Skoči na glavni sadržaj

Izvorni znanstveni članak

God’s Promises to Abraham (Gen 17) and the Question of the Ending of Priestly Writing

Bruna Velčić ; Teologija u Rijeci – Područni studij Katoličkoga bogoslovnog fakulteta Sveučilišta u Zagrebu, Rijeka, Hrvatska


Puni tekst: hrvatski pdf 402 Kb

str. 19-40

preuzimanja: 951

citiraj


Sažetak

The referential point of this article is the account of God's covenant with Abraham in Gen 17, which is attributed to priestly writing (Pg). The priestly writer reports only two covenants: God's covenant with Noah (Gen 9:1-17) and God's covenant with Abraham (Gen 17). While the covenant with Noah represents the conclusion of priestly prehistory (Gen 1-11), Gen 17 opens the narration of Israel's history and has, for this history, a programmatic function. When he made his covenant God promised Abraham numerous offspring (17:2-6), that he would be his God and the God of his descendants (17:7-8b); and that he would give him and his offspring the land of Canaan to his possession (17:8a). The priestly texts following Gen 17, i.e., Gen 28:19; 35:9-15; Ex 6:2-8, refer back to these promises and relate their gradual fulfilment. Scholars generally agree that the first two promises find their fulfilment in the book of Exodus (1:7; 40:34-35), while the fulfilment of the promise of the land is subject of debate. Namely, there is growing agreement in contemporary exegesis that Pg ends in Exodus or Leviticus, in texts which do not recount the gift of the land but the institution of cult (Ex 29:42b-46; 40:16-17a, 33b; Lev 9:23-24; 16). In this article, by taking Gen 17 as the starting-point, we have analyzed the priestly texts which are concerned with God's promises to Abraham and we have reached the conclusion that the promise of the land is fulfilled in Num 13-14*, and that there are valid reasons to place the end of priestly writing in the book of Numbers.
Contemporary research of the book of Numbers has shown that the dating of this book is very late, but still, some scholars attributed four accounts to Pg in this book: Num 13-14*; 20:1-13, 22-29; 27:12-23. Our brief survey of these texts has revealed that these texts can indeed be ascribed to Pg on the basis of their content, terminology and specific stylistic features. Moreover, these texts refer to the fulfilment of the promise of the land. In fact, while the promise of the land in Pg is always formulated in the future tense (!tn weqatal / yiqtol; cf. Gen 17:8; 2:,4; 35:12; Ex 6:8),, in Num 13:2 we find the !tn participle, and in 20:12-24; 27:12 qatal. These occurrences point to the conclusion that in Num 13:2 God »gives« the land to the people by sending the leaders to »spy it out« (rwt;13:2). The official representatives of the people, by spying it out (rwt;13:21), take the land legally into possession. Namely, we know from biblical accounts that »walking« on a certain territory can designate taking it into possession (cf. Gen 13:14-17; 1 Kg 21:16-18). Subsequently, the qatal form !tn in Num 20:12-24; 27:12 confirms that for the priestly writer Israel has already received the gift of the land, even if the people have not yet entered it.
The performed analysis, thus, suggests that Pg does not end in the book of Exodus or Leviticus, but continues and ends in the book of Numbers (13-14*; 20:113; 22-29; 27:12-23). The priestly texts in Numbers do not only narrate the failure of the generation of exodus and their leaders, Moses and Aaron, to enter the promised land, but also confirm the people's receiving the gift of the land (13:21; 20:12-24; 27:12), announce the entering of the next generation (14:31) and report the installation of new leaders, Eleazar and Joshua (20:28; 27:22-23). The priestly writing would, therefore, have an open ending, since it prepares Moses' death and the people's entering of the land, but it does not report them. This open ending could have been conditioned by the historical moment in which the priestly writer composed his work, i.e., at the end of the Babylonian exile and in the first years of return. His last accounts, which we now find in the book of Numbers, would then reflect the failure of the first generation of returnees to come back to the land, but at the same time, they announce the return of the next generation (14:31).

Ključne riječi

covenant; Abraham; God's promises; promise of the land; gift of the land; ending of the priestly writing (Pg)

Hrčak ID:

50701

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/50701

Datum izdavanja:

14.4.2010.

Podaci na drugim jezicima: hrvatski

Posjeta: 2.430 *