Studies in Antiquity
King David
Sacred and Secular in Biblical Times
E Bruce BrooksP
The rise of the Kingdom was the decisive event in the history of the ancient Hebrews, and its fall was their great catastrophe: it meant the failure of the promise of God to David, and the end of the worldly aspirations of the people of Judah. The Biblical texts which record these events were written over centuries, and together, they reveal a process of continual growth and doctrinal adjustment. This book follows those changes, both in in social forms (increasing emphasis on law, with an improved social status for women) and in doctrine (the ongoing conflict between the priestly and the kingly interest, the sacred and the secular). It follows the Promise Narrative, which links the first contacts with the Land of Canaan to the later Conquest. Canaan itself, the people who were there first, figure prominently.
Many regard the Pentateuch texts as post-Exilic. The finding of this book is that some texts or parts of texts (the Miracles in Egypt, at the beginning of Exodus) date from before the Kingship; others anticipate the Kingship (the Tabernacle instructions at the end of Exodus anticipate Solomon's Temple); others reflect the Exile (Kings is a theological analysis of how the sins of the kings caused it); and still others (Chronicles) express the hopes of a renewed Kingship that were inspired by the Return, The loss of faith (Job) and the emergence of a different kind of faith (Jonah) bring the book to a close.
To untangle these texts, the standard methods of philology are used, The simplest of these is to distinguish between earlier and later versions of a story. Thus, the Conquest is told in two incompatible ways (one textual, the other archaeological); which is nearer to what actually happened? Or at a more modest level, the killing of Goliath (pictured above; the first act attributed to the future King David) occurs not in one, not in two, and not in three versions, but in seven versions. Why seven? And who benefits from each stage of that process: David, or somebody else?
This book is not an Introduction to the Old Testament. The passages it does include are touched on only briefly; the discussion must be suggestive rather than exhaustive. What it intends to suggest is a what a historical reading of the Bible would look like. We hope to see, in some detail, what was going on. What were these people up to? Out of what materials did they construct, and then reconstruct, and then update, their stories? These are the questions on which we focus. At the end, we hope to have seen something of the more modest, and more complex, history that lies behind the present Biblical story.
Front Matter
Orientation, 11
Cover
Halftitle, 1
Title Page, 3
Dedication, 5
Introduction, 7
Contents, 9
01The Land, 13
02The Peoples, 14
03The Gods, 17
04The Kings, 23
05Ancient Texts, 29
Canaanite Tradition, 33
06The Garden of Eden, 35
07Cain and Abel, 37
08Seth, 39
09Noah's Ark, 40
10The Creation, 47
The Northern Patriarchs, 49
11Abram / Abraham, 51
12Isaac, 59
13Jacob / Israel, 64
14The Dinah Affair, 70
15The Twelve Tribes, 74
16The Joseph Story, 77Out of Egypt, 81
17Moses, 83
18The Miracles in Egypt, 87
19The Passover, 89
20Pharaoh's Chariots, 90
21Into The Wilderness, 93
The Laws of Exodus, 95
22The Sinai Covenant, 97
23The Covenant Code, 99
24The Decalogue, 101
25Two Festival Codes, 104
26The Tabernacle, 108Leviticus and Numbers, 109
27Leviticus, 111
28Nadab and Abihu, 115
29The Holiness Code, 116
30Numbers, 119
31Balaam, 122
32Zelophehad's Daughters, 125
33The Final Approach, 128Deuteronomy, 131
34To the Jordan, 133
35Admonitions, 135
36The Decalogue Code, 138
37Updating the Covenant, 160
38The Death of Moses, 162The Conquest, 165
39Khirbet el-Mastarah, 167
40Joshua, 170
41The Song of Deborah, 174
42Twelve Judges, 177
43The Need for a King, 185
44The Philistines, 188
Three Kings, 189
45Samuel, 191
46Saul, 194
47Goliath, 198
48David, 200
49Solomon, 205
50The Davidic Psalter, 210Two Kingdoms, 213
51The Book of Kings, 215
52Jezebel's Wedding, 216
53Elijah, 218
54Elisha, 222
55The Battle with Moab, 226
56Hezekiah's Defense, 229
57Josiah's Venture, 231Exile and Return, 233
58The Torah Psalter, 235
59Yehudim, 238
60Job, 241
61Qoholeth, 245
62The Second Temple, 252
63The Samaritans, 253
64Elephantine, 256The Parting of the Ways, 257
65Songs of Ascents, 259
66The Book of Chronicles, 262
67Nehemiah and Ezra, 266
68Ruth, 269
69Jonah, 272
70The Ethical Horizon, 274End Matter, 281
Chronology, 283
Maps, 286
Works Cited, 288
Passages Quoted, 299
Subject Index, 302
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