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Observations on the Marital Metaphor of YHWH and Israel in its Ancient Israelite Context: General Considerations and Particular Images in Hosea 1.2
The marital metaphor became for the (mostly, if not exclusively, male) literati of ancient Israel—and for those who accepted their discourses—a way to shape, imagine, express, and communicate their understandings of the nature and story of their relationship with YHWH. This article addresses systemi...
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Published in: | Journal for the study of the Old Testament 2004-03, Vol.28 (3), p.363-384 |
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Main Author: | |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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Citations: | Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The marital metaphor became for the (mostly, if not exclusively, male) literati of
ancient Israel—and for those who accepted their discourses—a way
to shape, imagine, express, and communicate their understandings of the nature and
story of their relationship with YHWH. This article addresses systemic aspects of
this metaphor within this social and ideological setting and deals with the
interplay of these aspects with the worldview and world of knowledge of these
literati. A brief consideration of a particular instance of this metaphor, Hos. 1.2,
serves to illustrate ways in which the actual use of the metaphor brought about
matters that were related but clearly go beyond the ‘generic’
issues that the metaphor evoked in the readership of books in which it was used.
Among them, one may mention the nature of Israel, its election by YHWH, explanations
that served to solve or attenuate the cognitive dissonance between the status of the
literati (and of Israel as a whole) in worldly affairs and their perceived place in
the divine economy, and the importance of education. |
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ISSN: | 0309-0892 1476-6728 |
DOI: | 10.1177/030908920402800307 |