Ethical Monotheism

From a detailed comparison of ANE prophetic/oracular texts with biblical ones, Wheaton’s John Walton ( Ancient Near Eastern Thought and the Old Testament: Introducing the Conceptual World of the Hebrew Bible ) concludes that Near Eastern oracles differed from Israelite prophecies in . . . . Continue Reading »

First the Bride

ANE kings were, often literally, believed to be sons of the gods. We find something like the same notion in the Davidic covenant: “I will be a Father to him, and he will be a son to Me,” Yahweh tells David, apropos specifically of Solomon. In the Bible, though, Yahweh already has a son . . . . Continue Reading »

Kingship and God

According to Henri Frankfort’s summary, “The Mesopotamian myth of beginnings knew neither single origin nor single authority. The primeval chaos contained two elements, sweet water and salt water - the male Apsu and the female Tiamat. This couple brought forth a multitude of gods whose . . . . Continue Reading »

Origins of Charity

In 1943, Hendrik Bolkestein published his dissertation in a German translation, Wohltatigkat und Armenflege im vor-christlichen Alterlsum: Ein Beitrag zum Problem “Moral und Gesellschaft . According to the reviewer in The Classical Journal , Bolkestein’s thesis was that Greek and Latin . . . . Continue Reading »

Stripping the altars

The Reformation, it is charged, secularized and de-sacralized European culture with its iconoclasm, its attack on relics, its revisions in sacramental theology. Isaiah 3-4 suggest a different assessment. Isaiah describes the stripping of priestly ornaments from the daughters of Zion (3:16-26), but . . . . Continue Reading »

Sermon notes

INTRODUCTION At creation, Adam was placed in a garden God planted, but after the flood, Noah planted himself a vineyard (Genesis 9:20). In the exodus and conquest, Yahweh placed Israel in a land of fields and vineyards, and so made Israel His vineyard (cf. Isaiah 5:7). But Israel has not produced . . . . Continue Reading »

Roebuck of God

In that day, the Branch will be “beautiful” (Isaiah 4:2). Various words are used for “beauty” in this passage, and here the Hebrew is tzebi , which is typically translated as “roebuck” (e.g., Deuteronomy 12:15, 22; 14:5; 15:22; 2 Samuel 2:18; 1 Kings 4:23; etc.). . . . . Continue Reading »

Water and Spirit

Though the daughters of Zion are full of filth and blood, Adonai will wash and purge them, like sacrifices. So says Isaiah (4:4). Yahweh will cleanse by His Spirit of judgment and burning. The purifying power of the Spirit is underscored by a wordplay. The word for “purge” or . . . . Continue Reading »

A Brief Inquiry

“The world in its essence, is a community, a community of creator and created, and has its source, God. Thus concludes a recently published Princeton undergraduate thesis, recently recovered by Princeton’s Eric Gregory. The thesis was written in 1942 . . . . by John Rawls! Before he got . . . . Continue Reading »

Not so Pomo

A brief preview of the David Foster Wallace collection at the University of Texas Harry Ransom Center ( Newsweek , 11/29) shows that Wallace was not actually the “purely pomo author” that he might seem. The collection contains notes and files for his unfinished and forthcoming Pale King . . . . Continue Reading »