Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 December 2009
חַוּ֣ﬧוְﬧ̤ב֗ﬠׂה֣ו̞היְה֧בּ̣ה̣וְ
אלׂ̗הו̞֔היְי֣בֵפְלִם̀יﬠ̣ל̞סְר͔בּ̤שׁ̠מְוּםירִ̀ה̞ק֠רֵפ̞מְקז̞̋ח̞וְהﬥ̞וֹדגְּ
׃הו̩̞היְשׁעַ̖ר̠ב̞אלֹ̗שׁע̠ר̱֔ח̠וּר̀ה̞דח֤̠אַוְה̭ו̞היְח̠וּ̖דב̞
׃הקּȹ̞ד̠מ̗̞מ̞דְּﬥוֹק̖שׁאֵ֔ה̞דח֣̱אַוְה̭ו̞היְשׁ̖אֵב̞אׁל̗שׁא̤֔שׁ̀ע̠ד̠̀ה̞דח֤̱אַוְ
And behold, the Lord passed by, and a great and strong wind rent the mountains, and broke in pieces the rocks before the Lord, but the Lord was not in the wind; and after the wind an earthquake, but the Lord was not in the earthquake; and after the earthquake a fire, but the Lord was not in the fire; and after the fire the voice of a gentle breeze.
1 Kings 19:11–12In the first section I surveyed some pre-modern perspectives on the cosmological which seemed – albeit at the cost of a liaison with archaic science – to give powerful theological expression to the principle that creation is through the Word. In the second section I proposed a scriptural cosmology, predicated upon an oscillation between sign and address. According to this view, the world and its objects are of God's making, and have a dual signifying function. They can be said both to refer and to address. Their referential function can be further classified into two types. We have world-constituting reference, which is to say, the way in which linguistic signs refer to entities which are at the same time natural signs that point to yet further entities in a complex weave which grounds our experience of and participation in the world. Things refer to other things, words to other words, and language combines with things in the formation of world.
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