Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 August 2011
A good deal of attention has centered of late on those sections of Samuel and Kings which are often said to constitute a biography of David. In particular, this ‘biography’ was recently singled out by Professor R. H. Pfeiffer, in his Presidential address to the Society of Biblical Literature, as an example of the almost complete absence of religious motivation in the school of which it was representative: Its showed history almost independent of religion, as the work of the Chronicler showed religion almost independent of history.
1 Of Dec., 1950. Published in JBL 70 (1951) 1 ff. See esp. p. 5.
2 N.Y. N.D. (1948), p. 358.
3 II Sam. 12, esp. vss. 11–14.
4 II Sam. 13.39; 16.1–11, 21–22; 18.5, 29, 32–19.1 &c.
5 I Kings 2.32f & 44; cp. II Sam. 19.19–22.
6 II Sam. 17.27 ff.; 19.32–39; I Kings 2.7.
7 See esp. 20.42 and 23.18.