Biblical narrative assumes a readerly discernment that works itself out along a wide horizon.
Biblical scholars consider that the book of Judges takes ancient narrative material and then weaves it into a more-or-less coherent whole that is itself part of Israel’s first epic history. By some lights this epic moves from primeval times through to the advent of Israel’s monarch or, in literary terms, from Genesis through Judges. Since such a horizon embraces six books, the term ‘hexateuch’ becomes common in describing the whole.
The result is something decidedly more engrossing than a string of stories haphazardly recalled. Though individual portions often rise to the level of gripping tales in themselves, the wise reader performs his task with wide eyes. This is all the more necessary given the Hebrew Bible’s developed reluctance to engage in mere morality tales. More often than not, the reader is expected to come to his own conclusions about an individual episode and its principals, an estimation that necessarily derives its moral balance from the wider story and the assumptions that undergird it. Continue Reading »