Though the move from exile to ‘consolation’ in the complex plot of the book called Isaiah is signaled in chapter 35, the door swings all the way open on its hinges in chapter 40. (more…)
Posts Tagged ‘Isaiah’
the aftertaste of bitterness: Isaiah 38-40
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Isaiah, textures on October 8, 2007| Leave a Comment »
Zion’s export(s): Isaiah 36–37
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Isaiah, textures on October 7, 2007| Leave a Comment »
The Assyrian emissary Rab-Shekah casts public doubt on all that Jerusalemites have learned to believe about themselves, their city, and their guardian deity. Moreover, he refuses to deliver his message in the dulcet tones of diplomatic Aramaic, choosing instead to stop the hearts of the common people on the wall by elaborating his terrifying ultimatum in the common Judahite dialect.
It is a moment when hearts shake like the leaves of wind-blown trees. Nervous glances are cast in the direction of the king’s palace and the prophet’s house. (more…)
drenching the desert: Isaiah 34-35
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Isaiah, textures on October 6, 2007| Leave a Comment »
The language of the landscape rejoicing is particularly powerful because one normally thinks of the ground beneath our feet as a stage, not a performer. It is inert, the platform and the background of the interesting and significant activities of those who appear upon it. (more…)
high-minded: Isaiah 10-12
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Isaiah, textures on September 27, 2007| Leave a Comment »
The moral architecture of the book of Isaiah is one of its sustaining threads, holding together deep complexity by the persistence of a singular theme. With its recurrent promise that ‘YHWH alone shall be exalted on that day’, the book establishes that when things are as they should be, YHWH is lifted up and all his creatures stand below him in proper submission. Indeed, chapter six’s vision tells us that the view from the heavenly throne room is just this way. Only matters on earth have gone temporarily akilter. (more…)
double edge: Isaiah 7-9
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Isaiah, textures on September 26, 2007| Leave a Comment »
YHWH’s proximity is an inconvenient wealth.
The Lord’s covenanting labors with Israel in the desert before Sinai are paradigmatic of the demanding consolation that his presence brings to a people with whom he chooses to live in close quarters. Rightfully, the Israelites of the Exodus narrative have a difficult time deciding whether this is precisely what they wanted. (more…)
exasperation: Isaiah 4-6
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Isaiah, textures on September 25, 2007| Leave a Comment »
In spite of its structural intricacy, the Song of the Vineyard in the book of Isaiah’s fifth chapter comes across with formidable blunt force. As parables go, it is brief. One surmises that the prophet led his listeners along the path of a well-told tale, then hit them in the gut with its damning burden. (more…)
here and there: Isaiah 2-3
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Isaiah, textures on September 24, 2007| Leave a Comment »
Isaiah’s complex journey will celebrate beloved Zion even as it works out a deep, genetic yearning for distant nations to know and serve Israel’s God. The book releases its energy in both centripetal and centrifugal form without denying either motion, as though gathering opposing forces into one insistent, polychromatic song. The book of Isaiah is not simple. Neither is it complicated. Instead, it is complex, a careful gathering of layers into one coherent statement that stretches the imagination while nourishing the reader’s capacity to allow multiple plates to spin. Attention to any one does not cancel out the rotation of the others. (more…)
Zion become Gomorrah: Isaiah 1
Posted in reseña, tagged biblical reflection, Isaiah, textures on September 23, 2007| Leave a Comment »
The first chapter of the book called Isaiah is best seen as an anthology of words of the prophet, collected here to lend the reader some glimpse of the tone and plot of the long, diverse book that follows. The book as such begins with the ‘second’ heading at chapter two, verse one. (more…)
explicit methodology, for good and for ill: Peter D. Quinn-Miscall, Reading Isaiah. Poetry and Vision
Posted in denkschrift, reseña, tagged biblical studies, Isaiah, Peter Quinn-Miscall, reseña on September 20, 2007| Leave a Comment »
Perhaps it requires a breakdown of certainties and ‘assured results’ like the one that has reigned in Isaiah studies for two decades to produce a book like this. In the wake of a century of historical reconstruction of the stages by which the book of Isaiah is alleged to have grown, Peter Quinn-Miscall is clear about what he feels we do not know. His ‘new way’ of reading Isaiah is meant to allow readers to make their own decisions about the ambiguities and contradictions which he believes characterise this long and eminently quotable Old Testament book. (more…)
close analysis by the ranking scholar on the Septuagint of Isaiah: Arie Van Der Kooij, The Oracle of Tyre. The Septuagint of Isaiah Xxiii As Version and Vision (Supplements to Vetus Testamentum)
Posted in denkschrift, tagged Arie van der Kooij, biblical studies, Isaiah, reseña, Septuagint on September 20, 2007| Leave a Comment »
This volume is a close study of LXX Isaiah chapter 23 by the most prolific writer on the Greek Isaiah. Chapter One (‘Introduction: the Method for the Book’, 1-19) surveys the various approaches to LXX Isaiah that have occupied the field since Z. Frankel’s seminal study. The author takes a ‘contextual approach’. The LXX is at first to be studied in relation to its presumed Vorlage (similar to MT Isaiah), but more importantly is taken seriously as a coherent text in its own right. Pace Seeligmann, the translator’s genius is not to be discovered at the word or verse level, in ‘isolated free renderings’, but rather at the level of pericope or passage. The translator is a scholar, with liberties to engage in creative and actualising interpretation. (more…)