
Amon, Josiah, J ehoahaz, J ehoiakim, J ehoiachin, Zedekiah). See Nogalski, Micah-Malachi,
563-65. In other words, the reference to the Assyrian threat really addresses the postexilic
community.
174 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Several source blocks have been used to create a prophetic writing or a major
section within a prophetic writing. 'I\Tritings compiled using such source blocks
include: Malachi, Zech 9-14, Habakkuk, Obadiah, and Joel.3 1 Zechariah 9-14
are best categorized as a thematic arrangement of compositions (and an
anthology) secondarily associated with a prophetic figure already part of the
larger scroll. This association, however, only comes by inference since the
superscriptions of Zech 9: 1 and 12: 1 do not mention the name of the prophet.
The core of the material in Zech 9-13 consists of longer units joined together
thematically and linked with a series of shepherd materials. 32 Zechariah 9-11
begins with a threat from the nations (9: 1-8) but transitions to the relationship of
Ephraim and Judah (10-11 ). Zechariah 12-14 focuses on the nations and
Judah/Jerusalem. Zechariah 14 reads like an anthology of Day of YHWH
material, but it is also linked thematically to Zech 13 by the shepherd materials
in Zech 13:7-9.
Malachi contains a series of six disputations, most of which document
interpriesdy concerns (or debates between priests and Levites). The Jerusalem
cult plays a prominent role in these source blocks. The original conclusion to the
disputations (3: 16-21 ) reflects a narrative account of a response to the
disputations involving a group of "those fearing YHWH." 33
Habakkuk contains two different superscriptions (1: 1; 3: 1) that both mention
"Habakkuk the prophet," though Hab 3: 19b also functions as a subscription
containing elements typically found in psalm superscriptions. It mentions the
leader and stringed instruments (see especially Pss 4: 1; 6: 1; 54: 1; 55: 1; 61: 1; 67: 1;
76: 1). Habakkuk 3 also shows undeniable signs of cui tic use (the director
mentioned in the subscription; the musical notation in the superscription; the
reference to the stringed instruments in the subscription; the three-fold use of
selah, which otherwise only appears as a note to the musicians in the Psalter).
Habakkuk 1-2 also show signs of the dovetailing of sources, along with editorial
glosses associating the wicked one in the woe oracles with Babylon.
Habakkuk thus utilizes four different sources. 34 (1) Chapter 1 contains a
prophetic complaint (1:2-4, 12-13) about the prosperity of the wicked that ends
with a narrative report of the prophet's decision to wait for a response in 2: 1-3
(though he has already received one in 1:5-11 in the final form). (2) A
3 1 Partial writings that draw upon source blocks include Hos 1-3; Nah I; and Jonah 2,
which are discussed in the next section below.
32 See the description by Paul L. Redditt, "Israel's Shepherds: Hope and Pessimism in
Zechariah 9-14," CBCZ,51 (1989): 631-42; and James D. Nogalski, "Zechariah 13.7-9 as
a Transitional Text: An Appreciation and Re-Evaluation of the vVork of Rex Mason," in
Bringing out the Treasure: Inner Biblical Allusion in Zechariah 9-14, ed . Mark J. Boda and
Michael H. Floyd,JSOTSup 370 (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 2003), 292-304.
33 See Nogalski, Micah-Malachi, 1061-65 .
34 See James D. Nogalski, Redactional Processes in the Book of the Twelve, BZAW 218 (Berlin:
de Gruyter, 1993), 129-81.
U'here Are the Prophets 175
35 The variety of threats presumed herein keeps open the possibility that this material is
itself a compilation, but the fact that the various threats all can be tied to the covenant
curse material of Deut 28 makes it likely that this material was composed as a literary
actualization of the covenant curse, not that it resulted from actual events. The situation
of multiple threats leads to a call to communal repentance at the temple (Joel 2: 12-17).
See discussions inJames D . Nogalski, '''Presumptions of Covenant' inJoel," in Covenant in
the Persian Period: From Genesis to Chronicles, ed. Gary Knoppers and Richard Bautch
(Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2015).
36 See Nogalski, Hosea-Jonah, 220-21.
37 See ibid. , 243-51.
176 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
deals with the slavery of Judah by the nations and 4:4-8 represents an existing
poem with its own integrity about the punishment of specific nations for
enslaving Judeans. Joel 4 :2 deals with judgment in the valley of Jehoshaphat, a
theme mirrored in 4:9-17 which also deals with YHWH's judgment in the valley
ofJehoshaphat (4: 12). Joel 4:9-17 has also been expanded by a citation of Amos
1:2 and it reverses a text in Mica h or Isaia h (cf. Joel 4: 10 with Mic 4:3 a nd Isa
2:4). Joel 4 : 1 introduces the la rger unit with the restoration of Judah and
Jerusalem a nd 4: 18-21 returns to this theme but also contains a doublet to Amos
9:13 a nd reverses the imagery ofJoel 1-2. Hence, the final component pieces of
Joel 4 combine a day ofYHWH text with a reversal ofIsa 2 (or Mic 4) and with
citations of the beginning and end of Amos while at the same time reversing the
curse ofJoel 1-2.
Joel 3: 1-5 is a very debated passage in redactional models rega rding the
point at which it enters the corpus, but even this text contains allusions to texts in
the Twelve Ooel 3:5 quo tes Obad 17 ; a nd Joel 3:4 uses the language of M al 3: 23
in referring to the "great a nd terrible day ofYHWH"). The simplest explanation
for these combinations of Joel's diverse text units combined with unifying
elements and allusions to other texts, in my opinion, is not a rolling corpus, but a
compositional style wherein a scribal prophet artfully combines preexisting texts
with citations to other writings. 38
The close connection between several of these texts a nd cultic activities
suggests: (1) knowledge of cultic service, (2) access to cultic compositions, a nd (3)
education in biblical texts. More work needs to be done to explain these
elements, but I understand their presence to be quite compatible with some of
the recent models on scribal education in which lengthy training in prophetic
texts was required of scribes. 39 The training would have almost certainly
included training in the texts and traditions that prophetic tradents were
responsible for transmitting.
In addition to source blocks used to build prophetic texts, evidence suggests that
source blocks were also used to enhance the mea mng of existing
38 For a recent example of a rolling corpus model for Joel, see the work of J akob Wohrle,
Dieftuhen Sammlungen, 387-435. Wohrle isolates five redactional layers inJoel, plus isolated
additions. For Wohrle, all but the Grundschicht (and the isolated additions) are associated
with redactional expansions of the developing multivolume corpu s that transcend the
individual writings.
39 Note especially the works of K arel van der Toorn, Scribal Culture and the Nlaking qf the
Hebrew Bible (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2007); D avid M . Carr, Writing on the
Tablet qf the Heart: Origins qf Scripture and Literature (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005);
and David M . Carr, The Formation qf the Hebrew Bible: A New Reconstruction (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2011 ).
U'here Are the Prophets 177
Some writings appear as though portions of the writings involve multiple sources
that have been intertwined with one another (Habakkuk, Obadiah). As already
mentioned, Hab I dovetails two sources, one being essentially a n individual
complaint song one might find in the p salter just as readily as in a prophetic
writing (1:2-4, 13-14; 2:1-3) and the other represents a n oracular warning of
the impending attack of the Babylonians (I :5-12). A Babylonian commentary
40 See J ames D. Nogalski, "The Redactional Shaping of Nahum 1 for the Book of the
Twelve," in Among the Prophets: Language, Image and Structure in the Prophetic Writings, ed. Philip
R . D avies and D avid]. A. Clines, JSOTSup 144 (Sheffield: JSOT Press, 1993), 193-202;
see also Brevard S. Childs, Introduction to the Old Testament as Scripture (Philadelphia:
Fortress, 1979), 454.
41 J ames D. Nogalski, "One Book and Twelve Books: T he Nature of the Redactional
Work and the Implications ofCultic Source M aterial in the Book of the Twelve," in Two
Sides of a Coin: J uxtaposing Views on Interpreting the Book of the T welvelthe Twelve Prophetic Books,
ed. Ehud Ben Zvi and J am es D. Nogalski (Piscataway, NJ: Gorgias, 2009), 27-28, 30- 39.
42 For a rehearsal of various forms of this widely held view, and those of its opponents, see
the discussions in Wolff, Obadiah andJonah, 128-32; and J eremias, Die Propheten, 78, 90- 93 .
178 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
(1: 15-1 7) expands the second pa rt of the complaint based upon the message of
1:5-12 . H a bakkuk 2 expands a n existing woe oracle collection (or composition)
with interpretive material associating the evil one with Babylon. Habakkuk 3
contains a poetic composition combining a theophanic victory song (3:3-15)
with a prophetic "prayer" (3:1-2, 16-19).43 This preexisting source m aterial
contains both its own superscription and subscription that attest to its
independence despite the fact that it functions thematically quite well as the
ending to Habakkuk, probably as the result of the prophetic prayer composed
for its location.
Obadiah presents two very different compositions which look as though
they have been dovetailed together so that the end of 1-14 + l5b overlap s with
l5a + 16-21. Obadiah is quite complex in that Obad 1-5 essentially parallels a
collection of a nti-Edom sayings (Jer 49 : 14-16, 9) a nd 6-7 a nd 8-9 seem to
extend reflections upon the entire block of sayings in Jer 49:7-22. The quick
changes between the sayings also provide Obadiah with the characteristics of an
a nthology where these short sayings follow upon one another and lead to a series
of accusations against Edom in 10-14 before a final pronouncement of judgment
(15b). The latter part of Obad l5a + 16-21 also shows signs of expansion,
though the question of when a nd why it was expanded elicits a number of
responses. 44
Zecharia h 1:2-6 contains the summary of a prophetic sermon and the
people's response. The theme and date of this sermon introduce Zech 1-8, but it
also provides important information for H aggai. By explicitly recounting the
repentance of the people at the conclusion of this sermon (1:6), the book of
Zechariah opens differently than any other book in the Twelve. Just as
importa ntly, the fact that this repenta nce is dated in the eighth month of the
second year of Darius, puts this action prior to the last dated speeches of H aggai.
43 A fairly typical interpretation of the origins of the independent hymn can be found in
Theodore Hiebert, God if i\{y Victory: TIe Ancient Hymn in Habakkuk 3, HSM 38 (Atlanta:
Scholars Press, 1986), 81-128. Nogalski describes the literary form of Habakkuk as
resulting from a combination of source blocks arranged for a rhetorical purpose and
linked by transitional comments: Nogalski, Micah-Malachi, 649-52. By contrast, Wohrle
argu es for a more gradual development into the book whose literary horizons include the
book of Habakkuk alone and incorporation into the developing multivolume corpus with
little additional editing: Jakob Wohrle, Der Abschluss des Zwo!fProphetenbuches Buchubergreifende
Redaktionsprozesse in den spaten Sammlungen, BZAW 389 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2006), 3 11-23.
W ohrle argu es that the liturgical elements of the psalm represent its latest pieces while its
earliest portions fo cused only on the battle against the wicked. The Babylonian
association, so Wohrle, com es in with the remainder of the Babylonian supplements but
only affects the third chapter by the insertion of 3: 16b, 17.
44 For an entry into the complicated literary divisions of Obadiah, see the discussions in
Wolff, Obadiah and Jonah, 21-22; Jeremias, Die Propheten, 57-59, 62-65 ; Rudolph, Haggai,
Sacharja 1-8, Sacharja 9-14, Maleachi, 295-96; Nogalski, Hosea-Jonah, 368-76.
U'here Are the Prophets 179
Chronologically, the overlapping of the dating systems in H aggai a nd Zechariah
also accounts for a gap in H aggai. Before Hag 2: 10, it is not clear that the people
were convinced of Haggai's entreaties to rebuild the temple. The previous date
formula in Hag 2: I comes in the seventh month while 2: I 0 articulates twenty-
fourth day of the ninth month a nd refers to the day when the temple foundation
stone (2: 15) was laid. Zecharia h 1:2-6 comes in between these two dates a nd
indicates that the prophet's speech resulted in the turning of the people to
YHWH.
LONGER COMPOSITIONS
45This statement is not to deny the presence of other clues to dating such as the mention
ofJoshua and Zerubbabel, but in those instances, the text assumes the readers know their
identity, they do not provide the information. See M arvin A. Sweeney, TIe Twelve
Prophets, Volume Two: Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi, Berit
Olam (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2000), 573; M ark]. Boda, "Zechariah: Master
Mason or Penitential Prophet?" in Yahwism after the Exile: Perspectives on Israelite Religion in the
Persian Period, ed. Rainer Albertz and Bob Becking, Studies in Theology and Religion 5
(Assen: Van Gorcum, 2003), 46-49; and John K essler, "Tradition, Continuity and
Covenant in the Book of Haggai: An Alternative Voice from the Early Persian Period ," in
180 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Amos or Zechariah. That does not mean that the vision reports have no
rhetorical aims, only that their function is not oriented toward the prophet.
The sequence of the visions of Amos is crucial. Two groups of paired visions
escalate the threat against Israel even as the objects of the visions become less
severe. The first two visions of Amos represent imminent threats (locusts, shower
of fire), but the prophet successfully intercedes for Israel following each one (7:3,
6). The third and fourth visions appear far less devastating at first glance (a lump
of tin and a basket of summer fruit), but neither of these contains prophetic
intercession. Rather, immediately after the third vision, one finds instead of
intercession, the expulsion of Amos by Amaziah in 7: 10-17, the narrative
fragment noted by Budde. The narrative of 7: 10-1 7 is immediately followed by
the fourth vision of the summer fruit (f'ji) that announces "the end" (fji;1) has
arrived. What follows in 8:4-14 represents a series of sayings that reprise the
themes and phrases of the collection of Amos before turning to the fifth and final
vision (9: 1-4) in which the prophet is a spectator to YHWH's destruction of
Israel. Clearly, the visions have been expanded by two sources, a narrative
fragment and a theological summary of the words of Amos that reads like an
anthology, but may well be a composition designed for its purpose in the book.
The eight visions of Zechariah-like those of Amos-share similar stylistic
and formal elements with one another. The thematic progression of the eight
visions represents less of an escalation than a program, a depiction of what
temple life should look like in the late sixth century. These visions begin with
YHWH's decision to restore Jerusalem, to reign in the nations, and then discuss
the extension ofJerusalem, the restoration ofJoshua, the combination ofJoshua
and Zerubbabel, a scroll of accusation, the removal of guilt from the land, and
the patrol of the four chariots and horses.
I conclude with a few notes about smaller editorial additions. Such insertions will
always be more controversial and consensus on a particular addition will thus be
harder to achieve. These shorter additions include diverse types of material
whose function also needs to be considered:
Tradition in Transition: Haggai and Zechariah 1-8 in the Trajectory of Hebrew Theology, ed. Mark
J. Boda and Michael H . Floyd, LHBOTS 475 (New York: T&T Clark, 2008), 1-39.
46 James
D . Nogalski, "Obad 7: Textual Corruption or Politically Charged Metaphor?"
ZAW 110 (1998): 67-71.
U'here Are the Prophets 181
The first two types often cause debate beca use of their size, but their
presence can ha rdly be doubted. Anyone who has studied the differences
between the LXX and MT versions of Jeremiah quickly realizes that small
insertions constitute a significa nt number of the differences in these texts.
Anyone who has looked at the great Isaia h scroll from Qumra n can see where
scribal additions appear between lines and in the m a rgins. One can easily
imagine how small parenthetical comments like these could m ake it into a scroll
the next time the scroll was copied. In the Book of the Twelve, one also find s
such parenthetical comments used to evoke other texts.
The insertions and Fortschreibungen have to be evaluated contextually. It is
not uncommon to find explanations for insertions related to material in another
part of a corpus. In the Book of the Twelve, the task becomes more complicated
because the corpus can include other writings in the collection, and texts can cite
other texts from outside the Twelve.5 1
The promissory endings added to many of the writings have long been
considered as additions to the core of several of the individual collections (e.g.,
Amos 9:7-15; Zeph 3:9-20; Mic 4-5; 7:8-20). Often, the promissory endings
themselves appea r to be the result of more than one level of editorial activity.
Analyzing these endings is complicated by the anthological character of the
47 J am es D. Nogalski, Literary Precursors to the Book if the Twelve, BZAW 217 (Berlin: de
Gruyter, 1993), 226-29.
48James D . Nogalski, Redactional Processes, 104-11 ; Nogalski, Micah-Malachi, 605-6.
49 E.g., Wohrle, Dieftuhen Sammlungen, 337-41 ; Sweeney, Twelve Prophets, 2: 607-12 . Both
scholars see the verses as secondary, but motivated by different portions of the broader
context.
50 Nogalski, Literary Precursors, 204-9.
51 Hence, Joel 4:16 and 4:18 contain citations of the beginning and end of Amos (1:2;
9: 13), the next writing in the MT order of the Twelve while Zephaniah contains three sets
of allusions to Gen I-II to frame the Zephaniah collection in cosmic terms. See J ames D.
Nogalski, "Zephaniah's Use of Genesis I-II ," HBAl2 (2013): 1-23.
182 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
promises in a number of cases (e.g. , the number of units in Zech 7-8 and 14 or
the addition of Zech 3: 18-20 to an existing set of promises discussed above).
CONCLU SIONS
The character of the writings in the Book of the Twelve reflects different
editorial techniques and settings that must continue to be evaluated both within
an individual writing and across the corpus. The character of the core material
collected does not focus upon the prophet as person. There are no large scale
prophetic narrative collections; in fact, there are no prophetic narratives apart
from Jonah, Amos 7:10-17, and Hos 1 and 3.
There is evidence that some books combined smaller collections with
editorial material designed to unify the writing in some way (Amos; Micah;
Hosea; Zephaniah). Other writings appear to have begun as individual
anthologies or compositions but have been repurposed for another literary
context (Nah 2-3, the sources of Habakkuk, Joel, and Malachi). Some collections
within writings appear to represent thematic compilations of short vignettes or
sayings (Haggai; Zech 14; and Hos 4-lO, 12-13).
The combination of these source blocks and anthologies generally offers a
better starting point for understanding the shape of the individual writings than
does the assumption of a rolling corpus model that figures prominently in some
of the recent redactional treatments.
Contrary to Budde, the character of the collections and their sources simply
shows no interest in the person of the prophet. The prophetic figures disappear
behind the function of the collections associated with them whose purpose is to
present the message ofYHWH.
Significantly, the function of the source texts that are involved in the
compilation and framing of the writings reflect more cultic associations than
biographical material. Joel and Malachi focus heavily upon reforming the cult
(both its worshipers and its personnel). Haggai and Zechariah focus on temple
construction and its leadership. Cultic poems play prominent roles in Nahum,
Habakkuk, and Jonah. The role of the nations in relationship to the temple or
Zion comes up frequently Ooel 4; Obadiah; Mic 4; Nah 2: 1; Zech 1-2; 8; and
14; Malachi). This cultic flavor has been underappreciated in prophetic studies
and it requires more consideration in the development of the Twelve since it
probably sheds more light upon the process of editing than the biographies of
the prophets.
9
INTRODUCTION
During the past two decades we have witnessed a veritable explosion of resea rch
on the Book of the Twelve, not only on the individual books, but also on the
corpus as a whole. l This present article builds on the foundation of recent
scholarship investigating the shape of the Twelve as a litera ry unit. Schola rship
on the Twelve was dominated in a n earlier phase by developmental interest
(especially redaction critical approaches),2 but there has always been interest in
literary design or at least emphases of the final literary form of the corpus. 3
1 With thanks to the rich conversation at the Barton College's Center for Religious
Studies, Colloquy 2012 hosted by Rodney Werline, where the ideas for this paper were
first presented. An earlier version of this paper served as my Presidential Address to the
Canadian Society of Biblical Studies (2014).
2 E.g., J ames D . Nogalski, Literary Precursors to the Book if the Twelve, BZAW 217 (Berlin: de
Gruyter, 1993);James D . Nogalski, Redactional Processes in the Book if the Twelve, BZAW 218
(Berlin: de Gruyter, 1993); Aaron Schart, Die Entstehung des Zwo!fProphetenbuchs, BZAW 260
(Berlin: de Gruyter, 1998); J akob WCihrle, Die Fruhen Sammlungen des Zwo!fProphetenbuches:
Entstehung und Komposition, BZAW 360 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2006); Jakob WCihrle, Der
Abschluss Des Zwo!fProphetenbuches: Buchubergreiftnde Redaktionsprozesse in den Sptiten Sammlungen,
BZAW 389 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2008).
3 E.g., Paul R . House, TIe Unity if the Twelve, BLS 27 , JSOTSup 97 (Sheffield: Almond
Press, 1990); Terence Collins, TIe Mantle if Elijah.· TIe Redaction Criticism if the Prophetical
- 183-
184 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
The present article investigates those insta nces in the Book of the Twelve
where huma n voices address Yahweh. The a nalysis will first look at how these
voices function within the individual prophetic books within the Twelve before
looking at patterns that can be discerned in the various types of voices a nd shifts
in the overall shape of the Book of the Twelve.
While the main focus will be on those instances in the Twelve where direct
huma n address to the deity is employed, indirect human address to the deity will
also be considered. Recent study of the Psalter has revealed the regular
appea ra nce of indirect huma n address alongside direct human address in
compositions which appear to be functioning as prayer within the life of the
biblical community.4 In this way God not only hears but overhears human
address and in both cases these function as address to the deity.
Past research has consistently noted that when these voices appear in the
text they reflect a n oral form- critical setting that predates the literary form of the
prophetic book, placing the accent on a setting apart from the book. 5 When
related to the book in which they are found , they have often been used as
evidence for redactional development of the book. 6 Without dismissing such
of Worship in the Psalter," in Rediscovering Worship: Past, Present, Future, ed. Wendy Porter,
McMaster New Testament Series (Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, 2015), 61-82; cf. Gerald
T. Sheppard, " 'Enemies' and the Politics of Prayer in the Book of Psalms," in The Bible
and the Politics if Exegesis: Essays in Honor ifNorman K Gottwald on His Sixty-Fifth Birthday, ed.
D avid Jobling, Peggy L. Day, and Gerald T. Sheppard (Cleveland : Pilgrim, 1991), 61-82;
W. D erek Suderman, "Prayers Heard and Overheard: Shifting Address and
Methodological Matrices in Psalms Scholarship" (Ph.D. diss., University of St. Michael's
College, 2007); W. D erek Suderman, "Are Individual Complaint Psalms Really Prayers?
Recognizing Social Address as Characteristic of Individual Complaints," in The Bible as a
Human Witness to Divine Revelation: Hearing the Word if God through Historically Dissimilar
Traditions, ed. R andall Heskett and Brian Irwin, LHBOTS 469 (New York: T&T Clark
International, 2010), 153-70.
5 See my earlier Mark]. Boda, "From Complaint to Contrition: Peering through the
Liturgical Window ofJer 14,1-1 5,4," ZAW 11 3 (2001 ): 186-97. In the Twelve this has
been one key fo cus of research on the Doxologies in Amos, see Friedrich Horst, "Die
Doxologien im Amosbuch," ZAW 47 (1929): 45-54; J ames L. C renshaw, Hymnic
Affirmation if Divine Justice: The Doxologies if Amos and Related Texts in the Old Testament,
SBLDS 24 (Missoula, MT: Scholars Press, 1975).
6 Again using the example of the Doxologies in Amos, see K . Koch, "Die Rolle der
Hymnische Abschnitte in der Komposition des Amos-Buches," ZAW 86 (1974): 504-37;
JorgJeremias, Der Prophet Amos, ATD 24.2 (Gottingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1995),
A Deafening Call to Silence 185
reflection as irrelevant, the present a rticle fo cuses on the role of these forms
within the rhetoric of the prophetic book in which they are found . Thus instead
of Sitz im Leben, the focus will be on Sitz im Buch or Sitz in der Literatur. This setting
will be considered for each of the "books" of the Twelve as found in the Hebrew
Masore tic tradition before considering a general trend in the rhetorical shape of
the Masoretic Twelve in relation to the phenomenon of huma n address to the
deity.
HOSEA
The book of Hosea contains four instances where a human voice addresses the
deityJ We first hear such a voice in 2:25 (Eng. 23) in Ya hweh's depiction of the
ideal future when people a nd God experience normative relationship.8 In this
verse Yahweh cites the fu ture covenantal declarations of both deity ("you are m y
people") a nd people ("m y God").9 In contrast, later in the book at 8:2 Yahweh
again cites the voice of the people, IO but this time it is the words of the present
generation who a re described in 8: 1, 3 as having "transgressed m y covenant a nd
rebelled against m y law . . . rejected the good" (8: 1, 3) and thus were
inappropriately crying out to Ya hweh with the claims: "M y God" and "we,
Israel, know you." II The climactic and most hopeful moment in the book comes
5 7- 58; Jorg Jeremias, TIe Book if Amos: A Commentary, trans. Douglas W. Stott, OTL
(Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1998), 78.
7 See Graham I. D avies, Hosea, OTG (Sheffi eld : Sheffield Academic, 1993), 71-75 , who
notes the way Hosea takes up "the language of public worship" even in formulating his
oracles, especially noting the close association between Hosea and Psalms 80-81. Hosea
6: 1-3 contains an echo of public liturgy; cf. Graham I. Davies, Hosea, NCB (London:
Marshall Pickering, 1992), 150- 52.
8 On this collection of sayings in 2:18-25 (Eng. vv. 16- 23), their cohesion as a unit and
relationship to the surrounding prophetic material see Hans vValter Wolff, Dodekapropheton
1, Hosea, BKAT (Neukirchen: Neukirchener Verlag, 196 1),57; Hans Walter Wolff, Hosea,
Hermeneia (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1974),47. The unit functions "to elucidate the era of
salvation" noted in 2:9, 17 (Eng. 7, 15).
9 Notice how prior to 2:25 (Eng. 23) in 2:22 (Eng. 20) the vocabulary of "knowing" (171') is
used in connection with the coming day of covenant renewal (cf. 2:20 [Eng. 18] ; and note
the repeated phrase "in that day" ( ~1;'V tJ;'~) in 2:18, 20, 23 [Eng. 16, 18, 21] ).
10 D avies, Hosea, 23, links this to "the public prayers of Hosea's day" (p. 23), noting that it
is "probably citing phrases from two separate compositions" (p. 70, noting Wolff, Hosea),
in particular because of the juxtaposition of the first common singular suffix on "my God"
and the first common plural pronoun in "we Israel know thee" (Davies, Hosea, 198).
II The juxtaposition of "my God" and "we, Israel, know you" in 8:2 which may be
suggestive of the amalgamation of two originally separate compositions (Davies, Hosea,
198; noting Wolff, Hosea) or the role of representative speakers in such declarations. See
Duane A. Garrett, Hosea, ]oel, NAC 19a (Nashville: Broadman & Holman, 1997), 181 , for
the view that "Israel" constitutes a third statement. On the meaning of "knowing" (171') in
186 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
in the final chapter, as the prophet calls the communi ty to return to Yahweh by
declaring the words cited in 14:3b-4 (Eng. 2b-3):
The initial three lines (14:3b [Eng. 2b] ) a re foundational for the penitential
expression in the final four (14:4 [Eng. v. 3] ).1 3 The people are to request God's
grace that will enable them to presen t their words in verse 4 (Eng. v. 3) as a
sacrifice to God. In their repenta n ce they eschew reliance on imperial (Assyria,
horses) and idolatrous resources, as well as abuse of the vulnerable (orphan).
Reference to "our God" echoes the earlier references to " my God" in the
expressions found in 2:25 (Eng. v. 23) and 8:2 . 14 Yahweh's response to prayer is
expressed immediately as he promises to " heal their apostasy" a nd "love them
freely," through blessing them (14:5-8 [Eng. vv. 4-7]), finally a ddressing them
directly in verse 8 by emphasizing that he is the so urce of their harvest. 15 Hosea
14:2-8 (Eng. vv. 1-7) clarifies the role for huma n response in the future scena rio
of covenant relationship depicted in 2:25 (Eng. v. 23). 16
Hosea see Mark J. Boda, A Severe Merey: Sin and Its Reme4J in the Old Testament, Siphrut:
Literature and Theology of the H ebrew Scriptures I (VVinona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns,
2009),298 .
12 OG and Peshitta suggest an original 'l!? (fruit), thus, "that we may present the fruit of
our lips." L is the more difficult reading.
13 See J ames M. T rotter, Reading Hosea in Achaemenid Yehud, JSOTSup 328 (Sheffield:
Sheffield Academic, 200 I), 214-15, who divides 14:2-8 (Eng. 1-7) into three sections:
Call to Repentance (14:2- 3a [Eng. 1-2a] ), Confession of Guilt (14:3b-4 [Eng. 2b-3] ),
Promise of R econciliation (14:5-8 [Eng. 4-7] ). Garrett, Hosea, J oel, 269, refers to this as
"a liturgy of repentance."
14 Notice, however, the use of the first common singular and first common plural in the
two sayings of8:2, see n. II above.
15 Contra Trotter, Reading Hosea in Achaemenid Yehud, 215, who argu es that the experience
of reading Hosea leads the reader to not merely expect "a simplistic direct
correspondence ... between repentance and salvation" but to rather merely look to "the
complete, sovereign freedom of God. " The flow of this passage encourages
correspondence between penitential expression and salvation, as Garrett, Hosea, J oel, 270,
notes: "repentance is essential to Hosea's theology ... no restoration is possible without
repentance. "
16 C( Davies, Hosea, 299. The basis for the penitential agenda can be discerned in the call
to repentance in 6: 1-3, which appears to have failed in the present, but will be successful
for a future community; see Boda, Severe iV/erey, 300, 303.
A Deafening Call to Silence 187
One other voice addresses Yahweh in the book of Hosea and this occurs in
9: 14a ("0 Yahweh, what will you give?"). It appears to be the voice of the
prophet, expressing his concern over God's severe judgment of Ephraim.
Yahweh's citation of human address to the deity in the book of Hosea thus
highlights the deep contrast between the hypocrisy of the present generation
(8:2) a nd the intimacy of the future ideal generation (2:25 [Eng. v. 23]). In both
cases it is Yahweh who cites the words of these contrastive generations. The
prophet, however, provides two other forms of voicing. The first is related to the
judgment of the present generation, as the prophet registers his protest in the
midst of the severe punishment articulated by Yahweh throughout chapter 9
(9: 14). In the end the prophet projects a way forward, whether before or after
the judgment, as he provides words for the community to express their penitence
and thus open the way for Yahweh's healing love and blessing (14:3-4 [Eng. vv.
2-3])Y In both cases the prophet functions mediatorially, challenging both
covenant partners, whether Yahweh (9:14) or the people (14:3b-4 [Eng. vv. 2b-
3]). At regular intervals throughout the book of Hosea readers encounter short
articulations of human address to the deity. These articulations are carefully
mediated through the divine or prophetic voice a nd shape the religious response
of the reader, focusing attention on covenant relationship (my/our God).IS
Verbal response to the deity appears to playa key role in the restoration of the
covenant relationship (2:25 [Eng. v. 23]; 14:3b-4 [Eng. vv. 2b-3]), but 8:2 shows
how verbal response must be expressed within a broader constellation of
penitential response. 19
JOEL
At four places in the book ofJoel one encounters a human voice addressing the
deity.20 The first voice is found in 1: 15a in the phrase "Alas for the day!" This is
17 See Gerald Morris, Prophecy, Poetry and Hosea, JSOTSup 219 (Sheffield: Sheffield
Academic, 1996), 115, who notes the close relationship between the resolution of Hosea
in 14:2-9 and motifs in the first three chapters. Thus, 2:25 (Eng. v. 23) foreshadows the
climactic guidance of 14:3-4 (Eng. vv. 2-3).
18 For the covenantal character of this relationship see Wolff, Dodekapropheton 1, Hosea, 68-
69; Wolff, Hosea, 55.
19 Note also 6: 1-3 which encourages a penitential response from the people in a liturgical-
like piece; c( Boda, Severe Mercy, 299-300.
20 See David Allan Hubbard, Joel and Amos: An Introduction and Commentary, TOTe
(Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1989), 28-29; G. Ogden, 'joel 4 and Prophetic
Responses to National Laments," JSOT 26 (1983): 97-106, for the close connection
between Joel andJudah's liturgical literature.
188 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
the cry which is to be voiced by the priests at the solemn assembly on the day of
fasting (1: 13-14).21
The opening word of 1: 15 (rT:jt\, Alas) is one that occurs at the outset of cries
directed to a deity or heave nly figure Gosh 7:7;Judg 6:22;Jer 1:6; 4:lO; 14:13;
32: 17; Ezek 4: 14; 9:8; 11 : 13; 21 :5), but in those cases the term is followed
immediately by the name of the person addressed in the vocative.22 Second
Kings 3: lOis similar to the use of this term in Joel 1: 15, cases where rT:jt\ is
followed by the causal particle '~, even though in Joel 1: 15 the phrase m"7 is
found immediately following rT:jt\. It is this presence of m"7 after rT:jt\ that leads us
to conclude that this is part of some form of liturgical response to the exhortation
to cry for help from Yahweh. The nearly identical collocation is found in Ezek
30:2-3 where the shortened form (rT:j, Alas) is used and followed by 01'7 and then
by m', ~1"i?-'~ as here in Joel 1:1 5.23 The short phrase 0;'7 rT:j in Ezek 30:2-3
appears to be the content of the lament commanded by the preceding
imperative 1"7'0 (wail) and the '~ clause which then follows provides the reaso n
for the exhortation as is the case in Isa 13:6; Zeph 1:7 ; Obad 12-1 5; cf. Jer 30:7.
Thus, we at least have a short piece of material that was to be used by the priests
on the day offasting ("Alas for the day").24
There is some debate over whether what follows in 1: 16-20 is also all part of
the prayer response or whether some of it (particularly 1: 16-18) is a continuation
of the reason for the prayer introduced by '~ in 1: 15. 25 On analogy with Jer
14:2-6 it is possible that 1: 16-18 is part of a prophetic liturgy which represents
an initial description of the present predicament which lays the foundation for
the direct address to the deity in 1: 19-20: 26
21 See the superb discussion of the fun ction of the words found in L1 5-18 in Eliyahu
Assis, The Book qf Joel: A Prophet between Calamity and Hope, LHBOTS 58 1 (New York:
Bloomsbury, 2013), 106-11.
22 Cf.Judg 11 :35; 2 K gs 6:5, 15 where addressed to a human.
23 See Hans Walter Wolff, Dodekapropheton 2, Joel und Amos, BKAT (Neukirchen-Vluyn:
Neukirchener Verlag, 1969), 25; Hans Walter Wolff, Joel and Amos: A Commentary on the
Books qf the Prophets Joel and Amos, trans. Samuel D ean M cBride, H ermeneia (Philadelphia:
Fortress, 1977),23.
24 See also Hubbard, Joel and Amos, 55, although v. 15b cannot be part of this cry. For the
use of a short particle to typify mourning see Amos 5: 16.
25 See Assis, Book qfJoel, Ill , and various views cited there. For the view that 1:1 5-20
contains fragments of laments see e.g., Richard J. Coggins, Joel and Amos, NCB (Sheffield:
Sheffield Academic, 2000), 33; Wolff, Dodekapropheton 2, Joel und Amos, 24; Wolff, Joel and
Amos, 22; Garrett, Hosea, Joel, 327-28 . Coggins sees in the ') erky style" evidence either of
oral fragments or a "deliberate literary device to express the incoherence of the
lamenters" (p. 33).
26 See Hubbard , Joel and Amos, 53, for vv. 15-16 as communal lament. The direct prayer
to the deity comes inJer 14:7-9 in the l cp. Cf. Boda, "Complaint."
A Deafening Call to Silence 189
This prayer does contain a clear request (formulated both positively and
negatively) and is addressed to the deity directly. The request and vocative is
followed by a reason clause which focuses on Yahweh's fame among the nations.
Here then the priests are given the human address to direct towards
Yahweh and it is a cry for God's mercy. This section that outlines the priestly
call for a solemn assembly and provides the priests' prayer on behalf of the
people is preceded by a clear call to a deep repentance by the people (2: 12-14).31
No record of this repentance is provided, but then neither is there any record
that the priests uttered their prayer for God's grace which follows . What does
follow in 2: 18-19 is a record of Yahweh's response, suggesting that in the literary
gap between 2: 17 and 2: 18 something has occurred that has prompted this
divine shift. Since the prophetic voice calls for both penitence from the people in
2: 12-14 and a cry for mercy from the priests in 2: 17, there is no reason to
suggest that the prayer of the priests is somehow an inappropriate response to
the call to repentance. Taking the call for repentance in the traditional sense,
this prayer constitutes a cry for mercy from the priests that would follow a
penitential expression from the people. The reason for this priestly cry for mercy
can be discerned even in the call to repentance in 2: 14 which reminds the reader
of the deity's sovereign freedom in relation to forgiveness: "Who knows whether
he may turn and relent and leave a blessing behind him?" As one can see in texts
like Exod 33: 19, repentance is not a guarantor of a shift in the predicament. 32
The final instance inJoel where a human addresses the deity comes in 3: 11 b
in a short prayer in which the prophet calls God to bring down his mighty ones
to do battle against the nations in the Valley ofJehoshaphat in the future.
The two main instances where humans address Yahweh in the book ofJoel
come at major junctures within the first half of the book and are thus in climactic
points in the development of its structure. The first appears at the end of the
initial phase of the book, one that calls the various entities to a day of fasting and
prayer in relation to a great plague afflicting the land (ch. 1). The second appears
at the end of the second phase of the book (2: 1-1 7), one that reveals how the
plague that afflicts the land is indicative of a much larger affliction that is
30 See Wolff, Dodekapropheton 2, Joel und Amos, 44, 61; Wolff, Joel and Amos, 39, 52; Garrett,
Hosea, Joel, 349-50, for this translation; cf. :J 7iZl~ in Gen 1:18; 3: 16; 4: 7; 24:2; 45:8, 26; Isa
3:12.
31 On the contentious issue of whether repentance in Joel refers to a turning from moral
failure see Boda, Severe }lfercy, 306-7; contra recently Assis, Book ofJoel, 140-41.
32 See Mark]. Boda, "Penitential Innovations in the Book of the Twelve," in On Stone and
Scroll: A Festschrifi for Graham Davies, ed . Brian A. Mastin, Katharine]. Dell, and James K.
Aitken, BZAW 420 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2011 ), 291-308.
A Deafening Call to Silence 191
approaching on the day of Ya hweh . 33 This larger concern dema nds not only a
cry to God for help, but also a deep repentance. The huma n address to Yahweh
is a cry for grace in the midst of the predica ment a nd the second of these appea rs
to be accepted by Ya hweh who transforms the people's situation.
The human address in 1: 15a a nd 19-20 cries direcdy to Ya hweh and
focuses attention on the m agnitude of the distress, but makes no precise dema nds
on Ya hweh to act. The huma n address in 2: 17 also cries direcdy to Ya hweh, but
now makes specific requests (look compassionately, do not make a reproach) a nd
focuses on the threat to the honor of Yahweh a mong the nations.
As with Hosea, Joel provides normative human address to be used by
members of the community to address the deity. For the readers of this
prophetic book these words a re reminders that the deity is open to hearing the
verbal response of the community. This is first seen in the words which articulate
the terrible conditions of a natural disaster (1: 15-20), but then in the words
a rticulated in the midst of a much more severe national crisis which prompts
seeking the mercy of the deity for a penitent community. As Assis has noted,
"the prophet simulates both a prayer and God's response, thereby seeking to
convince the people that this course of action would be beneficial. "34
AMOS
Direct human address to the deity occurs on only two occasions in the book of
Amos, in two successive vision reports in chapter 7. In both cases Ya hweh
presents to the prophet a vision of a n approaching divine judgment in the form
of a natural disaster: the first a plague of locusts (7: 1) a nd the second a mighty
fire (7:4).35 In both cases (7:3, 5) Yahweh responds to the prayer by "relenting"
(om nipha~ a nd a nnouncing ;'1;:;1l:J ~'7 ("it will no t come to pass"). The intercessory
prayer of the prophet is nea rly identical, both employing the same reason for
God to not follow through with the discipline envisioned, while utilizing a
different imperative: forgive (v. 3) and stop (v. 5).36
33 See Hubbard, J oel and Amos, 64, who sees 2: 17 as the "climax" of 1: 1-2: 17 and the
"turning point" in the book. Cf. Assis, Book qfJoel, 65, 70.
34 Assis, Book qfJoel, 164.
35 On the vision report form see M ark]. Boda, "Writing the Vision: Zechariah within the
Visionary T raditions of the Hebrew Bible," in Reading Dream and Vision Reports in the Hebrew
Bible, ed . Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer and Elizabeth H ayes, LHBOTS 584 (London: T&T
Clark, 2014), 101-18.
36 Hubbard, J oel and Amos, 222, attributes the difference in wording to the fact that the
reemergence of divine punishment in the second vision revealed that his intercession did
not result in forgiveness but only a stay of execution and so he capitulates to Yahweh and
merely asks for him to stay again. If this is tru e then one can discern a rhetorical shift in
the series of visions from request for forgiveness to request for cessation to no request.
192 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
There is one final vision report in Amos 7 (vv. 7-9). In this case, however,
the vision of total destruction does not prompt a n intercessory prayer by the
prophet. In contrast to the visions of discipline directed against what appears to
be the agricultural territory of Isra el in 7: 1-6 after which Amos protests (possibly
related to Amos' background as a farmer, cf. Amos 1: 1; 7: 14-15), the final vision
focusing on urba n destruction is accepted by the prophet. The reason for the
lack of prophetic protest m ay be related to the fact that the discipline envisioned
is directed at what a re con sidered illicit cult centres in the northern kingdom
(" high places of Isaac . . . sanctuaries of Isra el") a nd the royal p atron of these cult
sites ("the house ofJeroboam "). But it also m ay be because Yahweh m akes clear
that there is no longer room for forgiving or stopping when he declares: ~'Q;~-~'7
;'7 1;~~ 1;17 (" I will no longer pass over him," see Amos 8:2; cf. Mic 7: 18; Prov
19: 11).37 This acceptance of divine discipline against the urban royal cult cen tres
is then furthered in the intercha nge which follows immediately in Amos 7: 10-17
between the priest Amaziah at Bethel a nd Amos the prophet, an interchange
which ends with Amos' prediction of the demise of the family of Amaziah.38 The
vision reports which follow in chapters 8 and 9 also do no t prompt a ny prophetic
protest.
The two prophetic protests at the outset of chapter 7 represent a strea m of
theodicy within the book of Amos, one that ch allenges God's justice in bringing
destruction on the la nd by appeal to the vulnera bility of Israel. Here we see a key
role played by the prophetic figure, one with access to the deity who can
challenge the actions of the deity. At the same time the silencing of the prophetic
37 See Coggins, Joel and Amos, 141 , who suggests "pass by" in "the sense of overlooking
wrong doing." Wolff, Dodekapropheton 2, Joel und Amos, 339; Wolff, J oel and Amos, 294, notes
that the use of 1i17 '1'Qi~-~? assumes a connection with the first two vision reports of ch. 7,
and thus is explicitly rejecting prophetic intervention. Contra Hubbard, Joel and Amos,
215, who attributes the lack of prophetic intercession to "the undeniable evidence of a
plumb-line against a crooked wall" which "has convinced the prophet that the time of
mercy had passed. "
38 Also note the use of measuring device language in both the vision of 7:7-9 (l~t\) and the
prophetic word of 7: 17 (?;}Q, v?n). See Wolff, Dodekapropheton 2, Joel und Amos, 339-40;
Wolff, Joel and Amos, 294-95, for the original connection between 7: 1-8 and 8: 1-2
(possibly also 9:1-4) and the distinction of 7:\0-17 . Nevertheless he shows that 7:\0-17
was inserted between 7:7-8 and 8: 1-2 because "these texts interpret each other. " T he
present form of ch. 7-8, however does weave these units together as a rhetorical unit.
A D eafening Call to Silence 193
protest signals for the reader the basis for Yahweh's action a nd thus subtly
justifies the deity's actions.
This stream of theodicy within Amos needs to be set against the backdrop of
a nother stream that can be discerned,39 which is formulated in indirect human
address to the deity, reflective of Israelite liturgical traditions.4o Fragments of
praise punctuate the text of Amos at three junctures within the book: 4: 13; 5:8-
9; and 9:5-6.
All share a common focus on the creational activities of Ya hweh and
contain the phrase "Ya hweh .. . is his name." The Doxology in 4: 13 follows a
prophetic message which rehearses Yahweh 's failed attempts to prompt
repentance from the people through disciplinary actions ending with the
climactic warning: "Prepa re to meet your God, 0 Israel. " It is followed by the
decla ration of a dirge over fallen virgin Israel in 5: 1-2. The doxology in Amos
9:5-6 follows the first phase of the severe declaration of judgment in chapter 9,
a nd immediately after the divine declaration: "I will set m y eyes against them for
calamity a nd not for prosperity," thus at a key juncture in the flow of the
chapter. The placement of 5:8-9 appears to be in the middle of a description of
those purveyors of injustice (5:7, 10-13) who a re related to Bethel (5:6) and will
experience the brunt of Yahweh's destruction of this illicit sanctuary City.4 1 In
each case where the doxological fragments appear in Amos there is reference in
the context to a divine disciplinary destruction related to the sanctuary at Bethel
(see 4:4-5; 5:5-6; 9: 1). The doxologies represent a stream of theodicy within
Amos, one that focuses on God's right as creator to bring judgment upon the
la nd due to illicit worship a nd unjust actions. Using a form of praise in the third
person con trasts the employment of la ment in the first person. There is also
irony in the use of praise in relation to the destruction of a sanctuary like Bethel
which was created to foster worship. The doxologies not only justify God but
reveal his ability to accomplish what he has warned.
While explanations have been suggested for the original role of such
doxologies in the liturgical use of prophetic messages or even books, the present
39 For review of recent scholarship on the Doxologies in Amos see Graham R. Hamborg,
Still Selling the Righteous: A Redaction-Critical Investigation if Reasons for Judgment in Amos 2:6-16,
LHBOTS 555 (New York: T&T Clark, 2012), 79-81. Some see Amos 1:2 as another
fragment connected with these Doxologies; cf. Koch, "Die Rolle," 504-37 .
40 See e.g., Tchavdar S. Hadjiev, TIe Composition and Redaction if the Book if Amos, BZAW
393 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2009), 136, for connection to the cultic use of the book of Amos,
but also for the role of the doxologies as a "hymnic superstru cture" for the book.
41 5:8-9 is the most awkwardly placed, coming as it does in the middle of a section with
integrity in 5:7 , 10-1 3, see Coggins, Joel and Amos, 125 . However, see J an de Waard,
"Chiastic Structure of Amos 5:1-17," VT27 (1977): 170-77 , for the view that Amos 5:8-
9 is placed at the center of a chiastic structure; cf. M . Daniel Carroll R. , Amos-TIe
Prophet and His Oracles: Research on the Book if Amos (Louisville: Westminster John Knox,
2002),222.
194 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
a rticle is concerned with their Sit;: im Buch, that is, their role within the book of
Amos. 'J\Thile it is not clear that the doxologies are each at key structural
transitions within the book,42 Moller has noted how they are rhetorically
importa nt within their respective contexts a nd Marks has highlighted their role
within the book "at moments of exceptional severity, as though to solemnize the
words of divine judgment."43 Auld notes how the doxologies "reinforce the
message of their contexts."44 What m ay be overlooked in this discussion of the
role of the doxologies within the book a nd their respective sections is careful
atte ntion to their relationship to the protest prayers of the prophet in the vision
reports of chapter 7. Here we see how praise a nd prayer, hymn a nd la ment, are
intertwined in a prophetic section to justify God's actions, revealing God's
power, grace, and justice, as such human address to or about the deity is
declared or withheld.
JONAH
The book of Jonah contains three instances where huma ns address the deity
directly. The first comes in Jonah 1:14 as the gentile sailors cry out to Yahweh as
they are about to throw Jonah into the sea:
Please, Yahweh,
do not let us perish on account of this man's life
and do not place upon us innocent blood;
for You, 0 Yahweh, have done as You have pleased.
will shift Jona h from the safety of the fish to the new opportunity for obedience
on dry land.
No direct address to the deity is found in Jonah 3. However, the king of
Nineveh calls his citizens to "call (l\iji) on God earnestly" even as they repent
from their evil and violence (3:8). The response of the Ninevites prompts God to
relent. There is though a deep contrast between Jonah 2 a nd Jona h 3. Jona h 2
gives much voice to the human address to God, filling the majority of the
chapter, while Jona h 3 only makes reference to the human address to God of the
Ninevites with no actual words spoken directly to God. Jona h 2 does depict the
fact that Jona h prayed to Ya hweh for help, but never cites his prayer directly,
emphasizing instead the thanksgiving a nd inte ntion to fulfill a vow to Ya hweh .
In Jonah 3 the prayer of the Ninevites is not recited and there is no confident
expectation that the penitential rites would have an effect on the deity, only a
hope (3:9): "Who knows, God m ay turn a nd relent and withdraw his burning
a nger so that we will no t perish ?"
It is the prayer a nd response of the Ninevites in chapter 3 which prompt the
final series of huma n address to the deity in the closing chap ter (4:2-3, 8-9). In
his prayer to Ya hweh Jonah now questions God's justice even though he knows
it is based on the character credo which lies at the core of Israelite fai th . The
irony is thick as the angry prophet asks Yahweh to take his life, a fate that was all
but sealed in the opening chapter a nd from which Ya hweh had saved him.
Furthermore, while the gentile sailors cried to Ya hweh to save their lives and not
hold them accoun table for Jona h 's death in 1: 14, now Jonah, who sees himself as
acco unta ble for the gentile Ninevites' lives, cries to Yahweh to take his life. 5 1 The
book closes then with theodicy as the prophet inappropriately challenges
Ya hweh's justice. The other prayers in the book are used at key transitions and
serve to intertwine the fates ofJonah and the gentiles he encounters and to set up
the climactic interchange between God a nd prophet at the end of the book.
MICAH
Huma n address to the deity only occurs at one point in the book of Mica h in the
final pericope of the book (7: 14-20) which contains direct address in 7: 14, l7b-
20, a response from the deity in 7: 15 a nd possibly indirect address in 7: 16-1 7a. 52
51 The opening words of Jonah's prayer in 4:2 (:11:1' :1~~) are the same as those of the
HABAKKUK
The book of Habakkuk is dominated by direct address to the deity. 55 The book is
divided into two m ajor sections, chapters 1-2 and chapter 3, the first focusing
according to Nogalski on "theodicy" and the second on "theophany."56 The two
sections employ different forms of direct address to the deityY The book begins
in 1:2-4 with a cry of lament, utilizing the classic questions of la ment ("how long
Commentary on Micah [Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2006], 430; cf. Philip Peter Jenson,
Obadiah, Jonah, Micah: A 17zeological Commentary, LHBOTS 496 [New York: T&T Clark,
2008], 179, who calls 7:7 a transition verse). The speech of Lady Zion broaches the
subj ect oftheodicy, admitting sin and accepting the disciplinary action of Yahweh against
the supplicant while expecting that eventually Yahweh would exercise justice on her
behalf and release her from the crucible of judgment (7:9-10). Uncertain is the precise
relationship between this testimony and the human address to the deity in 7: 14-20,
although Jenson argues that all the elements in 7:8-20 can be found in psalms of lament
(Jenson, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, 183) and Hillers treats 7:8-20 as a liturgy (Delbert R .
Hillers, Micah: A Commentary on the Book if the Prophet Micah, Hermeneia [philadelphia:
Fortress, 1984],85).
53 Sweeney, Twelve, 413.
54 Nogalski, Micah-Malachi, 592-94.
55 See Sweeney, Twelve, 456, and Nogalski, Micah-Malachi, 645-46, for discussion over
and defense of Habakkuk as cuItic prophet; cf. Jorg Jeremias, Kultprophetie und
Gerichtsverkundigung in der Sptiten Konigszeit Israels (Neukirchen-Vluyn: Neukirchener Verlag,
1970), 55-127.
56 Nogalski, Micah-Malachi, 654.
57 See Marvin A. Sweeney, "Structure, Genre, and Intent in the Book of Habakkuk," IT
41 (1991): 63-83, for the structure of Habakkuk.
198 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
. . . why"), a rticulating the predicament of the distress, but all along challenging
Ya hweh for his lack of action in the midst of serious injustice .58 A second
challenge to God comes in 1: 12-1 7, again employing the questions of la ment
("why" in 1: 13), but raising the issue of theodicy, whether God is justified in
utilizing wicked entities to exact judgment. 59 The book ends in chapter 3 with a
lengthy composition echoing the psalms a nd containing m aterial which speaks
a bout Yahweh in the third person (3:3-8a, l6-l9a) alongside material which
speaks directly to Ya hweh in second person (3:2, 8b-15).6o Although one can
discern elements of the genre of theophany report in the composition, the
passage represents prayer as the p salmist expresses trust in Ya hweh (3: l6-l9a),
but also calls upon Yahweh to act mercifully (3: 2).61 The two sections of theodicy
a nd theophany express different modes of huma n address to the deity. Akin to
the book ofJob, in 2: 1-4 the prophet stands ready for reprooffrom the deity and
is told by the deity to prepare to record a vision even as he is given a message for
the righteous to live faithfully through the devastation that is about to come. The
call to silence then at the end of chapter 2 and prior to the visionary prayer of
chapter 3 stands at a key transition in the book. 62 The prayer in chapter 3 thus
58 See Nogalski, Nlicah-Malachi, 659, for connections to the lament tradition of the Psalter
and to the prophetic confrontation traditions ofJob andJeremiah.
59 On the original unity of the two complaint sections in ch. 1 and their original
connection to the vision report in 2:4-5, see Nogalski, Micah-Malachi, 650-51 , who sees
the complaints/vision report as focused on theodicy regarding the prosperity of the
wicked which was then applied by editors to the Babylonian issue. For a more unified
view of composition see Sweeney, Twelve, 457- 58, 479 .
60 Nogalski, Nlicah-Nlalachi, 687 , sees in the shift from second to third person, a shift from
prayer to the deity to recounting to those listening, but this does not take into account the
role of third person ad dress within prayer forms throughout the Psalter.
61 See Sweeney, Twelve, 480, 482. Nogalski, Micah-Malachi, 679, refers to this as "a
theophany report put into the framework of a prayer and a prophetic affirmation of
trust." He thus sees it as fun ctioning as "both a vision and a prayer" in which "the
prophet 'sees' what YHWH will do in the future and petitions for mercy" (p. 689). See
furth er John E. Anderson, "Awaiting an Answered Prayer: The D evelopment and
R einterpretation of Habakkuk 3 in Its Contexts," ZAW 123 (2011 ): 57-71 .
62 See Nogalski, Micah- Nlalachi, 659: "Mter the initial cry in 1:2, the prophet's complaint
changes to expressions of concern over the enemy attack until he is effectively silenced by
YHWH's response to be quiet (2:20). Much like Job, when the prophet speaks in Hab 3,
he does not confront YHWH with the same bravado as at the beginning." Nogalski
though does note that 2:20 relates first to the contrast between YHvVH and the powerless
idols of 2: 18-19, before noting that "The demand for silence marks a significant juncture
in the book, recounting YHvVH 's temple presence that deserves obeisance from all the
world and admonishing anyone who would challenge him-a subtle warning to the
prophetic character-that the time for questioning has ended," Nogalski, Micah-Malachi,
674.
A Deafening Call to Silence 199
ZEPHANIAH-MALACHI
With the close of Habakkuk there is a paucity of direct human address to the
deity in the remainder of the Book of the Twelve. 63 Human address to the deity
is a bsent from Zephaniah and Haggai completely. Zechariah 1:6b proba bly
reflects the idiom of the exilic penitential prayer tradition,64 but is cast in third
person as a declaration of Yahweh's justice in bringing discipline upon the
people. Throughout the vision-oracle section of 1: 7-6: 15 the autobiographical
prophetic figure does interact with heavenly figures, but in nearly every case this
interaction entails the prophetic figure seeking to understand the details or
significance of the visions. In one of the vision reports the prophet interacts with
the deity (2:4 [Eng. 1:21] ) but this is only to seek an interpretation of elements in
the vision. This stands in stark contrast to the role of the prophet in the earlier
vision reports of Amos where the prophet personally challenges the deity's
intended disciplinary action (see above). Such a challenge does occur at one
point in the vision reports of Zechariah in 1: 12, but it is a heavenly messenger of
Yahweh rather than the prophet who laments the enduring predicament of
Jerusalem, employing the classic question of Hebrew disorientation psalms:
"how long?" An opportunity for direct human address to the deity arises in Zech
7 as the contingent from Bethel approaches the temple site to "entreat the favour
of God" (7: 1), but 7:2 makes clear that they do this by "speaking to the priests
and prophets." There is an indirect human address to the deity in Zech 11:5b:
"Blessed be Yahweh, for I have become rich!," but this inappropriate
declaration by the abusive owners of the sheep in 11 :4-16 is certainly not
regarded as normative speech. In M alachi direct human address to the deity
returns, in every case cited by the deity (1:2, 5, 6, 7; 2:14, 17; 3:7, 8, 13). In
nearly every case these words of the people represent a challenge to the deity
which is then refuted by Yahweh. Questions of theodicy are undermined
consistently. The only time normative human address is employed is in 1:5
which cites indirect huma n address about Yahweh ("Yahweh be magnified
beyond the border of Israel"), words which Ya hweh says will be the response of
those who see him accomplish what he has promised in relation to Edom.
Interestingly, nea r the end of Malachi the depiction of those who respond
appropriately to the message of the prophet ("those who feared Yahweh"), do
speak words, but do so to one another (3:16). Ya hweh is depicted as overhearing
this speech and responding ("Ya hweh gave attention and heard").
Thus beginning with Zephaniah and continuing through to the end of the
Twelve there is a paucity of direct human address to the deity and when huma n
address is cited in all cases except one it reflects the words of the people a nd is
clearly identified as inappropriate .
Why does human address to the deity drop off significantly afte r H a bakkuk?
The reason for this can be traced to a repeated form which appears in the
second half of the book of the Twelve. Habakkuk, Zepha nia h , and Zecha ria h all
contain calls for people to be silent before Yahweh (see chart: Calls to Silence).65
The call in Hab 2:20 comes at the end of a section that most likely has in
view the injustice of a n imperial entity, while the call in Zeph 1:7 comes in the
midst ofa chapter focused on offenders a mong the people ofJudah, even though
more universal entities m ay also be in view. Zechariah 2: 17 [Eng. v. 13] comes
65 For reflection on the role of the call to silence within the Twelve and its respective
books see especially Nogalski, Micah-Malachi, 653, 675; Sweeney, Twelve, 477 ; Rudiger
Lux, '''Still Alles Fleisch vor Jhwh ... ': D as Schweigegebot im Dodekapropheton und
Sein Besonderer Ort im Zyklus der Nachtgesichte des Sacharja," Leqach 6 (2005): 99-11 3;
Aaron Schart, "D eathly Silence and Apocalyptic Noise: Observations on the Soundscape
of the Book of the Twelve," Verbum et Ecclesia 31 (2010): Article # 383; Aaron Schart,
"Totenstille und Endknall: Ein Beitrag zur Analyse der Soundscape des
Zwolfprophetenbuchs," in Sprachen-Bilder-Klange: Dimensionen der 7heologie im Alten Testament
und in Seinem Umfild; FestschrifiJur Rudiger Bartelmus zu Seinem 65. Geburtstag, ed. C . K arrer-
Grube, et aI. , AOAT 30 (Munster: Ugarit-Verlag, 2009), 257-74. The call to silence is
also found in Amos 6: 10; 8:3 , but this refers to its use within the funeral cult rather than
temple cult; c£ Lux, "Still Alles Fleisch," 110. Also see Schart who distinguishes between
the Amos references and those in Habakkuk, Zephaniah, and Zechariah, noting
especially the similar elements: placement of the interj ection in first position, common
reference to "the location, 'before (the face of) YHWH,'" and inclusion of an explanation
of the manner in which Yahweh is present. Schart highlights the use of these calls to
silence as "a very fitting frame around the deepest cu t in the narrative structure of the
Book of the Twelve," reflective of "redactional activity." He sees this silence before
Yahweh as "the appropriate attitude for coping with the painful punishment that YHWH
has imposed on God's people" and in this draws in not only the three uses in Habakkuk,
Zephaniah and Zechariah (which suggest the downfall of Babylon and Jud ah), but also
Amos 6:9 and 8:3 which refer to the downfall of the northern kingdom.
A Deafening Call to Silence 201
at the end of a section celebrating God 's punishmen t of the foreign nations a nd
the return of people and God to Jerusalem. With Hab 2:20 there is a call for
silence a mong the na tions, allowing for one final and climactic expression of
direct and indirect huma n address to Ya hweh in H a b 3 from the prophet.
Zephaniah 1: 7, however, brings all huma n address, now even the people of God
due to their disobedience, to a stop. ' !\That is interesting is that even with the
a nnouncement of the punishment of the imperial agent(s) in Zech 2, all
huma nity, whether within or outside the people
of God are told to remain silent.
Calls to Silence Thus, the final direct human speech to the
deity which challenges the deity appears in Hab
:t 1-2 and, following this, there are three calls to
~
;tzlij? 7:?'V:t ;'11;'1'1 ~ silence . After this point we do hear a final
n.l$:J-7~ 1'~~~ 00 N declaration of praise related to the appeara nce of
N
Q God (Hab 3), but the focus is now on trust in
Ya hweh rather than challenge (cf. Hab 2: 1-4;
;'11;'1' 'i1i'\ '~~~ 00 N Zeph 3:8). When a challenge is allowed in Zech 1
('D
;'11;'1' 0;' ~;'j? '~ "C it is on the lips of a heavenly messenger who is
n~! ;'11;'1' 1'~V-'~ =- .... authorized to speak in such a way .
1'l$'1P tzl'1i?;:T -.J
The rationale for the silencing of human
agents beginning with H a b 2:20 can be discerned
'~~~ 'W~-7~ 00 ('DN at two key intervals in the Book of the Twelve. I t
;'11;'1' I'l
is first encountered in Mic 3: 7, as the prophet
1;lI7p~ ';lI~ '~
=- N looks to a time when the evil deeds of the leaders
....
;tzlij? -.J of Israel will result in God no longer answering
(;'1:1l1) their cry (jillT). Micah 3: 12 associates this day
with the destruction of Zion. 66 The second key passage is Zech 7:13-1 4a.
Embedded within 7:11 -14, a prophetic sermon which reviews the history of
Juda h 's stubborn refusal to respond to Yahweh's prophetic calls to repenta nce
which led to the destruction ofland a nd exile of the people.
And just as he called [~'j7 suffix conjugation] and they would not listen [\7~rz.;
suffix conjugation] , so they are calling [~'j7 prefix conjugation] and I will not
listen [\7~rz.; prefix conjugation] , and I am scattering them with a storm wind
[,\70 prefix conjugation] among all the nations which they do not know.
66 See Mark]. Boda, "Babylon in the Book of the Twelve," HBAl 3 (2014): 225- 48 .
67 See Mark]. Boda, "When God's Voice Breaks T hrough: Shifts in Revelatory Rhetoric
in Zechariah 1-8," in History, Memory, Hebrew Scriptures: A Festschri.flfor Ehud Ben Zvi, ed. Ian
Douglas Wilson and Diana V. Edelman (Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 20 15), 169- 86 .
202 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
sin of the people and their lack of response to Yahweh's message to the people.
This disqualifies both cries for help as well as theodicy. 68
One might expect that with the restoration this silencing of human address
may have been removed .69 The Book of the Twelve does create a n expectation
that a key ideal of the restoration will be that God will a n swer the call of his
people (even as he answered the prayer of the heave nly messenger in Zech 1: 12-
13):
Joel 3:5 [Eng. 2:32] whoever calls [~"j;>] on the name of Yahweh will be
delivered
Micah 7:7 as for me I will watch expectantly for Yahweh, I will
wait for the God of my salvation, my God will hear
[17~fZll me
Zeph 3:9 for then I will give to the peoples purified lips, that all
of them may call [~"j;>] on the name of Yahweh to
serve him shoulder to should er
Zech 10:6 for I am Yahweh their God and I will answer [:1J17]
them
Zech 13:9 they will call [~"j;>] on my name and I will answer [:1J17]
them 70
But this expectation of a renewal of huma n address to deity for help lies in
the future a nd this future lies beyond the time of the " restoration" vision of
Zechariah. Zecharia h 1-8 reveals that there are enduring problems with social
injustice within the community of Yehud which has delayed the restoration and
with this any hoped for restoration of human address to the deityJI Only a true
68 Note the contrast between Zeph 1:7 andJoel 1:14-1 5 both of which provide a reason
clause related to the nearness of the day of Yahweh. But yet Joell:14-15 calls for a verbal
response seeking God 's intervention and Zeph 1:7 calls for silence. Note also Zech 2:17
and J oel 3: 1-5 (Eng. 2:28-32): both refer to "all flesh" and yetJoel refers to calling on the
name of Yahweh while Zech 2: I 7 refers to silence.
69 Nogalski has noted how the Calls to Silence appear at the beginning (Hab 2:20) and
end (or better potential end, Zech 2: 17) of the destru ction ofJerusalem; Nogalski, Micah-
Malachi, 635 , 675. But the call to silence remains in Zech 2:17 and in light of the
disappointing ending to Zechariah (chs. 7-14), the mode of silence remains.
70 Zechariah 10-14 does encourage a request to Yahweh for help (10:1), but this request
assumes a turning from reliance upon idols and diviners. Zechariah 12: 10-1 3: I looks to a
day when penitential mourning is prompted by a divine gift of "the spirit of grace and
supplication."
7 1 Seen especially in the shift from suffix conjugation in v. 13 to prefix conjugation and
from third person description of the past generation, to first person speech with its
immediacy of message to the present generation; cf. Boda, "When God's Voice Breaks
Through."
A Deafening Call to Silence 203
penitential response (Zech 7-8) will make possible a renewal of the human
address ( ~ijiljil1T) that will prompt divine response (;'1Jl1/l1/Jilf).
Habakkuk-Zephaniah link the calls to silence prayers for help and theodicy
to the discipline associated with the destruction of Jerusalem and exile, and
Zechariah links the calls to silence prayers for help even in the hoped for initial
restoration, Malachi makes clear that theodicy is also deemed inappropriate in
the initial restoration and possibly always. Yahweh consistently refutes any
attempts to question God's actions, motives or character. But the lack of actual
human address to the deity for help in the final section of the Book of the
Twelve, suggests that even prayer for help is deemed inappropriate until
penitential response is forthcoming.
CONCLUSION
All books in the Twelve from Hosea to Habakkuk which are addressed on the
surface to Israelite audiences (thus not Obadiah and Nahum) contain prayers
directed to Yahweh either directly or indirectly. They have various functions
ranging from prophets providing normative speech for the people to address
Yahweh (repentance, relational renewal, cry for salvation) to prophets
challenging God through theodicy. Prayer seems to playa key function in each
of the books, being placed at key junctures in the rhetorical flow of the books.
One can discern certain general trends, but hardly trends that would suggest
common origins for the prayer traditions within these books. These trends do,
however, highlight for the reader the importance of human address to the deity
in the reading of prophetic books and shape an expectation that human address
is normative for the readers, whether in the form of repentance, relational
renewal, or cry for salvation. Prophetic figures are regularly depicted challenging
God through theodicy.
However human address to the deity ceases as the reader crosses into the
section of the Twelve most often associated with the punishment of Israel and
Judah, that is, Habakkuk and Zephaniah. In these two books we find
exhortations to human silence before the deity, beginning near the end of
Habakkuk, then in Zephaniah, and these exhortations coincide with the
silencing of human address to the deity, whether prayers for help or theodicy.
One might expect that human address to the deity would reemerge in the books
often associated with "restoration" (Haggai-Malachi), but this is not the caseJ2
Not only is there a lack of human address to the deity, but there is an additional
exhortation to human silence in the midst of Zech 1-8. It appears that this series
72 There is one voice that is encouraged to speak in this latter phase of the Book of the
Twelve, that is, the voice of Daughter of Zion as seen in the series of Aufruft zur Freude in
Zeph 3:14-20; Zech 2:11 , 14-15 (Eng. 7, 10-11); 9:9-10. See Boda, "Babylon in the
Book of the Twelve."
204 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
73 See similar trends in Isaiah and J eremiah; cf. M ark]. Boda, '''Uttering Precious Rather
Than vVorthless Words': Divine Patience and Impatience with Lament in Isaiah and
Jeremiah," in Why? How Long? Studies on Voicers) if Lamentation Rooted in Biblical Hebrew Poetry,
ed. LeAnn Snow Flesher, Carol Dempsey, and Mark]. Boda, LHBOTS 552 (London:
Continuum, 2014), 83-99.
10
Here I will propose that describing the prophetic books as "prophetic fictions"
draws together much previous consideration of these books. It a lso accurately
describes their content and form and reflects what is most distinctive about this
genre as we find it in the Hebrew Bible. Having situated what is meant by the
genre description "prophetic fiction" I will try to show how this language can
help us understand the works themselves, focusing in particular on an outline
reading of Amos 1-3.
While the nature of the genre 'prophetic book' has been till recently little
discussed some older assumptions do not accurately describe the contents.
Suggestions that these works are "presentations" of a prophet may offer a way to
read the works better.
Form-critical study of the prophets in the twentieth century was by and
large conceived of as a kind of literary archaeology, driven by the desire to
uncover an "authentic" stratum of the prophet's own words. l This means that
1 See e.g., the opening to: Marvin A Sweeney, "Formation and Form," in Old Testament
Interpretation: Past, Present And Future, ed . Karl May (Nashville: Abingdon, 1995), 113-26;
Michael H . Floyd, "Basic Trends in the Form-Critical Study of Prophetic Texts," in The
- 205-
206 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
more attention was focused on the sm allest speech units that could be identified.
The typical form, implied function, and Sit;:, im Leben of each has therefore been
the subject of significant study a nd debate . Until recently the genre of the works
themselves, as wholes, had been less considered. By and large, form-critics were
no t interested in whole books, a nd the scholars who were focused on the final
form were less concerned with questions of genre than they perhaps should have
been.
Yet as Neujahr recently noted in his consideration of the genre of Akkadian
ex eventu texts:
Whenever an ancient text is found and published for the first time, the question
of that text's genre is actively engaged. In truth, any time any text is read by
any reader, questions of genre are wrestled with and, at least provisionally,
decided upon.2
Yet to a surprising degree this question was not overtly posed of the
prophetic books of the Hebrew Bible, schola rs were content largely to ass ume,
rather than to discuss, the genre(s) of the works. Some assumed them to be
collections of sayings. Indeed the superscriptions ofJeremiah and Amos dibre PN
could suggest this (Amos I: I; Jer I: I) a nd clea rly they a nd the other books
classed as "prophets" do contain many "sayings," and these comprise the largest
sort of m aterial in the books. On this view, the book of Jonah is quite different,
with its focus on na rrative rather tha n speeches. It has to be seen as a n
exception, and presumably misplaced a mong the prophetic books. However,
there is significa nt material of other genres in most of these books, nota bly stories
a nd songs, a nd the evidence of the superscriptions is not clea r cut. While as we
have seen two books begin dibre PN (Amos, Jeremiah) a nd the superscriptions of
six more speak of the rf'var yhwh (Hosea, Joel, Zephaniah, Mica h, H aggai,
Zechariah, cf. Jona h) which might also be seen as suggesting that they are
collections of sayings, three call themselves massa' PN (Nahum, Habakkuk,
Malachi) here strikingly massa) is singular so apparently the whole book was seen
as one speech. The superscriptions of two other books talk only of visions hrI;:,on
(Isaia h, Obadiah), a nd two have the standa rd opening of narrative texts vaYJh£
(Ezekiel, Jonah for narrative works that begin this way cf. Joshua, Judges, Ruth,
I Samuel, 2 Samuel, Esther). Though the case of Jonah is complicated as the
Changing Face if Form CriticismJor the Twenty-First Century, ed. Marvin Alan Sweeney and
Ehud Ben Zvi (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2003), 298-311 .
2 Matthew Neuj ahr, Predicting the Past in the Ancient Near East: NIantic Historiography in Ancient
Mesopotamia) Judah) and the Mediterranean World, BJS 354 (Providence: BrownJudaic Studies,
2012), 103.
TIe Book qfAmos as "Prophetic Fiction" 207
The Forms of the Old Testament Literature (FOTL) is a series of volumes that
seeks to present, according to a standard outline and methodology, a form-
critical analysis of every book or unit of the Old Testament (Hebrew Bible).8
Yet it is particula rly in this series also that outlines of the beginnings of new
styles of form- critical study begin to emerge clearly. Concerning the key issue
this paper a ddresses, in his 1996 Isaiah volume Sweeney offered a step towards
defining the genre of these books: "The Prophetic Book is the literary
presentation of the sayings of a particular prophet."9 In the Mica h commentary
of 2000 Ben Zvi offers the more complex (but closely related):
I see these definitions as related, since in each case the description includes the
element that such a book "presents" a prophet or their sayings. I will argue
below that this notion of presentation is crucial to understanding the nature of
"prophetic books." Thus while older (usually unexamined) genre descriptions do
not reflect the phenomenon accurately we have in this newer work a pointer
towards a more helpful understanding.
This section will consider two approaches to the issue that though they are
similar to the "presentation of a prophet" approach predate it, and m ay also
help us to sharpen the idea.
Peter Ackroyd's IOSOT p aper a qua rter of a century earlier offers the
closest predecessor of this approach. I I His major goal was to promote a more
holistic approach to the study of the prophetic literature, a move that at that
time was just beginning to impact other areas of Old Testament study. So he
challenged: "the assumption . . . that it is possible to consider Isa. i-xxxix as a
book separate from the whole in which it is now contained."12 So, although his
paper was tightly focused on Isa 1-12, it is nevertheless significant for
consideration of the Gattung of prophetic books as wholes. One of his goals in the
paper was to show how the structure of this section of the book "provides a
presentation of a prophetic figure and validates his authority in a particular
m a nner. " 13
He notes that these chapters, indeed most prophetic books, contain little
information a bout the prophet, and contrasts this with the typical introduction to
a modern commentary. 14 In 1-12 such information as is provided on this topic,
rather than serving (what in modern terms we might call) biographical ends,
serves to a uthenticate the prophet's commission. 15 He presents the subsections of
1-12 leading to the conclusion that:
10 Ehud Ben Zvi, Micah , FOTL 21b (Grand R apids, Eerdmans, 2000), 4.
II Peter Ackroyd, "Isaiah I-XII: Presentation of a Prophet," in Congress Volume Gottingen
1977, VTSup 29 (Leiden: Brill, 1978), 16-48 .
12Ibid ., the quotation is from the opening page.
13 Ibid ., 29.
14 Compare my comparative review of two Amos commentaries: T im Bulkeley, "T he
Long and the Short of It: Two R ecent Commentaries on the Book of Amos," ]SOT 16,
51 (1991 ): 11 9-21.
15 Ackroyd, "Isaiah I-XII," 40-41.
TIe Book qfAmos as "Prophetic Fiction" 209
There are points at which a good case can be mad e out for genuine Isaianic
sayings; but it is everywhere clear that the words of the prophet have been
ordered and amplified to bring them into relationship with subsequent
situations. It is not my intention to try to sort out either the genuine from the
non-genuine, or the possible situations ... to which this or that passage may
belong, or in which reapplication has been made . I am concerned rather to
observe how, in these twelve chapters as they now stand , there is a presentation
of the prophet. 16
Some of Ackroyd's ideas that are particularly significant for the genre
identification suggested in this paper were already present in Baltzer's work Die
Biographie der Propheten, published a couple of years earlier. In this Baltzer sought
to present the prophetic books as "ideal biographies" a Gattung he saw as
developing from the career biographies of Egyptia n functionaries. This form was
concerned to present the subject's title and family background, their call and
installation (including details of time, place, a nd witnesses etc.) a nd their area of
competence C(ustandigkeitsbereich) shown through incidents showing their fitness to
the task and examples illustrative of their role, concluding with notice of their
successor or sometimes their death. 17 These features distinguish such ancient
" biographies" not only from modern biography with its concern for the
personality of the subject but also from common understandings of the nature of
the prophetic books: "As far as Gattung is concerned, biography is to be
differentiated from mere oracle-assemblage a nd, conversely, from annals or
historical writing. " 18 Thus if one takes Baltzer's stress on the typicality rather
than individuality of the subject seriously his "ideal biography" begins to sound
rather like Ackroyd, Sweeney a nd ben Zvi's "presentation of a prophet"
approach, as long as the word "prophet" is not understood to stand in for the
particularity of a prophetic person . However, Baltzer's genre designation was
not much taken up, perhaps because the " biographical" approach epitomised in
the English-speaking world by John Skinner's Cunningham lectures from 1920
had been rendered so thoroughly outmoded by form- and redaction-critical
studies.
COGNATE LITERATUR ES
16 Ibid ., 44.
17 Klaus Baltzer, Die Biographie der Propheten (Neukirchen-Vluyn: Neukirchener Verlag,
1975), particularly 19-38.
18 Ibid ., 194.
210 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
however, if claims that Israelite prophetic books are unique l9 may be somewhat
exaggerated, these works are considerably more highly developed than the
examples we have from Israel's neighbors. The Egyptian Twelfth D ynasty work
"Prophecy of Neferti" (ca. 1990-1780 BeE) contains what scholars interpret as
a n ex eventu history of the fu ture in a connected na rrative, rather than a collection
of somewhat independent pieces. Thus it is more like the visions of apocalyptic
literature than the prophetic books of the Hebrew Bible. The Mari texts, though
from a similar period seem closer to biblical prophetic books, yet Petersen
summarises a consideration of them as a nalogues of prophetic books somewhat
negatively:
Perhap s the closest parallels to the prophetic books of the Hebrew Bible come
from the Neo-Assyrian texts which are much closer in time to the books that
concern us:
One feature of the Neo-Asyrian texts is particularly striking: more than one
oracle is present on a tablet. One tablet from Nineveh includes five oracles, all
apparently attributed to the same prophet. Moreover the middle oracle seems
to have been placed there because of its central importance for the overall
sequence, namely, the basis for a covenant between the god Assur and the royal
house of Assyria.21
This is, to date, the closest parallel to the biblical prophetic books, it shares
with them a (possibly deliberate) placing of oracles in a sequence and with a n
ordering that seems to present a theological message related to a covenant with a
divinity. '!\That it does not have are elements that suggest a "presentation of the
prophet. " Yet this seems to be a most striking feature of (at least some of) the
Israelite works.
elsewhere) as an oral phenomenon, the prophetic books are literary works. Thus
we might sharpen "presentation of a prophet" to "literary image of a prophet. "
So, Steck's guide to studying the prophetic books at the turn of the century,
7he Prophetic Books and 7heir 7heological Witness, provides both another approach
similar to those already presented, a nd takes us a step further. He summarised
the m ain tendency of twentieth century studies of the prophetic books saying:
The interest concentrates upon isolated literary layers, but especially upon the
original beginnings of the transmission, whether one seeks it with the prophet or
in a later period . Behind this situation stands the self-evident assumption that a
prophetic book is nothing more than the simple recording of sayings of the
prophet for whom the book is named or the sayings of later anonymous
prophets. Apparently, this assumption is justified by texts like Isaiah 8:16-18
and 30:8 , or by scenes of prophetic appearance (like Isaiah 7-8;Jeremiah 7 and
26) or by the picture of transmission in Jeremiah 36. Additionally, one
acknowledges varying numbers of isolated additions or actualizing individual
continuations of these recordings along the broader path of transmission.22
He then questions the reliability of the detail of such diachronic studies, pointing
to the diversity of conclusions which they produce,23 and suggests that:
Form criticism only appears to open the door directly to the words of
proclamation of this figure. The view of the prophet as speaker that dominated
in the era of form criticism can no longer serve as the starting point for the
question. The received location of prophetic messages in descriptions (!) of
speaking situations is primarily not a speaking situation that can be immediately
reconstructed. Instead, the received location is a book. vVe only possess the
book, and only the book is the ground upon which we can pose our questions. 25
22 Odil Hannes Steck, The Prophetic Books and Their Theological Witness, trans. J ames D.
Nogalski (St Louis: Chalice, 2000), 8.
23 Steck, Theological Witness, 9; cf. for example my remarks in a comparative book review:
Bulkeley, "The Long and the Short ofIt." (See n. 14 above.)
24 Steck, Theological Witness, 9.
25 Ibid ., 9.
212 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Thus the form criticism of the late twentieth century missed two critical
elements:
Like the prophetic book itself, this prophetic image that the book presents has
received little attention. This image could look quite different from the original
prophet.26
That is, Steck recognised a need for a closer examination of the actual books,
which suggests to me a rethinking of assumptions about their genre(s) and in
particular of the "prophetic image" which these books project, what he earlier
identified as "a literary image of a prophet." He also draws attention to the irony
that while what we have is a literary phenomenon, what this literary
phenomenon presents is presented significantly as an oral phenomenon. ';Y e
have a literary presentation of a prophet who speaks.
To be meaningful to readers of a later time, a "presentation" of a prophet is
likely to do more than just recount their words as they were delivered. The
words would presumably be adapted and reworked or added to, just as the
redaction critics claimY Indeed we might go further, unless we wish to ascribe
to the writers of prophetic books a kind of historiographical interest hardly
attested before the modern period, there is little necessary relationship between
these presentations and the prophets who may have inspired them. 28
This lack of necessary connection between the works and the historical
people who may have been their starting points suggests a further sharpening of
the description. It also points to another way in which Baltzer's talk of "career
biographies" fails to reflect the works we are examining. In this connection
Alter's talk of fictionalized history and historicized fiction will be useful.
PROPHETIC FICTIONS
26 Ibid .,
9.
27 This remains true even if the conclusions these cntIcs reach are too varied and
uncertain to themselves provide a firm footing for a reconstruction of the history of the
production of any particular prophetic book.
28 Steck, Theological Witness, 9.
29 James L. Crenshaw, Prophetic Conflict: Its Effiet Upon Israelite Religion (Berlin: de Gruyter,
197 1),64- 65.
TIe Book qfAmos as "Prophetic Fiction" 213
with a possible but not a necessary connection to any historic prophets who may
be identified. By this descriptor "prophetic fiction" I intend the word "fiction,"
not to imply the opposite of "factual," but rather as Alter used it in TIe Art qf
Biblical Narrative to underline the creativity of the writers, and to detach
investigation of their works from an overriding concern for the historicity of the
events (including speeches) they recount.30
Between the form and the contents of the prophetic books there is a
disconnect which has often been noted, but perhaps not fully exploited to
enhance our understanding of their nature . These works come to us as "books,"
that is written works with more or less stable contents,31 yet within this written
form they present oral phenomena. The prophets in these books are presented
most often as speaking, while there are very few mentions of their words being
written (pretty much limited to Isa 8: 1; 30:8;Jer 36; Hab 2:2). Indeed, unlike the
acco unts of prophetic figures in the narrative texts of the former prophets, their
actions are relatively seldom recounted.
Prophetic books are in the form of bounded written texts. These texts are
unlike the records of single oracles, or collections of a very small number of
oracles of which we have examples from nearby cultures. Yet the written texts of
the prophetic books present prophets as speakers. As mentioned a bove they are
only rarely associated with written texts. This discrepa ncy between form and
contents (the form of a written text describing a person who speaks) can be
understood in terms of a n understanding of their genre as "prophetic fiction"
without necessarily implying a ny connection to a prior oral phenomenon.
The possible place of oral performance in the history of the development of
prophetic texts is much discussed. 'J\Te have moved from a n easy uncritical
assumption of original oral performance of prophetic speech through its
recording to collection in the works we now have to a certain degree of
scepticism about this supposed history. M y point is not to enter this debate, but
rather that regardless of the possible histories of the development of prophetic
texts or phenomena the prophetic books we have present prophets as speakers.
Whether or not there were such people as prophets who spoke "words" like
those recorded in the books this is how the writers of the books envisage
prophets.
In the light of this it may be useful here to note that whether in the
historicized fiction of Genesis, or the fictionalized history (to use Alter's
30 Robert Alter, TIe Art if Biblical Narrative (New York: Basic Books, 1983), ch. 2
particularly p . 26.
31 The variety of textual traditions even in its most extreme form (found perhaps in the
two editions of the book of J eremiah, typified in critical editions of the MT and LXX
texts) does not invalidate this, though it may point to and hint at a fluidity to these written
forms.
214 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Jacobsen's words apply with equal force to the prophets as to the psalms.
Inevita bly, as with any genre descriptor, the term "prophetic fiction" fits
some works more closely than others. Jonah is at one end of such a spectrum,
with Amos, Jeremiah, Ezekiel nearer that end, while books like Joel, Obadiah,
and Zephaniah provide little personification of the prophets to whom the words
are attributed. Yet even here, for example in Obadiah, an attribution precedes
the divine speech(es). Whilst Obadiah (servant of Yah) may well be a descriptor
rather than an individual's name (though examples of the name are attested in 1
Chron 3:21 , 12: lO; Ezra 8:9 and Neh lO:6, 12:25) it functions here to attach the
"vision" to a human person and the messenger formulae in 1, 2, 4, 8, and 18
present this "person" as a prophet. Even in overtly narrative texts the degree of
characterisation varies between those that are richly and deeply complex to
those barely identified by their function.
The case of Isaiah is interesting. The presence of the character of the
prophet seems to recede as the book progresses. In the early chapters the
character of Isaiah is strongly present, not only in the introductions 1: 1; 2: 1; 13: 1
but the use of his name on thirteen other occasions in chapters 1-39 (7:3; 20:2-
3; and p articularly in the narrative section: 37 :2, 5-6, 21 ; 38:1, 4, 21; 39:3, 5, 8).
In the section of the book which begins at chapter 40 while Isaiah is not
mentioned an "I" who speaks is identified, and in some sense (as in Jeremiah) the
experiences of this prophet are part of the message. In this section of the book,
however, it is difficult to distinguish the "I" of the prophet from that of another
character "the servant of YH\I\'H. " This phenomenon is reminiscent of the
difficulty of distinguishing the prophetic "I" from the divine "I" in these books
more generally. In the final section into which the book is commonly divided
(56-66) the prophet recedes further and this section might be listed with the
works that least strongly reflect the description "prophetic fiction ."
Interestingly the translation p anel of one modern English translation seems
to view these books in a similar way. The Contemporary English Version (translated
by the American Bible Society) renders most of the superscriptions " I am [name
ofprophetJ"36 (Isa l:l ; Jer 1:1 ; Ezek 1:1 ; Hos l:l;Joel 1:1;37 Mic 1:1 ; Nah 1:1;
35 Rolf A. J acobsen, Many Are Saying: The Function if Direct Discourse in the Hebrew Psalter
(London: T&T Clark, 2004), 18.
36 Except J eremiah which reads "My name is J eremiah" (Zechariah reads "I am the
prophet Zechariah," an oddity since the Hebrew is close to Haggai see the footnote
below.)
37 The exceptions are Obadiah: "The Lord God gave Obadiah a message" as is Jonah:
"One day the Lord told Jonah"; Haggai: "On the first day of the sixth month of the
second year"; these books reflect rather different wording in the Hebrew which may
explain their difference.
216 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
38 E.g., Gerhard von Rad, "Origin of the Concept of the Day of Yahweh," ]SS 4 (1959):
105, could write: "the individual speech units in Amos are in thematic respects in no way
attuned to each other."
39 See Tim Bulkeley, "Cohesion, Rhetorical Purpose and the Poetics of Coherence in
Amos 3," Australian Biblical Review 47 (1999): 16-28; Tim Bulkeley, "Amos 7,1-8,3:
Cohesion and Generic Dissonance," ZA W 121 (2009): 515-28 for attempts to
demonstrate the coherence of parts of the book of Amos; and Tim Bulkeley, "L'Auteur
Est Mort, But Won't Lie Down: Inventing Authors While Reading Amos," Colloq. 43.1
(2011 ): 59-70 for a presentation of some of the ideas expressed here.
TIe Book qfAmos as "Prophetic Fiction" 217
reception of their speech, or concerning their interactions with God, like those
we find inJonah. 40
The genre description "prophetic fiction," as understood above, accurately
describes the contents of the prophetic books (even including Jonah) and is only
a small extension of earlier ways of describing the genre, but does it also offer
practical help in reading the works so described?
Having briefly presented the idea of describing the genre of the prophetic books
as "prophetic fictions" let me now show how this description might fit, and
indeed assist us to read, the opening chapters of the book of Amos. 41
The book opens, as most do, with a superscription (1: 1). In the case of Amos
this presents the "words" of a prophet, named Amos who was identified with
herders from Tekoa. 'J\Thatever our current inability to assess the meaning of this
information with confidence, it presumably provided the intended hearers with a
social setting for the prophet. The "words" are next specified as ones which "he
saw." The verb hiiziih is strongly associated with prophecy, and effectively
suggests the "words" were understood to be divinely inspired prophetic speeches.
The target of these speeches is broadly identified as "Israel" and they are
situated in time past: "in the days of King Uzziah of Judah and in the days of
KingJeroboam son ofJoash ofIsrael." This form of dating to me suggests, not a
claim to immediacy but rather, some distance between the teller and the events
or speech to be narrated. In the case of Amos the time is further specified as
"two years before the earthquake," suggesting a relatively short period of activity
for the prophet being presented.
The phrasing and contents of this superscription suggest a teller distanced
from Amos in time who will present his "words" (divinely inspired prophetic
speeches) and their audience. The next verse is a brief poetic fragment that is not
directly linked, through its contents, to its surrounding texts. It seems to serve as
an epigraph, perhaps to summarise or (since this is often the function of poetic
texts embedded in narrative)42 to celebrate the prophet's message. The
introductory "he said" seems to refer back to Amos, yet in the first line "YHWH
roars from Zion" and the speaker seems perhaps not to be Amos but the
narrator of the superscription. This fits with the suggestion that this verse serves
to celebrate (in advance) the ministry of a prophet whose "words" served to
40 This material is most prominent in Jeremiah but is also found in other prophetic books
including Isaiah and Ezekiel as well as Amos and Hosea.
41 This book seems a fitting test case as it is often presented in introductory courses as the
typical prophetic book.
42 Fokkelman, Reading Biblical Narrative, ch. 10.
218 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
communicate YH'!\TH's roar, indeed were YHWH 's words (according to the
shared prophetic ideology).
After this brief introduction, III verse 3, the account of Amos's preaching
begins. The first speech is two chapters long and contains eight oracles linked to
one another by shared formulae and content, with the last two more different
from the rest than the six are from each other. The common opening formula:
"For three transgressions of [name of a city or a people], and for four, I will not
revoke it, because . .. " is followed by accusation(s) and judgement. The first six
concern neighbouring polities: I :3-5, Damascus; 1:6-8, Gaza; 1:9-10, T yre;
1:11-12, Edom; 1:13-15, the Ammonites; 1:1-3, Moab. In each case the crime
is some sort of brutality in war, several times the victims of the atrocity are
Israelites. '!\Then cities are the named targets they seem to stand as
representatives. Thus though Gaza is introduced (I :6) Ashdod, Askelon and
Ekron are included in the judgment (I :8). After this excoriation of neighbouring
polities the speaker turns to first Judah (2:4-5) a nd finally Israel in the longest
a nd by far the most developed speech (2:6-16). This sequence, with the greater
detail and focus on the last item, leads most commentators to imagine a rhetoric
in which the prophet's hearers respond at first with enthusiasm, as their
neighbours a re condemned for their crimes, reaching a peak of perhaps
surprised approval when Judah joins those in the dock, setting them up for the
shock of the final condemnation of Israel. 43
During this final oracle of the series the address changes. In verses 6-8 those
who are spoken about are identified in the third person plural. In verse 9 the
a udience a re addressed directly in the second person plural, "you. " This direct
address continues until verse 13, though in verse 14-16 (where the judgement
pronounced in verse 13 is spelled out in verbal pictures) the pronouns again
become third person, but this time singular (as a "he" pictured for "your"
consideration). Although second person pronouns have not been used in the
book before 2: I 0 their identity has been suggested by the superscription:
"against! concerning Israel. " The addressees are the a ncestors of the presumed
hearers of the work (who are identified by most redaction critical studies as
"Israelites" in the Persian period),44 a nd indeed the (physical or spiritual)
a ncestors of the actual audiences of the canonized work once it becomes
"Scripture. "
How are the audience in the implied narrative world (Amos's Israelite
hearers) or indeed the actual (implied) hearers to be expected to react? Surely
such a strong attack, even if prepared by the careful a nd effective rhetorical
43 See e.g., Shalom Paul, A Commentary on the Book if Amos, Hermeneia (Minneapolis:
Fortress, 1991 ), 76 and the references there .
44 E.g., the books of Ezra and Nehemiah use "Israel" regularly to refer to the residents of
Yehud of whom the writer approves especially those who had "returned from the exile,"
by contrast the term yehuday is used less often.
TIe Book qfAmos as "Prophetic Fiction" 219
strategy of 1:3-2:5, must provoke questions about the speaker's authority and! or
message!
Chapter 3 is a unit; it begins with a strong formula: "Hear this word," and
ends with the formula: "YHWH's oracle" which is followed by a repetition of
the opening formula: " Hea r this word" in 4: 1. The chapter is expressed in ways
that defend Amos's identity as a prophet who must proclaim a message of
warning and destruction.45 Rhetorical and linguistic features (such as the
'excessive' use of messenger formulae in vv. 9-15, or the effect of the questions in
vv. 3-8) work together with the meaning expressed to underline that Amos is
commissioned as a divine spokesperson, and must proclaim God 's message of
woe, not weal. Thus in a "prophetic fiction" the speech(es) assembled in chapter
3, reply to Amos's audience's presumed response to the preceding oracle series
a nd to the potentially similar response by the implied audience of the book.
This m ay raise the question of whether the completeness of the destruction
suggested by the imagery in verse 12 could really motivate the "prophet's"
audience to change. Is a future nea r total national destruction really a stronger
motivator than the preceding stripping of strongholds a nd plundering of
citadels? However, for the writer of the acco unt of Amos's message this might
serve that purpose for their audience. Since the audience of the book knows the
destruction of Samaria as a fact of past history. Note the fact that the third
person subjects of verse 12 are na med as "the children of Israel who live in
Samaria" and not merely "Israel" might help suggest this double view, as in
narrative na ming is often significant of perspective.46
CONCLU SION
45 Bulkeley, "Cohesion, Rhetorical Purpose"; Yehoshua Gitay, "A Study of Amos's Art of
Speech: A Rhetorical Analysis of Amos 3: 1-1 5," CBQ 42 (1980): 293-309.
46 Berlin, Poetics and Interpretation qfBiblical Narrative, 59-61 .
11
I NTRODUCTION
1 To say nothing of the added difficulties of understanding the nature of "genre" itself,
and the relationship between individual instances of text and broader or more abstract
categories of text-type/ genre.
- 221 -
222 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
SFL. U sing the book of Obadiah as an example I will then present a prelimina ry
attempt at what SFL calls a "register analysis" of the text, as well as a summary
description of the book's linguistic context, which SFL calls the "context of
situation," as a n example of the potential of SFL as a helpful point of contact for
biblical form criticism generally, and for theory and practice related to situation
a nd context pa rticularly. 2
Herma nn Gunkel's theories related to text-type were adopted widely a mong Old
Testament/Hebrew Bible schola rs. The exacting application of the notion of Sit.:;,
im Leben related to form criticism found in '!\TolfPs work serves as a n excellent
example of the method. Wolff suggests that the Sit;: im Leben of the first p a rt of
Obadia h is "an assurance proclaimed by the prophet during lament ceremonies
held in the ruins of the Jerusalem sanctuary during the exilic period ."3 This,
thus, involves a decidedly pa rticular social location in postexilic Yehud. '!\That is
more, this specific social location is a n historical reconstruction. Based, in part,
on these conclusions Wolff suggests that verses ISa, 16, 17, 18, a nd 21 also fit
this social context, but that verses 19, 20, a nd 17b a re later literary additions,
from ca. 400 BCE or later. 4 This is entirely consistent with Gunkel's
understanding of the Sit;: im Leben as the original oral setting for a given text. 5 It
is also consistent with Gunkel's focus on the social location of theorized original
oral substrata, a nd not on book-level context. 6 Relation to the underlying social
situation of sub-units of a given prophetic book is, thus, one of the hallmarks of
Sit;: im Leben in the context of classic form criticism.
2 According to R aabe, Obadiah serves as a helpful precis for mu ch that is common in the
prophetic literature du e to its typicality and to its short length. Paul R. R aabe, Obadiah: A
New Translation with Introduction and Commentary, AB 24D (New York: Doubleday, 1996),3.
3 H ans Walter Wolff, Obadiah and Jonah: A Commentary, trans. Margaret Kohl , CC
(Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1986), 63, cf. 19.
4 Wolff, Obadiah and Jonah, 63-64.
5 Hermann Gunkel, "The Prophets as Writers and Poets," in Prophecy in Israel, ed. David
L. Peterson (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1987), 22-73. Cf. also Claus Westermann, Basic Forms
qfProphetic Speech, trans. Hugh C. White (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1991 ),68.
6 Gunkel, "Prophets as vVriters and Poets." As a point of clarification, the focus on
original oral situation is not myopic in classical form critical work. Form critics also paid
significant attention to the development of the religious tradition, and to ongoing contexts
in which a given form continued to maintain its relevance. Classical form critics were thus
interested in both the Sitz im Leben of the original, oral prophecy, and in the ongoing
situations (which may have differed in various ways from that original situation) in which
the oracle m ay have been maintained. See, for example, Sigmund Mowinckel, The Spirit
and the Word: Prophecy and Tradition in Ancient Israel, trans. K.C. Hanson (Minneapolis:
Fortress, 2002), 7.
Sit;: im What? 223
Gunkel also proposed that a determinative relationship existed between
genre a nd text production in ancient Israel.7 In a sense this is the keystone to
Gunkel's use of form criticism. Because both he and those who were later to
make use of form criticism were chiefly interested in the reconstruction of the
history of the religion of a ncient Israel, fixing the relationship betwee n a given
form (a nd thus the oral sub-strata of a prophetic text) a nd its social context was
quite necessary.8 If one could imagine flexibility either in terms of the form itself
or in terms of the relationship of a form to a given social situation, form criticism
would cease to be a functional tool for precise historical reconstruction. The
addition of elements of flexibili ty undercuts, in a fashion, the purpose of the
underlying project itself.
Since Gunkel's day, and since the heyday of the form-critical project (the
early- to mid-twentieth century) both these, and other, elements of form criticism
have been challenged. This has led to the problematization of the entire concept
of Sit;: im Leben, a nd of the relationship between social situation and genre.
Knierim, for example, has criticized both the focus on the relationship between
Sit;: im Leben a nd genre, a nd the notion of foundationally oral genres. 9 In fact he
has gone so far as to suggest that "'setting,' in the sense biblical form criticism
has understood it cannot be regarded indispensably as one of the factors that
constitute genres. Not if genre is understood as a linguistic phenomenon." lo This
suggests a significa nt, or even complete, divorce between the a nalysis of genre in
the biblical literature and an understanding of social situation. If this state of
affairs is to be accepted, no further conversation regarding Sit;: im Leben, or
a nything like it, need be pursued.
However, as Becking has noted, Knierim's intense minimalism regarding
social context may be something of an overreaction. I I This is not to say that
Becking himself accepts the acco unt of Sit;: im Leben provided by classic form
in Changing Face if Form Criticism.fOr the Twenty-First Century, ed. Marvin A. Sweeney and
Ehud Ben Zvi (Grand R apids: Eerdmans, 2003), 262. Cf. M ark J. Boda, Praying the
Tradition: TIe Origin and Use if Tradition in Nehemiah 9, BZAW 277 (Berlin: de Gruyter,
1999).
224 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
CritiCS, but he does suggest that the concept remains useful if applied
appropriately. In his analysis of Boda's form-critical comments on Nehemiah,
Becking notes that this work "implies that the relation between a GaUung and its
language is not always exclusive."1 2 That is to say, there is a kind of fluidity or
flexibility between the specific language of an individual text and the expected
features generally associated with the genre that text is thought to represent.
Instead of concluding that there is no relationship between genre and context,
this suggests that genres may have a degree of flexibility in terms of their
contextual background. Just as history writing involves the narration (and not
exact recollection) of the past, Becking suggests that Sit.:;, im Leben is a
"representation of the past" that has a heuristic usefulness. The question at hand
for Becking is whether and to what degree does a Sit.:;, im Leben help to elucidate
the text in question and overall history in general. 13
For Becking this indicates a variety of potential originating dates that might
be suggested by a given text. 14 Sit;:, im Leben thus remains a tool for recovering the
original situation(s) of a given passage. But, Becking's suggestion that context
forms a heuristic function may also allow us to think in terms of different points
of reception by reading communities. IS In either case we neither need accept a
wooden and unyielding relationship between a genre and its social context, nor
reject the existence of any such relationship at all. There is a good deal of middle
ground available, and we should seize it.
The concept of context has not been rejected by newer iterations of form
criticism, but it has undergone a significant shift from a focus on originally oral
sub-units to final literary forms. This has involved a concomitant shift away from
referring to a Sit;:, im Leben, a phrase which has retained the connotation of a
focus on oral sub-strata, to referring to a Sit;:, im Buch or Sit;:, in der Literatur.1 6 This
is due to the suggestion that prophetic books (and other kinds of biblical
literature) are more than just records of existing oral prophecies, but are instead
distinct artefacts, created by individuals and communities who were interested in
both preservation and creation. 17 Kim describes this difference in perspective by
asking what the critic should have in mind when considering the idea of setting.
"Is it the setting of the very event (e.g., the specific date, hour, and locale of the
prophet's preaching), or that of the author, transmitter, redactor, or manuscript
18 Hyun C hul Paul Kim, "Form Criticism in Dialogue with Other Criticisms: Building
the Multidimensional Structures of Texts and Concepts," in Sweeney and Ben Zvi,
Changing Face ifForm Criticism, 85-104.
19 Ibid .
20 Biddle, "Obadiah-Jonah-Micah in Canonical Context," 155.
21 Ehud Ben Zvi has also done extensive work on various contexts of reception for biblical
books from the perspective of final-form analysis. See, for instance, Ben Zvi, Nlicah; Ehud
Ben Zvi, Signs if Jonah: Reading and Rereading in Ancient Yehud, LHBOTS 367 (Sheffield:
Sheffield Academic, 2003).
22 Ehud Ben Zvi, "Reconstru cting the Intellectual Discourse of Ancient Yehud," SR 39
(20 10): 7-23.
23 I will expand upon this furth er below. There are, of course, those who continu e to
suggest that this fo cus on the prophetic book over and against individual oracles is
226 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
artificial, and obscures the meaning of the parts that make up the whole. See, for
instance, Robert P. Carroll, "Poets Not Prophets: A Response to 'Prophets through the
Looking Glass,'" in The Prophets: A Shdfield Reader, ed. Philip R . Davies (Sheffield: Sheffield
Academic, 1996), 43-49. Floyd has provided an able challenge to this contention. See,
Michael H. Floyd, " 'Write the Revelation! ' (Hab 2:2): Re-Imagining the Cultural History
of Prophecy," in Writings and Speech in Israelite and Ancient Near Eastern Prophecy, ed . Ehud
Ben Zvi and Michael H . Floyd (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2000), 103-143.
24 For a discussion of prophecy as social institution see, M artti Nissinen, "How Prophecy
Became Literature," SlOT 19 (2005): 153-72. Cf. also Floyd in this volume.
25 Martin]. Buss, The Changing Shape if Form Criticism· A Relational Approach, ed. Nickie M .
Stipe (Sheffield: Sheffield Phoenix, 2010), 48, 148.
26 Note that the content of this section is drawn to a significant degree from Colin M.
Toffelmire, "Orienting the Event: Register and the D ay ofYHWH in the Prophetic Book
ofJoel" (PhD diss., M cM aster Divinity College, 2014), 65-80. Other accounts of register
exist to be sure. See, for instance Teun A. van Dijk, Discourse and Context: A Socio-Cognitive
Approach (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008).
27 A complete exploration of the theory of language presented by SFL is far beyond the
capacity of this paper. For accessible presentations of the basic theory see, M. A. K .
Halliday, An Introduction to Functional Grammar (London: E. Arnold , 1985), xiii-xxxv; M. A.
K. Halliday, Language as Social Semiotic: The Social Interpretation if Language and Meaning
(London: Edward Arnold , 1978).
28 M . A. K. Halliday and Ruqaiya Hasan, "Text and Context: Aspects of Language in a
Social-Semiotic Perspective," Sophia Linguistica 6 (1980): 4-9 1.
Sit;: im What? 227
a "socio-semiotic," or a communicative sub-system of a given society's or
culture's meaning making system. 29 Given that language is social and
communicative, SFL theorists suggest that all instances of linguistic
communication are related to and even encode some kind of social situation.
There is no de-contextualized communication, and therefore context is not
merely an ad hoc tool to be used to clarify ambiguous phrasing. Some theory of
context and the relationship between context and text is necessary. Hasan argues
that context deserves the same degree of systematic attention as that given to
grammar, semantics, and other strata of the language system. 30 An analysis of
the register of a given text using the categories and methods provided by SFL
(modified as necessary for classical Hebrew) offers the potential to illuminate
elements of the social situation, or context of situation in SFL parlance, of a text.
While even an overview of SFL register theory is beyond this paper, I will
outline briefly the categories and steps involved. SFL theorists refer to three
high-level categories when examining linguistic register, the field, the tenor, and
the mode of the text. Field refers to ideational and logical components of the
text, including participants, arena (location and time), and verbal processes and
transitivity structure. Tenor refers to the interpersonal dynamics of the text,
including participant relations (modality) and any process sharing features.
Mode refers to the texture of the text, to the way in which language is deployed
as a communicative tool, including identity and similarity chains, and the
medium and channel of the text. The composite result of an analysis of a text
based on these features is a description of the register, or linguistic genre, of the
text in question. A description of register can then be used to suggest a likely or
plausible context of situation (social situation) to which it corresponds.
This context of situation is not a description of the actual historical and
material situation of a text, though historical and cultural location are important
factors. SFL theorists suggest four sub-categories of "context" that can provide
helpful precision to our discussion of Sit;: im Leben in a biblical text: context of
situation, context of text (co-text), context of culture, and material situational
setting. Let me move through these types of context in reverse order, beginning
with material situational setting.
The material situational setting of an utterance refers to the actual physical
environment of a communicative act. This material setting exists on a cline
between more and less relevant to the communicative act in question, depending
on the nature of that act. In the case of oral communication, the material
situational setting can be of significant importance, particularly if the
interlocutors in the discourse incorporate deictic reference or depend on non-
verbal forms of communication (pointing, gesturing, etc.). At the other end of the
scale, a highly textualized instance of communication may depend very little or
almost not at all on the material situational setting. I am writing this paragraph
using a computer, but the type of computer is not an essential component of the
communicative experience for the reader-the degree of physical and temporal
distance is too great for that material element to matter.
Context of culture refers to the broader sociocultural frame of reference for
a communicative act. This might include a great many variables, such as class,
language, historical context, geographical location, and so on. Context of culture
tends to be described at a high level of abstraction and, according to Hasan,
refers to "an organization of all possible features of all possible situations in all
their possible permunations, where 'possible' means socially recognizable."31
Context of text, or co-text, refers to inter textual and intratextual relations, or to
the way in which a given communicative act is internally self-referential or to the
way it refers (explicitly or implicitly) to other texts.
Context of situation, which is what concerns us here, refers to the social
situation of a given communicative act. This mayor may not include features of
the material situational setting, but refers to those elements of a situation
relevant to the communicative act in a given text. Normally discussions related
to context of situation in SFL research involve the observation of a situation and
the identification of the ways in which that setting predicts (in probabilistic
terms) the likely linguistic register. In the case of analyses of ancient texts we are
working to apply this logic in reverse, describing the register of a text in order to
suggest a likely or plausible context of situation.
Some brief comments regarding the relationships between context of
culture, co-text, and context of situation are also necessary. Because context of
culture and context of situation are given different names, the temptation may
be to think of them as different things, or as belonging to different categories.
Instead they should be considered the same essential phenomenon seen from
different perspectives and described using different degrees of abstraction.
Context of culture and context of situation are points at either end of a cline of
linguistic context. Context of culture is an abstraction of all of contexts of
situation that are real or possible within some identifiable set. Context of
situation is the instantiation of this system of real or possible situations, or the
social situation of some given text within the set of all possible or real texts in a
given culture. My description of co-text above refers to both intratextual and
34 And this is to say nothing of SFL's long history of practical textual analysis from these
theoretical perspectives. Also of import is the ongoing interdisciplinary interaction
between biblical scholarship and theoretical linguistics (esp . linguistic discourse analysis).
See, for instance, Robert D. Holmstedt, "The Typological Classification of the Hebrew of
Genesis: Subject-Verb or Verb-Subject?" ]HS II (2011 ): Article 14; Robert D. Holmstedt
and Andrew R . Jones, "The Pronoun in T ripartite Verbless Clauses in Biblical Hebrew:
Resumption for Left-Dislocation of Pronominal Copula?" ]SS 59 (2014): 53-89; C. H. J.
van der Merwe, "Biblical Exegesis, Cognitive Linguistics and Hypertext," in Congress
Volume Leiden 2004 (Leiden: Brill, 2006), 255-80; C. H . J. van der Merwe, "A Cognitive
Linguistic Perspective on Hinneh in the Pentateuch , Joshua, Judges, and Ruth," HS 48
(2007): 101-140; Cynthia L. Miller-Naud e and C. H . J. van der M erwe, " :l~0 and
Mirativity in Biblical Hebrew," HS 52 (2011 ): 53-81 ; Stanley E. Porter, "Studying
Ancient Languages from a Modern Linguistic Perspective: Essential Terms and
Terminology," Filologia neotestamentaria 2 (1989): 147-72; Stanley E. Porter, review of
"Linguistics and Biblical Interpretation," ed. Edgar J Bakker, ]SJVT (1990): 124; Stanley
E. Porter, "Grammar as Interpretation: Greek Literature in Its Linguistic Contexts,"
] SJVT (2001 ): 125; Stanley E. Porter, "M atthew and M ark: T he Contribution of Recent
Linguistic Thought," in Mark and Matthew 1: Comparative Readings (Tiibingen: Mohr
Siebeck, 2011 ), 97-119; Aaron Sherwood, "Paul's Imprisonment as the Glory of the
Ethne: A Discourse Analysis of Ephesians 3: 1-1 3," BBR 22 (2012): 97-111 ; Andrew
Todd, "The Interaction of Talk and Text: R e-Contextualizing Biblical Interpretation,"
Practical 77zeology 6 (2013): 69-85 .
Sit;: im What? 231
Charybdis of oversimplification in order to leverage the SFL account of register
a nd context of situation in a register analysis of the prophetic book of Obadia h .
A complete a nalysis of the register of Obadiah would depend first upon a fully-
orbed discourse analysis of the text. Because this is beyond our scope here, what
I offer instead are some preliminary comments on the register of the prophetic
book. This a nalysis will cover the three categories noted above in m y exploration
of SFL: field, tenor, a nd mode. In the analysis of field I will briefly identify the
discourse p a rticipants, and will then explore the discourse arena (including time
a nd location), and transitivity structure in the book. In the analysis of tenor I will
focus on participa nt relations, and especially on modality and grammatical
person. Finally, in the a nalysis of mode I will fo cus on channel a nd medium and,
to a lesser degree, on the role of intertextuality in a n a nalysis of the register of
Obadiah. I will conclude this analysis of register with an overview of the Context
of Situation for the prophetic book of Obadiah.
FIELD
35 I have noted in my analysis of the register of the book of Joel that participants often
group together into participant sets in the prophetic literature. These groupings are
accomplished by means of semantic chains related to textual coherence, and thus to the
mode of the text. Because I am not providing here a full analysis of the mode of Obadiah
(for reasons of both space and relevance), some of this work related to the grouping or
relatedness of discourse participants has been done "behind the scenes" as it were. Thus,
in some instances, I will refer to a participant (e.g. , Judah) and include under this title
various specific discourse participants that may be represented in some way other than an
actual instance of the lexeme (e.g., pronominal reference, or metaphorical reference).
36 Daniel I. Block, Obadiah: The Kingship Belongs to Yhwh, Hearing the Message of Scripture
27 (Grand R apids: Zondervan, 2013), 30- 3 1.
232 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
could take on their own behalf, which suggests to the reader that the semantic
Addressees play some other role in the discourse. Throughout the book,
references to Esau! Edom point to a brotherly conflict and to the horror of
fratricideY Assis argues forcefully that this creates a focus in the book on
election theology. 38 In prophetic theology Edom's attemp ts to occupy
Israelite!Judahite territory was seen as an attempt to "reverse the situation and
restore the birthright to Esau. "39 This is dramatically exacerbated by the fall of
Jerusalem a nd the consequent theological crisis for the survivors. Anti-Edom
polemic is "designed to extirpate from the people's consciousness the view that
God had abandoned them and had chosen another people in their place."4o
Patterns of tra nsitivity related to Edom in the book of Obadiah bear out
Assis's observation. The as-yet unnamed Addressees of verses 2-5 a re the
recipients of all verbal action, functioning as sem a n tic Goal. When Edom! Esau
is finally na med explicitly in verse 6 this pattern continues. Here both " Esau"
a nd "his treasures" function as Subject!Goal of p assive verbal clauses. The
semantic Actors in these cla uses in verse 6 remain unspecified, but in verse 7 the
"people of your covenant," and the "people of your peace" function as
Subject! Actor in their respective clauses, and appea r to be agents of the
suffering of Edom.4 1 In verse 8 YHWH is the referen t of the clitic Subject! Actor
of the verb 1Jl\, a nd "the wise of Edom and understanding from mount Esau"
function as Complement!Goai. Again, Edom or its co-referents receive the
action of the verb. The clitic Subject! Actor of the opening cla use of verse 9 is
not identified, but the Complement!Goal of the cla use is "the warriors of
Ternan," which is a clea r reference to Edom (cf. Ge n 36: 11 ; Ezek 25: 13).42 Also
in verse 9 "the people of mount Esau" function as Subject!Goal of the passive
verb 1"11:1. Following this in verse 10 the book once again refers to Edom! Esau in
the second person where the second person object suffix functions as
certainty. Clear references to Jacob begin in verse 10, a nd in that sub-section (vv.
10-14) coreferential participants function either as Complement/Goal or as
Adjunct/Circumstantial (e.g., as part of a prepositional phrase). This changes,
however, in the final sub-section of the book (vv. 15-21 ), as Jacob moves into the
active role of Subject/ Actor in verses 17-21.47
There is a n observable relationship between the transitivity structure of the
book of Obadiah in relation to the sets of participa nts noted above. First, there is
a n inverse relationship between Edom a nd Juda h as discourse participants.
Where Edom functions as sem a ntic Actor, Judah tends to be found in receiving
or supporting semantic roles (esp. vv. 11-14). 'I\ThereJuda h functions as sem a ntic
Actor, Edom tends to receive the verbal action (esp. vv. 17-21). However, this is
not a simple process of inversion. In verses 2-10 Edom functions mostly in the
role of Complement/Goal or Subject/Goal. But, as I will note below in the
discussion of time in the book, the events described in these verses occur more or
less at the same time as events described in verses 15-21. It is only in verses 11-
14, then, where we find Edom as Actor in any significant way. And yet, even
here this role of Actor is consistently found in negated volitional clauses. And so
action taken by Edom is uniformly negative (more on this in the Tenor section
below). The real principle Actor in the discourse is YHWH, even though he is
found as Subject/ Actor only a few times. But the actions taken by YHWH are
key actions, a nd events related to YH,I\TH are key events, which bring about the
inversion of verses 15-16, and thus the active semantic role of IsraellJ acob in
verses 17-21.
The next step in the a nalysis of register in Obadiah is what SFL theorists
refer to as "arena," including elements of time and location . There is a degree of
vagueness related to arena that is simultaneously frustrating a nd fascinating. As
Robinson has noted, " Obadiah pointedly does nothing to fix his vision in a
specific temporal or spatial frame which demands to be taken as the necessary
context for interpreting the vision."48 I will begin by exploring the description of
time in Obadiah, and move from there to a description oflocation.
There are three essential timeframes referred to in Obadiah: the past, the
near/immediate future, and the consequent future .49 Verses 2-10 describe the
near/immediate future, verses 11-14 describe the past, verses 15-16 describe
47 Note that I am including the various subregions in the outward expansion in vv. 19-21
as coextensive with Jacob.
48 Robinson, "Levels of Naturalization in Obadiah," 89.
49 R obinson's contention that events in Obadiah do not fix easily "on the familiar
continuum of past to future" is something of an overstatement. vVhile precision may be
difficult, it is possible to describe time in Obadiah in relative terms. Robinson's
agnosticism here may be related to his und erstanding of the biblical Hebrew verbal
system, which appears to include "tense" as a category Robinson, "Levels of
Naturalization in Obadiah," 90.
236 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
the near/immediate future, and verses 17-21 describe the consequent future. In
my description I will move in chronological, and not discourse, order.
That verses 11-14 describe a past situation is generally agreed upon, though
a wide variety of explanations are provided. The crux of the problem is the
repeated use of jussive verb forms, which are, of course, closely related to yiqtol or
"imperfect" verb forms both morphologically and semantically. If one were to
accept the traditional (and still widely held) view that Hebrew grammaticalizes
tense, and that the yiqtol form suggests non-past time, it becomes difficult to
reconcile the content of these verses (which appear to describe the destruction of
Jerusalem) with clusters of qatal forms that appear to describe a time following
that destruction. However, if we accept one of a variety of aspect-primary views
of the Hebrew verbal system this difficulty dissipates. 5o Here the succession of
jussive verbs is used to indicate a modal nuance (discussed below), but do not
indicate specific time reference. The time of verses 11-14 must be gleaned from
other contextual clues. Verse 10 indicates that violence against Jacob has the
result of the destruction of the Addressees (Edom).51 That violence must,
consequendy, be an event that precedes the coming destruction. Thus verses 11-
14 refer to the past event of Edom's transgression against Israel, which is also the
logical precursor to current and coming events for Edom.
Verses 2-10 describe the betrayal and destruction of Edom. Locating this
portion of the discourse is more difficult. Nogalski argues that the use of qatal
forms in this section suggests a past event, specifically the invasion of Nabonidus
or the Nabateans. 52 However, the conditional phrases of verses 4-5 and the use
ofyiqtol forms in verses 4, 5, 7, 9, and 10 problematize this suggestion. It may be
that this is a reference to a recent event in the past, but it is more likely,
particularly given the use of o~ in verses 4-5, that an event in the near future is
anticipated.
Verses 15-17 clearly refer to a future event, a fact marked by the use of
~;'i? These verses refer to a coming time of destruction and judgment identified
as the day of YHWH. This also bolsters my suggestion that verses 2-10 describe
a near future event, as those verses, like verses 15-16, appear to describe
judgment as a consequence of Edom's betrayal of Israel. The destruction
threatened in verses 2-10 appears, therefore, to parallel the destruction
threatened in verses 15-16, and these may well be references to the same
coming event.
50 See, for example, John A. Cook, Time and the Biblical Hebrew Verb: The Expression if Tense,
Aspect, and Modality in Biblical Hebrew, LSAWS 7 (Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2012);
Y oshinobu Endo, The Verbal !iJstem if Classical Hebrew in the Joseph Story: An Approach flom
Discourse Analysis (Assen: Van Gorcum, 1996); Bruce K. Waltke and Michael Patrick
O 'Connor, An Introduction to Biblical Hebrew !iJntax (Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 1990).
51 Reading W with a causative nuance here. Cf. Waltke and O'Connor, An Introduction to
Biblical Hebrew !iJntax, 11.2.11d.
52 Note his use of "tense" categories. Nogalski, Book if the Twelve: Hosea-Jonah, 385 .
Sit;: im What? 237
Finally, verses 18-21 describe the future results of the destruction of Edom
and the nations, which is the securing and expansion of the traditional
boundaries of Israel. Given the description of Jacob as a participant in the
destruction of Esau in verses 17-18, there appears to be some degree of temporal
overlap between the day of YHVVH and the resulting repossession of the land.
These may be one and the same event, but there is some sense that a distinction
is warranted. Note particularly the use of ;'~:Jl at the opening of verse 18, which
arguably marks a transition out of verses 15-17 and into verses 18-21. And yet,
there is a strong overlap in subject matter between verse 17 and verse 18, which
binds all of verses 15-21 together. 'J\Thatever the specific temporal structure of
this sub-section, it is fair to suggest that both the day of YHWH and the
reclamation of the land are described as future events from the perspective of the
discourse as a whole.
The temporal circumstances of the book describe the past event of Edom's
betrayal of Israel, including the past event of the destruction of Jerusalem by
invaders, the near future event of YHWH's day and a time of retribution against
Edom for that betrayal, and the consequent reclamation and extension of
Israelite territory. As Ben Zvi has noted, the heavy interplay between past and
future, and the near absence of a discernible "present" is a common feature of
prophetic books. He suggests that the significance of the discourse present may
actually increase when it is referentially absent from the text. 53 Obadiah is
concerned with what was (the betrayal and destruction) a nd what will be
(YH,J\TH's coming retribution), but makes no particular note of what is. This
focus on an imminent End m ay be related, as Buss suggests, to a negative view of
the present. 54 The present is a situation from which the readers of Obadiah
desire to be delivered .
There are four areas or locations that are of importance in the book of
Obadiah: Jerusalem, Edom, locations associated with exile, and Judah/Israel
(including its surrounding territory). Jerusalem is referred to specifically only
twice in the book (vv. II, 20), but is also related to the descriptions of destruction
throughout verses 11-14. Jerusalem is the locus of the destruction of the people
of YHWH, which is related to the betrayal perpetrated by Edom. Edom as a
location is described especially in verses 2-10, and here location is used
ironically to underscore the consequences of Edom's betrayal. Edom as a region
is described as mountainous (note repeated references to mount Esau in verses 8,
9, 19, 21 ) and remote. 'J\Thile this would normally denote safety from invasion,
the various metaphorical descriptions of verses 3-4 invert this expectation so that
Edom's expected security is no barrier to YH'J\TH's vengeance.
53Ben Zvi, "R econstructing the Intellectual Discourse of Ancient Yehud," II.
54M artin]. Buss, Toward Understanding the Hebrew Canon: A Form-Critical Approach (Sheffield:
Sheffield Phoenix, 2013), 41.
238 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Note also the opposition between "mount Esau" and "mount Zion. " In the
past-time portions of the book Jerusalem (Zion) is a place of destruction and
betrayal, but in the future-time portions of the book this changes so that mount
Esau, the supposed place of refuge, is destroyed and mount Zion, the past place
of destruction, is a place of refuge and safety (vv. 19 and 21 especially).
In verses 15-21 we encounter the post-day of YHWH depiction of Israel,
which appears to be a reestablishment and expansion of the Davidic kingdom.55
This is a fascinating reconstruction in terms of space for several reasons. First, as
Assis has noted the expansion of the kingdom does not only overcome and
encompass Edom, but also expands into area never really occupied by the
Edomites (the northern regions).56 Occupation of Edomite space brings a sense
of the now total security of reconstructed Israel,57 but this reconstruction goes
beyond traditional borders. It is a reclamation marked by dramatic
overabundance for returning Israel. Thus, while there is a degree to which the
return of land is related to the indictment against Edom, it involves more than
simply regaining what was taken or enacting vengeance against the betrayers.
Second, references to returnees from exile in relation to the expansion of the
boundaries of the land suggest an opposition between external space (the place
of oppression and exile) and internal space (the place of safety). This also focuses
the reader/hearer's attention on the expansion of that strongly positive internal
space. 58 Those who are distant will return home.
Block notes the fronted circumstantial clause that opens verse 17, which
move us from a focus on YH\lVH's wrath against Edom to Zion as a place of
safety and blessing. 59 To be sure there are still references to the destruction of
Edom following this phrase, but the focus of attention from this point until the
end of the book is on Zion and its surrounding regions as reclaimed space. Note
also the ever-expanding sphere of Israel's new sovereignty. Not only does this
highlight the extended borders of the post-Day kingdom, this also drives home
the centrality of Zion. It is with Zion that the description of the reclaimed
kingdom begins (v. 17) and ends (v. 21 ).
TENOR
60 Of these five are clearly identifiable on morphological grounds, and the remaining six
are indistinguishable from yiqtol forms, but are marked as jussives by the use of the
modifier 7~, and by their immediate proximity to morphologically clear jussive forms.
240 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
MODE
With reference to the mode of discourse, two issues are of particular interest.
First, I will explore the channel a nd medium of the text. Second, I will examine
intertextual ties to other pieces of biblical literature. Both of these elements
underscore the meaningfully, but not exclusively, textual nature of the book of
Obadiah as a communicative act.
In her account of medium Ruqaiya H asan provides a helpful distinction
between medium and channel. Describing channel H asan says the "term refers
to the modality through which the addressee comes in contact with the speaker's
message-do the messages travel on air as sound waves, or are they
apprehended as graven images, some form of graphic writing? The first channel
I will call phonic, the second graphic."6 I This is related to, but distinct from,
"medium" which "refers to the patterning of words themselves," and relates to a
cline between "spoken" a nd "written. "62 The value of this distinction between
channel and medium is that it allows one to distinguish between texts that
appear in the phonic channel but have la nguage patterns that more closely relate
to writtenness (e.g., a paper delivered at a n academic conference), or the
opposite, a text that is in the graphic channel, but the spoken medium (e.g., a
script for a play). C ha nnel a nd medium are also related to the concept of process
sha ring, or turn-taking in linguistic communication . Texts that appear in a
graphic channel and! or written medium have a reduced capacity for process
sharing, which is to say, they are more intrinsically monologic.
The channel of the book of Obadiah is, of course, graphic. The medium of
Obadiah is, perhaps, a slightly more complex affair. The book appears, in some
way, to represent itself as being associated with the "vision" of some individual
na med " Obadiah." This raises the complex question of orality and textuality in
the prophetic literature. A full examination of this issue is beyo nd the scope of
our work here, but some tentative comments can be made. 63 There is nothing in
this text to indicate any type of process sharing. There is no a nswering voice
presented that might respond to or address the concerns of the principal
speaking voice (i.e., the prophet! YHWH). This suggests a significant degree of
writtenness. However, as Ben Zvi has noted, the m aintenance a nd sacralisation
of a text in a preliterate culture would almost certainly necessitate some kind of
oral recitation. 64 And, Obadiah as a book would lend itself to interesting oral
recitation. It is short, well-crafted, and its message is relatively straight-forward.
This appears, consequendy, to be a book in graphic channel a nd a primarily
written medium, with potential for oral recitation. 65
The other aspect of the mode of discourse of Obadia h that I will note here is
the use of intertextual references in the book. As Block has noted, Obadiah is a
profoundly intertextual book. 66 He suggests that readers and hearers of the book
would be expected to note points of dependence a nd overlap with other
prophetic literature . Wolff has suggested that Obadiah is, in some sense, a
commentary on Joel 3 and on Amos 9. 67 And, of course, it has been widely
63 For a full er discussion of the questions at hand see the various essays in Ehud Ben Zvi
and Michael H . Floyd, eds., Writings and Speech in Israelite and Ancient Near Eastern Prophecy
(Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2000), esp . Floyd 's essay in that volume. On the
broader question of orality and literacy see also: Albert Bates Lord, Stephen A. Mitchell,
and Gregory Nagy, TIe Singer if Tales (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2000);
Susan Niditch, Oral World and Written Word, LA! (Louisville: Westminister john Knox,
1996); Walter J. Ong and john H artley, Orality and Literacy: TIe Technologi;;:ing if the Word,
3rd ed. (London: Routledge, 2012).
64 Ehud Ben Zvi, "Introduction: Writings, Speeches, and the Prophetic Books: Setting an
Agenda," in Ben Zvi and Floyd, Writings and Speech in Israelite and Ancient Near Eastern
Prophecy, 1-29.
65 T his is consistent with Biddle's suggestion that the shape of the prophetic books offers
clues to the nature of prophecy in a point of transition from "revelation to exegesis."
Biddle, "Obadiah-jonah-Micah in Canonical Context," 155. It is something of an
oversimplification to apply this statement to all of the prophetic literature simply due to its
graphic nature, but this statement does appear to apply in large measure to Obadiah.
66 Block, Obadiah, 38, 40-41.
67 Wolff, Obadiah and Jonah, 17. Regarding connections to Amos 9, see also Nogalski, Book
ifthe Twelve: Hosea-Jonah, 372.
242 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
observed that Obad 1-9 parallels Jer 49:7-11 closely.68 Additionally, readers of
this book would do well to be acquainted with the Jacob narratives in Genesis.
This raises any number of interesting interpretive questions and questions
related to direction of dependence, but setting those issues aside, this significant
intertextuality suggests both a highly literate and literarily engaged author(s) and
a highly literate and literarily engaged readership. Also, features like extensive
intra- and intertextuality facilitate what Ben Zvi has called "multivocal" exegesis;
readings of these texts are not finalizable because they are designed to be
unfinalizable. The chain of connections never really reaches an end. 69
Given all of these observations regarding the field, tenor, and mode of
discourse in the book of Obadiah, what can be said regarding the social context,
or context of situation represented by the book? The field of discourse suggests
that the locus of action and event in the book lies with YHWH. 'l\There Edom is
active, its action is condemned, and where Israel is active, it works to enact
YHWH's existing action. The book also presents YH,I\TH as the speaking voice.
The prophet is all but absent, and there is no sense of tension or discontinuity
between the voice of YH,I\TH and the voice of the prophet.70 The past in the
book refers to a time of destruction, perpetrated by the treacherous Edomites,
and the future in the book refers to a time of YHWH's imminent intervention,
and the consequential rectification of Israel's downtrodden status. There is no
reference to a discourse present, which suggests that for readers the temporal
context of the book exists in that "present" between past destruction and future
restoration. Jerusalem, or more accurately Zion, is the locus of that restoration,
just as it was the locus of destruction, and blessing expands outward in the
reestablishment and extension of the traditional kingdom.
The book contains many volitional forms, but no actual commands or
instructions. There is nothing for the real Addressees to "do," as it were. YHWH
is generally referred to in the first person, Edom in the second, and Israel in the
third (with some exceptions, of course). The virtual Addressees of the book, the
Edomites, are not meant to hear its message, and were they to hear it, it would
avail them nothing. The real Addressees of the book, the people of postexilic
Yehud, are not instructed to act, but are told that their salvation will be
accomplished by YHWH (though they will participate in that triumph).
The text is presented in graphic channel and written mode. There are no
instances of process sharing (virtual or otherwise), and the text proceeds as a
monologue. Nobody does or can answer the voice of YHWH. This textuality is
reinforced by the many intertextual references in this small book. It has been
created by someone with a high degree of knowledge of other sacred literature,
D. C . Timmer
I NTRODU CTION
- 245 -
246 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
4 See E. Ben Zvi, "The Prophetic Book: A K ey Form of Prophetic Literature," in The
Changing Face ifForm Criticismfor the Twenty-First Century, ed. M . A. Sweeney and E. Ben Zvi
(Grand R apids: Eerdmans, 2003), 276-97.
5 "In a narrower sense, coherence is separate from grammatical cohesion and specifically
signifies the semantic meaning and the cohesion of the basic interconnection of the
meanings of the text, its content/semantic and cognitive stru cture. Semantic coherence
can be represented as a sequence of propositions that form a constellation of abstract
concepts and connected relations." Hadumod Bussm ann, Routledge Dictionary if Language
and Linguistics, trans. and ed. Gregory P. Trauth and Kerstin K azzazi (London:
Routledge, 1996), 198. The distinction between cohesion as a textual or linguistic
phenomenon and coherence as a mental phenomenon in the mind of the reader is widely
accepted but need not be stressed here; see T . Sanders and H. Pander Maat, "Cohesion
and Coherence: Linguistic Approaches," in Encyclopedia if Language and Linguistics, 2nd ed.
(London: Elsevier, 2006), 592; Ellen]. van Wolde, "The Creation of Coherence," Semeia
81 (1998): 159-74.
6 See W. W. Lee, Punishment and Forgiveness in Israel's iviigratory Campaign (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 2003), 47.
TIe Non-Israelite Nations in Zephaniah 247
7 J am es Barr, The Semantics if Biblical Language (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1961 ),
269.
8 Lee, Punishment and Forgiveness, 54. The significance of this point is brought to bear on
biblical interpretation in Francis Landy "Three Sides of a Coin: In Conversation with
Ben Zvi and Nogalski, 'Two Sides of a Coin,'" ]HebS 10 (2010): article 11, esp. 9-10, 13-
14, 16-17 .
9 E.g., J akob Wohrle, Der Abschluss des Zwo!fProphetenbuches: Buchubergreiftnde Redaktionsprozesse
in den spaten Sammlungen, BZAW 389 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2008), 19, 161-64, 279-81, 35 1-
54.
10 E.g., D avid L. Petersen, "Israel and the Nations in the Later Latter Prophets," in
Constructs if Prophecy in the Former and Latter Prophets and Other Texts, ed . Lester L. Grabbe and
Martti Nissinen, ANEM 4 (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2011 ), 157-64
248 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
grammatical grounds, the reader can still profita bly pursue its coherence. I I
Moreover, it is this very pursuit that will bring into view the cognitive-linguistic
or hermeneutical means by which the reader apprehends the concepts expressed
by the text. It is with this heuristic method a nd orientation that we now turn to
the Zephaniah's most striking texts on the nations.
Zephaniah's first a nnouncement of a positive future for some a mong the nations
appea rs abruptly in a series of oracles of varied form that addresses nations to
Israel's west, east, south, and north. 12 This careful selection of nations based on
their location vis-a-vis Judah recalls the global perspective with which the book
began (e.g. , 1:2-3, now with the obvious exception ofJudah). 13 The effect of this
represen tative selection is to introduce "the nations," pars pro toto, as a group that
is guilty of misdeeds in the past a nd will therefore be punished in the future. This
monochromatic presentation of the nations will not continue uncha nged
throughout the section, as we will see. 14
2:5-7
The first oracle, the only woe-oracle in the collection, is directed against the
Philistines (no te the mention of the Philistine pentapolis in 2:4).
vVoe to the inhabitants of the seacoast, the nation of the C herethites! The word
of YHWH is against you, 0 Canaan, land of the Philistines; I will destroy you
II E.-M. Becker, "Was ist 'Koharenz '? Ein Beitrag zur Prazisierung eines exegetischen
The oracle a nnounces that the Mediterranean coast will be emptied of its
inhabitants (2:5d), and will subsequently be used as pastureland. ' !\Thile no reason
is given for this punishment, the subsequent shift in imagery from literal
pastureland for flo cks in 2:6 to metaphorical la nds upon which the Judean
remna nt itself will graze in 2:7 makes it most likely that this destruction is a
reprisal for Philistine aggression againstJudah. 15
The oracle's closing line, " for YHWH their God will intervene for them,
a nd return their captivity/restore their fortunes," is a mbiguous. Not only is there
textual uncertainty regarding 1:l1"l1~ill (Qere 1:lI1'~ill), but both statements are
generic rather than precise. 16 The unusual mention of Canaan in 2:5, which
presents what was Philistine territory (even in this oracle) in terms evocative of
the territory th at Israel was to possess long ago by mea n s of military endeavors
which were simultaneously punishment of the land's inha bita nts, arguably colors
the restoration/re turn referred to here with shades drawn from Isra el's initial
settlement in Canaan. 17
2:8-10
15 T his is probably clearest from the references to "houses," which never shelter sheep
(the reference to Canaan may also evoke the idea of the remnant inhabiting homes they
did not build , as in the entry into Canaan, Deut 6: 10).
16 The versions represent both senses (captivity, fortunes), Anthony Gelston, ed., The
Twelve Minor Prophets, BHQ)3 (Stuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, 2010), *127-28. See
in more detail M arvin Sweeney, Zephaniah: A Commentary, Hermeneia (Minneapolis:
Fortress, 2003), 131-32.
17 Berlin, "Zephaniah's Oracles," 178. T he Book of Joshua does not list the seacoast
among the territories conquered; cf. Richard S. H ess, Joshua, TOTC (Downers Grove,
IL: Inter-Varsity Press, 1996), 241-42.
18 Moab's cooperation with Assyria as one of her vassals may lie behind to the arrogance
and scorn mentioned here; cf. Moab's presence among those who paid tribute to
Sennacherib per his account of the siege of Jerusalem, "Sennacherib's Siege of
Jerusalem," translated by M. Cogan (COS 2.119B: 302- 303). Ammon's standing around
this time is hinted at by the fact that it submitted large vassal payments to Assurbanipal.
250 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
"I have heard the taunting of Moab and the insults of the sons of Ammon with
which they have taunted my people and become arrogant against their
territory. Therefore as surely I live," declares YHvVH of hosts, the God of
Israel, "Surely Moab will be like Sod om, and the sons of Ammon like
Gomorrah-a place possessed by nettles and salt pits, a perpetual desolation.
The remnant of my people will plunder them, and the remainder of my nation
will inherit them. This they will have in return for their pride, because they
have taunted and become arrogant against the people ofYHWH of hosts."
The destruction announced in this ora cle seems more complete than in 2:5-7,
where only the inha bita nts were affected, a nd is guaranteed by a divine oath
(2:9a). Moabite and Ammonite territories will be m a de like Sodom and
Gomorrah, "possessed only by nettles and salt pits" and are foreseen as
perpetually desolate. This oracle also differs from the first by assigning to Juda h 's
remna nt a n active role in plundering and possessing Moab and Ammon. The
ora cle seems to close in 2: 10 with a clear echo of two of the terms used to specify
the offences of Moa b a nd Ammon at the opening of the oracle (~in, piel; li1~,
hiphil, 2:8).
The end of the oracle cannot be so easily identified, however, especially
because of the presence of an unspecified pronominal referent ("them") in the
first clause of 2: 11:
YHWH will be terrifying to them, for he will starve all the gods of the earth,
and all the coastlands of the nations will bow down to him, everyone from its
own place.
If the reference is to Moa b and Ammon, YHWH's actions against them are p a rt
of a larger divine intervention that will "famish all the gods of the earth," while a
cataphoric reference would have in view "all the gods of the earth." Determining
the referent in question will clarify the sense of 2: 11 as well as its relation to the
seemingly complete oracle in 2:8-10.
2: 11
It should not escape notice that the ambiguous pronominal reference in the
opening clause of 2: 11 arguably presupposes a close connection of the statement
to its context. 19 If it is a redactional addition that was intended to qualify the
context's emphasis on universal judgment, reference to entities in 2: 10 would
render it so tightly integrated that it could hardly be identified as such on lexical
or syntactic grounds. The shift from third-person to first-person grammar for
YHVVH is of very limited value as a redactional trace, since the same shift is
widespread in prophetic utterances across the Hebrew Bible, including 2:5-7
19 Pace Hadjiev, "Survival," 574, who claims that it is "completely isolated from its context
both formally and thematically."
TIe Non-Israelite Nations in Zephaniah 251
and 2:8-10. Holladay's observations that 2:10-11 are in prose, and that the
nations are there referred to in general rather than specific terms, a re likewise
not sufficient grounds on which to conclude, as he does, that "these two verses
are secondary."2o
The possibility remains, of course, that the redaction was smoothly
integrated on the formal level (i.e. , cohesion is evident), and so can be identified
only because of the semantic tension it creates within the section by pointing in a
direction precisely opposite that of the universal judgment a nnounced by the
four oracles against the nations (i.e., coherence is compromised).2 1 The central
question is thus whether this verse coheres semantically with its context and with
the rest of the book. 22
It is beyond doubt that 2: II is the first time in the book that the nations are
associated positively with YHVVH (i.e., as his worshippers rather than those who
fall under his judgment). However, Judah's own fate in the book also includes an
abrupt shift from judgment to deliverance. Ben Zvi describes the development of
the Judah-theme as the movement from an initial guilty condition (status A)
through punishment (status non-A) to an ideal condition (status B).23 The fact
that the characterization and fates ofJudah a nd the nations are both developed
in essentially the same way encourages the reader to consider the nations (not
only in 2: II but throughout the book) alongside, and indeed in relation to,
Juda h.
Such a bifocal reading, taking the themes of Judah and the nations in
parallel or at least in relation to one a nother, highlights a consistent emphasis on
religious identity as distinct from nationality. Consider the oracles in 1:2-3, 17-
18 that bracket the a nnouncement of Judah's judgment in I :4-16. The book's
opening lines (after the incipit) a re inevitably the first information the rea der
receives, a nd their emphasis on the universal scope of the coming judgment does
more tha n simply impress- it establishes a concep tual context for understanding
what follows. 24 The scope of the hyperbolic prediction in 1:3 shares with the
primordial flood its nature as re tribution against sin, but also exceeds that of the
deluge by including a quatic life in its scope:
"I will completely remove all things from the face of the earth!" declares
YHWH. "I will remove man and beast, 1 will remove the birds of the sky and
the fish of the sea, and the ruins along with the wicked. 1 will cut off man from
the face of the earth," declares YHWH.
Whether the phrase " the ruins along with the wicked" in 1:3 is original or not,
the descrip tion of the coming judgment as judgment for sin is explicit in 1: 17,
a nd corresponds well to the focus on humanity at the beginning a nd end of the
chapter. 25 The reference to ZJ1~ in 1: 17 echoes the same term in 1:3, and is
followed immediately by its undoing: human bodies disintegrate like the dust
(i~17) from which they a re formed (cf. Gen 2:7) because of sin (1~Un :11:1" ':I)
(Zeph 1: 17). Zepha nia h 1 thus contributes to the reader 's understanding of
Juda h, the nations, a nd their interrelation a n initial universal framework within
which all subsequent material relating to either one should be placed. Perhaps
most salient for our discussion is the allocation of divine judgment along moral,
rather than national, lines.
This distinction is further developed in the following pericope (2: 1-3), which
a nnounces the possibility that some within Judah might escape the punishment
just described. The tide of " undesired nation," given to Judah in 2: 1, m akes the
point bluntly but effectively. 26 Despite her descent from J acob, the presence of
the D avidic monarch (1: 1) a nd many other distinguishing characteristics, Juda h 's
moral/spiritual condition takes precedence over other identifying factors in
relation to its ultimate destiny. Only the possibility of escape is men tioned ("1~),
a nd this slim hope is presented not to "sinners" or to some group that might
more easily be tied to such a fate (and, of course, no t to allJudahites on the basis
of their belonging to Juda h), but to the " humble" who perform YHWH's
ordinances. 'l\Thile this raises questions of theodicy that will not detain us here, it
24 HALOT emends the text to do away with all hiphil forms of '110, being here and Jer
8: 13; see the longer discussion in Sweeney, Zephaniah, 59-62.
25 On the phrase tJ'17fz.;-';rn~ m?iZlJ~:11 in I :2, see Gelston, Twelve Prophets, *126, and
Domenique Barthelemy, Critique textueUe de l'Ancien Testament, 4 vols., OBO 50.1-4
(Gottingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1982-2005), 3:882.
26 "Undesired nations" is the most probable meaning although the syntax of '10JJ-~? may
be incomplete, and Roberts is right to compare it with "unpitied nation" (:1~n;-~?) in Hos
1:6;].]. M . Roberts, Nahum, Habakkuk, and Zephaniah, OTL (Louisville: Westminster John
Knox, 1991), 187.
TIe Non-Israelite Nations in Zephaniah 253
IS significant for this study that this section of J udahite society can be
27 While :-in in the Piel means to let wither or shrivel, the MT as it stands attests the Qal,
which has the sense "dwindle" (transitive); cf. Ludwig Koehler and Walter Baumgartner,
The Hebrew and Aramaic Lexicon if the Old Testament, trans. and ed. M . E. J. Richardson, 2
vols. , study edition (Leiden: Brill 2001 ), 1209. At bottom the semantic difference is quite
small: if Yahweh starves them (so Roberts, Nahum, Habakkuk, and Zephaniah, 201-2), these
gods are hardly better off than if he destroyed them outright. The Greek, Latin, and
Syriac versions have a future tense/imperfect aspect verb, which suits well the waw-
imperfect-consecutive syntax that follows the verb here.
28 Michael H . Floyd, Minor Prophets Part 2, FOTL 22 (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2000),
223 .
29 Not only is there no evidence of compulsion in the nations' response in the very similar
scenario presented in 3:9, but there is always an element of acquiescence in the hishtaphel
of:-iln; cf. especially H.-P. Stahli, ":-iln," TLOT 1: 398-401.
254 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Israelites are in view. 30 Note, first, that the only other occurrence in the Hebrew
Bible of the phrase "all the coastlands of the nations" in Ge n 10:5 refers to
huma n beings, no t to deities. The syntagm is pa rticula rly striking in the Genesis
context for its inclusion of all humanity, as after the deluge "all the coastla nds of
the nations were separated into their la nds, each one according to his la nguage. "
Second, not only the phrase, but also the key term "coastlands" ( ,~) is
consistently restricted to places (coastlands, Isa 11 : 11 ; perhaps Ps 97:11 ) or
people (Est 1: 10; Ps 72: 10; Isa 20:6; note the parallel use of Ll"~ a nd Ll'1). in Isa
40:15),3 1 and never refers to deities. 32 There is thus no precedent for
understanding this phrase as a reference to various deities, and the alternative
proposed here is plausible even if it involves a sha rp sem a ntic contrast (which
has precedents earlier in Zephaniah as well as a strong parallel in 3:9).
2:12
The third oracle against the nations, m 2: 12, should perhap s be classified
otherwise due to what is arguably a retrospective orientation. As Floyd and
others have noted, 2: 12 is without verbal-syntactic connections to its immediate
context, a nd so without a clear gra mmatical tense. 33 Since there is little historical
evidence for a fall of Cushites later than the seventh century, the fall of Thebes
as the center of Cushite power in 664/663 is the most visible candidate, after
which Assurbanipal returned rulers from Sais to power. 34 It is probably best,
therefore, to take 2: 12 as a statement regarding one of the nations, to the effect
that YHWH has already begun his campaign against the nations. 35
He will stretch out his hand against the north and destroy Assyria, and he will
make Nineveh a desolation, parched like the wilderness. Flocks will lie down in
her midst, all kind s of beasts; both the owl and the hedgehog will lodge in the
capitals of her pillars, a voice will sing in the windows. Desolation will be on the
threshold, for he will lay bare the cedar beams. This is the exultant city which
dwells securely, who says in her heart, "I am, and there is no one besides me."
What a desolation she has become, a lair for beasts! Everyone who passes by
her will hiss and wave his hand.
The imagery used to portray Assyria's destruction is quite similar to that used for
the destruction of the Philistine coast in 2:5-7, although wild animals rather than
livestock will meander among its ruins (probably because of the references to its
lack of water, 2: 13) and although various aspects are elaborated or developed.
Similarly, the reasons for Assyria's fate are comparable to those alleged against
Moab a nd Ammon, although Assyria's self-image is underlined more clea rly by
the use ofa citation and the mention of her incomparability (2:15).
Assyria n pride and self-confidence are a mply documented in the empire's
self-description. A prophecy addressed to Assurbanipal, king of Assyria from
668-627, puts the king in control of the destinies of other nations:
[MullisJsu has said: [You shall reigJn over [the kingJ s of the countries! You shall
show them their boundaries; you shall determine the [roJads they take!36
The reign of Assurbanipal (ca. 668-627) saw widespread use of leonine imagery
to amplify the king's power and splendor, a nd as contemporaneous with
Zepha niah's setting m ay have affected some of the choices of imagery here (e.g.,
the territory overrun by wild beasts)Y 'J\Thatever its correlation with a particular
historical setting, the emphasis on Assyria's hubris a nd autonomy make clea r the
reasons for the divine pronouncement of judgment.
SUMMARY
While diverse in terms of their literary forms, the oracles against foreign nations
in 2:5-10, 13-15, a nd the statement in 2:12 present "the nations" as (on
occasion) the enemies of Juda h a nd as (always) opposed to YHWH her God. 38
While the theological significance of Assyria's pride a nd the simila rly-motivated
boasts of Moab and Ammon is clear, one would be ha rd pressed to imagine a
significandy different rationale for the judgments against C ush a nd the
Philistines.
The relation of 2: 11 to this otherwise homogeneous section can be described
as follows. First, it appears in the middle of the sequence that addresses four
nations in each of the cardinal directions vis-a-vis Judah. The integration of 2: 11
in its context both syntactically (via the possibility that its initial pronominal
reference includes Moab and Ammon, at least indirecdy by mea ns of their gods)
a nd sem a ntically (via the same sphere of reference, i.e., the nations) favors the
conclusion that fu ture divine intervention will include both punishment a nd
transformation for the nations. Second, this judgment-delivera nce pair with
respect to the nations finds a precedent a nd analogue in the m aterial on Juda h in
1:4-2:3.
If 2: 11 is taken as the source of sem a ntic incoherence in 2:5-1 3, the same
judgment must apply to the various descriptions of delivera nce for Judah
(including 2: 1-3). This is hardly tenable, however. First, it presupposes the
semantic incoherence of a judgment-deliverance pair that is patient of several
plausible explanations (e.g., that those judged are no t those delivered; that those
delivered a re sometimes those who a re transformed through judgment, etc.).
Second, the same paradox is very common elsewhere in the Hebrew Bible,
including one or two passages to which Zepha nia h refers: the flood , from which
eight persons did in fact escape (cf. 1:2-3), a nd Sodom a nd Gomorrah, from
which four persons were able to escape (cf. 2:8-10).39 Third, the use of remnant-
paix en As.ryrie: Religion et imperialisme, Les Conferences de I'Ecole Pratique des Hautes
Etud es (Paris: Cerf, 2010), 69-94, and Steven W. Holloway, Assur is King! Assur is King!
Religion in the Exercise if Power in the Neo-As.ryrian Empire, CHANE 10 (Leiden: Brill, 2002).
38 The explanation of Ehud Ben Zvi, A Historical-Critical Stucfy if TIe Book if Zephaniah,
BZAW 198 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 1991), 334, is helpful: "the real source of trouble for the
Ammonites and M oabites can only be that they failed to recognize that YHWH is not a
god but God. Therefore they could not but fail to take into account the logical inference
from the 'fact' that YHvVH = God ofIsrael = God, and consequently they dared to taunt
Israel, and by implication, no other than God."
39 The conceptual proximity of the remnant that left Sodom is accentuated by the
mention of Moab and Ammon in the oracle in Zeph 2:8-10; cf. Gen 19:36- 38.
TIe Non-Israelite Nations in Zephaniah 257
After the oracle against Assyria in 2: 13-15, Zephaniah addresses a woe oracle
against Judah (3: 1-8).43 The presence of such an oracle at this point in the book
is itself surprising, since in a " normal" tripartite prophetic book, oracles against
the nations would normally be followed by an oracle of salvation for Israel. 44
Instead, this section brings the focus back to Judah once more, rather like 2:1-3.
The section's relation to the nations-theme is intriguing. On the one hand,
as the first woe oracle against Judah, it suggests a connection with the preceding
woe-oracle against the Philistine pentapolis in 2:5-7. On the other hand, it
affirms that YHWH has attempted to sensitize Judah to his leading by punishing
other nations for their own failings, but to no avail (3:6-7). This brings to
prominence the relation of Judah to the nations, and while YHWH has seen fit
40 In Zephaniah, when "remnant" governs the meaning of "people," (i.e., when 1I1' and
are in construct with "house ofJudah/my people"), the setting is clearly future due
I1'1l'(W
to temporal indicators such as :1':11 (2:7) or imperfective verbal forms (:1':1I1, 2:9). By
contrast, "my people" by itself (e.g., 2:8; similarly "the people of YHWH of hosts," 2: 10)
most naturally refers to the historical Judah that Moab and Ammon have reproached in
the past, and these elements are the subj ect of simple perfective verbs. Cf furth er Silvio S.
Ap6stolo, "On the Elusiveness and Malleability of 'Israel,'" ]HebS 6 (2006): article 7;
Ehud Ben Zvi, "Inclusion in and Exclusion from Israel as Conveyed by the Use of the
Term 'Israel' in Post-Monarchic Biblical Texts," in The Pitcher is Broken: Memorial Essaysfor
Costa r1l: Ahlstrom, ed. Steven W. Holloway and Lowell K. Handy, JSOTSup 190
(Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 1995), 95-149 .
41 The Qere of MT is supported by the Old Greek, Vulgate, and Syriac; cf. Gelston,
Twelve Minor Prophets, 106, *128.
42 See Donn M . Morgan, "Remnant," in Dictionary if the Old Testament: Prophets, ed. M . ].
Boda and]. Gordon McConville (Downers Grove, IL: Inter-Varsity and IVP Academic,
2012),658-64.
43 Floyd sees the oracle ending after 3: 7 (iviinor Prophets, 229-31 ). Here I include 3:8 both
because woe oracles sometimes include punishments (of which there is none prior to 3:8),
and because our fo cus on 3:9 requires us to include it regardless.
44 Ben Zvi, "Understanding the M essage," 98.
258 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
to begin with punishment against the nations for their sins, Juda h (having failed
to learn from what she observed) now faces the same unpleasan t prospect. 45
The p ast judgment of the nations will continue, however, before Juda h
reaches a ny turning point (3:8). While it is no t impossible that the "nations" and
"kingdoms" in 3:8 would include Juda h, the clear distinction between them
everywhere else in the book strongly favors seeing non-Israelite entities as the
focus of divine wrath here.46 Nevertheless, the connection between 3: 1-7 and 3:8
links the fa te of Judah to tha t of the na tions, while the connection of 3:8 to 3:9
links the judgment of the nations to their deliverance. Both these connections
invite further examina tion. 4 7
The focus of 3:9 is a diverse body of non-Israelites called "peoples" (O'7J;]). 48
This group is first the object of one tra nsformation made by YHWH, a nd then
becomes the subject of various verbs that manifest the results of that change.
YH\lVH's words describe the transformation thus: "I will give peoples a pure
lip. " The expression "pure lip" is very ra re Gob 33:3 only; cf. also Pss 15:3; 24:4;
Prov 10:8, 11 , 32; Isa 33: 15), although parallel concepts a re a ttested several
times. Most relevant a mong these p a rallels are Hos 2: 17 , which speaks of
removing Baal's na me from unfaithful Israel (cf. Zeph 1:4-6), and Isa 6:5, which
45 T he fact that judgment begins with the nations may also explain why Zephaniah
presents their deliverance first (in terms of textual order). The first clear affirm ation of
deliverance for some ofJud ah appears in 3: 11-1 3 (or perhaps in 3: 10), following two clear
affirmations of renewal and restoration of relationship with YHvVH for the nations in
2:11 ; 3:9.
46 M any other pieces of data point in the same direction. U ntil this point in the book tJ;]
(sg.) has generally been used to refer to Israel (with a contextual qualifier; one exception is
"people of Canaan" in I: II ), and the plural appears here for the first time. The term '1l
has also been used in the singular of national Israel (2: I), of other nations (the Philistines,
2:5 ; Nineveh, 2: 14), or of the remnant of Israel (2:9, with 1n'). T he plural tJ'1l, as with
tJ'tJ;], has been used only of non-Israelite groups (2:11 ; 3:6).
47 H adjiev does not take account of these themes' potential interrelation, and affirms of
3:9, 10 that "they seem to talk in the same breath about two completely different things-
the transformation of the nations (v. 9) and the return of dispersed Jud eans (v. 10)"
("Survival," 574). His assertion that the two concepts are distinct is doubtless valid , but he
does not seem to consider the possibility that two distinct facts, which are not mutually
contradictory in any case, might be both interrelated and part of a larger, polychrome
whole.
48 T he emendation of "peoples" to "my people" proposed by J. Vlaardingerbroek,
Zephaniah, Historical Commentary on the Old T estament (Leuven: Peeters, 1999), 195, is
without textual evidence and surmises that the M T 's reading can be explained by a later
scribe's belief that Judah's judgment was "a judgment upon the world." It should be
rej ected since the earliest attestations of the text preserve the plural, as does LXX.
Further, Hubert Irsigler, ZifanJa, H T hKAT (Freiburg: H erd er, 2002), 369, points out that
the corresponding term "nations" in 3:6, 8 is also anarthrous and that a plural referent in
3:9a is presupposed by "they all" in 3:9b.
TIe Non-Israelite Nations in Zephaniah 259
speaks of a cleansing from sin via a coal from the altar that focuses on the lips
(plural).49 These two references' focus on proximity to the divine made possible
by purification parallels Zephaniah's focus on proximity to YHWH brought
a bout by the day of YH'J\TH , and in all three cases purification is a prerequisite
for the positive roles (i.e., various sorts of divine service) that follow. 5o Finally, a
good case can be made that ii~ is not primarily cultic but moral or ethical when
paired with heart or hands: Irsigler's contention that it "versteht sich im Sinne
einer umfassenden sittlich-religiosen Lauterung" is well founded. 51
Turning to the results of this transformation on these "peoples," the phrase
"call on YHWH's na me" (with a variety of prepositions) can describe various
types of communication with YHWH, but in light of 2: 11 the most reasonable
interpretation is to see this as expressive of a new relationship with YH'J\TH. 52
This is confirmed by the following expression "serve YH'J\TH ," which is
frequently contrasted with serving other gods, less often in a cultic setting than
more generally.53 Zephaniah 3:9 thus presents the "giving of a pure lip to
peoples" as an event that creates among non-Israelites who formerly worshipped
other gods a unified group that submits to YHWH and serves him
harmoniously. 54
It is not clear whether non-Isra elite entities are still in view in 3: 10. Gartner
has recently adopted this view (i.e. that a non-Israelite pilgrimage is in view in
3: 10), and not without reason. 55 First, the difference in deixis between 3:8, 11-12
(second-person) a nd 3:9-10 (third-person) suggests that 3:9-10 share the same
subject. Further, the pilgrimage mentioned in 3: lOis not without precedent
49 Ben Zvi's protest, Zephaniah, 224-25 , that the singular "lip" in Zeph 3:9 cannot be
equivalent to the plural "lips" elsewhere seems unnecessary; note Ps 22:4; Isa 28: II (in
construct with a plural adj ective) and the Qere for Prov 16:27, where one lip as part of
the mouth is comprehensible. It is metonymy for speech in Gen II: I ;Job 12:20; Isa 33: 19
(in construct with a plural adj ective); and Ezek 3:5,6 (in construct with a plural adj ective).
50 Greg A. King, "The Day of the Lord in Zephaniah," BSac 152 (1995), 16-32 (27), notes
that darkness, cloud, thick darkness in Zeph I: 15 also appear in the description of the
Sinai theophany in Deut 4: II ; 5:22-23, and that the only other collocation is in Joel's
description of the Day ofYHWH (Joel 2:2).
51 Irsigler, Zifanja, 374.
52 F. L. Hossfeld and E.-M. Kindl, " ~"j7," mOT 13: 11 3. In light of Zephaniah's
penchant for moving backward through Genesis, Gen 4:26 is an interesting cotext.
53 Helmer Ringgren, " 1:J17," mOT 10:384-87.
54 Essentially the creation of a remnant among the nations, as suggested by Martin Beck,
"Das Tag YHWHs-Verstandnis von Zephanja iii," VT 58 (2008): 175.
55 Judith Gartner, 'Jerusalem- City of God for Israel and for the Nations in Zeph 3:8, 9-
10, 11-1 3," in Perspectives on the Formation if the Book if the Twelve. Methodological Foundation~
Redactional Processe~Historical Insights, ed . R ainer Albertz, J ames Nogalski, and J akob
Wohrle, BZAW 433 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2012), 269-83, esp. 275-77; so also Marvin A.
Sweeney, "A Form-Critical R eassessment of the Book of Zephaniah," CBQ. 53 (1991):
402, and Sweeney, Zephaniah, 185-86.
260 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the T welve
elsewhere in the Hebrew Bible, whether for non-Israelites (the Egyptians bring a
;'nJIJ in Isa 19:21 ) or for a portion of Juda h (Zeph 3:11 ).56 Third, uses offl~ in
Gen 10: 18; II :4, 8, 9 (where all huma n people groups are in view) share with
Zeph 3: 10 the elements of la nguage and opposition of those who were scattered
to YH'I\TH's purposesY
However, several objections can be raised against this understanding of -I'1J
'~1~ , most notably the possibility that expatriated Judahites had fled to Cush
following Esarhaddon's alliance with the Saites and Ashurba nipal's attestation
that Manasseh sent soldiers there to defeat Taharqa. 58 There are also other
biblical texts which presume the presence of Israelites/Juda hites in Egypt (e.g.,
Isa 11:11 ).59 For these reasons, a nd because 3:10 would add very little to our
understanding of the na tions based on 3:9, we will leave it aside in our study of
non-Israelite groups here.
SUMMARY
Zephaniah 3:9 conceives of a time when God pours out his wrath on "all the
earth." As part of this complex action, he creates a mong non-Israelites who
formerly worshipped other gods a group that submits to him a nd serves him.
The fact that elsewhere in Zephaniah the nations meet with destruction, and the
clear introduction of the remna nt concept to describe similar dyna mics within
Juda h, allow us to conclude that Zephaniah also foresees the creation of another
remna nt, this one a mong the nations.6o
CONCLUSIONS
Does the tra nsformation of (some from among) the nations into worshippers of
YHWH fit smoothly into Zepha niah? While some have tried to identify 2: II and
56 Sweeney, Zephaniah, 185, explores ad ditional links between Zeph 3:8b-1O and Isa 18-
19.
57 Cf. Mark Brett, "R eading the Bible in the Context of M ethodological Pluralism: The
Undermining of Ethnic Exclusivism in Genesis," in Rethinking Contexts, Rereading Texts, ed.
M . D aniel Carroll R . (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 2000), 48-74.
58 "Campaigns against Egypt, Syria, and Palestine," translated by A. L. Oppenheim
(ANET294-97 ), 294.
59 SeeJohn D . W. Watts, Isaiah 1-33, WBC 24 (Waco, TX: Word, 1985), 179, Rodney S.
Sadler Jr. , Can A Cushite Change His Skin? An Examination if Race, Ethniciry, and Othering in the
Hebrew Bible, LHBOTS 425 (London: T&T Clark, 2005), 46-49, 73-78, and Dan'el
K ahn, 'judean Auxiliaries in Egypt's Wars against Kush," JAOS 127 (2007): 507-16.
60 This is also suggested by Beck, "D as Tag YHWHs-Verstandnis," 17. This holds
regardless of which group is in view in 3:10. IfIsraelites are in view in 3: 10, 3:9 and 3:10
reflect numerous similarities. Ifnon-Israelites are in view in 3:9-10, the same is tru e of the
relation of 3:9-10 to 3: 11-1 3.
TIe Non-Israelite Nations in Zephaniah 261
6 1 Holladay's suggested redaction history for 3:1-13 consists of numerous facets, all of
The movement of Zephaniah thus begins with the largest circle, p asses through
the nations and concludes with Judah, whose remna nt appears at the end of the
book as the group admired by "all the peoples of the earth" (3:20). The
movement from the outside of the circle to its center bisects both smaller circles
along the way, so that part of the nations a nd p a rt ofJudah a re associated with
delivera nce while their other sections are associated with judgment and
destruction.
64 The concentricity ofJud ah and the nations underlines the ultimately secondary nature
of national appurtenance, since Judah is one nation among others.
65 Because prophetic discourse is so consistently non-literal, such a description might well
allow for the salvation-through-judgment that 2: 1-3 seems to contemplate with respect to
Jud ah, but for the sake of a clear argument, such complexities can be left aside.
TIe Non-Israelite Nations in Zephaniah 263
characterization of those among the nations who are associated with YHVVH
apart from judgment is radically different, and clearly imagines them leaving
behind their gods (2: 11) and worshiping (2: 11 ) and serving (3:9) YHWH as a
unified group.
The transformation of some non-Israelites into worshipers of YHVVH in
Zeph 2: 11; 3:9 doubtless constitutes a complex, dynamic conception of the
nations in the mind of the author(s). It seems easier, however, to elaborate a
dynamic nations-theme than to arrive at a simple redactional explanation that
possesses sufficient probability, particularly because all such explanations involve
multiple hypotheses each of which reduces the probability of the whole. The
various points of connection between the dynamic nations-theme sketched above
a nd the rest of the book further suggest that arguments for the excision of 2: 11
and 3:9 have not given sufficient attention to the interrelation of the nations-
theme to the rest of the book, a nd that doing so uncovers new possibilities for
understanding the relation of Zephaniah's parts to the whole.
13
I NTRODUCTION
I For descriptions of the method, see Claus Westermann, Basic Forms if Prophetic Speech,
trans. Hugh Clayton White (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1957); Gene M. Tucker, Form
Criticism if the Old Testament (Philadelphia: Fortress, 197 1); W. Eugene March, "Prophecy,"
Old Testament Form Criticism, ed. John H . Hayes, TUMSR 2 (San Antonio: Trinity
University Press, 1974), 141-77; D aniel]. Harrington, S]. , Interpreting the Old Testament,. A
Practical Guide (Wilmington, DE: Michael Glazier, 1981), 69-82; John Barton, Reading the
Old Testament (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1984), 30-44; Odil Hannes Steck, Old Testament
Exegesis: A Guide to the Methodology, trans. James D. Nogalski, RBS 33 (Atlanta: Scholars
Press, 1995),99-125; Marvin A. Sweeney, "Form C riticism," To Each Its Own A1eaning,
rev. ed . (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1999), 90-104; and Steven L. McKenzie,
How to Read the Bible (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005), 67-89.
- 265-
266 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
other me thods in conjunction. In the booklet2 of Amos, for example, form cri tics
isolated a number of passages that appea r to derive (more or less) from the
prophet himself. Of course, those critics worked on the presupposition that
Amos did not record them; someone else remembered and wrote them down, a
crucial presupposition indeed. The opening and closing sections, Amos 1-2 and
7-9, contain sayings widely considered no t authentic to Amos,3 and the
conclusion of Amos 9: 11-1 5 presupposes a nd looks back on a fallen "booth of
David" (either the mona rchy or Jerusalem or both in 586). It is clear, therefore,
that sayings attributed to Amos a rose over time beginning with Amos a nd
attracted supplementation until the time of the exile a nd later. The key to this
whole literary (not oral) process, of course, was the work of scribes, who
recorded, arranged, and even disseminated the sayings of the prophets for
posterity, albeit with their own, often successive, additions.
One (but no t the only) very fruitful line of investigation in studying this
process has posited successive layers of additions often tied to discernible,
previously exiting collections lying behind the Twelve : that is, a Book of the Four
(Hosea, Amos, Micah, and Zephaniah), a nd what may be called a Book of the
Three (H aggai, Zechariah, and Malachi), and a Book of the Two (Nahum a nd
Habakkuk).4 In other words, the originally oral sayings of the prophets contained
2 I will call the individual works within the Twelve "booklets" to emphasize their brevity.
Hosea and Zechariah are the only two containing more than ten chapters, and Amos has
nine. Obadiah on the other extreme runs only twenty-one verses. A rough comparison of
their overall length may be obtained by determining the number of pages taken up by all
of them in Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia and comparing that total with the pages taken up by
the other three Latter Prophets: Isaiah runs 104 pages,Jeremiah 11 5, Ezekiel 84, and the
Twelve 95 .
3 Jorg J eremias, The Book if Amos, OTL (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1998), 6.
Jeremias argues that the oracles against Tyre and Edom (I :9-10 and 11-1 2, see pp. 29-
31) and the one against Judah (2:4-5 , "with its characteristically Deuteronomistic
terminology," p . 44) date from a time after Amos. For an accurate, but disdaining analysis
of form and redaction critical interpretations of Amos, see R . R eed Lessing, Amos, CC
(Saint Louis: Concordia, 2009), 21-29. He endorses rhetorical analysis (pp. 29-37), which
clearly also has its rightful place among the tools at the disposal of the student of the
Bible.
4 See, among others, James D. Nogalski, Literary Precursors to the Book if the Twelve, BZAW
217 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 1993) and Redactional Processes in the Book if the Twelve, BZAW 218
(Berlin: de Gruyter, 1993); Aaron Schart, Die Entstehung der ZwoifProphetenbuchs (Berlin: de
Gruyter, 1998); and articles in J ames W. Watts and Paul R. House, eds., Forming Prophetic
Literature: Essays on Isaiah and the Twelve, JSOTSup 235 (Sheffield: Sheffi eld Academic,
1996); James D. Nogalski and Marvin A. Sweeney, eds. Reading and Hearing the Book if the
Twelve, SBLSym 15 (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2000); Paul L. Redditt and
Aaron Schart, eds., Thematic Threads in the Book if the Twelve, BZAW 325 (Berlin: de
Gruyter, 2003); and R ainer Albertz, James D . Nogalski, and J acob Wohrle, eds.,
Perspectives on the Formation if the Book if the Twelve, BZAW 433 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2012).
Form Criticism in Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi 267
in the Book of the T welve seem to have undergone a lengthy period of growth in
which those sayings were ela borated over time (i.e., through successive editions or
redactions), first in sm all collections (for example, the sayings of Amos a nd
Hosea moved south a nd were reapplied there and supplemented first with the
redacted sayings of Micah a nd then of Zephaniah), then in these two-to-four-
booklet collections, then in an overall Book of the Twelve, which also
incorporated Joel, Obadiah, a nd Jonah. Finally the Book of the T welve became
part of an emerging canon of Law a nd Prophets (see Mal 4:4-6 [MT: 3: 19-24] ).
The purpose of this essay is no t to flesh out this theory of the growth of the
Twelve; that work has been done a nd is background for this study. (See foo tnote
4.) The purpose of this essay, instead, is to highlight what has happened to the
method of form criticism in those and other studies. If the focus therein has
shifted from the structure, locus, and conten ts of the original sayings of the
prophets to understanding their meaning(s) in their various places in a growing
body of literature, what role does form criticism still play? The answer simply is
that form criticism still provides the baseline and m a ny of the categories for such
studies. In so doing, it remains essential. This essay, therefore, will address how
scholars still employ form criticism in studying the Book of the Twelve, a nd it
will do so by focusing on the last three collections or booklets in the Twelve,
Haggai, Zechariah, a nd Malachi. 5
Aside from Haggai-Zechariah 1-8, the best case can be made for a previously existing
"Book of the Four" (Hosea/ Amos/Micah/Zephaniah) which C hristoph Levin ("D as
'Vierprophetenbuch': Ein exegetischer Nachruf," ZA W 123 [20 II]: 221 ) called a
"Forschungskonsensus," though he unsuccessfully attacked it. T he idea of a Book of the
Three (Haggai, Zechariah, M alachi) recognizes not only the interconnected dating
scheme in Haggai/Zech 1-8, but very similar superscriptions and inner borrowing
between Zech 9-14 and Malachi. On Nahum/Habakkuk, see Duane L. Christensen,
Nahum, AB 24F (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009), 4, and earlier "The Book of
Nahum: A History of Interpretation," in Watts and House, Forming Prophetic Literature,
192- 94. A debate over this way of reading the Twelve appears in Ehud Ben Zvi and
James D . Nogalski, Two Sides if a Coin: J uxtaposing Views on Interpreting the Book if the Twelve /
the Twelve Prophetic Books, Analecta Gorgiana 201 (Piscataway, NJ: Gorgias, 2009).
5 For an extensive bibliography on Haggai and Zechariah, readers are directed to Mark].
Boda, Haggai and Zechariah Research: A Bibliographical Survry, Tools for Biblical Study
(Leiden: D EO, 2003). Special mention must be made here of three classic American
commentaries on Haggai-Malachi: Carol L. Meyers and Eric M . Meyers, Haggai,
Zechariah ]-8 and Zechariah 9-14, AB25C (New York: Doubleday, 1993); Andrew T. Hill
Malachi, AB25D (New York: Doubleday); and D avid L. Petersen, Haggai and Zechariah ]-8
OTL (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1984) and Zechariah 9-14 and Malachi, OTL (Louisville:
Westminster John Knox, 1995). T hey remain found ational in the study of the Twelve.
This article, however, will deal often with specific articles and monographs or this
author's own work.
268 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
6 Hans Walter Wolff, Haggai, trans. Margaret Kohl, CC (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1988).
The original German edition was published in 1986.
7 Tim Meadowcroft, Haggai, Readings: A New Commentary (Sheffield: Sheffield
Academic, 2006), 3.
8 It is worth pointing out in this connection that one of the early leaders in reading the
Twelve as a volume edited to be read as one work Paul R . House (The Unity if the Twelve,
]SOTSup 97 [Sheffield : Almond Press, 1990], 240-41 ) reminded readers that the
"implied" author was YHvVH. Indeed, the superscriptions and other headings in Hag
1:3,7; 2:1,10,20,23; Zech 1:1 , 2, 7; 2:6; the dialogue that is Zech 3; 6:9; 7:1,8; 8:1, 2, 3,
4,7, 11 , 14, 18,20,23; 9:1; 11 :4, 13, 15; 12:1; 13: 1,2; 14:8; Mal 3:7, 13, 17; 4:1, 3 (MT
3: 19-21 ) say so explicitly, and other passages are cast as speeches of God to the prophets.
Form Criticism in Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi 269
speech as isolated through form criticism, genres still visible behind later written,
edited, and literarily manipulated versions of those speeches.
The prophet Haggai spoke four times that a re reported in the bookle t
bearing his na me: first in " the second year of King Darius" (superscription found
in H ag I: I) or 520, in the sixth mon th (roughly August/September) on the first
day of the month; second (Hag 1:15b-2:1) on the twenty-first day of the seventh
month in the second year or 5 19; then (Hag 2: 10) in the seventh month of that
same year on the twenty-fourth day; a nd finally in the fourth year or 517 (Hag
2:20) on the same day. The booklet of Zecha riah likewise gives three dates for
that prophet's speeches in Zech I: I, 7, a nd 7: I. These particular date formulae a re
unique among the Nebiim in that they set the activities of the two prophets in
the context of foreign rulers, whereas the superscriptions of the books of Isaiah,
Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Hosea, Amos, Mica h, a nd Zepha nia h set their na mesakes
during the reigns ofJude a n kings. (The booklets of Hosea a nd Amos also add the
na mes Israelite kings, reflecting the place where their namesakes flourished.)
These date formulae demarcate divisions within H aggai a nd Zech 1-8, and also
redactionally link the two as contemporaries. They also mark the m ajor divisions
in both booklets, dividing their contents under different headings. They are
clearly literary a nd not verbal markers. That is, they constitute a written genre,
not an oral one. 9 They disappear after Zech 7:1, no longer demarcating divisions
within the H aggai-Zechariah-Malachi corpus. I 0 Other types of headings do
appear later, and they will be dealt with in place.
After date formulae the second genre that one encounters in Haggai is the
prophetic narrative in I: I b-1 5a. Such narratives could be biographical (as here) or
autobiographical (as Isa 6: 1-1 3). Readers should remember, however, that the
terms "biographical" a nd "autobiographical" are descriptive. Simply beca use a
life narrative is written in the first as opposed to the third person does not prove
that the narrative is autobiographical, let alone true. The 1987 American best-
seller Zen and the Art qf Alotorcycle Maintenance ll offers a contemporary example of
this point. It has been called fictionalized autobiography, biography, a nd a long,
discursive essay. It can even be seen as a novel written in the first person
singular. It tells of a father and son who travel cross-country by motorcycle one
9 See, for example, Janet E. Tollington, Tradition and Innovation in Haggai and Zechariah 1-8,
JSOTSup 150 (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 1993), II.
10 Richard A. Taylor in Richard A. Taylor and E. R ay Clendenen, Haggai, Nlalachi, NAC
21A (Nashville: Broadman & Holman, 2004), 59- 66, recognizes the vacillation between
first and third person portions of Haggai and explains that vacillation as possibly a natural
consequence of Haggai's messages being copied by his secretary. On doctrinal grounds,
however, he insists that it reports the ipsissima verba of Haggai. A confissional (not a
scholarly) response to Taylor could run thu s: the words were inspired regardless of how
many or few of them Haggai spoke. In any case, rightly or wrongly, critical scholars do
not settle such issue on the basis of an appeal to faith .
II Robert Pirsig, Zen and the Art ifMotorcycle Maintenance (New York: HarperCollins, 1974).
270 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
12 See Duane L. Christensen, Nahum, AB 24F (New Haven: Yale U niversity Press, 2009),
4.
13 The terms "command" and "accusation" are sometimes used as technical terms for
genres.
Form Criticism in Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi 271
A third genre (or perhaps just a literary device) one encounters in Haggai is
the rhetorical question (see 1:4, and also 2:3, 19), which was designed to force an
audience and the reader to face an issue and render a judgment. In 1:4 the
question was whether the time had come to rebuild the temple in Jerusalem, and
in 2:3 the questions concerned the blatant differences between the grandeur of
the first temple (which, perhaps, the oldest residents in Persian Yehud could
actually remember, and about which everyone no doubt had heard) and the
plainness of the building being erected on the same site. Perhaps some!most of
the stones for the altar and temple were still in the vicinity, but the skill to
rebuild a grand temple and the laborers to do the work were in short supply.
Haggai commanded the builders to work and to let God take care of beautifying
the structure. The overall narrative assures the reader that members of Haggai's
audience obeyed.
John Kessler points to what in Hag 2:6-9 he calls the "generalization" and
"focalization" of this overall passage. In doing so he notes both its similarities to
and differences from Ezek 38-39, Joel 4 (Eng. 3), and Zech 14. For example,
who are the "nations" and where will the great battle take place? Some of the
details differ from text to text. Zechariah 14, moreover, speaks specifically of an
earthquake. 14 Kessler defines "focalization" as "the highlighting of certain details
of a theme or tradition."15 That is, the commonalties among the traditions are
tailored to the prophet's particular situation and perspective. Kessler then
situates the message of Haggai squarely in Jerusalem soon after the events of 520
BeE to which the superscription attributes the saying.
Fourth, the reader of Haggai encounters descriptions of the practice of
consulting priests on a matter of pollution. That is, worshipers wondered
whether persons were polluted (and thus unqualified to bring sacrifices) for
having done X. The answer to such a question is called a torah, a teaching.
Readers of the Hebrew Bible encounter them regularly in the Torah or
Pentateuch, but elsewhere also. In this literary casting of the work and words of
Haggai, the question! answer torah dialogue is followed by a secondary
application. Still, one need not imagine worshippers physically seeking out a
priest to whom to pose the question. That familiar action, a crowd gathering to
hear a prophet-Haggai-is called to mind for the reader literarily.
Fifth, a reader encounters in Hag 2:20-23 a complex message, form-
critically speaking. On the one hand it constitutes a message of doom against foreign
nations (2:21 ), in this case Persia, whose overthrow Haggai predicts. In verse 21
God, speaking to the prophet in the first person singular, instructs Haggai to
deliver the message to Zerubbabel, but readers are allowed to "eavesdrop" in the
written version. There is no report of its being delivered to the people orally.
14 John Kessler, TIe Book if Haggai,- Prophecy and Sociery in EarlY Persian Yehud, VT Sup 91
Indeed, there is such mystery surrounding Zerubbabel one may even wonder
whether the message was delivered to him. Regardless, the message is one of
punishment! destruction against the "throne of the kingdoms" and of salvation
for Yehud. In 521 , the intended object of that destruction could only have been
the rulership over Jerusalem of the Persian king himself, Darius I. The previous
year Darius had fought his way to the throne of Persia. He, of course, claimed
legitimacy, a claim which might have been accurate, but whose accuracy was
ultimately immaterial to Haggai. The prophet dared to proclaim that God
would overthrow Darius. That prediction might have been foolhardy (the
prophet might have been arrested or worse), but times were dire.
Sixth, however, Hag 2:20-23 also contains a prophecy qf salvation, which genre
scholars usually say articulated an "indication of the situation," a "prediction of
salvation," and a "concluding characterization."1 6 Verses 20-23 articulate the
expectation that God would make the Davidide Zerubbabel into God's signet
ring. Regardless of whether the saying was ever delivered orally, Hag 2:20-23 is
literary in that it reworked!reversed a prediction of Jeremiah (in Jer 22:24-30)
forecasting the demise of (Je)Coniah: namely, though King Coniah (called
Jehoiachin in Kings and Chronicles) was the signet (signature) ring of God, worn
on God 's right hand, God would yank him off and throw him away into
Babylon. Haggai 2:23 recasts the prediction ofJehoiachin's doom into a positive
saying for Zerubbabel.
That new saying, however, raises an abiding question concerning the
prophets: how does one distinguish a true prophet from a false one?
Deuteronomy 20: 18-22 addresses directly that very issue. One criterion it
adduces is whether the prediction came true. If the answer did not come before
one had to act, a second admonition was to heed prophets predicting evil rather
than good. It was too easy to say what people wanted to hear, so few would
make up prophecies of destruction. By those criteria, Haggai appears hard to
call. On the one hand, he demanded work on and offerings for the temple, a
demand people already strapped financially might not want to hear. On the
other hand, his prediction concerning Zerubbabel did not pan out. Neither
Zerubbabel nor any other Yehudite king ever reoccupied the throne of David.
Even the hope for such a king waned after a while and rarely appears later in the
Hebrew Bible. (See the discussion of Zech 9-14 below.) It seems clear, however,
that the tradition-bearers responsible for preserving Haggai considered him a
true prophet.
16 See March, "Prophecy," 162. H e (p. 163) and others also speak ofa similar genre: an
oracle of salvation, which promises divine intervention, states the results, and declares
God's purpose for intervening; and an oracle of salvation, introduced by the formula
"fear not."
Form Criticism in Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi 273
17 Paul L. Redditt, Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi NCeB (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1995),49.
18 Edgar W. Conrad, Zechariah, RNBC (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 1999). In fact, his
analysis of the text varies little from mine.
19 See Zoltim Rokay, Die Nachtgesichte des Propheten Sachmja (Frankfurt: Lang, 2011 ).
274 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
20 See, for example, Klaus Seybold, Bilder zum Tempelbau: Die Visionen der Propheten Sacharja,
Stuttgarter Bibelstudien 70 (Stuttgart: KBW, 1974), 16-17 , and K arl Elliger, Das Buch der
zwoif kleinen Propheten, ATD 25 (Gottingen: Vandenhoeck and Ruprecht, 1982), 2.103,
11 9- 22-
21 See, for example, David]. Clark and Howard A. Hatton, A Handbook on Haggai,
Zechariah, and Malachi (New York: United Bible Societies, 2002), 132; Meyers and M eyers,
Haggai, Zechariah ]-8, 228-59, who treat vv. 6b-lOa as an insert, as do Petersen, Haggai
and Zechariah ]-8, 214-37 and many other critical commentators.
22 On that issue readers might read Wolter H . R ose, Zemah and Zerubbabel: Messianic
Expectations in the EarlY Postexilic Period,JSOTSup 304 (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 2000).
Rose reads the conflicting opinions of scholars concerning the identity of the one called
"Zemah" as a result of a failure to recognize that Zemah was another name for Zerubbabel.
His solution is debatable, like all scholarly conclusions, but that issue will not be pursued
furth er here because it does not belong to the realm of form criticism. It does show,
however, that form- critical considerations may well impinge heavily on other issues of
interpretation. See also Paul L. R edditt, "T he King in Haggai-Zechariah 1-8 and the
Book of Twelve, Tradition in Transition: Haggai and Zechariah ]-8 in the TraJectory if Hebrew
77zeology, ed . Mark]. Boda and Michael H . Floyd, LHBOTS 475 (London: T&T Clark,
2008), 56-82. Most if not all of the articles in that volume pertain to the subj ect of
intertextuality between Haggai/Zechariah 1-8 and other texts. See also Mark]. Boda,
Haggai, Zechariah, NIVAC (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2004).
Form Criticism in Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi 275
were prepared to back him as the future ruler. Antonios Finitsis goes so far as to
describe the perspective of Zech 1-6 as "restorative eschatology," because it was
peculiar to the sociohistorical developments pertaining to the restoration of the
Second Temple.23 Joshua the high priest might have seemed tainted by his
years/birth in Babylon to some members of the community in Yehud. Thus
Zech 3 was added to emphasize that God had cleansed him of that filth (Zech
3:4-5). This line of reasoning demonstrates the continuing use of form criticism
in connection with historical reconstruction and redaction criticism.
While the visions of Zech 1-8 comprise the majority of those chapters, other
genres appear as well. Staying within the visionary section of the booklet (1:7-
6:15), one first encounters an admonition (Zech 2:6-12; MT 2:10-16), ending
with a psalm-like command for silence (Zech 2: 13; MT 2: 17). It is placed
redactionally after the vision of an angel measuring for a wall of fire to surround
and protect the city. Then after the last vision one encounters an admonition
that combines instructions (Zech 6:9-12) with a prophecy of salvation (Zech
6:13-15).
Zechariah 7-8, however, begins with a new superscription (see above) and
moves its readers from the visionary realm into a collection of diverse, short
sayings. They consist of the following: first, a narrative introduction in Zech 7: 1-
3 in which messengers from Bethel (a city traditionally belonging to Ephraim,
but after the fall of Israel to Assyria belonging to Judah and in the post-exilic
period to Yehud) came to the priests at the temple, asked a question, and
received a priestly torah or instruction. Their question was whether to continue the
practice of mourning (the destruction of the temple?) in the fifth month (see 2
Kgs 24: 13). Zechariah 7:4-7 gives God's reply through the prophet Zechariah to
both parties. It over-answers their question, however. They asked only about the
fifth month. The answer in Zech 7: 14 dealt with fasts in the fifth and seventh
months. The second answer to the question appears in Zech 8: 18-21. In effect it
says: "No, discontinue all four fasts in the calendar: those in the fourth, fifth,
seventh, and tenth months." In these verses God's answer to the question is
introduced with a lengthy superscription combining both a narrative transition
to the question, namely "The word of YHVVH came to me, saying . . . "), and the
introductory phrase 'Thus says YHWH." In verses 18-19 the prophet gives the
priestly instruction that four fasts (those of the fourth, fifth, seventh, and tenth
months) should be turned into feasts. The passage then gives way (vv. 21-23) to
the prediction that "many peoples and strong nations" will come to Jerusalem to
seek YHWH. 24
25 Zech 8:2, 4,7 , 9, 14, 19, 20, and 21. The tenth occurrence is in 8:3, which omits "of
Hosts." vVhether the omission was original and deliberate is unclear.
26 Compare Mic 6:8. T here is no proof that Zechariah had that passage in view, though
he or a redactor of the Twelve might have. Regardless, the same understanding of justice
was common to both texts.
Form Criticism in Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi 277
God's renewed covenant. 27 Stead does not abandon form criticism in his work,
but he does move beyond it.
27 Michael R . Stead, TIe Intertextuality if Zechariah 1-8, LHBOTS 506 (London: T&T
Clark, 2009), 13-14.
28 R aymond F. Person, Second Zechariah and the Deuteronomic School, JSOTSup 167 (Sheffield:
Sheffield Academic, 1993), 24-37. The rest of the monograph works out the particulars of
that conclusion.
29 Paul D. Hanson, TIe Dawn ifApocalyptic (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1975), 409.
30 Nicholas Ho Fai Tai, Prophetie als Schri.flauslegung in Sachmja 9-14, Calwer T heologische
Monographien 17 (Stuttgart: Calwer, 1996), summary on pp. 285- 90 .
31 vValter Harrelson, "T he Celebration of the Feast of Booths according to Zechariah xiv
16-21 , in Religions in Antiquity. Essays in Memory if Erwin Ramsdell Goodenough, ed . Jacob
Neusner, Supplements to Numen, XIV (Leiden: Brill, 1968), 88. The oft-held date of ca.
330 (or later) rests upon the mistaken view that Zech 9: 1-8 had in view Alexander's
incursion along the Mediterranean coast. For a detailed refutation of that view, see Byron
G . Curtis, Up the Steep and Stony Road, AcBib 25 (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature,
2006), 172-82.
278 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
32 Form critically Zech 12: 10-13: 1 is peculiar. Verse 10 sets forth God 's coming blessing
(a spirit of compassion), which will have the effect of making people repent of their sins
(vv. 11-14), leading to the cleansing of the people ofJerusalem and Jud ah from their sins
(13:1 ).
33 Some passages contain threats against Judah's enemies, which makes them predictions
of good for Judah. In addition, scholars sometimes distinguish what may be called
subtypes of positive sayings: a prophecy of salvation, an oracle of salvation, and a
prophecy of salvation. See March, "Prophecy," 162-64.
34 R ecently scholars have preferred the translation "alas" over "woe," and sometimes they
also call the genre an "alas oracle."
35 Rose (Zemah and Zerubbabel, 21-22 and throughout) disagrees that Zerubbabel was the
Zemah or "Shoot" expected in Zech and argu es instead that Zemah was someone else. See
also Henning G. Reventlow, Die Propheten Haggai, Sacharja und Maleachi, ATD, 25.2, rev.
ed. (Gottingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1993), 54; and Nurmela Risto, Prophets in
Dialogue. Inner-Biblical Allusions in Zechariah 1-8 and 9-14 (Abo: Abo Akademi University,
1996), 65 .
36 See Meyers and M eyers, Zechariah 9-14, 4.
37 On the translation see Paul L. Redditt, Zechariah 9-14, IECOT (Stuttgart:
under Sheshbazzar (Ezra 1:8) or Zerubbabel and Joshua (Ezra 2:2, 64-66 and Neh 7:62-
65) probably exceeded the total population ofYehud at the end of the Persian period and
well into the Greek period. Charles E. Carter (The Emergence if Yehud in the Persian Period,- A
Social and Demographic Stuqy, JSOTSup 294 [Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 1999], 201-2)
in fact arrived at population estimates for all of Yehud at the lower figures of 13,350 by
450 BC and 20,650 (i.e., less than half the number of Returnees alone reported in Ezra 2
/ / Neh 7) by 33 1. Similarly, a recent estimate of the population of post-exilic J erusalem
(Oded Lipschits, "Achaemenid Imperial Policy and the Status of J erusalem," J udah and
J udeans in the Persian Period, ed. Oded Lipschits and Manfred Oeming [Winona Lake, IN:
Eisenbrauns, 2006], 32) sets it no higher than about 1500 as late as the end of the Persian
period.
280 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
same type of promise: God would rouse the sons of Zion and wield them like a
sword. 42 Verses 14-17 continue the motif of God as the Divine 'l\Tarrior,
wreaking havoc on God's enemies and restoring the early post-exilic community.
This collage of borrowed images and motifs looks bookish, and not like orally-
delivered prophetic speeches.
Zechariah 10 also illustrates the use and reuse or reinterpretation of older
sayings. Zechariah 10: I + 3b-5, 6-10 constitutes two prophecies of salvation.
Zechariah 10: I is often understood as an exhortation, but the verb 17~ iZl should
be read as a qal, perfect, third masculine plural and should be translated "They
asked. "43 Its continuation in verse 3b explains why they did so: "YHWH of hosts
cares for his flock, the house ofJudah ." Verses 4-5 talk a bout people who belong
to that flock. Zechariah 10:6-10 turns its attention to the house of Joseph (the
northern tribes) by means of a simple redactional move in verse 6: "I (YHWH)
will strengthen the house ofJudah, and the house ofJoseph I will save." Like the
English translation just given, the Hebrew sentence places the clauses "house of
Judah" and "house of Joseph" back to back in the middle of the sentence; the
verbs on either side open and close it. The rest of the passage specifies Ephraim
(v. 7) and Gilead (v. 10), that is, not just the tribes north ofJudah, but the tribes
in Transjordan as well. Zechariah 10: II also exhibits knowledge of the traditions
of the exodus, regardless of whether it knows the book of Exodus. Zechariah
10:2-3a, however, stands out from its context because it blames "shepherds" for
the ills ofJudah. The verse is a proverbial "bolt out of the blue" in Zech 10, but
it anticipates a series of additional modifications to the hope of Zech 10.
Zechariah 11-1 3 actually abandons hope for the reunion ofJ udah and Israel, for
a D avidic king, and for a dutiful priesthood. The preoccupation with people
called "shepherds" in Zech II :4-16 and a scathing condemnation of one
shepherd called "God 's associate" in Zech 13:7-9 articulate the redactor's
concern. The "merchants" introduced in Zech II :4-16 (see discussion below),
moreover, are condemned again at the very end of Zech 14, and the D avidides,
priests, and some or all prophets come in for denunciation as well (Zech 12: 10-
13:6). It appears, therefore, that Zech 10:2-3a, form-critically classifiable as an
indictment with punishment, is the redactional piece tying together Zech 9 and
10 with Zech 11-14. Its use is highly literary and stunningly effective. 44
Formation if the Book if the Twelve, ed . R ainer Albertz, J ames D . Nogalski,Jakob Wohrle,
BZAW 433 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2012), 216-17 .
Form Criticism in Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi 281
To what genre, however, does Zech 11:4-16 belong? It has been called a
"sign-enactment report" or a "para ble." There is widespread agreement,
moreover, that the passage constitutes a reuse and a modification of two
prophetic narratives of symbolic acts in Ezekiel: Zech 11 :7-16 II Ezek 37: 15-23
and Zech 11: 16 II Ezek 34:3-4. Functionally, it describes the postexilic situation
experienced by postexilic Yehud from the redactor's perspective: Persian officials
ruling through Davidides and Yehudite priests. It is tied to Zech 9-10 by means
of Zech 11: 1-3, a taunt song against the "Shepherds" Uewish a nd other leaders
of Yehud). It concludes with a curse against the Worthless Shepherd (most likely
the High Priest).48 Zech 13:7 returns to that motif as part of a redactional
conclusion to Zech 11-13. Zechariah 13:9, moreover, dialogues with Mal 3:2b-
3. 49
Against the background just painted, Zech 12: 1-9 and Zech 14: 1-21
constitute predictions of God's salvation, which are themselves comprised of
smaller, reworked units. Zechariah 12: 10-13:6, however, makes the case against
the indigenous leadership ofYehud: the Davidides (who do not rule!), the priests
(who especially were implicated in Zech 11 ), and false prophets. Zechariah
12: 10-14, however, is a prophecy of salvation in the form of God's promise to
bless the guilty on the condition that they repent of their bad conduct.
49See below the discussion of the relationship between Mall: 14b and Zech 14:9, 16-17.
50 See, for example, Aaron Schart, Die Entstehung des Zwolfprophetenbuchs, BZAW 260
(Berlin: de Gruyter, 1998), 291-93; E. R ay Clendenen in Richard A. Taylor and E. Ray
Clendenen, Haggai, Malachi, NAC 21a (Nashville: Broadman & Holman), 227; Beth
Glazier-McDonald, Malachi, the Divine Messenger, SBLDS 98 (Atlanta: Scholars Press,
1987),2 1; Theodor Lescow, Das Buch Maleachi, AzT (Stuttgart: Calwer, 1993), 12. These
four scholars cover various pairings: German and English, Jewish and Christian, critical
and traditional.
Form Criticism in Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi 283
Jeremiah (15:1 ) a nd the Twelve (Mic 6:4).51 Elijah is mentioned nowhere else in
the Latter Prophets, but it seems clear that here Elija h represents at least the
former prophets and quite possibly even the Nebiim. It is quite probable,
therefore, that those verses were added when the Tora h a nd the Nebiim were
combined. 52
Recently scholars have paid attention to intertextuality between Malachi
a nd still other passages. One such text is Mal I : 14b, which announces the
kingship of God. Malachi 1:5 a nd II announce the greatness of God among the
nations, but in Mal I : 18 God renounces impure sacrifices a nd does so on the
grounds that God was a great king. That claim appears nowhere else in M alachi,
but it stands at the very heart of Zech 14 in verses 9a and 16-17 . However, the
motif of the oneness of God that appea rs in Zech 14:9b appears nowhere else in
Zecharia h and appears to draw upon Mal I: 14. 53 In other words, when Zech 9-
14 and M alachi were placed next to each other, a redactor tied them together in
both directions.
51 The mention of Aaron and Nliriam in Mic 6:4 makes it appear likely that a redactor of
dialogue with the Twelve as a whole and with other literature, especially Isaiah,
Jeremiah, a nd Ezekiel, but also Exodus, Psalms, and possibly others as well.
CONCLU SION
The result of this study is not that form criticism on the Book of the Twelve in
general and on Haggai through Malachi in particular is dead or even dying. In
fact, it stands with textual, source, and redaction criticism as a foundational
method in the study of the Twelve. What has happened in recent decades is that
scholars have become interested in the whole history of the traditions, from their
oral, preliterary stage to their latest redactional stage-and indeed, though not
discussed here, in the reading of the traditions/books in later biblical literature,
in the New Testament, and in Rabbinic circles. Scholars have also borrowed
methods or strategies from various other disciplines. The study of biblical texts
runs from the earliest oral stage to its meaning for readers today.
14
Anthony R . Petterson
1 Since " Shoot" is a proper noun (Zech 6: 12), I use it without the definite article.
- 285-
286 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Robert Gordon has well documented the shift in the study of the prophets during
the 1970s, where rather than looking behind the text to reconstruct the history of
Israel a nd its social institutions, or to recover the " historical" prophet a nd the
preliterary origins of prophetic texts, there was a shift to apply approaches from
the wider study of literature to the final form of the biblical books.3 One of the
effects of this shift for form-critical studies was a move from studying and
classifying genres so as to reconstruct the Sitze im Leben of the prophets, towards
reconstructing the social locations in which the prophetic books themselves we re
written. 4 In addition, the concern to appreciate the social locations of the books
grounds the subsequent reading of them in history, unlike some literary readings
2 See Hyun Chul Paul Kim, "Form Criticism in Dialogue with Other C riticisms: Building
the Multidimensional Structures of Texts and Concepts," in The Changing Face if Form
Criticism for the Twenty-First Century, ed. M arvin A. Sweeney and Ehud Ben Zvi (Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 2003), 96: "our reconstruction of the setting of the final stage of a text
may still be no more than mere conj ecture."
3 R . P. Gordon, "A Story of Two Paradigm Shifts," in "This Place is Too Smallfor Us": The
Israelite Prophets in Recent Scholarship, ed. R. P. Gordon (Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns,
1995), 3-26.
4 Reflected in the introduction of Ehud Ben Zvi, Hosea, FOTL 21A (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 2005), 5-6: "To be sure, it is most likely that written sources und erlie the
present book. It is also likely that the present book is the end result of some redactional
processes. T his being said, the book of Hosea-that is, this particular instance of
YHWH 's word-is a book that is presented to its intended readers as a unit, and that asks
them to approach it as such and carries particular meanings as such. ... There is no
indication that the intend ed readership of the book was asked to divide it into potential
sources, read each of them separately and then reconstruct the possible redactional
processes that led to the book in its present form. There is no reason to assume that any
historical (ancient) community read the book in such a manner. Accordingly, a historical
commentary on the BOOK of Hosea ... has to deal with the book as a whole and, of
course, as a written document to be read and reread, again and again."
A New Form Critical Approach to Zechariah 287
that exclude the author(s) and any discernible intention that they might have in
their writing, and focus only on reception. 5
There are a number of fruitful products of this shift within form-critical
studies. First, the focus on social location in the production of the prophetic books
and the reception community to whom the books were read and reread supports
the inference that the individual prophetic books are coherent, both internally and
against the wider cultural and intellectual environment in which they were read. 6
This approach contrasts with those that see the prophetic books as more of a
haphazard collection of disparate prophetic material, where apparent incoherence
gives rise to theories a bout different a uthors and redactional layers without really
questioning how such an incoherent work would be received by its reception
community. Admittedly, a n approach that presumes internal and external
coherence of the final form of a book is a particular challenge for the book of
Zechariah which for the last two centuries has been treated for the most part as at
least two separate books with different authors and different social settingsJ Many
see these parts standing at least in tension or at most in contradiction to each
other. Yet a new form-critical approach will prefer an interpretation that explains
the final form of the text as it stands rather than one that involves emending the
text and reconstructing editorial changes.
The coherence of the prophetic books in their reception community entails
other subsidiary points. It means that to the extent that authors and their
reception community share their "theological viewpoints," there is direct access to
these viewpoints through the books themselves. It follows, therefore, that
reconstructing these theological viewpoints or thought worlds is not such a
speculative enterprise because it is reconstructed from the books that we actually
have (from the world "of the text," so to speak, unlike the earlier form-critical
project that sought to reconstruct the world " behind the text").8 Furthermore, one
of the key components of this theology which h as a crucial bearing on the
5 A point made by Kim, "Dialogue," 96: "giving up on the historicality of a text implies
ahistoricism."
6 So Colin M . Toffelmire, "Form Criticism," in Dictionary if the Old Testament: Prophets, ed.
Mark J. Boda and J. Gordon McConville (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity and IVP
Academic, 2012), 266: "New form critics begin their investigations with the assumption
that these texts are coherent and have been skillfully collected, edited and transmitted."
While Ehud Ben Zvi ("The Prophetic Book: A Key Form of Prophetic Literature," in
Sweeney and Ben Zvi, Changing Face if Form Criticism, 289) seems happy with some
measure of internal incoherence, he still argues that "the world of these books could not
stand in a flagrant contradiction with the world of knowledge and the theological
viewpoints shared by authorship and primary readership and rereadership."
7 For a recent treatment of the history of scholarship on the division ofZech 9-14, see
Byron G. Curtis, Up the Steep and Stony Road: TIe Book if Zechariah in Social Location Trajectory
AnalYsis, AcBib 25 (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2006), 118-23.
8 See Toffelmire, "Form Criticism," 266.
288 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
interpretative task is the central claim of each of the prophe tic books to speak the
word of God. 9 The literature itself presents Ya hweh transcending and governing
the created order and through his powerful word proclaimed by his prophets
bringing history to its a ppointed purpose (see, e.g. , Isa 4 5 :18-25; 55:8-13). A
significant con sequence of this view of God (sh a red by the a uthorship, readership,
a nd a udience to a greater or lesser extent), is that it is difficult to see how
prophecies that were understood to have supposedly "failed" would continue to be
viewed as authoritative by the reception community and passed from generation
to generation. Gordon commen ts on "the problem of unfulfilled prophecy":
. .. society's familiarity with, and expectations of, the prophet figure are of
crucial importance, and on at least two different levels. First, the success or
failure of the claimed prophet relates closely to his fulfilling the prophetic
stereotype as this is perceived by the society in which he operates. ... If a
prophet does not conform in some way to the popular conception of a prophet
his credibility will diminish. Secondly, the social expectation that produced the
formulation of the prophetic role in Israelite society should be a datum in the
modern scholar's investigation of prophecy in Israel.I 0
This is a significan t issue with respect to Zech 6:9-15 and any hope it expresses for
Zerubba bel, since all a re agreed that Zerubbabel did not usher in the promised
restoration a nd at the same time, in verse 15 the prophet stakes his authority on
his oracle coming to pass (cf. Zech 2: 13, 15 [Eng. 2:9, 11] ; 4 :9). 11 This dema nds an
explanation since, as Michael Floyd asks:
How could predictions that did not happen become the basis for predicting
something that will happen? If the reconfiguration of monarchial Judah as
imperial Yehud did not really amount to a restoration, wouldn't this completely
discredit the very idea of "restoration" rather than foster hope in an even more
glorious one? How could unkept divine promises fan the flames of even more
ardent faith in divine promises?1 2
A second product of the shift to read the prophe tic books in view of their
social locations is the recognition that they a re not to be read in isolation since the
books themselves quote, allude to, and echo earlier a uthoritative texts, prophetic
a nd otherwise. 13 Indeed, the book of Zechariah sets itself in the stream of the
"earlier prophets" (cf. 1:4; 7: 12). The corollary of this is that prophetic books a re
to be read against this wider textual background a nd this trend is seen in the
growing interest in the inner-biblical exegesis or intertextuality of the prophets.14
For Zech 6:9-15 this is important for there are several words, ideas and phrases
that cannot really be understood (including the word Shoo t [mnm without taking
this wider textual background into account. 15
Third, the shift to study the final form of prophetic books in view of their
social location raises the importa nt question of the intention of the author of the
book and what they wanted to achieve a mong reade rs a nd hea rers of their book.
This focus shares a key feature of rhetorical criticism and contrasts with some
approaches to the prophets that seem to assume that the books a re doing little
more than recording the prophets' words for posteri ty. 16 Marvin Sweeney captures
this contrast between the concerns of classical form criticism with the new form
criticism:
Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2006), 269. See also Robert C. K ashow, "Zechariah 1-8 as a
Theological Explanation for the Failure of Prophecy in Haggai 2:20-23," ]TS 64 (2013):
389.
13 So Toffelmire, "Form Criticism," 267.
14 For the book of Zechariah, see Rex A. Mason, Preaching the Tradition: Homily and
Hermeneutics After the Exile (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990); J anet E.
Tollington, Tradition and Innovation in Haggai and Zechariah 1-8, JSOTSup 150 (Sheffield:
JSOT Press, 1993); K atrina J. A. Larkin, The Eschatology qf Second Zechariah: A Study qf the
Formation qf a Mantological Wisdom Anthology, CBET, 6 (Kampen: Kok Pharos, 1994); Risto
Nu rmela, Prophets in Dialogue: Inner-Biblical Allusions in Zechariah 1-8 and 9-]4 (Abo: Abo
Akademi U niversity, 1996); Michael R. Stead, The Intertextualily qf Zechariah 1-8, LHBOTS
506 (New York: T&T Clark, 2009).
15 This raises an issue with which there is little scholarly consensus, namely the
provenance of the prophetic (and other biblical) books. However, inner-biblical exegesis
may help to resolve some of these debates if the direction of influence can be determined,
since appeal to non-existent prophetic works, explicit in the case of Zechariah, would
make no sense to Zechariah's audience. See Stead, Intertextualily, 43.
16 T homas Renz, The Rhetorical Function qf the Book qf Ezekiel, VTSup 76 (Leiden: Brill,
2002), 13, notes one of the differences between form and rhetorical criticism is that "the
unity and coherence of a rhetorical unit is to be found not in the uniformity of its
structure, but in the unity of its rhetorical situation. T hus, the boundaries of a rhetorical
unit can be identical with the boundaries of a form- critical unit, but they can also extend
over several form-critical units."
290 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
R ather, the prophetic literature was preserved, transmitted, supplemented, and
reformulated because later writers and communities believed that it addressed
them and their situations respectively.17
Decisions a bout the composition a nd redaction of the book of Zecha riah have
obvious bea ring on how the a udience (or audiences) of the book of Zecha ria h are
conceived of a nd in turn this can dramatically influence the way that its parts a re
read. 24 This will be illustrated with reference to Zech 6:9-15.
Having identified several key issues that arise when the social location of the
readership and audience a re taken into account (internal and external coherence,
inner-biblical exegesis, and intention), I will now explore these in dialogue with
representative interpretations of this passage published in the last decade.25 I will
begin with interpretations that consider Shoot to be Zerubba bel a nd then deal
with those that believe that Shoot is a future D avidic figure beyond Zerubbabel.
Michael Stead seeks to read Zech 6:9-15 against its "intertexts," of which he
identifies two key "sets."26 The first set is from Jeremiah. InJer 22:30, three things
a re removed from kingJehoiachin (~~~, '7ipb, and JW'), and these are now given to
"the Branch" in Zech 6: 13 as a reversal of the earlier judgment. Simila rly, just as
Jehoiachin lost his "honor" (;-"(1;') in Jer 22: 18, Shoot will bear "honor" (1;;') in
Zech 6: 13. Stead understands Jer 23:5 as "a promise that the D avidic line will
22 E.g., Aaron Schart, "R econstru cting the Redaction History of the Twelve Prophets:
Problems and Models," in Reading and Hearing the Book if the Twelve, ed .J ames D. Nogalski
and Marvin A. Sweeney (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2000), 42.
23 Marvin A. Sweeney, "Zechariah's D ebate with Isaiah," in Sweeney and Ben Zvi,
Changing Face if Form Criticism, 338. Similarly, Floyd, "Changing Views," 262: "For
whatever reason, interpreters seem reluctant to confront the fact that the editors who put
the prophetic corpus in its canonical form regarded all fourteen chapters of Zechariah as
constituting a distinct prophetic book. This block of text is separated from Haggai and
Malachi in the same way that all other prophetic books are demarcated, with a
superscription or introduction identifying the prophet for whom the book is named."
24 Floyd, "Changing Views," 262.
25 There have been several other treatments of Zechariah published in this time, but I
have not dealt with those published at a more popular level. I have surveyed
interpretations prior to this more broadly in Petterson, Behold Your King, 13-45 . For my
own treatment of this passage, see Behold Your King, 100-120 .
26 Stead, Intertextuality, 137.
292 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
endure, notwithstanding the fact that Jehoiachin and his children will be excluded
from it," a nd this is what is being activated in Zech 6:9-15. 27 There are also
references to Jer 33 with "the Bra nch" " branching out" (Zech 6:12; cf.Jer 33:15)
a nd "the Branch" working in parallel with a priest (cf. J er 33: 17-18).28 The second
intertext that connects with the temple building in verses 12-13 is 2 Sam 7. Stead
notes the striking parallel in expression between 2 Sam 7: 13 a nd Zech 6: 13. 29 He
summarises: "the significance of the promises in 2 Sam 7 is that they establish that
the temple building role was intrinsic to the promises which inaugurated the
Davidic line. "3o Stead fur ther no tes the way that Cyrus is called God's "anointed"
because of his role in rebuilding the temple in Isa 44:28-45: 1, a nd five kings in 2
C hronicles who are given a n unqualified positive assessment have a key part to
play in rebuilding or restoring the temple. 31
Having established these intertexts, Stead seeks to understand " how this
double allusion should be understood with reference to its sixth-century BCE
context."32 He argues:
Hence, Stead asser ts there is no "Zerubba bel problem" since the expectations for
Zerubba bel to build the temple were met. 34 The temple that "the Bra nch" will
build is no t a n eschatological temple, but the temple that is the focus elsewhere in
Zech 1-8. The crown will be placed in the temple (v. 14) after it has been built,
not before. 35
Stead then seeks to establish his interpretation with reference to the historical
(sociological) context, arguing that Zerubba bel was present in Jerusalem in 520
BCE for the refounding of the temple, absent when the sign-act occurred (possibly
in Persia as par t of a delegation to D arius), a nd then present again in 515 BCE
27 Ibid ., 138.
28 Ibid ., 139.
29 Ibid ., 140.
30 Ibid ., 140.
31 T hese are Asa (15:18); Joash (24:4-14); J otham (27:1-4); Hezekiah (29: 1-11 , 35- 36);
Josiah (34: 1-8). Stead, Intertextuality, 141.
32 Ibid., 142.
33 Ibid., 143. Stead deliberately distinguishes between "a messiah" (a ruling son of David)
and "The Messiah" (the final figure at the end of time who would bring salvation).
Crucially, he believes that J er 23 is "not necessarily describing 'The Messiah' ... but a
restoration of the Davidic line" (p. 144).
34 Ibid., 145. A similar treatment is offered by Floyd, "Prophetic Hope," 284: "T hus there
are no failed prophecies here."
35 Stead, Intertextuality, 155.
A New Form Critical Approach to Zechariah 293
when the temple was completed. 36 Stead understands the crowning of Joshua as
part of his commissioning for his role as high priestY The other crown symbolizes
the future "crowning" of (the absent) Zerubbabel.3 8 Hence: "The dual crowning
thus a nticipates the time when the 'Branch ' will have built the temple, and the
high priest will be administering it. "39
Stead certainly enriches an appreciation of this passage through a discussion
of its intertexts. Yet like others, Stead reads 6:9-15 solely in reference to the period
from 520-5 15 Be, and not in view of the book of Zechariah as a whole. 4o He has
a reduced view of what is promised to Shoot in verse 13, presumably to seek
coherence with what Zerubba bel actually accomplished. Rather than "bear
majesty," and "sit and rule on his throne," Stead argues the "Branch" will simply
"sit on his seat and rule."4 1 Stead is certainly correct to note that the things
Zerubbabel did achieve were very significant, namely rebuilding the temple and
reestablishing the D avidic line in Jerusalem. However, there is arguably a wider
Davidic dynasty tradition that presents a strong hope for a future individual king
(to reverse Stead's phraseology, not "a messiah," but "the Messiah") who is central
to the coming of Yahweh's kingdom (e.g., Isa 9:6-7; 11:1-10; 16:4-5; Ezek 21:26-
27; 37:21-25; Hos 3:5; Mic 4:8-5:6 [Eng. 4:8-5:5] ; Amos 9:11-15; cf. Zech 3:8). 42
This wider hope is what is captured in Jeremiah's use of the term "Shoot," who is
explicidy a wise and just Davidic king who will reign in the land and in whose days
Judah will be saved. Similarly, in Zech 3:8-10, the coming of Shoot is said to
usher in an age comparable to that of Solomon (cf. 1 Kgs 5:5 [Eng. 4:2 5]).
Zerubba bel certainly did not realize these expectations. To make this cohere,
Stead considerably underplays the force of the Jeremiah intertexts. Furthermore,
he does not address how this passage would be heard by the audience of the book,
36 Ibid., 151.
37 R ather than sitting on a "throne," Stead translates ~I;I:;J as "seat," so the priest in v. 13
sits on his own seat, like Eli in 1 Sam 1:9.
38 Stead, i ntertextuality, 155.
39 Ibid ., 155.
40 Ibid. , 40-41. This observation is also made by Marvin A. Sweeney, "R eview: The
Intertextuality of Zechariah 1-8," ]SS 56 (2011 ): 416. "Like many modern critics, he
[Stead] presupposes that Zech 1-8 must be viewed as a discrete diachronic unit within
the book of Zechariah which he then dates to the late sixth century BCE. But recent work
on the synchronic form of the book of Zechariah as a whole by Edgar Conrad and the
present reviewer has some diachronic implications for the classical critical reading of
Zechariah."
41 Stead, i ntertextuality, 187.
42 See Anthony R . Petterson, "T he Shape of the D avidic Hope Across the Book of the
Twelve," ]SOT35 (2010): 225-46.
294 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
for whom the temple had been completed. 43 ' !\Thile Zerubbabel may have come to
mind to those who witnessed Zecha ria h 's sign-action and heard his oracle a bout
Shoot when it was delivered, the reality is that Zerubbabel is not na med as Shoot
in the passage, nor in Zech 3:8, which sets the coming of the Shoot into a n
eschatological timeframe with the phrase "in that day" (v. 10).44 This demands
a nother interpretation by those who read the final form of the book after the
completion of the temple, especially since the hopes associated with Shoot were
not realized .
Antonios Finitsis considers this passage to be a n "oracle" and seeks to read it
against a reconstructed social location, which he develops from chap ters 1-6. He
a rgues that there are two crowns involved since verse 13 "clearly refers to two
persons."45 One crown is set on the head of the high priest as a coronation which
"points to the elevated position of the high priest in the post-exilic community."
Because the one crowned "sh all build the temple" a nd "bear royal honour,"
Finitsis believes that the original form of the text ha d Zerubbabel being crowned
a nd this was later edited out when it never took place. 46 The priest standing by the
throne of the king, implies a lesser status for the priest (contrary to what Finitsis
states earlier?), but the dual leadership arrangement enables each to keep the other
in check, particularly to avoid mistakes in the past when the king a bused his power
with no other a uthority to keep him in check. 47 Nevertheless, there will be a co-
operative leadership arra ngemen t with a "peaceful understanding between the
two."
Finitsis believes that n7J~ has messianic connotations on account of its
background in J eremiah. 48 H e states: 'The fact that the temple got built but
Zerubba bel never came to the throne proves the prophet's failure."49 Finitsis is not
troubled that there a re elements in the presentation that do not cohere, since "it is
typical of the biblical text to allow loose ends to stand ."5o Yet one wonders how
Zechariah's prophecy was received as prophetic scripture if this we re the case,
especially since it does no t cohere with the popular expectations of a prophet, nor
43 T he temple was completed in the sixth year of D arius according to Ezra 6:14-15 . That
the book comes from after the temple is completed is inferred from the way that the
temple seems to be functioning in Zechariah's sign action in Zech II : 13.
44 See furth er, Petterson, Behold Your King, 98-100.
45 Antonios Finitsis, Visions and Eschatology; A Socio-Historical Anafysis if Zechariah 1-6, LSTS
79 (Lond on: T&T Clark, 2011 ), 133 .
46 Ibid ., 134.
47 Ibid., 135.
48 Ibid ., 130- 3 1. The "messianic connotations [of m~:!1] in Isaiah and J eremiah" are
discussed only in relation to Zech 3: 10 in a footnote.
49 Ibid ., 121-22. He is here referring to the prophet Haggai, but the same must be true of
Zechariah.
50 Ibid ., 134- 35.
A New Form Critical Approach to Zechariah 295
with Zecharia h 's own claim in 6:15. 51 The social context Finitsis constructs is:
.. . a period of change and both prophets [Haggai and Zechariah] tried to shape
a new and cohesive cultic community around the newly rebuilt temple in
J erusalem .... T he two prophets wished to show that the future was possible.
That is why they identified the leaders of the community as the people
responsible for ushering in the new era. T heir argument was that the future will
follow the present if only people would be bold enough to discern and accept
it.52
For Finitsis, the night visions evince what he calls "restoration eschatology" where
for Zecha riah the eschaton is brought into the present, or very close to the present.
This construal is based solely on Zech 1-6 (and Haggai) a nd he does not seek to
read these chapters in relation to the rest of the book where there is clea rly a more
distant horizon in view. Yet even in Zech 1-6 there are a number of elements that
look beyond Zecharia h 's day. These include Ya hweh's return to Jerusalem in glory
to bring prosperity a nd peace (2: 5-9 [Eng. 2:1-4]; 2:14 [Eng. 2:10] ), the removal
of the iniquity of the land (Zech 5), a nd the judgment a nd incorporation of the
nations (2:10, 15 [Eng. 2:6, II] ; 6:8).53 Zechariah's hope for Shoot sits more
coherently alongside these elements.
InJames Nogalski's recent commentary on the Twelve, he understands Zech
6:9-15 to be an oracle that relates to the fourth a nd fifth visions. Three leaders
from among the returned exiles are to go to the house of J osiah (one of the
Judeans already living in the la nd) with a collection of silver a nd gold. They a re to
make crowns (plural) which will be placed on the head of Joshua. Since there is
only one person crowned, Nogalski suggests:
For Nogalski, since the high priest is crowned a nd the m ysterious "branch " is only
credited with reconstructing the temple, it implies power was to be shared between
them. Branch will build the temple and is described with royal attributes in verse
13. Since Joshua stands by his side, bra nch "must be identified as Zerubbabel, the
descendant of D avidic kings."55 Yet he is never called "king" and is not mentioned
by name-his role was deliberately downplayed over time. The crowns are a
symbol of the exiles ("those who are fa r oW') coming to help in the reconstitution
of the temple. 56
Nogalski understands 6:9-15 working along with the fourth a nd fifth visions
to regulate the ruling structures of the community where "the political power
vested in Zerubba bel is placed on a par with that of the high priest and the
religious power of the country."57 There are limits placed on the governor, with an
officially sanctioned place for religious authority (the high priest). Yet, the claims
made for Zerubbabel as "the branch" probably posed a threat to the Persian king
Darius. If Zerubba bel had pla ns to reinstitute the Davidic monarchy, or if the
expectations of Zechariah and Haggai made it look this way, Darius may have
removed him from power. Nogalski believes: "The prophet's hope either went
unrealized, meaning Zerubbabel's role was downplayed, Zerubbabel himself was
not interested in pursuing a larger role, or Zerubbabel attempted to lead a
rebellion but was quickly removed . At any rate, the political power of David's
descendant never appea rs to have achieved the status Zechariah envisioned."58
This raises again the issue of coherence in the wider environment.
Intriguingly, Nogalski suggests that the original oracle has been reworked for
the fin al form of the book. In a sidebar he says: "It is thus suggestive that someone
has downplayed the role of Zerubba bel in the book by removing direct references
to him as the branch, while still leaving an expectation of a ' branch' to come."59
Here Nogalski seems to suggest that a final-form readership might read the
passage to refer to a future figure, but he unfortunately does not say any more
than this. In terms of the passage's rhetorical intent, Nogalski only draws out its
implications for an a udience in Zecharia h 's day before the completion of the
temple. He states that the report of those returning with gifts to build the temple
would have rallied those who had become discouraged "to build the temple, to
reconstitute the community as God's people, and to reinstitute worship at
YHWH's house."6o This is clearly a message that predates the completion of the
temple a nd the final form of the book.
Robert Kashow deals with Zech 6:9-15 in an article that seeks to explain "the
failure of prophecy in Hag 2:20-23." He a rgues that H aggai's prophecy should be
read in the light of Zech 1-8, where conditionality is added to the promises
concerning the "Davidic heir. " Hence, the promises concerning Zerubbabel in the
final form of Haggai and Zechariah should be understood as not being fulfilled
56 Nogalski (ibid .) believes that there is no satisfactory text-critical explanation for the
different names between verses 10 and 14. Either the intention is to refer to the same four
people, or two of the people responsible for making the crowns were not responsible for
its care and storage in the temple.
57 Ibid., 882.
58 Ibid., 883.
59 Ibid., 881.
60 Ibid ., 883.
A New Form Critical Approach to Zechariah 297
This quote supports m y wider argument that reading Zech 1-8 (and Haggai) from
a new form-critical perspective highlights the problem of "the failure of prophecy"
if Zerubbabel is identified as Shoot. Kashow's thesis at first appears to resolve "the
failure of prophecy," but a closer investigation of the relevant passages does not
support his proposal, and it creates other difficulties.
Kashow admits there is no conditionality in H aggai, and that the
conditionality in Zech 3:8 does not attach to the Davidic heir, but to the
priesthood. His thesis hinges on Zech 6: 15b, but here it is not clear exactly what
the conditionality attaches to . Kashow asserts that it is "the full restoration spoken
of in Hag. 2:20-3, Zech. 3:7-10, a nd Zech . 6:9-15," but this is not obvious. 64 Ifit
is the case, it poses another difficulty in that Zecha ria h stakes his prophetic
credentials on it coming to pass: "And you will know that Yahweh of hosts has
sent me to you. " What would this mean for a final-form audience for whom it had
not m aterialized? ''''ere they to disregard the prophet? Significantly, this same
prophet a uthentication statement is attached to the construction of the temple in
Zech 4:9 a nd this is exactly what is in view at the beginning of 6: 15:
is assuming that Zerubbabel is Branch and that his thesis also holds for those who those
who consider Branch an indefinite future figure. However, there is no problem of a
"failure of prophecy" for those who hold the latter view. Furthermore, his thesis poses
other problems if Branch is a future figure, which I identify below.
62 Ibid., 398.
63 Ibid., 403. Italics original.
64 Ibid ., 400.
298 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
And the ones who are far off shall come and build in the temple of the LoRD.
And you will know that Yahweh of hosts has sent me to you. And it will come
to pass if you diligently obey the voice of Yahweh your God .
In view of the final-form audience for whom the temple building was completed,
the conditionality is more naturally understood as attaching to the temple
completion and functions to authenticate Zechariah and indicate that other
elements of his prophecy (such as the coming of Shoot) will be fulfilled .
Furthermore, in Hag 1: 12-15, the people obey the voice of God and work on the
temple-this conditionality is portrayed as met. One would expect a clearer
explanation for "the failure of prophecy" if it concerned Zerubbabel, especially
given the magnitude of the expectations accompanying Shoot from this and earlier
prophetic texts.
Another issue that Kashow does not discuss is the way that in both Zech 3
and 6:9-15, the stone given to Joshua (3:9) and the crown placed in the temple as
a memorial (6: 14) seem to indicate that Zechariah expected some distance of time
before Shoot would come. Finally, Kashow's proposal creates the impression that
Zechariah is saying that the kingdom of Yahweh will not be inaugurated until the
people obey - it is all up to them. Yet there is a sense from passages likeJer 30-33
that " the full restoration" including the coming of Shoot (cf. Jer 30:9; 33: 15), will
be accomplished by God in spite of ongoing covenantal disobedience-God will
ultimately do for his people what they are unable to do for themselves and
circumcise their hearts so that they will obey in the new kingdom ITer 31:33; cf.
Deut 30:6). Certainly in the final form of the book, Zech 9-14 indicates that the
work of Yahweh in "the full restoration" is primary.
Two further studies explicitly approach the book from a social location perspective
and both conclude that Shoot is a future Davidic figure, those of Byron Curtis and
Heiko 'J\Tenze1. 65 Both studies also seek to read the final form of Zechariah as a
unity, though they configure this quite differently. Byron Curtis argues that there
are two divergent social locations underlying Zech 1-8 and 9-14. Zechariah 1-8
comes from the center ofJerusalemite institutions in the early years of Darius the
Great with a view to the temple completion. Zech 9-14 comes from a very
different social location, still within the prophet's lifetime, but now the prophet is
marginalized and found at the social periphery.66
Regarding the sign-action, Curtis believes that there are two crowns involved,
perhaps one of silver and one of gold (cf. v. lla). He suggests it is the silver one
that is placed on the head ofJoshua "signifying the perhaps-expanded duties of the
65 Curtis, Steep; Heiko Wenzel, Reading Zechariah with Zechariah }:}-6 as the Introduction to the
Entire Book, CBET 59 (Leuven: Peeters, 2011 ).
66 Curtis, Steep, 3-4.
A New Form Critical Approach to Zechariah 299
high priest in a time without a Yehudean mona rch."67 The gold crown is held in
reserve for the future Zemah. He suggests that there was no need to crown
Zerubba bel since he had already been a uthorized as governor by the Persians and
needed no coronation. Rather over-optimistically he states: " Once the
understanding appea rs that Zemah is not Zerubba bel, but a future Davidide, m a ny
of the difficulties in 6:9-15 vanish."68 For C urtis, the temple that Zemah will build
is either a n enlargement or renovation of Zerubba bel's temple, or otherwise the
eschatological temple envisioned in places like Ezek 40-48. 69 He argues against
reading Zemah as a priest-king, instead the priest is another figure with his own
throne. Regarding n" iJ~v in verse 14, Curtis entertains reading it as either a plural,
in which case both crowns are placed on display in the temple, or as a singula r, in
which case Joshua retains his crown a nd only the gold crown is placed in the
templeJO The promise that "those who are far away" will come to build the
temple could refer to exiles, or non-Israelites, or both and this again refers to the
eschatological temple. Curtis concludes with what this sign action mea ns:
While Curtis seeks to read Zechariah against the background of its social location,
it is the social location of the author in two different settings which is in view,
rather than the social location of the audience of the final form of the book. He
a rgues that Haggai-Zech 1-8 was a composite unity before the completion of the
temple which functioned with the intention to further encourage "the community
so heavily engaged in the work of building."72 Zecha ria h 9-14 comes from a later
time after the completion of the temple. He later summarizes his perspective:
.. .in Zech 1-8 the author writes in order to bolster a nascent leader and to
anticipate a m essianic leadership. In Zech 9-11 the author writes to condemn a
tyrannical leadership and to anticipate a messianic leadership. In Zech 12-14
the au thor writes to rebuke the house of D avid and to anticipate a divine
67 Ibid ., 145.
68 Ibid., 146.
69 Curtis is not clear what temple he has in mind until later: "the eschatological temple
associated with the restoration of D avidic rule" (p. 147).
70 Ibid., 147.
71 Ibid., 148.
72 Ibid ., 112.
300 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
leadership. Thus, in respect the leadership theme, chs. 9-14 stand partly in
continuity with chs. 1-8, and partly in discontinuity. 73
In this way, Curtis seeks to resolve what he sees as different emphases in the two
parts of the book, but the question of the intention of the final form of the book for
its readership is not really addressed.
Wenzel is concerned to read the book of Zechariah in its final form with the
insights of Mikhail Bakhtin on dialogical orientation. This means that he is
concerned with social location and audience since "the dialogical orientation of
the word focuses on the relationship between [the book of] Zechariah and its
audience." 74 For 'I\T enzel, the audience of the entire book is essentially the same as
the audience of the prophet. What is distinctive about his study is he argues that
there is no real difference in perspective between the two parts of the book.
Whereas many argue that Zech 1-8 has an imminent eschatology and 9-14 sets
the coming of God 's kingdom at more of a distance, 'l\Tenzel argues tha t from the
perspective of the book as a whole, Zechariah announces "a time of waiting" from
the beginning of the book. This is a time in which the leaders and people are
called to renewed faithfulness to the Sinai covenant, which he contends the
introduction to Zechariah (1: 1-6) establishes. This is no different to the
perspective of 9-14: 'These chapters [9-14] do not introduce a time of waiting
because the people did not obey (pace Moseman) or because the prophecies of
Zech 1-6 had failed; rather, they elaborate on what the time of waiting will bring
for the people."75 'I\T enzel demonstrates this " time of waiting" in relation to Zech 3
and 4 and then reads Zech 6 from this perspective. 76
Zechariah 6: 15 is one of 'I\T enzel's case studies to demonstrate his thesis that
the time of waiting calls for covenant obedience. He deals with this verse in the
context of the sign-action of 6:9-15, which he believes has an important role in
framing the night visions. It reveals "a time of waiting" before the complete
fulfillment of Yahweh's promises. 77 He notes the absence of a direct object with
"set on the head" ( izl~i~ lJ7iWl) in verse 11 and argues by comparison with Deut
1: 13 that it refers to making Joshua (and subsequent high priests) leaders of the
priesthood until Shoot comes. If Joshua was crowned, there is no indication that
Joshua's (political) status changes. Like Zech 3:8, "it is a revelatory sign in the
present, looking into the future." 78 He thinks it is more proba ble tha t there is only
one crown because of the singular verb in 6: 14. In this case the plural form refers
to either the materials (gold and silver), several ba nds, or several layers. Regarding
73 Ibid ., 264.
74 Wenzel, Reading Zechariah, 35-36.
75 Ibid ., 204.
76 Ibid ., 140. Also (p . 152): "In light of the shift from Zech 3:6-7 to 3:8-10, the word n~"
refers to a future figure ."
77 Ibid., 142.
78 Ibid ., 148-49.
A New Form Critical Approach to Zechariah 301
other issues he says: "A careful reading of the Hebrew text does not a nswer all of
these questions in a satisfactory m a nner. Most of the attempts to solve the riddles,
however, can be excluded on the basis of the text."79 Against Rignell, he argues
that verses 12-13 are not a reflection of the present time (referring to Joshua a nd
Zerubba bel) and there is no indication that the subject changes be tween these
verses. Indeed, the lack of an a rticle on 1\:1:1 suggests it continues to refer to "the
Bra nch " as a priest. Furthermore, if there was a separate priest reigning "on his
(own) throne, one would expect :nzl,."80 For Wenzel, the antecedents of Ll:j'~ifl in
verse 13 are the high priest Joshua a nd his successors, and the Branch. It refers to
two individuals and their roles. Since the crown will be stored away for the Branch
when he comes, "I t confirms that Zerubbabel is not the promised king. "8 1 Later he
notes that the temple that the Branch will build is not the 1"1':;), but the ,~'V :
"Zerubba bel (a nd Joshua) will finish the former; but they should be well aware
that the complete fulfillment of Yahweh's promises (concerning the ,:1':1) awaits
the a rrival of the Bra nch ."82 Those who a re far away (Ll'j(inl) refer to Jews who still
live in Babylon, of whom the individuals who provide silver a nd gold for the
crown are representatives.
In this survey of recent interpretations, \I\'enzel comes closest to reading the
book from a new form-critical perspective. He treats the book of Zechariah as a
coherent whole, coming from the prophet Zecharia h, but he does not make very
much of a ny distinction between the prophet and his book, nor of identifying the
book's origin and Sit;:, im Leben. 83 He is more interested in how the book portrays
the a udience and their relationship with Ya hweh. He also believes it is coherent in
its external environment with no evidence of failed expectations or dissonance. 84
In terms of intention, the sign-action does several things according to \1\' enzel.
It draws attention to the time of waiting once again a nd explicitly calls the people
to obedience (v. 15). It also challenges those Jews in Babylon-will they return to
the Promised La nd? This is an intention that serves an a udience after the
completion of the temple and after Zerubba bel.
M y own treatment of this passage seeks a coherent reading of it in the final
form of the book, which addresses a n a udience after the temple reconstruction, an
a udience who realize that the completion of the temple has not brought about the
restoration promised by the "earlier prophets."85 The sign-action report records
Zecharia h making a crown a nd crowning the high priest Joshua in order to
reiterate the hope for the future king of prophetic expectation, the Davidic Shoot,
79 Ibid., 149.
80 Ibid ., 149.
81 Ibid., 150.
82 Ibid ., 153.
83 Ibid., 278 .
84 Ibid., 280.
85 Petterson, Behold Your King, 100-120. More recently, Anthony R. Petterson, Haggai,
Zechariah, and Malachi, ApOTC 25 (Nottingham: Apollos, 2015), 181-91.
302 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
who is associated with God's coming kingdom (e.g. Isa II: I;Jer 23:5-6; 33: 14-18;
Ezek 17:3-6, 22-23; 21 :26-27). Nowhere in this passage or elsewhere is
Zerubbabel identified as Shoot, and this is the point-it looks to a king beyond
him. The reason for crowning the high priest Joshua is not explicit, but perhaps
against the background of Ezek 21 :3 1-32 (Eng. 21 :26-27) and Ps 89:39-41 (Eng.
89:38-40) where the rejection of the D avidic king at the exile involved a defiling of
his crown, the crowning of the high priest sanctifies the crown so that it can be
taken up in the future by its rightful heir. The word that accompanies this sign-
action (6: 12-1 3) establishes that Shoot when he comes will build the eschatological
temple hoped for by the prophets (cf. Isa 2:2-3;Jer 3:16-18; Ezek 40-42; Mic
4:1-2; Hag 2:7-9). He will bear majesty and rule as Yahwe h 's co-regent and
priest, issuing in a reign of peace (the ideas ofPs 110 seem to be reflected here). In
the meantime, the crown will remain in Zerubbabel's temple as a memorial of the
exiles and the hope that they have for his coming. Hence, in the final form of the
book, the crowning of Joshua looks forward to the crowning of the Shoot and
therefore to the coming king of Zech 9-14. The intention of the passage in its final
form is to engender hope for its audience. It also validates Zechariah as a true
prophet since his prophecy a bout the completion of the temple is realized, and it
calls on its audience to continue in covenant obedience.
86 Floyd, "Changing Views," 262. Cf. Michael H . Floyd, Minor Prophets: Part 2, FOTL 22
(Grand R apids: Eerdmans, 2000). One of the intriguing features of Floyd's own
commentary is that he refers to readers of the various parts of the book, rather than
readers of the book as a whole. For instance, in the "Intention" section of 4:1-14, he
argu es that it shows why "temple reconstruction deserves their full support" (p. 387),
clearly referring to an audience prior to 5 15 BCE. Similarly, in the "Intention" section for
6:9-1 5 it is an audience prior to the completion of the temple: "If they will act in accord
with the claim made by the sign, that only the royal temple can give this sacramental
significance to Jud ah and its leadership, their assent will cause events to unfold in a way
that confirms their faith" (p. 409). For a more recent treatment of this passage by Floyd
along similar lines, see Floyd, "Prophetic Hope," 268-96. Floyd argu es that this passage is
to be read in light of the "compositional design and rhetorical aim" of 1:7-6:1 5 (p . 273).
He identifies Shoot as Zerubbabel, but like Stead, downplays the full connotations
associated with the Shoot and the Davidic dynasty tradition, so that Shoot is only a
A New Form Critical Approach to Zechariah 303
of the identity of Shoot in Zech 6:9-15 is the different audiences of this passage
envisaged by interpreters. 87
This survey shows that interpretations that identify Shoot as Zerubbabel lack
coherence on importa nt issues (such as how the passage a uthenticated Zechariah
as sent by Ya hweh when Zerubba bel did not become king), in terms of inner-
biblical exegesis they reduce the significa nce of the wider Davidic dynasty
tradition found in other texts (Zerubbabel as a messiah, rather than the Messiah),
a nd ! or limit the intention of the passage to the audience of the prophet. At the
same time, readings that identify Shoot as a future figure a re not always clear on
the audience of the passage a nd its intention.
I am no t suggesting that the audience of the prophet is unimportant. R ather,
m y argument is that the final form of the book is addressed to a different audience
a nd that the issues that this perspective raises need to be appreciated when reading
the parts of the book. 88 At the same time, it is fascinating to see with rega rd to this
passage the number of schola rs who still seek to reconstruct the actual words (a nd
actions) of the prophet, reflecting the concerns of classical form-criticism .
Ultimately it is impossible to know if the intent of Zecharia h when he performed
this sign-action was different to how it is recorded in the book. In a ny case, his
actual words and actions have been appropriated for a broader purpose in the
final form of the book, as is the case for all the prophets.89
If the implications of the new form- criticism are taken seriously, readers of the
final form of the book of Zecharia h read it not simply as a chronicle of earlier
times, but as a communication from a n author who had an intention to do
something among his readers. Furthermore these readers we re all too conscious
that Zerubba bel did not come near to exhausting the expectations of the D avidic
temple builder (p. 282): "The aim is obviously to gain support for Zerubbabel, but only
with respect to the completion of the temple building." Note Serge Frolov, "Is the
Narrator also Among the Prophets? R eading Zechariah Without Presuppositions," Biblnt
13 (2005), 16: "What both Conrad and Floyd are offering is an intertextual reading of
'D eu tero-Zechariah' against the backdrop of 'Proto-Zechariah' rather than an integrated
reading of the book of Zechariah."
87 Of course there are other factors. For instance, if one is unconvinced of the hope for a
future D avidic king elsewhere, then one is unlikely to see it here, regardless of the
audience being addressed .
88 I recognize that this challenges prevailing approaches which interpret each part of the
book in its own terms. Furthermore, I admit that the book of Zechariah is complex and it
may lack coherence as m any have conclud ed . However, if a coherent interpretation of
the book as a whole can be found , and reading its parts in the light of the whole offers an
enriched perspective, then perhaps the original ground s for dividing the book in the first
place need to be questioned.
89 On "appropriated discourse," see Nicholas Wolterstorff, Divine Discourse: Philosophical
Riflections on the Claim that God Speaks (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995),5 1-
53. Thanks to my colleague Andrew Sloane for drawing my attention to this.
304 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
dynasty tradition found in the wider received literature (and in Zech 9-14). When
Zech 6:9-15 is read from the perspective of its final-form audience, it continues to
hold out the hope expressed elsewhere for a future Davidic king (cf. 9:9) who will
build the temple of earlier prophetic expectation, a temple which is also envisioned
at the end of the book where its holiness spills out to encompass Jerusalem a nd
Juda h (Zech 14:20-21 ). This is a much greater temple than what Zerubbabel built
a nd is accompanied by a much grander vision than was achieved under him. The
intention of Zech 6:9-15 in the final form of the book is to call its readers to an
obedience that involves more than temple building, rather, to covenantal
obedience to Ya hweh. 9o At the same time, the passage continues to engender hope
a mongst the final-form a udience for Yahweh's coming kingdom, just like the
previous visions, a nd the book as a whole. 9 1
90 In calling for covenantal obedience, this passage functions like the call to repent in I: 1-
6 and the call for obedience in chapters 7-8 (e.g., 7:9-10; 8:16-17). Yet this obedience is
not what will bring in the kingdom, rather the people are to obey in view of its coming.
91 C£ Ehud Ben Zvi, "The Concept of Prophetic Books and Its Historical Setting," in The
Production if Prophecy; Constructing Prophecy and Prophets in Yehud, ed. Diana V. Edelman and
Ehud Ben Zvi (London: Equinox, 2009), 75. "The prophetic books are about hope." C£
Mark]. Boda, "M essengers of Hope in Haggai-Malachi," ]SOT32 (2007): 11 3- 3 1.
15
This collection of studies shows that current "form criticism" has a variety of
concerns a nd thus includes a variety of procedures and assumptions. Past form
criticism often acted as a branch of historical criticism, with an interest in
reconstructing the oral background of texts. That approach was not antiquarian,
to be sure, since many believed that oral expressions represent the dynamic
character of life as a whole a nd of faith more specifically. The historicist phase of
form criticism came to a close when scholars recognized that form-critical
a nalysis is not very helpful for placing traditions in time and place. On the basis
of the essays before us, it is now possible to gain a composite picture of at least
some of the " new" form criticism.
A basic feature of what has been called "form criticism" is its interest in the
relations between language, thought, and life. Redditt mentions this
characteristic, and it is exhibited system atically, for instance, in Gerstenberger's
present contribution. Since relations are repeatable, form criticism has a general
concern. In fact, "genres"-which are verbal patterns exhibiting the three
aspects that have been mentioned-are treated in most of the essays. Sweeney,
Nogalski, a nd Bulkeley deal with the genre of a prophetic book as a whole. More
specifically, Tiemeyer describes patterning for vision reports, Dempsey for woes
a nd promises, a nd Boda for huma n address to a nd a call for silence before Deity.
Most genres that are reasonably broad in their scope transcend a single
culture. Several contributors-including Floyd, Trotter, Gerstenberger, a nd
Bulkeley-thus deal with more or less comparable formatio ns in neighboring
cultures. However, unlike much of earlier form criticism, little attention is paid
here to non-neighboring cultures, although Gerstenberger a nd perhaps other
- 305-
306 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
contributors have done so elsewhere (of course, the essay format provides limits
to what can be said). Among the human sciences, cognitive linguistics makes an
appearance in the discussion of metaphor theory by Stovell.
The new form criticism focuses, at least first of all, on the text as it lies at
hand, as Tiemeyer and Petterson explicitly emphasize. Since there may be
tensions within the text as it stands, Timmer distinguishes between "cohesion"
on the textual/linguistic level and conceptual "coherence" that recognizes
"meaningful interrelations of various sections of the text." Both coherence and
incoherence are interesting for synchronic reader-response views, but this
standard is of limited value for historical criticism, which should be based
primarily on allusions to known events and conditions. Most of the essays do add
a diachronic perspective. Floyd, Tiemeyer, Nogalski, and Redditt explicitly
defend that combination.
Earlier form criticism had widely assumed that early oral patterns were
"pure" and rigid. In contrast, Stovell, Tiemeyer, Toffelmire, and Redditt,
among others, point out that genres are usually fluid and often mixed. Indeed,
according to relational theory-upon which I have reported, as is mentioned
briefly by Nogalski-all actual relations require some looseness in order to be
"relations." However, that same theory also holds that relations involve, at least
partially, a theoretically meaningful connectivity, which in traditional rhetoric is
called "aptness." This aspect interested Gunkel and his followers but is not
overtly addressed in these essays.
In a partial contrast with Gunkel's use of the term Sit;:, im Leben, which
referred to a normal context in life, some scholars have come to speak of a Sit;:, in
der Literatur. Toffelmire points out that this relation can be described as "co-
textual" and that a "context of situation" would be in addition to that. If "life
context" is conceived in terms of dynamic human patterns that are in many
ways continuous although varied, form-criticism has a trans-chronic and trans-
geographic reach. Potential relevance for the present is, in fact, expressly
indicated by Dempsey and Boda.
I have been asked to state clearly the position from which I operate. The
following sketch represents succinctly what I have described and demonstrated
elsewhere.
The special contribution of historical criticism lies in its focus on
particularity. This supported the possibility of change during a period in which
"modernity" came to be embraced as a positive value in contrast to stability.
Generic criticism, which came to be called "form criticism," balanced this focus
by attention to commonality between expressions in different places and times.
Developments in the disciplines of biology and linguistics can serve as
illustrations. At one time, they focused on standard forms, viewed as "essences."
Then they became interested in evolutionary history. Now they deal heavily with
relational processes, as Saussure famously argued for linguistics. This newer way
recognizes that, while objects and events are particular, relations are general in
Goals and Processes 307
1 Martin J. Buss, The Prophetic Word of Hosea: A Morphological Stu4Ji, BZAW III (Berlin:
Topelmann, 1969). Since then I have treated Hosea with regard to a number of issues
beyond what can be mentioned here in Toward Understanding the Hebrew Canon, Hebrew
Bible Monographs 61 (Sheffield: Sheffield Phoenix, 2013).
Goals and Processes 309
have a doubtful basis. Nevertheless, there are more issues that can be discussed,
as is to be expected.
16
Robert R . Wilson
Beginning roughly in the middle of the twentieth century, the classic form-
critical approach to biblical literature began to undergo a number of
transformations, a process which finally culminated in what this volume
designa tes "new form criticism." Although it is not yet clear that "new form
criticism" represents a new or even a coherent approach to biblical
interpreta tion, it does seem to have certain tendencies, which in various ways are
reflected in the essays contained in this volume. The essays themselves are
complex, creative, and often quite provocative, but constraints of space prevent
me from dealing with each of them in detail. Rather, in the essay that follows I
will concentrate on the ways in which the new form criticism informs these
studies of prophetic literature. By way of introduction, I will first indicate briefly
why the older form-critical method was modified, and then I will try to indicate
some of the major emphases of the new, revised version of the method. Finally, I
will indicate areas in which the new form-critical approach requires further
research and how some of the authors in this volume address the remaining
issues. Like the volume itself, which focuses on the Book of the Twelve, I will
confine my remarks to prophetic literature.
From its inception in the late nineteenth century, the form-critical method
displayed some imprecision in explaining its focus and goals. Hermann Gunkel,
who is usually credited with developing and popularizing the method, was
interested initially in writing a history of ancient Israelite literature, a task which,
in his view, required dealing both with Israel's oral literature and with the
- 311 -
312 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
written literature that later grew from it. For Gunkel, this sort of study involved
recovering the literary genres (Gattungen) that Israel employed, first at the oral
level and then at the written one. The result of such an effort could then be
called Gattungsgeschichte (the history of genres) or Formgeschichte (the history of
literary forms), although Gunkel himself would eventually question the use of
these labels. l Lying behind this description of the enterprise was Gunkel's belief
that oral literature was somewhat formulaic and that oral genres would follow
regular patterns. At this point he was probably being influenced by the new
academic discipline of folklore studies, which began to be prominent in
Germany in the late nineteenth century. In some cases the oral patterns were
preserved when the material eventually reached written form. In these cases, a
careful reading of Israelite written literature could allow a reconstruction of the
oral originals. As part of the recovery of the original oral genres or forms,
Gunkel also tried to recover the setting in the life of the people (Sit;: im Volksleben)
in which the oral material was used.
Gunkel formulated his form-critical program in an academic atmosphere
that was heavily influenced by German Romanticism, so it is not surprising that
he, and even more obviously some of his later students, accepted the tenets of
the Romantic Movement without examining them. In particular, he believed
that inspiration, whether artistic or religious, was rooted in a personal, almost
mystical experience and that the recovery of that experience depended on
getting as close as possible to the original event. As this idea was worked out later
by his successors in the movement, this quest for origins caused biblical scholars
to see the oral speech of inspired individuals to be superior to later written
versions of the material, which was likely to be the uninspired elaboration of
scholars. Similarly, the romantics saw poetry to be more inspired than prose,
and the uneducated but inspired common people to be preferred to the educated
but uninspired writers. As form criticism developed, there was in some circles so
much energy expended trying to recover the oral, inspired material that the later
written form of that material was undervalued or ignored. The effort at recovery
sometimes did violence to the written text by stripping away as inauthentic the
uninspired prose in order to reach the inspired oral, usually poetic, nugget that
lay buried within. Genuine inspiration lay only within the small core, and in
order to reach it, much of the surrounding text had to be removed . In
1 For Gunkel's own brief description of his program, see Hermann Gunkel, "Israelite
Literary History," in Hermann Gunkel, Water for a Thirsty Land: Israelite Literature and
Religion, ed . K . C . Hanson, trans. A. K . Dallas and James Schaaf (Minneapolis: Fortress,
2001 ), 31-41 . A brief history of the development of form criticism may be found in
Antony F. Campbell, "Form Criticism's Future," in Sweeney and Ben Zvi, Changing Face
qfForm Criticism, 15-23.
New Form Criticism and the Prophetic Literature 313
theological terms, genuine revelation had to be recovered by removing all of the
later uninspired additions and modifications. 2
In fairness to Gunkel, it is importa nt to note that he himself was not guilty of
m aking some of the questiona ble methodological moves that routinely m a rked
the work of later form critics. To be sure, Gunkel did feel that the narratives of
Genesis, for example, originated in short, inspired tales produced by the
common people and then circulated orally until they were later written down
a nd elaborated by the uninspired authors of the biblical texts. However, his
treatment of these materials in his commentary on Genesis by no means neglects
the actual written text of the book. He tries to recover the oral originals, but he
also analyzes the written text as the last stage of the book's litera ry history. 3
Nevertheless, Gunkel's failure to elaborate his method clearly a nd to resolve
a mbiguities in his descriptions of it created problems which later generations of
form critics were una ble to resolve. For example, he failed to distinguish clearly
between the German terms Gattung, usually translated "genre" a nd Form, "form "
or "structure," and as a result created confusion about what scholars were
supposed to be recovering or tracking. "Genre," as the term is used in English ,
usually refers to larger literary categories, such as "narrative," "oracular speech,"
"la ments," and the like. On the other ha nd, "form" does not usually describe a
category but the structure of a specific text. One term is quite general, while the
other is very specific, although scholars often use the terms intercha ngeably, as
do some of the authors in this volume. There is still some work to be done to
cla rify terms if form criticism is to continue to be used as a n interpretive
method.4
Furthermore, in practice form critics have had great difficulty recovering
the settings of the literary genres, in part because Gunkel was unclear about
whether the setting referred to the language used in the genre or to the social
location in which the genre was actually used. The two a re sometimes related ,
but not always. For example, Gunkel notes that the home of legal la nguage is the
law court, but the appearance of such language in a prophetic text does not
necessarily mea n that the prophets carried out their activities in legal settings,
although some scholars have tried to advance this argument.5 As a result of this
looseness with which Gunkel referred to setting, there has been little agreement
on questions of setting in form-critical analyses. The one exception has been the
2 The role of the Romantic Movement in shaping form criticism has often been noted .
See most recently Marvin A. Sweeney and Ehud Ben Zvi, "Introduction," in Sweeney
and Ben Zvi, Changing Face ifForm Criticism, 2-3.
3 Hermann Gunkel, Genesis, trans. Mark E. Biddle (Macon, GA: Mercer University Press,
1997 [translated from the third German edition, 19 10] ).
4 For a discussion of these two terms and their meanings, see Campbell, "Form
temple setting of the Psalms, although even here some literary forms in Psalms,
such as the individual lament, were surely used on occasions of personal
mourning and were not confined to the context of formal worship. In short,
Gunkel's concept of setting was slippery, and determining the settings of literary
forms has frustrated form critics for generations.
Finally, the description of distinct oral literary patterns has often been
difficult and has led to scholarly disagreements. Many of the reconstructions
contain litde that is detailed enough to identify a given literary form clearly. For
example, the ancestral narratives of Genesis were analyzed by Gunkel simply as
Sagen, a label which basically means that the narratives were originally oral
rather than written. At the written level, the narratives exhibit few distinctive
formulaic patterns, and there is much formal variation in individual texts, so it is
no surprise that the reconstructed oral forms are similarly diverse. In terms of
literary form, form criticism has had its greatest success in analyzing Psalm
patterns and wisdom genres, but even in this case a good bit of formal fluidity
still exists.
The issue of the form criticism of prophetic texts is also a complicated one.
Gunkel actually wrote very litde about prophetic literature, but it is clear that he
thought about the development of prophetic books in the same way that he did
other types of Israelite literature. In his view, prophecy was originally an oral
phenomenon, and each instance of prophecy began with the private, mystical
experience of the prophet. After this experience had ended, the prophet
delivered the revelation orally to an audience, although Gunkel is unclear about
how the experience was transformed into an oral oracle. Eventually the oracles
were written down, perhaps by members of the audience, but Gunkel is a bit
vague about how this process eventually led to the prophetic books that we now
have. He was also unclear about the setting of prophetic activity, which seems to
have taken place in a number of different social locations, if the biblical
narratives themselves are to be believed. Similarly, Gunkel did not try to
describe a distinctive literary form associated with prophecy, either at the oral or
written level, and he recognized that prophets used a great variety of speech
forms in their work. 6
Gunkel's preliminary remarks about prophetic literature were eventually
expanded by Claus \J\T estermann. 7 Westermann argued that the announcement
of judgment was in fact the original oral prophetic literary form, but his
description of the form had so few distinctive features that scholars quickly began
6 Hermann Gunkel, Die Propheten (Gottingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1917), 1-31,
104-140; Hermann Gunkel, "The Prophets: Oral and vVritten," in Water for a Thirsty
Land,85-133.
7 Claus Westermann, Grun4formenprophetischer Rede (Munich: Kaiser, 1960; 2nd ed . 1964);
English translation: Basic Forms of Prophetic Speech, trans. Hugh Clayton White
(Philadelphia: Westminster, 1991 ).
New Form Criticism and the Prophetic Literature 315
to doubt the form 's existence. Furthermore, there are few pure examples of the
form , and the ones that do exist are found primarily in Deuteronomistic
literature, thus raising the possibility that if the form did exist at the oral level it
was not widespread. Furthermore, 'J\Testermann did little to clarify the problem
of the setting of either prophetic speech or prophetic activity, although he
implied a juridical setting for both, an idea that was eventually explored by
others. Finally, he did not deal with prophetic promises at all, following the
scholarly consensus of the time that salvation oracles in Isra el were a late
developmen t. 8 Later form-critical schola rship attempted to refine Westermann's
work, but for the most pa rt efforts at reconstructing original ora cle forms failed
to convince the majority of scholars, and attempts to deal with the question of
setting led mostly to frustration .
It is against these schola rly developments that the m a in emphases of the
" new form criticism" must be unders tood. Although the designation " new form
criticism" suggests that the practitioners of the approach see themselves in
continuity with the classic form- critical method, so much of Gunkel's original
program has been jettisoned that observers might wonder why the traditional
terminology is used at all. Although the new form critics exhibit a good bit of
variation in their approaches, most of them share some obvious similarities.
First, there is a tendency for the new form critics who study prophecy to give up
Gunkel's quest for oral m aterial that might lie beneath the surviving biblical text.
They do this in varying degrees. In its most extreme form, this disinterest in the
oral original denies that oral oracles ever existed, a point of view that dovetails
nicely with minimalist claims that prophecy as it is described in the biblical text
never existed at all. More moderate is the claim that oral prophecy proba bly
existed in Isra el but that scholars can no longer reconstruct its characteristics and
certainly cannot recover its oral literary forms with a ny certainty. In either case,
many new form critics believe that recovery of the oral level is irreleva nt to the
in terpre ti ve task. 9
8 Westermann eventually took up the question of promise oracles in his Prophetic Oracles if
Salvation in the Old Testament, trans. Keith Crim (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1991).
For an early critical analysis of Westermann's work, see Robert R. Wilson, "Form-
Critical Investigation of the Prophetic Literature: The Present Situation," SBLSP 1973,
1:100-27. A more recent critique may be found in David L. Petersen, "The Basic Forms
of Prophetic Literature," in Sweeney and Ben Zvi, Changing Face ifForm Criticism, 269-75.
9 For a brief summary of the perspectives of the new form critics, see Michael H. Floyd 's
article in this volume, pp. 17-18. Earlier treatments may be found in Sweeney and Ben
Zvi, "Introduction," 3- 5; and Campbell, "Form Criticism's Future," 24-27. For the
extreme view that Israelite prophets did not exist or that their words can no longer be
recovered, see, among others, Robert P. Carroll, "Poets Not Prophets," ]SOT 27 (1983):
25-31. More moderate, but still denying that oral prophecy can be recovered, is Philip R.
Davies, '''Pen ofIron, Point of Diamond' (Jer. 17:1): Prophecy as Writing," in Writings and
316 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Second, just as many of the new form critics dispense with the quest for oral
literary forms, so also many of them do not attach any importance to the
traditional effort to reconstruct the original setting of prophetic speech or
activity. For the scholars who deny the existence of prophets and prophecy, the
disinterest in setting is an obvious corollary of their belief. For the more
moderate scholars who believe that there was a setting for early prophetic
activity, the exercise of reflecting on setting is so fruitless that it pays no
interpretive dividends.
Third, rather than focusing their attention on what precedes the biblical text
as we now have it, the new form critics begin and end their investigations with
the text itself. This means that for the new form critics, literary forms are in fact
descriptions of the actual features of specific texts in all of their particularity. The
interest of classic form criticism in typical literary patterns has been replaced by
a focus on individual texts that for the most part do not contain much in the way
of patterns. It is at this point that observers might wonder how the new form
criticism differs from a purely literary approach, like the sensitive readings of
Robert Alter, the holistic approach ofMoshe Greenberg and others, or even the
various canonical approaches inspired by the work of Brevard Childs.
Fourth, just as the minimalist historians date the writing ofIsrael's history to
the exilic period or later, so also the new form critics locate the formation of
Israelite prophetic literature in the exilic and early post exilic periods and
attribute prophetic compositions from those periods to the work of anonymous
scribal elites. According to most new form critics, the work of shaping prophetic
texts began in the exile, in Babylon, but was finished by scribes in Israel after the
return. IO
Finally, some of the new form critics have recently argued that the aim of
literary analysis should be the study of whole prophetic books, and that the
creation of such books was the aim of the scribes that wrote them. In short, the
books as we have them are not simply the result of agglomeration and mild
editing over time but have been intentionally crafted by the scribes to reflect
their own interests. Taking this process one step farther, in recent years there has
been an additional concern with describing how books were gathered together in
groups by the scribes and shaped so as to be unified expressions of their creators'
views. Examples of this scholarly interest may be found in recent studies of how
Speech in Israelite and Ancient Near Eastern Prophecy, ed. Ehud Ben Zvi and Michael H. Floyd
(Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2000), 65-81.
10 For a discussion of exilic and postexilic dates for the formation of prophetic books, see
Michael H . Floyd, "Basic Trends in the Form-Critical Study of Prophetic Texts," in
Sweeney and Ben Zvi, Changing Face of Form Criticism, 298-311 . For efforts at
reconstructing this process in greater detail, see the essays contained in Diana V.
Edelman and Ehud Ben Zvi, eds., TIe Production of Prophecy; Constructing Prophecy and Prophets
in Yehud (London: Equinox, 2009).
New Form Criticism and the Prophetic Literature 317
the Torah was formed a nd how the individual books making up the Book of the
Twelve were finally brought into a unified literary whole. I I
Each of these developments reflected in the new form criticism raises new
scholarly issues which deserve further investigation. The omission of a
consideration of possible oral origins from the study of prophetic literature may
be understandable in the light of the controverted his tory of efforts to reconstruct
oral m aterial, but this omission does raise a number of problems. In the first
place, comparative evidence from contemporary prophecy studies a nd from the
a ncient Near East suggests that prophecy as a religious phenomenon is initially
oral in character everywhere it appea rs. This evidence also suggests that
prophets exhibit stereotypical behavior, including patterned actions and
speech .12 In theory, then, oral prophecy in Israel should be a subject worth
exploring, if there were some way to do it. In the second place, to ignore the oral
stage of the prophetic process in Israel is to risk removing the prophet from the
history of Israelite prophetic literature, thereby creating some major a uthority
issues. 13 As a religious phenomenon, prophecy is of interest to a contemporary
a udience or to later readers only if the prophet in question actually received a
divine revelation. Later readers of Amos would not be interested in the book if
they did not believe that a genuine prophet was the source of what it contains. In
short, the a uthority of prophetic writings seem s to depend on the existence of a
prophet who actually existed or who was thought to have actually existed, no
m atter how fictionalized later biographies of the prophet might be. If prophecy
in Israel really began with late scribal literary productions, then the scribes either
had to convince their audience that a genuine historical prophet existed in the
past or that the scribes themselves did what they did as a result of divine
inspiration. Both of these claims have been advanced in recent scholarship, but
the whole question requires fur ther study.14 Finally, it is worth noting that oral
prophecy not only enters the scholarly discussion when the beginning of a text's
II See in particular Ehud Ben Zvi, "The Prophetic Book: A Key Form of Prophetic
Literature," in Sweeney and Ben Zvi, Changing Face ofForm Criticism, 276-97 .
12 See most recently M artti Nissinen, "Since When Do Prophets Write?," in Kristin De
Troyer et a!., eds., In the Footsteps of Sherlock Holmes: Studies in the Biblical Text in Honour of
Anneli Admelaeus (Leuven: Peeters, 2014), 585-606.
13 This problem is recognized and discussed in Michael H . Floyd's article in the volume,
p. 17-36.
14 For preliminary discussions of this problem, see Hans M . Barstad, "\lVhat Prophets Do:
Reflections on Past Reality in the Book ofJ eremiah," in Hans M. Barstad and Reinhard
G . Kratz, eds., Prophecy in the Book ofJeremiah, BZAW 388 (Berlin: D e Gruyter, 2009), 10-
32; and Stuart Weeks, 'Jeremiah as a Prophetic Book," in Barstad and Kratz, Prophecy in
the Book of Jeremiah, 265-74. It is interesting to note that even Ehud Ben Zvi, who
advocates fo cusing on whole prophetic books, stresses that the books identify their subj ect
matter as coming from a single prophet, whom the scribes supply with a fi ctitious
biography. See his discussion in "Prophetic Book," 284.
318 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
history is being considered, but also after the text has been fixed in wntmg.
Written texts are often reoralized in order to pass them on to illiterate a udiences.
Thus written texts do not seem to have existed only in written form after their
creation, but they beca me oral again under certain conditions. This
phenomenon of alternation between the written a nd the oral has been noted in
several recent scholarly studies a nd requires more ela boration. 15
Given the neglect of oral prophecy by the new form critics, it would seem
reasona ble to conclude that they would also not be interested in the question of
the setting of prophetic material. Although this is true in some cases, in fact what
seems to be happening is that the question of setting is now being explored in
connection with the circumstances of the text's final writing rather than in
connection with a hypothetical reconstruction of the circumstances of the
material's origin. Historical reconstruction is still required, although the focus of
scholarly inquiry is now the exilic and postexilic periods rather than earlier
periods in Israelite history. Fortunately for these recen t efforts to understand
more clearly the d yna mics of literary production in the Neo-Babylonian and
Persian periods, there are now new resources for understanding the problems
facing the J udean community in exile. However, this new m aterial has not yet
been studied in detail. 16
Because the new form critics have shifted the focus of their attention to the
exilic a nd postexilic periods and to scribal activities in those periods, there has
been much new research on scribal activity in Israel. 17 In general, scholarship on
prophetic books has attributed their creation to scribal elites, probably associated
with the palace or the temple, although both of these suggested venues seem
improba ble during the exile itself, a nd a royal setting seem s unlikely after the
exile. The attribution of prophetic books to scribes therefore seems to make
sense, but it leaves unanswered such crucial questions as who the scribes were
a nd why they were interested in producing prophetic books. If they were not
concerned simply to pass along earlier prophetic stories a nd oracles, then they
must have had other purposes in mind. '!\Then the new form critics have
15 This phenomenon has been noted particularly in recent studies ofJer 36. See initially
Susan Niditch, Oral World and Written Word (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1996),
104-5; and the more detailed exploration of the idea in Joachim Schaper, "On Writing
and R eciting in J eremiah 36," in Barstad and Kratz, eds., Prophecy in the Book qfJeremiah,
137-47 .
16 For the most recent discussions of Jude an communities in exile, see Laurie E. Pearce,
"Continuity and Normality in Sources Relating to the Judean Exile," HBAI 3 (2014):
163-84. T he cuneiform texts on which this article is based have now been published in
Laurie Pearce and Cornelia Wunsch, Documents qfJudean Exiles and West Semites in Babylonia
in the Collection qfDavid Sqfer (Bethesda, MD: C DL, 2014).
17 See particularly William M . Schniedewind, How the Bible Became a Book (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2004); and Karel van der Toorn, Scribal Culture and the
Making qfthe Hebrew Bible (Cambridge: Harvard U niversity Press, 2007).
New Form Criticism and the Prophetic Literature 319
explored the question of scribal interests and intentions at all, they have come up
with a variety of hypotheses, and to date there is no scholarly agreement in sight.
The most specific suggestion is also the narrowest: The scribes represented the
interests of their employers, primarily the government and! or the temple.
However, this explanation seems inadequate, given the fact that the prophetic
literature does not seem particularly interested in or supportive of either the
government or the temple. It is therefore likely that scribal interests, whatever
they were, are being viewed too narrowly. To be sure, it is certainly possible that
the scribes represented the interests of the temple, but they could have
represented the interests of other groups as well. They may also have simply
represented their own idiosyncratic opinions. Recent studies of text production
and scribal activity at Qumran also suggest another possibility. Scribes may have
participated in larger groups and shaped the texts that they eventually wrote on
the basis of oral conversations with other scribes. In this case it is possible that
the prophetic books as we have them were the results of oral interpretive activity
grounded in earlier texts or traditions. In such cases, the scribes may have
exercised some creativity as they dealt with their inherited material, but they
may have finally claimed authority for what they did because of their belief in
the divine inspiration of their source material rather than in the divine
inspiration of their own activities. IS However that may be, if the new form critics
continue to attribute prophetic writings to scribes, then they need to engage in a
more thorough investigation of scribalism than has been undertaken so far.
Finally, scholarly study of collections of texts such as the Book of the Twelve
is certainly important and has produced some interesting results already, but a
number of questions remain to be answered. How thorough was scribal editing
across the whole collection? Why are individual books set in different time
periods and cultural settings? How was this large collection intended to function
at the oral level when it was read to an audience? \l\Tould subtle editorial links
have been noticeable to a listening audience? What were the interests of the
scribes who created the collection? Do the varying orders of the books in
different traditions suggest different purposes in the minds of the scribes who
created them?1 9 Clearly much more work needs to be done on book collections
of this sort.
Seen against this background, it is clear that all of the authors who have
contributed to this volume are aware in varying degrees of both the perspectives
of the new form criticism and the problems that remain. As a whole, the authors
share the major claim of new form criticism that interpretation should focus on
the final form of the texts as we now have them. There is little interest in these
essays in recovering earlier literary levels and certainly not in reconstructing
earlier oral forms. However, when analyzing individual texts, the authors apply
various methods of reading, few of which resemble the focus of classic form
criticism on formulaic literary patterns. Exceptions appear in the studies of
Michael Floyd, James Trotter, and Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer. Floyd discusses the
tradition of lists in the ancient Near East and suggests that such lists might have
influenced the literary formation of prophetic oracles. 2o Like other contributors,
he uses data from another field to understand the biblical text, so in this sense he
is not simply doing a close reading of the biblical material. Trotter's contribution
is an interesting study of the rib or lawsuit form, which classic form critics
sometimes thought to be at the heart of prophetic speech. Trotter accepts the
Persian period dating of the prophetic books, and using comparative material
from the legal realm in Mesopotamia, asks whether or not the audience at the
time of the texts' creation would have recognized the legal allusions. His negative
answer would not please classic form critics, but his approach to the problem
would certainly be recognizable to them. He is talking about literary forms and
allusions in a particular setting, which is a very form-critical enterprise, although
the setting with which he deals is the matrix of the reception of the text and not
the matrix of its hypothetical point of origin. 21 Tiemeyer's careful study also
investigates a traditional form-critical issue by analyzing the use of vision reports
in Amos and Zechariah to see whether or not the latter depends on the former,
thus blending an interest in a traditional literary form with the question of
resonance within the Book of the Twelve. Her negative conclusions are a useful
reminder of the complexity of the editorial history of the Twelve.
Other essays do not explore literary structure as much as they pay attention
to contents, themes, and motifs. In this category would be Beth M . Stovell's
literary study of textual allusions in the Book of the Twelve. In this essay ancient
Near Eastern comparative material is not used, but there is heavy use of
contemporary literary studies of metaphor to better understand the biblical text.
Carol]. Dempsey too studies content and analyzes the language of weal and woe
in the Book of the Twelve, a major departure from the classic form-critical
19 The last question is prompted by the discussion of the variations in the exemplars of the
Twelve in Sweeney's essay in this volume, pp. 137-6l.
20 See above, Michael H . Floyd, pp. 21-3l.
21 See above James M . Trotter, pp. 63-74.
New Form Criticism and the Prophetic Literature 321
It appears, then, that the authors that are represented in this volume exhibit
the major characteristics of the new form criticism, but many of them are also
aware of the problems that the new approach raises, and some of the essays
attempt to address these problems, at least obliquely. However, the fact remains
that additional research still needs to be done on some of the issues highlighted
earlier in this essay. In particular, the issues surrounding exilic and postexilic
scribal activity need to be explored to determine the settings in which Israel's
scribes worked, the methods that they used, and the interests that caused them to
write as they did. The authors in this volume touch on these issues and are
certainly are aware of them, but many questions still need to be answered before
the field can advance.
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Achtemeier, Elizabeth. Preachingftom the ivfinor Prophets: Texts and Sermon Suggestions. Grand
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Ackroyd, Peter. "Isaiah I-XII: Presentation of a Prophet." Pages 16-48 in Congress Volume
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Ancient Sources Index
- 347 -
348 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
2 Samuel, 206 1 Chronicles Esther, 160, 206
7, 292 3:21 ,2 15 1:10,254
7:1 3,292 12:10,2 15 3:12- 14, 23
18, 254 16:25,253 8:9- 10, 23
18:24-28, 22
2 Chronicles, 292 Job, 198
I Kings 12:1-11 , 255 1- 2, 276
4:20, 11 3 14:9-15 ,255 9, 126
4: 32, 104 15: 18,292 12:20,259
5:5 , 293 20, 140 33:3, 258
8:33-34, 123 20:20-26, 145 42: 1- 9, 126
8:35-36, 123 24:4-14, 292
8:37-40, 123 27:1-4, 292 Psalms, 160- 61 , 196,
12:25- 33, 123 29: 1-11 , 292 284
14:25-28, 255 29:35-36, 292 1- 4 1, 160
14:27 ,22 30: 1-12, 22 4:1 , 174
18, 140, 148 30:6-9, 23 6:1 , 174
18:1-22:40, 126 34:1-8, 292 8,131
19:4, 150 8:6- 9, 126
22,80 Ezra, 126,2 18,274 15:3, 258
22-23, 153 1,274 18, 195
22: 17 , 77, 79-80 1:8,279 22:4,259
22:19-22, 77, 79-80 2, 279 24:4, 258
2:2, 274, 279 27:10, 127
2 Kings, 276-77 2:64-66 , 279 30, 195
3:10, 188 5:1 , 155 32, 195
6:5, 188 6:14, 155 33, 131
6:15, 188 6:1 4-15, 294 34, 195
8:17-20, 22 8:9, 215 40:1- 10, 195
9-10, 143 40:7- 11 , 126
10:32- 33, 144 Nehemiah , 126, 218, 42- 72, 160
12:18-19, 144 224, 274 44,124, 131
13: 1-5, 144 1:5 , 194 46, 131
13:22-25, 144 1: 11 , 194 46:10, 104
14:23-29, 144 7, 279 47,130, 131
14:25, 140, 149, 172 7:62- 65 , 279 48, 131
14:25-28, 101 8:1 - 6,121 49:4, 104
15-17,33 8:2- 8, 124, 131 50,126
17:7-23, 124 8:7- 8, 121 50:7-23 , 126
20:3,194 9, 124 51:17-19,126
22,75 10:1- 40, 124 54:1,174
23:25-27, 124 10:6,2 15 60, 131
24: 13,275 12:25, 21 5 61:1 , 174
13:22, 22 66, 131
Chronicles, 214 66:1 3-20, 195
67 :1 , 174
Ancient Sources Index 349
4:1 3,82, 124, 133, 6:9, 102, 200 8:1 - 3, 75 , 77 , 80, 82,
193,2 16 6:9-1 0, 122 88- 89, 179
4:1 4,102 6:10,200 8:2, 82- 83 , 85- 86, 88-
5, 123, 19 1 6:11-14, 122 89, 192
5- 6, 122, 148 6:1 2,103 8:2- 3,89
5:1 , 122- 23, 170 6:14,102 8:3, 82, 83 , 86- 89, 93 ,
5:1-2, 193 7, 11 9, 191-92, 194 200
5:1-6: 14, 147 7- 8,80,92, 192 8:4- 14, 87- 88, 180
5:2, 123 7- 9, 75,83,85- 86,90, 8:9, 89
5:2- 7, 122 95, 148, 266 9, 89, 148, 192- 93,
5:4, 124 7:1 , 82, 83, 191 241
5:4-6,2 14 7:1-3,75,77,80, 82, 9: I , 82- 83, 89, 193
5:4- 7, 124 93,95, 179 9:1- 4, 75 , 77 , 80, 83 ,
5:5- 6, 193 7:1-6,77,79- 80, 192 89- 90, 95 , 179- 80,
5:6, 122, 124, 193 7:1-8,88,90, 192 192
5:7, 193 7:1-9:10, 102 9:4, 82
5:7-1 2, 101 7:1-9: 15, 147 9:5- 6, 82, 124, 133,
5:8- 9, 124, 193, 216 7:2, 82, 95 193, 216
5:8- 9, 82, 133, 193 7:3,82,86,95, 180, 9:7- 10, 82
5:10-1 3, 122, 193 191-92 9:7- 15, 82 , 181
5: 14, 124 7:4, 82- 83, 19 1 9:1 1- 15, 82, 130, 14-6,
5:14-1 5, 124 7:4-6, 75, 77,80, 82, 266, 293
5: 15, 124 93,95, 179 9:1 3, 176, 181
5:1 6, 188 7:5 , 82, 19 1-92
5: 16-1 7, 122- 23 7:6,82, 86, 180 Obadiah , 60, 119,
5:1 8- 20, 101- 2, 123, 7:7, 82- 83 133 , 139, 140- 41 ,
146 7:7- 8, 79, 87- 89,93, 148, 171 , 174, 177-
5:1 8- 27 , 99, 101-3 95 78, 182, 203, 206,
5:20, 10 1 7:7- 9, 75, 77,80, 82, 215 , 221 - 22, 231 - 35,
5:21, 101 88- 89, 179, 192 237- 38, 239, 241 - 44,
5:21-24, 101, 122 7:8, 82, 85,88- 89,95 267 , 290
5:22, 10 1 7:8- 9, 88- 89 1, 133, 148- 49, 23 1,
5:23, 10 1 7:9, 82- 83, 86- 89, 93 , 233- 34
5:24, 10 1, 103 95, 165 1-5, 149, 178
5:27, 122 7:10- 17, 6, 87 , 148, 1-9, 242
6: 1, 170 165- 66, 180, 182, 1-1 4, 178
6:1-3, 123 192 1-21, 149
6:1-6,10 1 7:11,87, 165 2, 233
6:1-1 4, 99,10 1-3 7: 14-15 , 192 2- 5, 232
6:1-7,102 7:17,87, 192 2- 10, 235- 37, 240
6:4- 6, 122 8, 87 , 192 3- 4, 237
6:4-7, 102, 123 8:1, 82 4,233- 34, 236, 239
6:6, 122 8: 1- 2, 79, 87- 90, 93, 4- 5, 236
6:7- 8, 122 192 5, 236
6:8, 102 5- 7, 234
354 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
6, 232 2, 173, 174, 177, 195, 1:5 , 31 - 32
6- 7, 178 196 1:6- 7,32
7, 180,232,236 2:1 , 195 1:6- 15, 33
8,232-34, 237 2:1-11 , 149 1:7, 50
8- 9,178 2:2, 204 1:8, 32, 125, 127
9, 232, 236- 37 2:3, 195 1:8- 9, 165
10, 232, 235-36, 239 2:3-10, 195 1:8- 16, 32, 107
10-14, 178, 235 2:5, 177, 195 1:9, 32
II , 237 2:8, 177 1:10- 15,32
11-14,23 1,235- 37, 2:9-10, 177 1:12, 32
239, 240 2: II , 195 1:1 3,3 1- 32
12, 233 3, 196 1:1 4, 31 - 32
12-15, 188 3:1-1 0, 149 1:15,3 1- 33
15, 178,222,233- 34 3:1-4:11 , 149 1:16, 33
15-16, 149,234-36, 3:8, 196, 204 1:22,3 1
240 3:9, 196 2:1 - 2, 106
15-17 ,236- 37 4:1-11 , 149 2:1 - 5, 106- 8
15-21 ,235,237- 38 4:2, 150, 196 2:1 - 5: 14, 15 1
16, 222, 233- 34, 239 4:2-3, 196 2:1 - 13, 99, 105- 8, 151
16-21 , 178,23 1 4:8-9, 196 2:2, 106
17 , 176, 222, 237-38 2:3 , 106
17-18,237 Micah, 31, 34-36, 2: 3- 5, 106
17-21 ,235- 36,240 39-41 , 43- 50,52-53, 2:3- 7, 106
18, 222, 233- 34, 237 55, 57,59,60- 61 , 64, 2:4, 106, 133
18-21 ,237 99, 105- 8, 125, 127, 2:5 , 106
19,222,233,237- 38 129, 130, 133, 139, 2:6, 106
20, 222, 237 140- 4 1, 145 , 150- 51 , 2:6- 11 , 106- 7, 165,
21,222,233- 34,237- 166, 170- 71 , 176, 166
38 182, 196- 97 , 199, 2:8 , 106
206- 8,225 , 266- 67, 2:8- 9,106
Jonah, 119, 139-41 , 269, 290 2:9, 106
149, 152, 171 , 177, I , 12, 48- 53 , 60, 61 2:9- 11 , 106
179, 182, 194-95, 1- 3, 105, 107, 125, 2:11 , 125, 127 , 166
206-7,212,215-17, 166, 172- 73 2:12- 13, 106- 8, 165
267 , 290 1- 7, 105, 107, 139 3, 164
1-4, 139, 149 1:1, 31 , 125, 150- 51 , 3: 1, 6, 125, 127, 165,
1:1-3, 149 215 167
1:1-16, 195 1:1- 16, 8, 31 3:1-4, 107
1:1-2:1, 149 1:1 - 7:20, 151 3:1-5: 14, 151
1:4-16, 149 1:2, 32 3:5-7 , 107
1:6, 195 , 204 1:2- 4,32 3:7, 201
1:14, 194, 196,204 1:2- 7, 32, 107 3:8, 107, 125, 127
1:14-16, 195 1:2- 7:20, 15 1 3:9-12, 107
1:15, 195 1:2- 15, 33 3: 12, 125, 150,20 1
1:1 6, 195 1:2- 16, 31- 32, 151 4,4, 12, 44, 48, 53- 54,
1:3- 4,3 2, 133 56-61,136,176,182
Ancient Sources Index 355
4-5, 105, 107, 125, 6:8, 125, 131 , 276 1,173,174, 177
130, 172-73, 181 6:9-12, 126 1- 3, 139
4: 1, 58, 173 6:9-13, 125 1:1 , 151- 52, 215
4:1-2 ,302 6:9-16, 126 1:1 - 3:19, 152
4:1-5 ,32,56,59, 110, 6:13-16, 126 1:2, 152
145, 151 6:16,126 1:2- 8, 133, 216
4:1-5:8 , 181 7,126-27 1:2- 10, 152
4:1-5:14, 107 7:1 , 125 1:2- 15, 133
4:2, 58, 133 7: 1-2, 126, 133 1:2- 3:19, 152
4: 3, 58, 176 7:1-7,196 1:3, 180
4:4, 54, 57 , 58,126 7:1-20, 151 1:11- 2:1, 152
4:5 , 133, 136 7:2-4, 126 1:12- 13, 109
4:6, 126 7:5 , 125 1: 12- 15 , 108- 10
4:6-7 , 181 7:5-6,127 1:1 4,109
4:6-5: 14, 107 7:7, 125, 127, 196-97, 1:1 4-15, 109
4:6-7 ,57,59 202 1:12,1 10
4:7 ,59 7:7-13, 196 1:12- 15, 99, 108
4:8, 59 7:7-20, 196 2- 3, 172, 182
4:8-5 :6, 293 7:8, 127 2:1 , 22, 182
4:9, 44, 59 7:8-9,127 2:2- 11 , 77
4:9-10, 44, 173 7:8-10,125 , 127, 133, 2:2- 3:19, 152
4:9-5 :4,57 196 3:1 - 3,77,109
4:10,44, 54-55 7:8-20,127 , 181 , 197 3:1 - 7, 99, 108- 10
4:11-12, 32 7:9-10, 197 3:1 - 17, 108
4:14, 133 7:10,127 3:2- 3, 110
5:1 , 151 7:11-12, 127 3:4- 7, 110
5:2, 44 7:11 - 13,107,127,196 3:8- 10, 152
5:4-5,133 7:14, 127, 196- 97
5:5-6, 173 7:1 4-20, 133, 196- 97 H abakkuk, 99, 103- 4,
5:7-9,32 7:15 , 127, 196 133, 139- 4 1, 152- 53 ,
5:9, 126 7:16- 17,32, 127, 196- 171 , 173- 74, 177- 78,
6, 73, 74, 126 97 182, 197, 199,200,
6-7 , 105, 120, 125-26, 7:17,127 203 , 206, 266, 267 ,
128, 172-73 7: 17- 20, 196 270, 290
6:1 , 126, 173 7:18,127,192 1, 134, 177, 198
6: 1-8,3,63,65, 72, 74 7:18- 20, 107, 127, 1-2, 174, 197, 201
6:1-16, 151 133, 197 1-3, 139
6:2, 126 7:19,127 1:1 , 152-53, 174, 216
6:3 , 126 7:19- 20 , 125, 127 1:1-15, 270
6:3-5, 125-26 7:20,128 1:1-2:20, 153
6:4, 283 1:1-3: 19, 153
6:4-5,126 Nahum, 99, 108, 133, 1:2, 198
6:6, 125 138- 41 , 151- 52 , 171 , 1:2-4, 134, 153, 174-
6:6-7, 125-26, 133 177, 182, 203 , 206, 75,177 , 197
6:7 , 126 266- 67 , 290 1:2-2:20, 153
356 New Form Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
1:5-11 , 77 , 134, 153, 3:1 6-1 9, 175, 178, 198 2:5- 10, 253, 256
166, 175 3:1 7, 178 2:5- 13, 248, 256
1:5-1 2, 178 3:1 9, 134, 153, 174 2:5- 15, 154
1:6, 104, 270 2:6, 249
1:1 2-1 3, 174-75 Zephaniah, 9, 11 , 13, 2:7, 249, 251 , 257
1:1 2-1 7, 134, 153, 198 99, 11 5, 138-41 , 2:8, 249- 50, 257 , 261
1:1 3, 198 153- 54, 170- 71, 175, 2:8- 10, 249- 51 , 253,
1:1 3-1 4, 177 181-82, 199- 200, 256
1:14-1 7, 175 203 , 206, 215, 245- 2:9, 134, 250- 51 , 257-
1:1 5- 17, 178 46, 248, 254, 256- 58, 58
2, 134, 170, 178, 198 26 1-63, 266- 67,269, 2:10,250,257
2:1 , 23 290 2:1 0- 11 , 251
2:1-3, 174, 177 1, 166,252 2:1 1,13, 246,248,
2: 1-4, 198,20 1 1-2, 120, 130 250- 51 , 253, 256,
2: 1-20, 153 1-3, 139, 172 258- 63
2:2, 21, 22, 121, 213 1:1 , 154, 216,252 2: 12, 254- 56, 261
2:2- 5,23 1:1-3:20, 154 2: 13, 254-55
2:3- 5,23 1: 2, 134, 252 2: 13- 15, 255- 57
2:4- 5, 198 1:2- 3, 248, 25 1, 256 2:14, 258
2:4-1 5, 175 1:2-1 8, 154, 253 2: 15, 255
2:6, 104, 171 1: 2- 2: 15, 11 5 3:1- 7,115 , 258
2:6- 8,104 1:2- 3:20, 154 3:1 - 8, 257
2:6-1 7, 104 1:3 , 134, 252 3: 1- 13, 261
2:6- 20, 99, 103- 5 1:4- 6, 253, 258 3:1- 20, 154
2:9, 171 1:4- 16, 251 3:6, 258
2:1 2, 171 1:4- 2:3, 256 3:6- 7,257 , 261
2: 12-14, 104 1:7 , 2, 104, 188, 200- 3:7 , 257
2:1 5, 171 202 3:8, 134, 201 , 257- 59
2: 15-1 7, 104 1:10, 134 3:8- 9, 257
2:1 6,104 1: 11,258 3:8- 10, 260
2: 18-1 9, 198 1:1 4- 18, 101 3:8- 13, 115
2:1 8- 20, 104 1: 15, 259 3:8- 20, 181
2: 19, 171 1:1 5- 16, 134 3:9, 202, 246, 253- 54,
2:20,2, 198- 99, 200- 1: 17,252 257- 63
202 1: 17- 18, 251 3:9-1 0, 259- 60
3, 134, 153, 173- 78, 2- 3, 154 3:9- 20, 18 1
197- 98, 20 1, 216, 2: I , 252, 258 3:10,258- 61
270 2: 1- 3, 101, 154, 253, 3:11 ,260
3:1 , 134, 152- 53, 174 256- 57 , 262 3:11-1 2, 259
3:1-2, 178 2: 1- 3:20, 154 3:11-1 3, 258,260
3:1-1 9, 153 2:3, 253 3:14-1 8, 134
3:2, 198 2:4, 154, 24-8 3: 14- 20, 99, 11 5-1 6,
3:2-1 9, 153 2:4- 3:20, 154 143 , 203
3:3- 8, 198 2:5, 249, 258 3: 19- 20, 134, 181
3:3-1 5, 178 2:5- 7, 248, 250, 255, 3:20, 134, 26 1-62
3:8-1 5, 198 257
Ancient Sources Index 357
- 361 -
362 New Fonn Criticism and the Book qf the Twelve
Caroll, Robert P. , 18 Donald, D avid Herbert, 20, 329
Carr, David M. , 23, 176, 327
Carroll R ., M . D aniel, 193, 327 Eco, Umberto, 26, 329
Carroll, Robert P., 19, 20, 226, 315, Edelman, Diana V., 316
327 Elliger, Karl, 274, 329
Carter, Charles E., 279, 327 Endo, Yoshinobu, 236, 329
Carver, Terrell, 42, 327
Charteris-Black,]., 42 , 327 Fales, Frederick M ., 255, 329
Childs, Brevard S., 177,3 16,327 Fauconnier, Giles, 38, 42, 44
Christensen, Duane L., 109,267,270, Fauconnier, Gilles, 329
328 Fensham, F. Charles, 48, 329
Clark, D avid]. , 142, 274,3 19,328 Fewell, Danna Nolan, 214, 33 1
Clements, Ronald E. , 88, 210, 328 Figulla, H . H. , 68, 329
Clendenen, E. R ay, 269, 282-83, 328, Finitsis, Antonios, 275, 294-95, 330
344 Fishbane, Michael, 138, 330
Clifford, Richard]. , 99, 328 Flesher, LeAnn Snow, 326
Clines, David]. A., 328 Floyd, Michael H ., 17-18, 22,92,98,
Cloran, Carmel, 328 100, 110, 151-55, 158, 205 , 226,241 ,
Cogan, Michael D ., 328 253-54, 257 , 288, 290-92,302-3,
Coggins, Richard]. , 145-46, 188-89, 305-6,3 15-17 ,3 19-21 ,330
192-93, 328 Fokkelman,jan, 214, 217 , 330
Collins, Terence, 183,328 Freedman, David Noel, 60, 87 , 166,
Conrad, Edgar, 155, 273, 293, 303, 323
328 Frolov, Serge, 303
Cook,john A. , 236, 328
Crenshaw,james L. , 21-22,145,184, Gardiner, Alan, 229
212,3 28 Garrett, Duane, 185- 86 , 188, 190, 330
Curtis, Byron G., 277-87 , 298-300, Gartner,judith, 259, 330
328 Gelston, Anthony, 24·9, 252, 257 , 330
Gerstenberger, Erhard, 6- 9, 12, 99,
D andamaev, M . A. , 69-71 , 328 128, 130- 31 , 134, 305, 32 1, 330- 31
D aniels, Dwight R ., 63-64, 328 Gese, Hartmut, 88, 331
D arr, Katheryn Pfisterer, 44, 328 Gibbs, Raymond W. , 42 , 33 1
D avies, Graham I., 25 ,55, 142, 185- Gitay, Yehoshua, 331
86,232, 315, 328 Glazier-McDonald, Beth , 282- 83, 331
D avies, Philip R ., 19,329 Goody,j ack, 26, 331
D avis, Ellen F., 234, 243 , 329 Gordon, R. P., 286, 288, 295, 331
D e Roche, Michael, 63- 64, 73 , 74, 329 Green, Barbara, 41, 331
D e Vries, Simon]., 144,329 Green, William Scott, 337
de Waard, j an, 193 Greenberg, Moshe, 316
D earman, ]. Andrew, 23, 52, 11 3,329 Gries, Stefan Thomas, 42, 342
D eist, Ferdinand E., 17, 11 9-20, 329 Grimal, Nicolas, 254, 33 1
Delkurt, Holger, 90, 329 Gunkel, H ermann, 10, 14- 15,4·3,64,
D emare-Lafont, Sophie, 66, 329 97 , 168, 221 - 23, 226, 229, 306- 7,
D empsey, Carol, 5, 55 , 305-6, 320, 311 - 15, 33 1
326 Gunn, David M. , 214, 331
Dijk, Teun A. van, 329
Modem Authors Index 363
Van De Mieroop, Marc, 254, 344 Yardeni, Ada, 71, 72, 339
van der Kooij , Arie, 159, 344 Yee, Gale A. , 52, 346
van der Merwe, C. H .]., 230, 337, 344 Young, Liam Cole, 26-27 , 346
van der Toorn, Karel, 21, 22, 25, 176,
318, 345
van Dijk, Tuen A., 226
Van H eeke, Pierre, 42, 345
Van Seters,John, 288, 345
van Wolde, Ellen]. , 246
Vlaardingerbroek,]., 153,258, 345
Vladimir, Vladimir G., 328
von R ad, Gerhard, 216, 345
von Soden, Wolfram, 24-25 , 28, 345
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