Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 The Joseph and Moses narratives 4: narratives about the origins of Israel
- 2 Historical notes on Israel's conquest of Palestine: a peasants' rebellion
- 3 The background of the patriarchs: a reply to William Dever and Malcolm Clark
- 4 Conflict themes in the Jacob narratives
- 5 History and tradition: a response to J. B. Geyer
- 6 Text, context, and referent in Israelite historiography
- 7 Palestinian pastoralism and Israel's origins
- 8 The intellectual matrix of early biblical narrative: inclusive monotheism in Persian period Palestine
- 9 How Yahweh became God: Exodus 3 and 6 and the heart of the Pentateuch
- 10 4Q Testimonia and Bible composition: a Copenhagen Lego hypothesis
- 11 Why talk about the past? The Bible, epic and historiography
- 12 Historiography in the Pentateuch: twenty-five years after Historicity
- 13 The messiah epithet in the Hebrew Bible
- 14 Kingship and the wrath of God: or teaching humility
- 15 From the mouth of babes, strength: Psalm 8 and the Book of Isaiah
- 16 Job 29: biography or parable?
- 17 Mesha and questions of historicity
- 18 Imago dei: a problem in the discourse of the Pentateuch
- 19 Changing perspectives on the history of Palestine
- Index of biblical references
- Index of authors
18 - Imago dei: a problem in the discourse of the Pentateuch
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 The Joseph and Moses narratives 4: narratives about the origins of Israel
- 2 Historical notes on Israel's conquest of Palestine: a peasants' rebellion
- 3 The background of the patriarchs: a reply to William Dever and Malcolm Clark
- 4 Conflict themes in the Jacob narratives
- 5 History and tradition: a response to J. B. Geyer
- 6 Text, context, and referent in Israelite historiography
- 7 Palestinian pastoralism and Israel's origins
- 8 The intellectual matrix of early biblical narrative: inclusive monotheism in Persian period Palestine
- 9 How Yahweh became God: Exodus 3 and 6 and the heart of the Pentateuch
- 10 4Q Testimonia and Bible composition: a Copenhagen Lego hypothesis
- 11 Why talk about the past? The Bible, epic and historiography
- 12 Historiography in the Pentateuch: twenty-five years after Historicity
- 13 The messiah epithet in the Hebrew Bible
- 14 Kingship and the wrath of God: or teaching humility
- 15 From the mouth of babes, strength: Psalm 8 and the Book of Isaiah
- 16 Job 29: biography or parable?
- 17 Mesha and questions of historicity
- 18 Imago dei: a problem in the discourse of the Pentateuch
- 19 Changing perspectives on the history of Palestine
- Index of biblical references
- Index of authors
Summary
2009
Moses in the desert
When my generation of exegetes first left the university, Old Testament studies was understood as a historical-critical discipline, with but a limited and mostly traditional connection to theology. Today – a generation later – this dominance of historical-critical research is collapsing on all fronts. One no longer speaks, for example, of a historically implicit ‘Sitz im Leben des Volkes,’ but rather about the implicit symbol system of a text's contemporary intellectual world. It is time once again to question the relationship of exegesis to theology. To further such a discussion, I would like to take up today the issue of the narrative figure of Yahweh as God, which is so problematic a representation of truth within the Pentateuch's discourse.
In my inaugural lecture to the faculty in Copenhagen more than fifteen years ago, I addressed the question of the concept of God in the Pentateuch on the basis of Exodus 3:12's presentation of Yahweh's self-understanding in the phrase, 'ehjeh 'imak, ‘I will be with you’ – a presentation, which is reiterated in Isaiah's ‘Immanuel’ discourse and reused in the Gospel of Matthew (Isa. 7:14; 8:8, 10; Mt. 1:23). In the scene of his revelation to Moses at the burning bush in Exodus 3, Yahweh understands himself as the god, who is with Israel; namely, God as Israel comes to experience and understand during the course of the story: the god, which is known from tradition (cf. Deut. 32:7-9).
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- Biblical Narrative and Palestine's HistoryChanging Perspectives, pp. 291 - 304Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2013