Von Rad’s venerable and seminal treatment of the topic, now made available in an inexpensive reprint, is considerably enhanced for modern readers by B.C. Ollenburger’s introductory essay, ‘Gerhard von Rad’s Theory of Holy War.’ This version of what has become a classic point of departure for studies of warfare and the Divine Warrior figure in the Old Testament’ is further complemented by J.E. Sanderson’s ‘War, Peace, and Justice in the Hebrew Bible: A Representative Bibliography.’ Approaching the topic with an ethical concern that is not given broad expression in Von Rad’s monograph, Sanderson appends her annotated bibliography ‘as a contribution to the advancement of peace’ from the pen of ‘someone with a lifelong fascination for the Bible as well as a commitment to peacemaking.’
Thus framed, this new publication of von Rad’s Holy War in English displays both the virtue and the vulnerability that characterise a theory that ‘seemingly accounts for everything’, as Ollenburger assesses. His introductory essay places von Rad in the historical context of the discussion about war in the Old Testament, something von Rad’s sparsely footnoted monograph itself did not take pains to achieve.
The substance of von Rad’s argument requires no comment. From the vantage point of Old Testament studies at the present juncture, von Rad’s description of how an ancient idea and practice was appropriated and reappropriated within circles whose ideological habits were markedly distinct from those of its origin, is undertaken with sometimes breathtaking confidence. His characteristic attention to the institutions in which this occurred undergirds a reconstruction of the history of Holy War that has demanded an accounting from all subsequent writers on the topic. This fine new presentation, marred only by recurrent errors in Hebrew quotation, returns an old standard to easy accessibility.
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