Institute
for Christian Teaching
Jo
Ann Davidson
408-00
Institute for Christian Teaching
12501
Old Columbia Pike
Silver
Spring, MD 20904 USA
Symposium
on the Bible and Adventist Scholarship
Juan
Dolio, Dominican Republic
March
19-26, 2000
I. Issues
Theologians along with philosophers, have long grappled with Truth and Goodness. However theology, unlike philosophy, has neglected serious scrutiny of the study of Beauty or Aesthetics. Frank Gaebelein is one of several noting this phenomenon:
The bulk of the work being done in the field of
Christian aesthetics represents Roman and Anglo-Catholic thought. Its roots go deep into sacramental theology,
Thomism, Greek philosophy, and such great writers as Dante. But in large part it is extrabiblical. There is a radical difference between the
thought-forms of the Bible and those of Western philosophy and humanistic
culture.... [The Bible's] basic insights must provide not only the foundation
for an authentic Christian aesthetic but also the corrective for artistic
theory derived from other sources, however excellent these may be.[1]
Why is the aesthetic dimension excluded?
Concern for those in poverty leads some to the idea that any interest in Aesthetics is objectionable. The "luxury" of Beauty is not appropriate when so many people are still in such desperate need of food, shelter and justice. Others suggest that the urgency of Christian eschatology cannot honestly countenance "unnecessary" or "peripheral" considerations of Aesthetics.
Henton Davies[2] reflects another avenue
of thinking on this issue: "Neither the Old Testament nor the New
Testament has any theory of the beautiful." Peter Forsyth expresses a related sentiment:
The second commandment passes the death sentence
on Hebrew art. In killing idolatry, it
killed plastic imagination. At least it
placed it under such a disadvantage that it could hardly live and certainly
could not grow... Neither painter, sculptor, nor dramatist could live under the
shadow of this stern law, or in the midst of this grimly earnest people. Such is the complaint of both Philo and Origen
in speaking of the Jews.[3]
Others might believe
that since aesthetical concerns emerged with the ancient Greek philosophical
system, it is not a theological concern at all. Moreover, with critical studies dominating most theological
schools much of the 20th century followed now with "Post Modernism",
seeking for any fundamentals (Truth, Goodness or Beauty) for some
theologians becomes impossible.
Church History and Historical Theology are rightly studied in reference to the interweaving of political and intellectual threads that mingle with and affect the life and thought of the Christian Church. Aesthetic considerations are not included. Yet the most obvious manifestation of the Judaeo-Christian religion within Scripture is largely disclosed in aesthetic language or objects.
Whatever the motivation,
it appears that theology's foundational source material, the Holy Scriptures,
is probed for numerous issues with the exception of aesthetical values. Gerhard von Rad insightfully remarks that
"no aesthetic of the Old Testament has yet been written."[4] The same observation could also be made for
the New Testament, and the biblical corpus as a whole. For example, Millard J. Erickson's massive
1247-page Christian Theology includes only one paragraph on the last
page regarding the aesthetics of Scripture.[5]
However, the canon has
no dearth of aesthetic phenomena. For
example, up to 40% of the Old Testament involves poetic language. Disciplines outside of theology readily
acknowledge the aesthetic value of the biblical narratives and poetry of both
psalmist and prophet.[6]
Furthermore, from its
very commencement as a nation, Israel's artistic genius was expended in
religious architecture and its decorations.
Almost 50 chapters in the Pentateuch alone are involved with God
directing the construction of a lavish Sanctuary, involving architecture and
various artistic techniques.
Nearly another 50
chapters within the OT consist of the artistic manifestation of Solomon's
Temple. Ezekiel also devotes several
chapters to the glories of a "third" temple.
The New Testament contains its own unique exposure of the aesthetic within the Gospels, Pauline materials and the Apocalypse. The canon concludes with the book of Revelation and the pointed focus again on (heavenly) sanctuary imagery. Thus Scripture is enveloped with the glories of God's earthly and heavenly sanctuaries.
The manifestation of
aesthetic phenomena in Scripture cannot be brushed aside as an unnecessary
luxury. The exposure is too extensive.
God is rightly
understood with many attributes including that of: 1) Father: Mt 6:9; 1 Ch 29:10f; Is 9:6; Mal 1:6; 2:10;[7] 2) Judge: Dan. 12; 2 Tm
4:1, 8; Heb 12:23; Gen 18:25;1 Sm 2:10; Ps 51:6; Is 11:3-5; 3) Warrior: Bible writers sometime describe our
spiritual lives in terms of warfare, and reveals a cosmic and redemptive
significance to our everyday
struggles. Many books of the Bible in
both Testaments tell about God's warring activity: Gen 3:15; Ex 15:3; Col. 2:13-15; Rev. 12--"war" in
heaven; 19:6-11.
God also has an
aesthetic nature. Evidence for this is
far more extensive than often recognized.
For example, in Scripture God is portrayed as a potter:
"But now, O LORD ... We are the clay, and
You our potter; And all we are the work of Your hand." (Is 64:8)
Jeremiah also:
"Then the word of the LORD came to me,
saying: 'O house of Israel, can I not do with you as this potter?' says the
LORD. 'Look, as the clay is in the
potter's hand, so are you in My hand, O house of Israel!'" (Jer 18:6)
The Apostle Paul echoes the same sentiment in
the NT:
"But indeed, O man, who are you to reply
against God? Will the thing formed say
to him who formed it, 'Why have you made me like this?' Does not the potter have power over the clay
...?" (Rom 9:20-24)[8]
Furthermore, God not
only declares Himself a potter but also reveals Himself as
involved in the creation of human artworks. He commissions lavish works of art, and
commands the Israelites to construct an extravagant Sanctuary. He provides not only the architectural
blueprints, but also the instructions for all its furnishings.[9]
At Mount Sinai God gave not only the Decalogue along with civil ordinances including assistance to the poor, but also specific directions to construct a lavish structure involving almost every type of artistic skill. It wasn't an either/or situation, as Christ's disciple Judas would later suggest regarding an expensive gift offered to Christ: "the money should have been given to the poor."
Israel was commanded to
construct an elaborate sanctuary with precise specifications for the woods,
fabrics, dye colors, costly metals and precious gems. Within these directions, God urges "And see to it that you
make them according to the pattern which was shown you on the mountain."
(Ex 25:9). God was architect of it all,
even minute details of construction.
There are more chapters regarding the plans for and subsequent building
of this sanctuary and its furnishings than any other subject in the
Pentateuch. Absolutely nothing was left
to human devising.[10]
Even the garments of the
officiating priests were specifically designed for aesthetic appeal. God instructs Moses:
And you shall make holy garments for Aaron, your
brother, for glory and for beauty.
For Aaron's sons you shall make ... them ... for glory and beauty.
Ex 28:2, 40.
Besides manifesting
glory, the priestly vestments were to be made 'for beauty.' This is specifically mentioned two
times. BEAUTY is thereby perceived as
an appropriate end in itself. The
Creator of colors, form, and textures,
the author of all natural beauty, clearly values the aesthetic dimension. They have a place within the will of God.
Even Solomon's
magnificent temple was also designed by God, as King David insists:
"Consider now [Solomon], for the LORD has
chosen you to build a house for the sanctuary; be strong and do it" Then David gave his son Solomon, the plans
for the vestibule, its houses, its treasuries, its upper chambers, its inner
chambers, and the place of the mercy seat; and the plans for all that he had,
David declares, by the Spirit,
of the courts ..., of all the chambers ..., of the treasuries ..., also for the
division of the priests and the Levites, for all the work of the service of the
house of the LORD, and for all the articles of service in the house of the LORD
... (more details follow, then he concludes–giving the reason!) ... "All
this," said David, "the LORD made me understand in writing, by
His hand upon me, all the works of these plans." (1 Chr 28:10-13, 19).
"... and the work is great, because the temple [[literally, PALACE]] is
not for man but for the LORD God." (1 Chr 29:1).
Thus it is not surprising that the text again
records myriad aesthetic details:
And
he [Solomon] decorated the house with precious stones for beauty, and
the gold was ... from Parvaim. He also
overlaid the house--the beams and doorposts, its walls and doors--with gold;
and he carved cherubim on the walls. ... the great molten sea [with its brim]
shaped ... like a lily blossom. ... He
made wreaths of chainwork, as in the inner sanctuary, and put them on top of
the pillars; and he made one hundred pomegranates, and put them on the wreaths
of chainwork. Then he set up two
pillars before the temple, one on the right hand and the other on the left. 2
Chr 3:5-7, 16-17.
The
text specifies that "[Solomon] also overlaid the house--the beams and
doorposts, its walls and doors--with gold; and he carved cherubim on the
walls." (2 Chr 3:7). Francis
Schaeffer correctly comments:
The temple was covered with precious stones for
beauty [v. 5]. There was no pragmatic
reason for the precious stones. They
had no utilitarian purpose. God simply
wanted beauty in the temple. God is
interested in beauty. ... And beauty has a place in the worship of God.[11]
The passage also
mentions two free-standing columns. They had no utilitarian engineering
significance for they supported no architectural weight. They were there because God said they should
be there as a thing of beauty. Fastened
upon the capitals of the columns
were chain wreathes with pomegranates. Art work upon art work. If we understand what we are reading here,
it is something very beautiful.[12]
Constructing this temple and also the earlier desert sanctuary required a great number of artistic techniques. How was this to be accomplished? We are again informed of God's direct involvement, regarding the desert sanctuary:
"And Moses said
to the children of Israel, ''See, the LORD has called by name Bezalel the son
of Uri, the son of Hur, of the tribe of Judah; and He has filled him with the
Spirit of God, in wisdom and understanding, in knowledge and all manner of
workmanship, to design artistic works, to work in gold and silver and bronze,
in cutting jewels for setting, in carving wood, and to work in all manner of
artistic workmanship. And He has put in
his heart the ability to teach ... He has filled [him] with skill to do all
manner of work ...'" (Ex 35:30-35)
This is a compelling
passage with intriguing details.[13] It contains several principles concerning
the divine perspective on aesthetic value.
First, art is within
God's will. The Tabernacle,
designed by God, involved
"artistic designs.' The God
of heaven was not to be worshiped in a bare, unfurnished tent. Rather, the Israelites were instructed by
God to "make [a] Tabernacle with ten curtains of finely twisted linen and
blue, purple and scarlet yarn, with cherubim worked into them by a skilled
craftsman" (Ex 26:1). The
furnishings were to be constructed of pure gold, delicately carved wood,
elegant tapestries, bronze and precious stones (Ex 25).
God's specifications for the desert Tabernacle, and later for Solomon's Temple, take up a good part of the OT, as mentioned above. The unending details include how many hooks to place in the curtains, how many cubits the frames must be, what to cover with beaten gold, and what to make from bronze. All these numerous chapters are often tedious reading to modern readers.
But it pleased God not
only to precisely instruct the Israelites concerning sacred architecture and
its furnishings but also to record these very details in His holy Word. He could have merely stated that the matter
was accomplished. But instead God
carefully includes within Scripture the particulars of design along with extensive
comment of their detailed accomplishment.
The passage about
Bezalel also indicates that being an artist can be a vocation from God, a
ministry.
We think of people being
called to the ministry or to mission service, but here we find that even artistic
occupations can be God-given callings.
Ex 35 plainly states that God 'called' Bezalel for the work of
constructing and furnishing the Tabernacle. He issued an individual call to a
particular person from a certain family and tribe by name. Bezalel was specifically called by God to be
an artist:
See, the Lord has called by name Bezalel, the
son of Uri, son of Hur, of the tribe of Judah' (Ex 35:30, RSV).
Moreover, we see here
that artistic ability is God's gift:
"And Moses called Bezalel ... in whose mind the Lord had put
ability ..." Ex 36:2, RSV. We are instructed that artistic talent is
not some innate human skill, nor the accomplishment of individual genius, but a
gift of God.[14]
This passage then
continues to detail the specific qualifications Bezalel was endowed with,
providing us with the divine perspective on human artistry.
The first gift given to
Bezalel is arresting. 'He/God has
filled him with the Spirit of God' (Ex 35:31). The ministry of the Holy Spirit is not regularly ascribed to
artistic talent. But here we find it as
the initial gift given to Bezalel.
In fact, Bezalel is the very first person recorded in the OT, in all
Scripture, as inspired by the Holy Spirit.
And he is not a priest or a prophet, nor a preacher, but an artist.[15]
In
the NT, the Holy Spirit is given to all Christians and bears fruit in many
areas of life.[16]
Eph 5:9 "for the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness, righteousness,
and truth."
Elsewhere in Scripture, the Spirit of God came upon certain persons who
thereby became a prophet, a judge, or a preacher.[17]
Here in the book of Exodus, the Spirit of God empowers Bezalel 'to devise
artistic designs.' The implication is
that the works of Bezalel will also express, through the medium and language of
art, the will and mind of God.
The
Exodus 35 passage also describes how God blessed Bezalel with talent [with
skill to create], intelligence [for example, knowing the different ways to
handle different metals: gold--how to
beat it paper-thin, smoothly, without tearing it; silver; also, the many steps
of casting bronze; and how to carve the different kinds of wood], and knowledge [for example, how to weave
"cherubim" into the curtain tapestry, for cherubim are not the cute
baby angels we see on Valentine cards.
Bezalel would need to know how to depict in tapestry these mighty
heavenly beings that have to assure human beings every time they appear,
"Fear not!" "Don't be
afraid!"]
Lastly, this important
verse on artistry in Ex 35 instructs us that God 'inspired him [Bezalel] to
teach' (Ex 35:34). Not only was he
given the gifts necessary to construct and adorn the Tabernacle, but he was
further empowered to instruct others.
Here we find that God's gifts are brought to fruition through divine
enlistment of human teachers!
Just as we have observed
regarding the Israelites' sacred architecture and decoration, Israel's liturgy
was also given by God. King David
insists that the Holy Spirit inspired his psalms:
Thus says David the son of Jesse: Thus says the man raised up on high, the
anointed of the God of Jacob, and the sweet psalmist of Israel: "The Spirit
of the LORD spoke by me, and His word was on my tongue." (2 Sm
23:1-2).
The book of Psalms reveals the prominence of singing in Israelite worship. Phrases such as "sing praises unto the Lord" or "I will sing unto the Lord" occur multiple times. Elsewhere in the OT, when Israelite worship is recounted, music is evident and impressive. For example, 1 Chr. 23:1-5:
... and four thousand praised the LORD with
musical instruments, 'which I made,' said David, 'for giving praise.'
Later we again are informed: 2 Chr 29:25, when
Hezekiah restores Temple worship:
Then he [Hezekiah] stationed the Levites in the
house of the LORD with cymbals, with stringed instruments, and with harps, according
to the commandment of David, of Gad the king's seer, and of Nathan the prophet;
for thus was the commandment of the LORD by his prophets.
Music is important in the will of God!
It might be argued that aesthetic dimensions are found in sacred worship throughout history in all nations in worship of their gods. However, Israel alone insists that their God designed every detail of His worship, including architecture, furnishings, priestly attire, and liturgy.
Scripture as Art
God's involvement in
Israel's architecture and liturgy is not the only evidence of His aesthetic
nature. Nor was Israel's artistry
restricted to the representational arts.
There is widely-held recognition that "the supreme expression of
Israel's capacity for beauty is in her gift of language."[18]
Hebrew poetry is highly extolled in
both biblical and secular studies. The
Book of Psalms is the classic collection.
These psalms are generally considered as hymns and prayers to
God. But
even more importantly, the 150 psalms are God's words to humans. As David insists, "HIS word was upon my
tongue." (2 Sm 23:1-2)
The Psalter itself is divided into 5 books. Some have suggested a correspondence between
each one of the five books of the Psalms with each of the first five books of
the Pentateuch. It is now frequently
acknowledged that the Psalter is not just a random collection of songs and
prayers, but rather a carefully ordered structure of key words and themes.
We must not neglect the striking fact that
prophets also spoke in poetic language.
Even the stern rebukes and challenges.
This was harder to recognize in earlier English translations of
Scripture. Newer versions now format
prophetic speech in poetry as it should be.[19]
One can also observe
close ties of prophecy with music: In 1 Sm 10:5, the prophet Samuel informs
newly-anointed Saul: "[when] you come to the hill of God where the
Philistine garrison is, ... you will meet a group of prophets coming down from
the high place with a stringed instrument, a tambourine, a flute, and a harp
before them; and they will be prophesying."
Later, Jehoshaphat inquires
of Elisha for counsel from God in 2 Ki 3:14-15. And Elisha responds: "'... bring me a musician.' And it happened, when the musician played,
that the hand of the LORD came upon him, and he said, 'Thus says the
LORD'"--- and then Elisha proceeds to declare God's future intentions.
The book PATRIARCHS AND
PROPHETS informs us that the chief subjects of study in the Schools of the
Prophets established by Samuel, "... were the law of God, with the
instructions given to Moses, sacred history [this is understandable! but also--], sacred music, and poetry."
(PP 593). This assembly of experienced
pedagogues should find this an intriguing curriculum...
Beyond the considerable
manifestation of biblical poetry, it is now widely acknowledged that even the
biblical narratives or stories have been meticulously crafted.[20] Moreover, the many narratives also seem to
have been carefully woven together in a calculated sequence. Various scholars with literary sensitivity
have begun to appreciate why, for example, the narrative of Judah and Tamar is
suddenly sandwiched within the narratives of Joseph and his brothers in
Genesis.[21] Or why, in the NT, the narrative of the
woman at Samaria's well (Jn 4) follows immediately after that of Nicodemus
seeking out the Messiah late one night (Jn 3).
It is becoming increasingly recognized that the narrative linkages
themselves reveal theological statement.[22]
In the NT, the Messiah
Himself often employs the literary form of parables.[23] For example, when asked to define 'who is my
neighbor', Jesus, rather than providing an abstract definition, recounts the
parable of the Good Samaritan! Ellen
White also mentions that the
"words of Jesus were full of freshness, and truth and beauty."
(DA 139)
In the Pauline materials
one finds profound theological discourse laced with doxology. A good example of this is in the book of
Romans. John Stott is perceptive:
"For eleven chapters Paul gives his
comprehensive account of the gospel, and his horizons are vast. He considers time and eternity, history,
Christ's Second coming, justification, sanctification and glorification. Now he stops, out of breath. Analysis and argument must give way to
adoration. Like a traveller who has
reached the summit of a high mountain, the apostle views the vast panorama of
salvation history and bursts into praise.... Before Paul goes on to outline the
practical implications of the gospel, he falls down before God in worship,
chanting his doxology in poetic strains:
'O, the depth of the riches both of the wisdom
and knowledge of God! How unsearchable
are His judgments and His ways past
finding out!
For who has known the mind of the LORD?
Or who has become His counselor? ... For of Him and through Him and to
Him are all things, to whom be glory forever. Amen'"[24]
Book of Revelation: Stark warnings and
curses underscore the profound importance of the Apocalypse. The entire book displays an imposing mosaic
of drama, architecture, and vivid panoramas in which God displays His
perspective on Salvation History. There
is hardly an original word. Instead one
finds an extremely complex tapestry of words, phrases and sentences borrowed
from the OT but woven together into an entirely new fabric. This final book in the NT is in a vastly
different style than that which Paul and the Gospel writers use. One instead finds overwhelming aesthetic
display. These 22 chapters are not an
erratic jumble, but rather reveal a carefully structured document hinging on
seven scenes of the heavenly sanctuary--each one opening with deeper access
into the heavenly court.
God did not furnish John with a standard abstract theological or historical document. The phrases "And I saw" ... "and I heard" ... recur over and over again introducing dazzling scenes, and leaving one breathless! The stunning pictorial vistas portray the working out of the Great Controversy, expanding the imposing display given earlier to Daniel and Ezekiel.
The literary manifestation of Scripture also includes the artful construction of sentences, verses, chapters, and entire books with extensive usage of inclusios, chiasms, panel and parallel writing. Sternberg is one of many who suggests that it is the literary nature of the biblical narratives for example, that substantiates its veracity:
In line with his self-effacing policy, the
biblical narrator no more lay any explicit claim to inspiration than he makes
other mentions of himself and his terms of reference. But the empirical evidence, historical and sociocultural as well
as compositional, leaves no doubt about his inspired standing. [25]
The case study below will illustrate this point.
Scripture also instructs
that God continues to restore in fallen human beings, through the process of
redemption, the marred imago Dei.
He has forbidden any material representation of His being. Thus it is startling that His salvific
purpose is for fallen human beings to reflect something of the divine. Paul and Peter both elaborate on this
point: "I beseech you therefore,
brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living
sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service. And be not conformed to this world: but be
ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that
good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God." (Rom 12:1-2).[26]
This salvation makes
possible the transformation the human character. Both Testaments are saturated with the exhibition of God's
renowned skills in remolding sinful
human beings into "the beauty of holiness."[27] Moreover, Christ's incarnation into human
flesh itself is a profound aesthetic statement.[28]
This Incarnation is
rarely extolled for its beauty.
However, as a few infrequent theologians have noted, not only Christ and
His Incarnation, but also the Godhead itself is not only true and good, but
also "beautiful." Karl Barth
writes of the beauty of God. He
identifies it as God's glory.[29]
Early American
theologian, Jonathan Edwards also writes of the beauty of God, though he is
usually remembered only for his sermon on hellfire. In fact, Roland Delattre underscores the aesthetic stance within
Edwards' theology:
Certainly one of the distinguishing marks–if it
is not indeed the distinctive feature–of Edwards' theology, when looked
at in relation to the whole history of Christian thought, is his radical
elevation of beauty to preeminence among the divine perfections.[30]
Delattre argues that Jonathan Edwards' focus on the divine beauty should affect the believer's apprehension of God:
It is the genius of Edwards' settling upon
beauty as the most distinguishing perfection or attribute of God that he has
thereby a concept in terms of which to insist at once upon the objectivity of
God and upon his view that God can be fully known only to the extent that he is
genuinely enjoyed. When placed at the
center of his conception of God, beauty has the peculiar merit of offering at
once a way of conceiving of the nature of God in structural and ontological
terms and of so conceiving of that divine object as to make it not only
dogmatically but also philosophically clear that (and why) God can be fully
known only if he is the direct object of enjoyment. Beauty provides Edwards with a perfectly flexible category, at
the very heart of the Divine Being itself, which also constitutes a definition
or specification of the relation between the creature and the Creator.[31]
Edwards appears to be a
rare theological voice attributing such ontological weight to the aspect of
beauty within the Godhead.[32] The biblical perspective indicates Edwards
is correct. As the psalmist David
declares:
One thing I have desired of the LORD,
That will I seek:
That I may dwell in the house of the LORD
All the days of my life,
To behold the beauty of the LORD ... (Psalm 27:4,
emphasis added)
Beauty of the Created
World
Though God had appointed
the great beauty of both the desert sanctuary and the Jerusalem temple, He also
insists that the exquisite lily from His own hand is still more beautiful than
the greatest artworks He commissioned during Solomon's time (Lk 12:27). The beauty of the natural world is thereby
recognized by Christ. Thus it is not
surprising that both the Old and New Testaments include rejoicing for the
beauty of nature. The Psalter, along with
many other biblical books, brim with praise for the Creator and His created world. Accordingly, through the perspective
espoused in Scripture, we are instructed that the study of the natural world
can aid in lifting our minds to our Creator, the Master Artist:[33] God Himself announces to Job:
Where were you when I laid the earth's
foundation?
Tell me, if you understand.
Who marked off its dimensions?
Surely you know!
Who stretched out a measuring line across it?
On what were its footings set,
or who laid its cornerstone–
while the morning stars sang together
and all the angels shouted for joy! (Jb 38:4-7)[34]
For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead, so that they are without excuse (Rm 1:20).
However, nature, though
glorious, is never worshiped by any biblical writers. The Creator and created human beings are seen enjoying its
beauty. This is a distinctive variation
from some thinking (past and present) where nature is almost (and sometimes
actually is) deified,[35] positing a
"spirituality" without God.
Even so, this modern human deification of nature does serve to
underscore the profound beauty still found in a fallen world constraining even
secular minds (along with the biblical writers) to extol.
Indeed, the overwhelming impression gained from Scripture, the sole document on which the Christian faith is established, is that of the aesthetic nature of God flooding His revealed Word and created world.[36] God is not revealed in Scripture as a systematic theologian.[37] The nature of His revelation in either testament is regularly expressed through artistic manifestation as opposed to analytical treatises and logical discourse.[38]
Implications
Unfortunately, however, the Church has sometimes regarded aesthetics as antagonistic to religion. This attitude was formed prior to the Christian era, gaining entrance into Western and Christian thought through the influence of Plato. And Plato's claims have often been echoed by Christian writers. One result being that aesthetics has often been viewed as a dangerous influence to human salvation.[39] Another perspective suggests that artistic expression is not critically important, being lighter, or more "casual" in "weight" than intellectual discourse. T.R. Wright comments cogently:
It sometimes seems that there are two different
ways of thinking: one that assumes
literary forms, whether narrative, poetic, or dramatic, and another that argues
'systematically' in terms of concepts.
Many theologians, certainly have fallen into this second category but my
thesis is that theology need not be confined to this; it is possible and even
necessary to talk about God in the form of stories, poems and plays.... the Bible itself, the most obvious example
of a text, or collection of texts, which relies on a variety of literary forms
to express theological insight.[40]
Wright's concluding point above can hardly be denied. This raises questions: of what significance is the biblical aesthetic to theology? Why is the aesthetic expression so extensive? Does it have a purpose beyond merely bringing literary pleasure or sating emotional needs? We have argued that the truths of Scripture are expressed more through the aesthetic medium than systematic treatises. But is there reason for this?
Intensification
Many authors in the aesthetic discipline suggest that for a person sensitive to artistic dimensions, aesthetic expression can intensify experience. For example, Harold Hannum writes:
Aesthetic pleasure and a sensitiveness to beauty
does not contradict religion, nor is it a frill or unnecessary adornment. A true appreciation of beauty is a deeper
experience which will enhance all spiritual values.[41]
This aesthetic
intensification could arguably be an important facet of the divine intent.
But beyond this, literary devices may even be
the superior medium to express theological truth, as Wright, among others,
hints:
one of the few principles on which all critics
agree, is the inseparability of form and content, a belief staunchly defended
against the heresy of paraphrase. 'A literary work is its meaning': its
meaning cannot be 'abstracted' from it, cannot be paraphrased without
loss. Any interpretation, therefore,
although it can analyse the various effects achieved by certain formal devices,
cannot say precisely what the work means.
The whole point of reading literature, its importance as a human discipline,
beyond that of giving pleasure (which is by no means unimportant), is that it
says something about life which cannot be said in any other way. Literary devices, in other words, are not
just ornamental, imparting additional eloquence to an otherwise bald and
unconvincing statement or narrative.
They have the capacity to generate new meaning by stretching language
beyond its ordinary uses.[42]
Paul
Brand and Philip Yancey concur:
... a writer employs metaphor to point to a truth, not to its opposite. Abraham Heschel, a Jewish theologian, concludes, "The statements about pathos are not a compromise–ways of accommodating higher meanings to the lower level of human understanding. They are rather the accommodations of words to higher meanings."[43]
intensification:
My thesis says that art and religion do not so
much express fundamental feelings common to mankind as determine these
feelings; they do not so much provide explanations for phenomena which men
cannot otherwise understand as provide those data which men have difficulty
understanding; they do not so much provide security or ways of adjusting to
phenomena which men cannot otherwise handle as interpret the world in such a
way that phenomena are delineated which men seem not to be able to handle. As I have said before: art and religion provide the patterns of
meaning, the frames of perception, by which society interprets its experiences
and from which it makes conclusions about the nature of its world. They tell us what is; they do not respond to
what is.... My thesis suggests a priority, not a parallel [with science]: Art and religion come first; the sciences
follow. The first declares or
determines what is, perhaps secondarily declaring or determining what needs to
be done; the second responds, and does.[44]
This close connection
between Beauty and Truth[45] however has been
struggling since Immanual Kant (1724-1804), perhaps the most influential
philosopher of the Enlightenment. In
his famous Critiques he attempted to establish that human reason and
sensory experience are unavoidably severed.
His discussion has been dominant ever since. So much so that the philosophical realms of truth, goodness and
beauty have remained radically ruptured.
The different properties of the human being are supposedly splintered
into non-communicating faculties of reason, will and emotion.
Because of Kant it has since been assumed that scientific reasoning delivered objective truth. The emotions are the channels for aesthetic perception. Thus the world of actual "facts" is supposedly separated from that of "values." As a result, knowledge and facts have supposedly parted company from faith, and aesthetics becomes a matter of purely subjective judgment. Kant's position has been pervasive and dominant since. Repercussions still reverberate. John Wilson notes this Kantian split:
The eighteenth century
'Enlightenment' was a period of intense philosophical and literary
activity. Reason became the new
god. As knowledge became more
'scientific' the very concept of a God who had to reveal Himself was considered
to be against reason and unacceptable; to believe in such a god, or in
miracles, was dismissed as unreasonable.
Although many of the philosophers still used the concept of God it was
no longer the God of the Bible, but the God of the philosophers, the unknown
God of the Deists, or the 'Supreme Reason' of the intellectuals of the French
revolution.
As knowledge became more
rational and human reason supreme the arts retreated from the findings and
theories of the philosophers and scientists.
The arts became Romantic in their approach and search for truth. Romanticism was a widespread movement,
which, in general, emphasized emotion against reason, intuition against logic
and saw imagination as being of more importance than intellect. It was a reaction, a protest against the
scientific approach of the Enlightenment.[46]
For these and various
other reasons noted earlier,[47] the Christian Church
rarely acknowledges the extensive aesthetic manifestation of God in Scripture
when constructing theological argument.
Instead, it has persistently ordered its theological thinking
philosophically, relegating aesthetic value, even if only implicitly, to the
emotional needs of the believer.
However, this is in noticeable contrast to God's means of revelation in
the canon.
Contra Kant, God affirms
the wholistic nature of each human being as He communicates through the
aesthetic manifestation of Scripture.
Surely, the mind is an important aspect of human nature. However, God rarely limits His communication
to the human being through abstract reasoning or systematic discourse in
Scripture. Rather, He employs aesthetic
avenues, thus affirming the wholistic nature of the human being, assuming the
whole person (even though fallen) as capable of knowing Him and receiving
theological truth.[48] Larry Crabb notes this:
Biblical metaphors–panting after God, tasting
God, drinking living water, eating bread from heaven–make it
clear that finding God is not merely academic.
We are to do more than understand truth about God; we are to encounter
him, as a bride encounters her husband on their wedding night. Finding God is a sensual experience.[49]
There is no emphasis,
within either testament, on the mental cognitive powers as the sole receptor of
truth. Indeed, the primary avenue for
truth-teaching appears to be through aesthetic value. Nowhere in Scripture is there instruction to escape a
"bodily prison" to allow a closer proximity to the mind of God. Rather, in both the Old and New Testaments,
explicitly and implicitly, divine truth is regularly conveyed to the human
being primarily through aesthetic value.[50]
Dangers
God pointedly
established an elaborate system of corporate worship. However, the internal condition of the participant is explicitly
targeted. God rails against outward
aesthetically perfect worship when such glorious expression camouflages inner
motivation. This is noticeably
different from Greek philosophy, and some modern thinking, where aesthetic
beauty is viewed as salvific in itself.
Over and over again God
thunders through His prophets against the glorious worship which He Himself
designed and implemented but which was now being used to disguise a degenerate
life:
I hate, I despise your feast days, and I do not savor
your sacred assemblies.
Though you offer Me burnt offerings and your grain
offerings, I will not accept
them, nor will I regard your fattened peace
offerings.
Take away from Me the noise of your songs, for I will not
hear the melody of
your stringed instruments.
But let justice run down like a river, and righteousness
like a mighty stream.
(Am 5:23-24)[51]
It was not enough that
the sumptuous sanctuary and ark were in the midst of Israel. It was not enough that the priests in
glorious vestments offered sacrifices, and that the people were called the
children of God. The Lord is not fooled
by those who observe aesthetically-crafted outward worship but cherish iniquity
in the heart. It is written: "he
that turns away his ear from hearing the law, even his prayer shall be
abomination." (Pr 28:9)
Thus we find many of the
OT prophetic messages condemning the worship of God, despite its great beauty.[52] Though designed and commanded by God, He at
times finds it offensive, as when He speaks through Jeremiah:
Comes frankincense from
Sheba,
And sweet cane from a
far country?
Your burnt offerings are
not acceptable,
Nor your sacrifices
sweet to Me. (Jer 6:20)
During the Babylonian
captivity, God instructs the prophet Ezekiel about aesthetic abuse:
As for the beauty of his
ornaments,
He set it in majesty;
But they made from it
The images of their
abominations
And their detestable
things;
Therefore I have made it
Like refuse to them.
(Ezl 7:20)[53]
Again, God speaks through Ezekiel:
As for you, son of man,
the children of your people are talking about you beside the walls and in the
doors of the houses; and they speak to one another, everyone saying to his
brother, "please come and hear what the word is that comes from the
LORD."
So they come to you as
people do, they sit before you as My people, and they hear your words, but
they do not do them; for with their mouth they show much love, but their
hearts pursue their own gain.
Indeed you are to them as
a very lovely song of one who has pleasant voice and can play well on an
instrument; for they hear your words, but they do not do them. (Ezl
30:30-33, emphasis added).
Though aesthetic values are extensive and prominent in Scripture they are never salvific. Many divine messengers rail against an elegant outward worship experience that lacks transparent correspondence to the inner experience of the believer. God rejects aesthetic forms of worship if they cover injustice and other moral evils.
Another inherent danger
seems to be that the power of aesthetic appeal can tend to promote a
"superficial" religion supplanting the true faith it is supposed to
convey. Calvin Johansson is perceptive:
Idolatry, whether it be
a homemade religion of positive thinking or a comfortable aestheticism, can
thus offer a sort of domesticated spirituality. Our human need for transcendence, for meaning, for value, can be
met to a degree, in, for example, a majestic symphony without the pain of
repentance and the cost of discipleship, without what Flannery O'Connor has
called "the sweat and stink of the cross." Properly, the sense of transcendence in a symphony, the sensation
of being swept out of ourselves into something high and beautiful, can and
should make us mindful of the transcendent realm of the infinite Lord. Yet it need not. Many people are satisfied with the 'richness of life' offered by
aesthetic stimulation, which by its nature can make few self-consuming demands.[54]
This is an important point, for the arts and religion have undeniably affected each other. As Harry Lee also observes:
We tend to classify
together our concepts of art and religion as twin institutions, since they
afford experiences to our inner life which resemble each other much more
closely than either resembles our experience of any other social
institution....
In viewing the outside
world as the symbolic expressions of inner reality, art and religion are at
once differentiated as a class apart from the practical, utilitarian
institutions of our daily lives. We
attend to both as exercises of the spirit; they are alike in being experiences
which are noble, passionate, and serene, and which absorb our interest most
fully when we turn to them for solace and with a spirit of humility and
devotion. By employing within formal
frames a mode of thinking which ... makes the freest use of symbol, both
provide in sensible form a focus for our contemplation of something other than
ourselves. Each yields feelings of release
and of elevation, similar in kind. Art,
like religion, expresses the spiritual capacities of our human nature; we judge
them as similar in their intent since they constitute our most salutary refuges
from transient and contingent, from the practical and the pedestrian.[55]
There are also indicators in both testaments that aesthetic expression can be evaluated, and judged. For example, following the Exodus from Egypt, Moses was coming down from lengthy communion with God on Mt. Sinai. He and Joshua heard sounds from Israel's encampment below the mountain. To Joshua, the soldier, the first thought was of an attack from their enemies, and he said, 'There is a noise of war in the camp" (Ex. 32:17). But Moses evaluated more truly the nature of the commotion. The sound was not that of combat, but of revelry:
It is not the voice of
those who shout in victory,
Nor is it the voice of
those who cry out in defeat,
But the voice of those
who sing that I hear. (Ex 32:18)
As they drew near, they
beheld the people shouting and dancing around the golden calf, probably
imitating the idolatrous feasts of Egypt to which they had been so long
exposed. Moses was furious. He had just come from the presence of God's
glory, and had been warned of what was taking place (Ex 32:7-9). Having been trained for forty years in Egypt
as the son of the king's daughter,[56] he was well able to assess the situation
immediately. Accordingly, we are
instructed that music can be expressive of different emotions, and can be
evaluated.
Later, Balak, king of Moab, sought the services of Balaam to curse the children of Israel. He was concerned lest they fall to the same fate as the Amorites. Balaam was determined to curse the Israelites. However, he was so controlled by divine power that he was constrained to utter, instead of the imprecations he intended, sublime and impassioned poetry of blessing (Nm 22-24). Again, God is seen directly involved in aesthetic utterance involving specific emotions.
The Apostle Paul also
instructs us that aesthetic expression can be evaluated and judged. Writing to the Philippian church, no doubt
composed of both Hebrew and Gentile cultures, he counsels in what is sometimes
referred to as an "aesthetic mandate":
Finally, brethren,
whatever things are true, whatever things are noble, whatever things are
just, whatever things are pure, whatever things are lovely,
whatever things are of good report, if there is any virtue, and if there
is anything praiseworthy–meditate on these things. (Phil 4:8, emphasis added)
Paul is instructing
believers that it is important to evaluate and discriminate between worthy and
less worthy aspects of any culture.[57]
This
is also assumed with the award of the Nobel Prize in literature, which suggests
its transcultural value. A Christian is not left floundering in a miasma
of personal choices and standards with no absolutes to guide, as Calvin
Johansson (along with the Apostle Paul), suggests:
The gospel is no
cosmetic facelift but a matter of life-changing orientation running deep and
swift in its cleansing, shaping, and loving power. It shows to man the fallacy of phoniness and of being concerned
for the effect without concern for the cause.
The gospel of Jesus Christ stands for integrity, wholeness, and
creativity. Genuine newness is the
result of an inward dynamic at work--a creativity that breaks new ground with
imagination and integrity.... The gospel costs something in terms of
discipleship. Christ's death and
resurrection put an awesome responsibility on those who accept Him as
Saviour--a responsibility to give Him everything we have and are. Such a calling is often difficult, even
painful. ... There is a cost to such discipleship and the gospel does not water
down the requirements. Few are willing
to pay the price. There are no
short-cut methods, no easy ways, no getting around the fact that discipleship
means discipline.... The gospel requires the highest standard of living.[58]
A central idea regularly assumed in the modern aesthetic discipline is that of "disinterestedness". Kant was the first to describe the experience a work of art elicits in a person as "disinterestedness." This posture has been enormously influential in aesthetics ever since. However, Eddy Zemach vigorously tackled this long-standing maxim, and in doing so, moved much closer to the biblical perspective. For within the canon, as we have seen, we find God intimately involved in aesthetic values. Zemach argues:
Trait 1 of the aesthetic
attitude (heralded by contemporary Kantians such as Francis Coleman or Jerome
Stolnitz), is entirely bogus; the argument for it is a clever slight of
hand. Saying that Smith does something
without concern for her own interest, we mean that she is altruistic: she
sacrifices her own gratification for the sake of others. But in watching a play or reading a novel,
one does not sacrifice one's interests for the sake of others; to engage in
these activities is to indulge one's own interests. The sleight of hand is to call every interest (economic,
sexual, etc.) that motivates self-serving action, except the aesthetic
interest, "interested" and then "discover" that the
aesthetic interest alone is disinterested!
Thus a new monster, disinterested interest, is born.
The"disinterestedness" of the aesthetic interest is based on mere
verbal prestidigitation. To have
culinary or sexual interests is to wish to engage in certain activities, suffer
if one is denied them, be ready to give up other satisfactions in order to have
them, and so on. The same is true of
our aesthetic interests. Aesthetic
needs are no different from needs for love, power, or food. Some people like to play music or read
poetry even when they are not compensated for their effort. We often forgo satisfaction of other needs
so as to satisfy aesthetic needs; we suffer when we cannot pursue our aesthetic
interests. It is entirely disingenuous
to classify as self-serving all human interests except the aesthetic interest
alone, which is glorified as "disinterested."
If you listen to music
for its own sake, that does not mean that you do not listen to it for your
sake, for by listening to it you satisfy yourself, not the music! I may attend a concert for your sake, but
not for the concert's sake, the concert gains nothing by my attending it. Therefore, to listen to music for its own
sake is not to have a "disinterested interest" in music (whatever
that means); it is to have genuine interest in music. I do not listen to music in order to attain some other end, for
example to please you, but listening to music itself satisfies me, just as
eating, having sex, playing with my children, and meeting friends are
activities that satisfy me in and of themselves. To engage in an activity for its own sake is to be genuinely
interested in it, not the opposite, as Kant has it.[59]
Zemach
goes on to suggest why "distinterested" aesthetics has remained so
dominant:
The notion of the
aesthetic disinterested interest is perhaps one aspect of the great romanticist
attempt to secularize European culture, with art as a substitute for
religion. Romanticism has tried to model
art of religious institutions, and to a great extent it has succeeded; we dress
for the opera as we would for church, assume an attitude of reverence toward
art and artists as was traditionally accorded God and his ministers, treat art
as lofty and spiritual, etc. Now
religion teaches that it is wrong to worship God in order to serve one's own
interests. God should be worshiped
because he deserves to be worshiped; it is sacrilegious to treat worship as a
profitable transaction. We are supposed
to love God for what he is, and love is unselfish. Aspiring to replace religion, romanticism needed a new selfless
interest that transcends mundane interest.
Thence the "disinterested interest." But that is a hoax; art lovers engage in self-gratification, not
in worship. Aesthetic enjoyment is no
less mundane and self-serving than any other enjoyment.[60]
Thus, Zemach also
argues, as does Scripture, for the wholistic nature of the human being.
In fact, Zemach, through
lengthy discussion and argument, makes the arresting suggestion that it is
aesthetic qualities that verify scientific theory, and not empirical data, as
commonly assumed. Instead, aesthetic
function is foundational for establishing truth, and in fact, is the only way
it can be done. He writes:
What I wish to do is
prove that if you subscribe to any kind of realism, scientific or
metaphysical, aesthetic features are a part of it. That is, if any predicates correctly describe objective
reality, aesthetic predicates are among them.... Scientists and artists try to make sense of experience by weaving
it into aesthetically good years; the aesthetic appeal of the story vindicates
its way of formatting data.[61]
He augments his argument by describing how
Science aspires for two
kinds of beauty, internal beauty, i.e., elegance, is having internal
design that manifests a maximal unity in variety: a rich variety of
theorems derivable for a few and simple axioms. The theory's external beauty is its
compatibility with other entrenched theories (including common sense and folk
beliefs): this, too, is a unity in variety.
Now unity in variety is, of course, how Plato (and scores of other
classical and modern aestheticians) defined beauty.[62]
Other voices
concur. For example, John Wilson:
Even apparently objective
activities such as mathematics and scientific research are affected and
influenced by aesthetic factors. In
their writings scientists often refer to the harmony, simplicity, elegance and
beauty that they find in their researches and theories. The norms of art are not absent from their
considerations.
Einstein said of Isaac
Newton that he combined, in himself, the experimenter, the theorist, the
mechanic and, 'not least, the artist.'
Another scientist, Hinshelwood, once argued that chemistry was not only
a mental discipline but an adventure and an 'aesthetic experience.'[63]
Accordingly, as Zemach
and others insist, science itself "is a pursuit of beauty, not of
truth. To borrow Kant's terminology,
one may say that beauty serves us as a schema for truth, a postulated
substitute for a reality which we cannot fathom."[64]
Therefore, aesthetic
value, though rightly studied extensively within philosophy, has wrongly been
restricted and reduced to appealing only to the human's emotional needs, and
unable to bear the weight of propositional truth.[65] This was based on the assumption that such
values are grounded on experiences located only in the affective side of human
nature.[66] However, in the perspective observed in
Scripture, and further argued by Zemach and others, this is not adequate. The relationship of beauty to that of truth
and goodness is foundational, not peripheral.
And if this is true, and
it is the position of this study that Zemach is right, one can begin to
understand why God employs, almost exclusively, aesthetic media to communicate
His truth to human beings. For, as Kant
states above, "beauty serves us as a schema for truth, a postulated
substitute for a reality which we cannot fathom."[67] Aesthetic value, as observed in Scripture,
is more correctly viewed as the foundational value to structure and
substantiates truth itself, rather than merely a peripheral issue of the
emotions. Perhaps the poet Keats was
right after all: "Beauty is truth, truth, beauty: that is all ye know on
earth, and all ye need to know."[68]
The biblical aesthetic
is a wholistic discipline, affirming the whole being of each person. The senses, rather than being a peripheral
aspect of human nature, secondary to the mind, are the foundational means for grasping
truth and knowledge. The mind and human
reason are not extolled as the primary avenue for receiving divine revelation
in Scripture. Indeed, this revelation
is diffused and filtered through the aesthetic awareness of the human being
which thereby undergirds and substantiates the identification of truth. Aesthetic pleasure is even offered as one of
the rewards of salvation![69]
Accordingly, of the
three main values of Truth, Goodness and Beauty, it can be argued, Beauty,
though not salvific and though susceptible for misuse, is a fundamentally
critical value in the biblical aesthetic.
Why take the artistic way to prove so much?
Because, it is the glory and good of Art,
That Art remains the one way possible
Of speaking truth, to mouths like mine at least.
–Robert Browning[70]
Narrative Analysis is a
more recent discipline in theology.
During the years of dominance by the historical-critical method,
biblical narratives were perceived as uneven conflations of variously assorted
myths. With an increased understanding
of the Hebrew language, narratives are now increasingly appreciated as
sophisticated writing informed by particular theological presuppositions. The following analysis of Genesis 22
illustrates this.
The comprehensive
aesthetic manifestation of the OT writers was not devised to promote
appreciation for their literary skills.
Nor were the writers seeking to soothe the emotional needs of human
nature. Instead, their desire was to
point to the Messiah and His salvation.
In fact, it can be argued substantively, as John Sailhamer and others
do, that the actual details each writer includes (which are characteristic of
the terse narrative style of the canon) are indicative of this. Jesus Himself seems to substantiate this, by
placing Himself as the central focus of the OT: "You search the Scriptures [necessarily the OT at that time]
... and these are they which testify of Me." (John 5:39) Also, following His resurrection, to the two
walking to Emmaus:
"O foolish one, and slow of heart to
believe in all that the prophets have spoken!"... And beginning at Moses
and all the Prophets, He expounded to them in all the Scriptures the things
concerning Himself." (Luke 24:27); and again later that day He said to
them, "These things are the words which I spoke to you while I was still
with you, that all things must be fulfilled which were written in the Law of
Moses and the Prophets and the Psalms concerning Me." And He opened their understanding, that they
might comprehend the Scriptures. (Luke 24:44-45)[71]
This strongly suggests
that the OT narrative materials are not simply an eclectic collection of
unrelated and random details.[72]
One additional caveat: narrative analysis is a valuable tool. However, I submit that a present weakness of this method, besides its leaning toward a non-historical interpretation of biblical narratives, is its proclivity to overlook the possibility of any overarching theological stance operant in the biblical writer's mind.
Though interpretations
vary, a long historical consensus exists in theological studies regarding the
profound nature and significance of Genesis 22:1-19. There are wide differences in interpretation, but not over
its supreme importance in biblical narratives.
This attention has not been limited exclusively to Christianity. All three monotheistic traditions that claim
Abraham as their "father" (Christianity, Judaism, Islam), insist on
the significance of this passage for their theology.[73]
Narrative Analysis of
Genesis 22:
verse 1: "Now it came to pass after these
things that God tested Abraham":
The formula, "after
these things" is found only four times in the Pentateuch---all four in
Genesis (15:1; 22:1; 22:20; 48:1)[74] Notably, two of these
within the Abraham narratives.
This brings questions to
mind, such as: after what
"things"? And why is this
pericope being singled out? With the
many narratives in Genesis, what was the author's intent in "tagging"
so few narratives in this particular manner?
In Gen 22:1, "after
these things" introduces God speaking again to Abraham.
Perhaps this is to remind us of Abraham's long,
complex life, as recorded in the nine preceding chapters.[75] Abraham now is well over 100 years old--an
old man even for his generation. In his
earlier years he had been strong to endure hardship and to brave danger, but
now the ardor of his youth has passed.
The son of promise has grown to manhood by his side. Heaven seems to have crowned with blessing a
life with hopes long deferred.
But then comes the
shock: "God tested
Abraham". The reader is abruptly
informed at the outset that the following harrowing experience comes from God. The subsequent lethal commands are not a
figment of Abraham's imagination nor his misinterpretation of a dream. The test is not instigated by Satan.[76] Neither is it a matter of Abraham losing his
mind. The explicit description of God's
responsibility is underscored both by the reversal in the Hebrew of the usual
verb-subject sequence, and also with the unusual use of the definite article
with God's name.[77]
The verb
"tested" is not uncommon in the OT.
It is found 36 times in the Piel.
These often point to other divinely-appointed "tests" which generally include explanations of why
the test is permitted. The reader is
often informed of its reasonableness (Ex 15:25; 16:4; 20:20; Dt 8:2, 6; 13:3,
4).[78] However, in this instance, we are not told why
God is testing Abraham--perhaps suggesting that even Abraham himself wasn't
told.
--"and He said to
him, 'Abraham'": God has already
spoken to Abraham on several occasions in the preceding narratives (12:-13;
13:14-17; 15, 17; 18;21). However, only
this time does God address Abraham by name first–perhaps singling
out the solemnity of this moment.
--"and he said, "hineni". This response by Abraham to God occurs in
Gen 22 (vs. l, 11). Only two additional
times in the entire Pentateuch will an address by God be coupled with this
response.[79] Abraham's atypical response perhaps suggests
that he himself was recognizing the portent of this occasion, and also his
posture of obedience. He responds to
God in this manner only in this narrative.[80]
verse 2: "take now your son, your only/unique
one, whom you love, Isaac": This
is the fourth time God's commands to Abraham have involved his family ties.[81]3)
Gen 17:17-18, separation from Ishmael. As
painful as the earlier sundering of these bonds must have been, this surely is
the ultimate devastation. Even the
arrangement of the nouns in the Hebrew conveys a particularly strong sense of
gravity. The three-fold description
increases and intensifies Abraham's attachment to his son Isaac: "Your son, your only/unique one, Isaac,
whom you love."[82]
Moreover, the triple
designation plus name rules out any possible confusion. Abraham couldn't evade
the realization that God was clearly aware of what He was asking Abraham to
do--and that He was specifically identifying the promised heir.[83] It could not be Eliezer, whom Abraham once
suggested as his descendant (Gen 15:2).
Nor could it be Ishmael, his son by Hagar, whom he begged God to let
stand before Him (Gen 17:18).
The phrase--"who
you love" involves the initial use of the word "love" in the
OT. With the oft-noted verbal reticence
of this narrative, the tender regard Abraham had for Isaac is surely
highlighted. Moreover, God Himself is
speaking. Thus, the first time He
uses this word in all His recorded dialogues in the OT is significant.
--"and go
forth" occurs two times in the Abrahamic narratives. Both at the outset of two signal commands to
Abraham.[84] Gabriel Josipovici notes the alliteration:
... an arresting alliterative phrase urges us
forward and leaves us no chance to pause or look back: lekh lekha,
orders God, take yourself and go. It is
a phrase which is used only once again in the bible, also by God and also to
Abraham: 'Take your son, your only son, whom you love, Isaac, and lekh lekha
to the land of Moriah, and offer him there for a burnt offering upon one of the
mountains which I will tell you of' (Gen. 22:2). This time the forward thrust of the alliteration is barely reined
in by any compensating sense of return: the brevity of the first word, lekh,
forces the breath to leap on to lekha, and the repetition accentuates
the urgency, an urgency carried over into the repeated kha sounds of the
rest of the phrase: lekh lekha me'arzkha umimoladtakha umibait avikha el
ha'aretz asher arekha.[85]
"to the land of Moriah": no further identification of the divinely-ordained location is given except the assurance that God will signal Abraham at the appropriate time. Again, as in chapter 12, Abraham is commanded to go on a mission with its final destination a mystery. Verse 4 informs the reader that the designated place for sacrifice was a three-days' journey away. Abraham would need to travel approximately 70 kilometers (45 miles) from Beer-sheva. However, traveling long distances was not new to Abraham as earlier Abrahamic narratives have shown..
--"and offer him as
a burnt offering": The first two
imperatives in verse 2 would not have been alarming for Abraham. He is described in Genesis as regularly
offering sacrifices to God. But with
the third imperative, the true horror of the command is now made clear.
Furthermore, the term "burnt offerings" is used not less than six
times in this and the next few verses, the repetition keeping before the
reader's mind the extreme nature of the demand.[86]
verse 3: What is Abraham's response? "So Abraham rose early in the morning
and saddled his donkey and took two of his young men with him, and Isaac his
son, and he cut the wood for the burnt offering and arose and went to the place
of which God had told him."
From preceding
narratives the reader knows Abraham as a mighty warrior, who readily speaks.[87] However, now he only responds "hineni",
v. 2, and then becomes uncharacteristically silent. There is no more discourse, only actions, until Moriah.[88]
The reader
"sees" Abraham "saddle the donkey" and "cut the
wood", and should recall how "it is rare to find routine tasks
mentioned in biblical narrative."[89] Moreover, one wonders why Abraham at
his advanced age, and with his great wealth, is doing these tedious
chores. Surely these were tasks he
didn't normally have to do for himself--this "mighty prince of God"
(Gen 23:6) who could arm "318 trained servants who were born in his own
house."
Why does Abraham saddle the
donkey and cut the wood for the sacrifice himself? Is this giving a hint of Abraham's anguish? In his turmoil he perhaps doesn't want to
explain the journey (and thus God's command) to anyone. Maybe he knows someone would try and
persuade him not to go, telling him he must be mistaken about what God
said. Or, perchance, he wants to
be alone as he wrestles with his thoughts.
Thus, he attends to the preparations himself.
Notice also how Isaac is
brought into the narrative after the two servants, perhaps indicating
that Abraham, in his distress, woke Isaac up last in his distress.
Suddenly the narrative
alerts us to the fact that the journey to the unknown destination lasted three
days. Verse 4: "On the third day Abraham lifted his
eyes and saw the place afar off."
The distance traveled before arriving at Moriah surely prolongs the
agony for Abraham. He must have
reviewed the three-fold command from God over and over in his mind hoping he
had made some mistake. There was plenty
of time in three days to think. Yet the
narrator passes over any mention of the journey. We are not permitted to view those three torturing days.[90]
"and Abraham lifted
up his eyes and saw the place": possibly suggesting the height of the
mountain that God revealed to Abraham.
The more common OT description of "seeing" is "he looked
. . . and saw". Thus, the author,
by describing Abraham's "seeing" by "lift[ing] up his eyes"
perhaps hints of Abraham's inner struggle, underscoring his deep mental anguish
by implying his head was bowed down.
Or, is the use of this particular expression possibly suggesting more
than just physical sight?[91]
verse 5: "and then Abraham said to his young
men, 'stay here with the donkey. I and
the lad will go yonder and worship and come again to you.'"
Abraham, from his
extensive household, brought only two young servants with him. Now having arrived at the hour of sacrifice,
he leaves them with the donkey. Perhaps
even yet they might try to restrain Abraham.
Or, possibly, he didn't want them to view what was going to happen. Father and son must go alone.
--"we will
worship": the perceptive reader notices the first use of this word for
"worship" in the Pentateuch.
Abraham's faith apparently has not wavered throughout the three-day
journey. Even with pain surely stabbing
his heart, he can still affirm his intent to worship God.
--"We will return
to you": this is an electrifying
statement in light of what Abraham faces.
The verbs are cohortative and thus reveal emphatic determination. The plural "we" should be
shocking. Though the narrator never
discloses Abraham's agony, this profound statement of faith perhaps gives a
glimpse of Abraham's mental wrestling during the long three-day journey. The author of the book of Hebrews (11:17-19)
suggests this when he writes: "By
faith Abraham, when he was tested, offered up Isaac . . . accounting that
God was able to raise him up, even from the dead." The nature of Abraham's faith on the
mountain of sacrifice is astounding when one recalls that he had no precedent
of any resurrection on which to base his faith. A 20th century person looking back through such miracles
subsequent to Abraham can only marvel!
verse 6: "and Abraham took the wood of the
burnt offering and laid it on Isaac his son and he took in his hand the fire
and the knife; so they went, two of them, together."
The verb, "and
Abraham took" completes the
divine command to "take" in v. 2. God has commanded Abraham, and Abraham has conscientiously
obeyed. Notice too, how in this verse,
the sacrificial implements "wood of the burnt offering" and
"fire and knife", verbally surround 'Isaac his son.'"[92]
Isaac now takes the
place of the beast of burden. Why is
the donkey left behind? The poignant
picture is that of the victim bearing the instrument of his death. Father and son go alone. The text states: "so they went, both of them, together."
The wood has the heavier
weight of those items that are needed for sacrifice and Abraham is
elderly. Is this why Isaac carries the
wood? Even so, notice how the father
carries the knife and fire, as if to shield his son from their harm as long as
possible.
Verses 7-8: "and Isaac said to Abraham his father
and he said, 'My father,' and he said, 'hineni [here am I], my son'; and
he said, 'behold, the fire and the wood but where is the lamb for a burnt
offering?' And Abraham said, 'God will
see/provide himself the lamb for a burnt offering my son'; and they went, two
of them, together."
At Isaac's question,
Abraham again responds "hineni".
Note this identical response of Abraham to God earlier. Is this alerting the reader to the intensity
of this moment?[93]
The poignant
dialogue: "My father" . . .
"my son" reminds the reader again and again of the relationship
between Abraham and Isaac in this narrative--four times in just these two
verses. In fact the word
"son" occurs ten times between verses 2-16. This constant reminder is not just a
redundant reference to the blood relationship between Abraham and Isaac. Rather, this obvious repetition pointedly
stresses the horror of a father going to sacrifice his son.[94]
--"God will
see/provide himself": One of many
times this narrative emphasizes "seeing." God's involvement dominates Abraham's guarded response to
Isaac. Normal Hebrew syntax is again
reversed and the subject precedes the verb.
Note, also, how it includes a lingering ambiguity of apposition linking
"burnt offering" and "my son". Was this the only way Abraham could yet speak of what was just
ahead?
"and they went, two
of them, together": this phrase is
repeated the second time in just three verses.
Was this the point where Isaac began to understand Abraham's enigmatic
response? If so, he did not try to
escape, for we are again reminded that even yet father and son
"went together".
verses 9-10: "and they came to the place of which
God had told them. Abraham built there
an altar and laid in order the wood and bound Isaac his son and laid him on the
altar upon the wood and Abraham put forth his hand and took the knife to slay
his son."
"and they came to
the place of which God ["God" again with definite article as in v.1]
had told them": once more we are
reminded of the certainty of God's instructions and how carefully Abraham had
carried them out.[95]
At this point the
narrative slows down dramatically with the preparations on the mountain. Why are so many details included here? These preparations for a burnt offering would
be unnecessary instruction to OT readers, well-familiar with sacrificial
worship. Yet note the calculated
accuracy depicted through this sequence of six verbs. Abraham alone is the subject of them all, with Isaac appearing
as the object after each group of three.[96] Milgrom comments,
"These are particularly desperate moments because at each of these pivots
Abraham could have turned back."[97] Even the action of taking the knife is
divided into two separate movements--putting forth his hand and then taking the
knife--with the reader reminded yet again of Abraham's intention "to slay
his son."[98]
We are never informed when
Abraham told his son of the divine command, or what he said to
Isaac. Whenever it occurred, there
apparently was no resistance. For when
Isaac is again mentioned, we find that Abraham has bound him for
sacrifice. As a young man, Isaac could
have easily over-powered his aged father.
But instead, the reader becomes aware of a second profound act of faith and
obedience. For Abraham's beloved son,
heir of the promise, lies ready to die by his own father's hand. The father has yielded his son. The son has yielded his life. All Christian and Jewish writers pause long over
these two verses.[99]
verses 11-12: "but the angel of Yahweh called to him
from heaven and said, 'Abraham, Abraham,'and he said , 'hineni [here am
I].' And he said, 'do not lay your hand
on the lad or do to him anything. For
now I know that you fear God; you have not withheld your son, your unique one
from me.'"
At this critical
juncture one immediately notices the change of the name of God used up to this
point. And this name will now be used
until the end of the narrative.
The double vocative
"Abraham, Abraham" reinforces the intervention from heaven,[100] as does the father's
third "hineni" (as in vss. 1 and 7), all adding to the
intensity of this moment.
Also punctuating God's
urgent halt is the double negative to ensure the total safety of Isaac,
"do not lay your hand on the lad/do not do anything to him."
"now I know you
fear God": The divine being
declares the meaning of Abraham's act.
This direct characterization of Abraham uttered from heaven thus has
absolute authority. The reader is left
with no doubt that true fear of God consists in complete subjection to His
sovereign will.[101]
"Your son, your
only/unique one": God repeats this
designation of Isaac at this juncture (as in v. 2), repetition assuring the
reader that God recognizes full well the nature of His command to Abraham.
verse
13
"and Abraham lifted up his eyes and looked, and behold a ram behind
him caught in a thicket by his horns; and Abraham went and took the ram and
offered it up as a burnt offering instead of his son."
At
this point, again "Abraham lifts up his eyes and sees." The narrator utilizes the same formula as in
v. 4 to mark off another poignant moment for Abraham. The first time he "lifted his eyes" his heart must have
stopped as he saw the mountain God
indicated. He knew then for sure
that he had not been mistaken about God's command. And now, at this moment he sees the substitute for
his son.
As alluded to above, the
phrase "[he] looked ... and saw" is the most common way of depicting
physical sight in the OT. It is used
over 860 times; over 240 times in the Pentateuch; and almost 100 times in
Genesis alone. Forms of "to see" also occur seven times
within fifteen verses of Gen. 22. Thus
it becomes tantalizing to notice the few times when the rare phrase
"lifting up . . eyes" is tagged to the already obvious word for
"seeing." Could this possibly
imply something beyond mere physical sight?[102] The narrator could have written that
Abraham "saw." He writes in
this manner almost 250 times in the Pentateuch. However, at this dramatic point in Gen. 22 there is added
"lifted up the eyes" to the word "seeing." Is this possibly indicating something beyond
natural vision?[103]
In the NT, Jesus Himself
declared that "Abraham rejoiced to see My day, and he saw it and was
glad." (Jn 8:56). Could He have
been alluding to this instance of "lifting up the eyes and seeing" of
Gen 22:13? Was the Messiah's future
mission of salvation something that Abraham began to "see" there on
Moriah's mountain? The rare formula
"lifting of the eyes," used at two critical junctures in this
narrative, could possibly signify something beyond mere natural sight. The narrator seems intentional that the
reader "see" as Abraham did when he "went and took the ram, and
offered it up for a burnt offering instead of his son." Ellen White so contends:
This terrible ordeal was imposed upon Abraham
that he might see the day of Christ, and realize the great love of God for the
world, so great that to raise it from its degradation, He gave His
only-begotten Son to a most shameful death.
Abraham
learned of God the greatest lesson ever given to mortals. His prayer that he might see Christ before
he should die was answered. He saw
Christ; he saw all that mortal can see, and live. By making an entire surrender, he was able to understand the vision
of Christ, which had been given him. He
was shown that in giving His only-begotten Son to save sinners from eternal
ruin, God was making a greater and more wonderful sacrifice than ever man could
make.
...
In the words of Abraham, 'My son, God will provide Himself a lamb for a burnt
offering' (Gen 22:8), and in God's provision of a sacrifice instead of Isaac,
it was declared that no man could make expiation for himself. The pagan system of sacrifice was wholly
unacceptable to God. No father was to offer
up his son or his daughter for a sin offering.
The Son of God alone can bear the guilt of the world.
Through
his own suffering, Abraham was enabled to behold the Savior's mission of
sacrifice." (DA 469)
The drama of this substitution is also emphasized through the phrase "behold a ram," answering earlier Isaac's question: "behold . . . where is the lamb?" in v. 7. This is the first time the word for this sacrificial animal is used in Genesis.
verse 14: "and so Abraham called the name of
that place Yahweh will see, as it is said to this day, on the mount of Yahweh,
it shall be seen."
Abraham now names the
mountain. The "name draws
attention to God, not Abraham. It is
not Abraham-has-performed, but God-will-provide."[104]
verses 15-18: "and the angel of Yahweh called to
Abraham a second time from heaven and said, 'by Myself I have sworn' says
Yahweh, 'because you have done this and have not withheld your son, your
only/unique one. With blessings indeed
I will bless you and I will multiply your seed as the stars of the heaven and
as the sand, which is on the shore of the sea, and your seed shall possess the
gate of his enemies. And in your seed
all the nations of the earth shall be blessed because you have obeyed my
voice.'"
After the sacrifice, the
"angel of the Lord" called out of heaven the second time to
Abraham. Three times in just 19
verses God speaks to Abraham, two of them at this pivotal climax of the
narrative.[105]
(verse 16) "I swear
by Myself": This is the solitary
instance of God swearing this way in all of the Patriarchal narratives,
crowning these words with extreme importance.[106] The Pentateuch subsequently has repeated
references to this oath (24:7; 26:3; 50:24; Ex 8:5; 33:1). God is
obviously reaffirming His earlier Covenant with Abraham but in a dramatically
expanded manner. "And He
said," used over and over in these 19 verses, is now punctuated with
"says Yahweh."[107] Even the verbs are reinforced by the
absolute infinitive--adding "most abundantly!" Noticeably, the blessing is now extended to
Abraham's seed, and victory over enemies is mentioned for the first time. These blessings are also uniquely presented
as the result of Abraham's actions, and not merely as God's gracious
initiative, as in previous chapters.
God specifically praises Abraham's obedience in this Covenant
statement. Note also the mention of
"nations" for the first time in the covenant expression. A significant "hint" that the
messianic gift was to extend beyond the Abrahamic line.
The narrative of Gen 22
is profound.[108] Each of the "particulars" beckons
attention and interpretation. It seems
very apparent that the narrator has displayed, as Robert Alter cogently
remarks, "his omniscience with a drastic selectivity."[109] It is the position of this paper that the
accumulative effect of the various particulars of Gen 22 and its surrounding
context cannot be brushed aside as merely coincidental.
1. Isaac's birth, in
just the previous chapter (21), is announced in a very singular manner.[110] Up to this birth, the author of Genesis has
described the conception of a child as the result of the husband
"knowing" his wife."[111] However, in this instance we are told that,
"the LORD visited Sarah as He had said, and the LORD did for Sarah as He
had spoken."
Sarah conceived, without
the previously-used Genesis formula of her husband "knowing" her. This in no way suggests that Abraham was not
involved! This is not a virgin
birth. Sarah has, however, been
pointedly depicted as well-beyond child-bearing years (chapter 18). Thus this birth of Isaac is miraculous in
that fact alone, pointing the perceptive reader to the later miracle involved
in the Messiah's unusual birth.
2. The text declares
that Isaac's miraculous birth also came "at the set time of which
God had spoken to him" alluding to a later fulfillment of God's word when
at "the fullness of time" the Messiah would be born (Gal 4:4).
3. The birth announcement involves both names
for God that are found in Gen 22, the shift in names occurring there at the
decisive interruption on Moriah.
4. God explicitly
informs Abraham what he is to call his son: "Then God said: 'No, Sarah
your wife shall bear you a son, and you shall call his name Isaac,'"
bringing to mind the later words of the angel to Joseph, "you shall call
His name Jesus." (Mt. 1:21)
Matthew quotes the exact LXX phrase of Gen 17:19.
5. The word
"love" is used for the first time in Genesis in this narrative,
specifying a father's love for his son.
Surely fathers loved their sons before Abraham. However, this particular relationship is
singled out.
6. Specific mention of
Moriah: later readers would be reminded
of when God halted the plague against Israel (2 Sm 24:15-25); where the Temple
would stand (2 Ch 3:1), and thus, "in NT times, the vicinity of
Calvary--where sin's great Plague would be halted."[112]
7. Abraham's journey to
Moriah is specifically pointed out as being a "three days'
journey." "Three days"
proves to be a significant marker in the Pentateuch, sensitizing the reader to
the three days of Christ's death and resurrection. (See footnote 90)
8. The reader is given a
double reminder linking a father and son-- "they went, two of them,
together."
9. The detail of Isaac
carrying the wood to the place of sacrifice is explicitly noted, sensitizing
the reader to Christ's bearing of His cross to Calvary.
10. The dramatic
slow-down in the narrative in verses 9-10, sensitizing readers of the only time
"in history by which it is surpassed:
that where the Great Father gave His Isaac to a death from which there
was no deliverance."[113]
11. Curiously, Isaac is
silent. He speaks only once--on
Moriah's mountain. Isaiah later writes
of the Messiah: "Yet He opened not His mouth; He was led as a lamb to the
slaughter ..." (53:7)
12. The word for the
"sacrificial ram" occurs first in this narrative.
13. It can be argued
that the narrator develops a whole constellation of salvation images in Gen 22:
a father giving his son; a son yielding to the father's will; a sacrifice,
wood, altar, ram, love, faith and obedience.
Taken in its entirety, the poignant details of this narrative seem to
point to the Great Sacrifice of Christ.
Section 3: Theological Implications:
Much current Narrative
Analysis assumes the non-historical, mythical nature of OT events and
personages with interest focused on probing the psychological nuances of the
characters.[114] More importantly, the various details
included by biblical narrators have not generally been allowed to carry
theological import. However, a
"close reading of the text" suggests a deliberate hermeneutic pervading
the Abrahamic narratives.[115]
New Testament materials
also give evidence of linkage with Gen 22.
It could be argued that it was some of the very particulars in Gen 22
that the NT writers pondered as they wrote of Christ and His death. The Apostle Paul seems to have lingered long
over Gen 22 when he writes "What then shall we say to these things? If God is for us, who can be against
us? He who did not spare His own Son
but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give
us all things?" (Rom 8:32, emphasis supplied). Had John the Baptist been studying Gen 22:7-8 and pondering
"My father . . . where is the lamb?"
And coupled this with Is 53 when he announced, by the Jordan River,
"Behold the Lamb of God which takes away the sin of the world."
(Jn 1:29, 36, emphasis supplied)
Is the word
"love" describing a father's heart initially used in Gen 22 so that
when later God Himself calls from heaven twice, "This is My beloved
Son"[116] we would better grasp
what love was involved in His heart for His Son? The mention three times to Abraham by
God in Gen 22 of Isaac as "your son, your only/unique one" also finds
echo in Christ's words to Nicodemus when He tells him that "God so loved
the world that He gave His only/unique Son."
The Apostle Paul also
does careful exegesis of Genesis. He notes
(Gal 3:18) that "... the Scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the
nations by faith, preached the gospel to Abraham beforehand," saying, 'In
you all the nations shall be blessed.'"
Of his several statements of the Abrahamic covenant, here Paul was
distinctly referring to the blessing in Gen 22 and the final covenantal
declaration with Abraham. Two
previous times God's covenantal promise that through Abraham all the earth
would be blessed: in chapter 12, all
the "families" of the earth; but in chapter 22, all the
"nations" of the earth (which rendering Paul quotes). For in Gen 22:18, God dramatically changes
the destination of the blessing from "families" of Gen 12:3, to
"nations."
This important passage
in Galatians also seems to validate the suggestion above that the "lifting
up of the eyes" includes more than just physical sight. For Paul states that the "gospel"
was "preached to Abraham" and pinpoints this exact time with a direct
quote from Gen 22:18. There is no
explicit mention of God "preaching" the "gospel" to Abraham
in Genesis chapters 12-25. When does
God "preach" the "gospel" to Abraham? If the enigmatic obscure formula
"lifting up the eyes" can suggest something more than just natural
eyesight, it could be hinting at Abraham's perception opening when he
"lifted his eyes" and "sees" the substitute lamb on Mt.
Moriah.
Paul's argument in later
verses (Gal 3:15-16) must not go unnoticed in this context. He seems to continue his exegesis of Gen 22
when he points to the deliberate change to the singular "seed" in the
Great Blessing of Gen 22. Paul is not
careless. He has traced the
"seed" through its several promises within the Abrahamic narratives
and thus demonstrates a "close reading" of Gen 22:17, elaborating on
a detail which many modern English versions do not translate precisely.
Paul apparently noticed
that elsewhere in Genesis when the collective "seed" is used it
appears with the pronoun "they" (i.e. Gen 15:13). In Gen 3:15, the first covenant promise, one
finds the first mention of the "seed" (collective plural) but used
with the 3rd person plural. When
God blesses Hagar In Gen 16:10, no pronoun is used with "seed." In 17:7, 9, "seed" is used with plural
pronouns. Yet in 22:17 and 24:60, the
text includes a deliberate use of the singular pronoun. This pronominal precision continues in the
discussion of the "seed" beyond the Pentateuch. For example 2 Sm 7:12–"I will raise up
your seed after you . . . I will establish his kingdom." Also 2 Ki 17:20--"The Lord rejected all
the "seed" of Israel--afflicted them, delivered them,
etc.--when a nation is implied, the pronominal suffix is plural.
Further testimony can be
found "indirectly" from the LXX.
Of the 103 times where the Hebrew masculine pronoun is used in Genesis, never
does the LXX violate the agreement of the pronoun and antecedent except in Gen
22--evidence, perhaps, of an anti-Messianic bias.[117] The RSV appropriately translates the pronoun
"he"-- the Hebrew utilizes the third person singular
pronominal suffix following the plural seed in Gen 22:18. This is an important textual nuance Paul
noticed (and built his exegesis upon) but which is excluded by most modern
English translations.
This is not an isolated
incident. Pronominal suffixes in the
Covenant blessings are not carelessly written.
Subsequently in chapter 24, as Rebekah leaves her home to go and marry
Isaac, she is blessed, "May you become the mother of ten thousands; and
may your seed possess the gates of those who hate him." (again,
the 3rd person singular pronominal suffix!).[118] This deliberate focusing on a single
"him" seems again to imply a Messianic understanding of these
promises by the author of the Pentateuch--a significant detail upon which Paul
builds his own argument.[119]
Many have seen Isaac as
a type of Christ in this narrative. We
also tentatively argue that in the carefully crafted Gen 22 narrative, the writer also seeks to rivet
the attention of the reader upon the father. There is almost exclusive focus on Abraham. He is the subject of almost all of the
verbs. Perhaps it was here in Genesis
that the NT writers learned of the Heavenly Father's love for His Son, and how
closely He was identified with Jesus in the Great Sacrifice.[120]
OT sacrifices for sin
were God-ordained. They were a prominent
part of Hebrew worship. However, in Gen
22 one is instructed that God does not need the bloody sacrifice to bring His
heart to love and to forgive. It is
because of the love already in His heart that He makes provision for the
Atonement (Rom 5:8). And before any of
the elaboration of the sacrificial ritual later in the Pentateuch, God first
revealed to Abraham, the father of the true seed, what would be in His
heart as He offered His only Son in sacrifice for sin.
The NT writers have not
"advanced" theologically beyond the OT when insisting that "God
is Love." They are not introducing
some exalted new concept. Rather, it is
the position of this paper that NT writers had lingered long over Gen 22 and
had seen, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit who also inspired the
Abrahamic narratives (2 Pt 1:20-21), that "the Father Himself loves you."
(Jn 16:27) The collective details in
Genesis 22 are not randomly included, but instead serve as intriguing pointers
toward the Messiah's sacrifice issuing from His Father's heart.
We moderns tend to pride ourselves on our access
to the sophisticated tools of comparative linguistics, religion, psychology and
archaeology in dealing with the biblical text.
Yet we are humbled to recognize that the ancients saw all the angles,
voiced all the questions and paradoxes, and emerged from the maze still one
step ahead of us.[121]
A "close reading" of OT narratives helps to establish the aesthetic nature of Scripture structuring and expressing Truth.
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
Alter, Robert. The Art of Biblical Narrative. New York:
Basic Books, 1981.
_____________. The
Art of Biblical Poetry. New York:
Basic Books, Inc., 1985.
Robert Alter's book on
biblical narrative is considered the classic.
Alter is very sensitive to the Hebrew text and this book is exceedingly
helpful in becoming discerning of Hebrew narrative style. However, Alter does not believe the
narratives are necessarily true history which is very different from the SDA perspective.
Gabriel Josipovici, The
Book of God: A Response to the Bible.
New Haven: Yale University Press, 1990.
Josipovici, like many
writers on biblical narrative, is helpful in opening one's eyes to the
treasures in biblical narrative. But a
SDA needs to be sensitive to his denigrating the historical nature of the
narratives.
Sailhamer, John H. Genesis. The Expositor's Bible Commentary vol. 2. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1990.
_____________. The Pentateuch as Narrative. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1982.
Sailhamer provides many
insights of the Hebrew text and Hebrew narratives. He is more inclined to accept the narratives as historical. He recognizes his debt to Alter.
Ellen G. White: there is
no one that can match Ellen White's insight into biblical narratives. Her perceptions include details that can
only be detected in the Hebrew text but which are lost in translation to
English. Especially valuable: Patriarchs
and Prophets, Prophets and Kings, Desire of Ages, and Acts
of the Apostles.
Many biblical
commentaries now include a new sensitivity to Hebrew narrative writing and also
to the chiastic structures within the texts.
[1]Frank E. Gaebelein, The
Christian, The Arts and Truth: Regaining the Vision of Greatness. Portland, OR: Multnomah Press, 1985, p. 56.
[2]"Beauty",
The Interpreter's Dictionary, George A. Buttrick, ed., Vol 1 (New York:
Abingdon Press, 1962).
[3]Peter Taylor
Forsyth, Christ on Parnassus (London: Independent Press, 1959), 43.
[4]Gerhard von Rad, Old
Testament Theology, Vol. 1 (New York:
Harper & Row, 1962 English translation), 364.
[5]Erickson writes:
"Beyond the logical or rational character of theology, there is also its
aesthetic character. There is the
potential, as we survey the whole of God's truth, of grasping its artistic
nature. There is a beauty to the great compass
and the interrelatedness of the doctrines.
The organic character of theology, its balanced depiction of the whole
of reality and of human nature, should bring a sense of satisfaction to the
human capacity to appreciate beauty in the form of symmetry, comprehensiveness,
and coherence." Millard J.
Erickson, Christian Theology (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1989),
1245-1246.
However, no mention is made of the
extensive display of finely crafted poetry and narratives, nor of literary
structures, which Gerhard von Rad is sensitive to:
Her
[Israel's] most intensive encounter with beauty was in the religious sphere, in
the contemplation of Jahweh's revelation and action; and because of this
concentration of the experience of beauty upon the credenda, Israel
occupies a special place in the history of aesthetics. ... All her hymns, all her songs of victory and
all her artistically shaped narratives testify to the fact that she perceived a
strong aesthetic element as well in the actions wrought by Jahweh." Gerhard von Rad, Old Testament Theology,
Vol. 1 (New York: Harper & Row, 1962 English translation), 364.
[6]Aidan Nichols is one of
various voices that affirms this:
For
all this Scripture has its own language, which is largely that not of
metaphysics but of poetry. Just as in
the sacraments God uses material things and gestures to communicate his
gracious life, so in the images of the bible he takes as his media their
linguistic equivalents–verbal icons–to communicate his gracious truth. This befits our nature and situation. It bestows dignity on the material realities
in whose setting we live .. Aidan Nichols, O.P., The Splendour of Doctrine:
The Catechism of The Catholic Church on Christian Believing (Edinburgh:
T&T Clark, 1995), 105.
[7]Also: "As a father
pities his children, so the LORD pities those who fear Him. For He knows our frame; He remembers that we
are dust." Ps 103:13.
[8]Titus Burckhardt rightly
suggests: "From the Christian point of view God is similarly 'artist' in
the most exalted sense of the word, because He created man 'in His own image'
(Gen 1:27)." Titus Burckhardt, Sacred
Art in East and West: Its Principles and Methods, Lord Northbourne, transl.
(London: Perennial Books, 1967), 11.
[9] "Then the LORD
spoke to Moses, saying: 'Speak to the children of Israel, that they bring Me an
offering. From everyone who gives it
willingly with his heart you shall take My offering. And this is the offering which you shall take from them: gold, silver, and bronze; blue and purple
and scarlet yarn, fine linen thread and goats' hair; rams' skins dyed red,
badger skins and acacia wood; oil for the light, and spices for the anointing
oil and for the sweet incense; onyx stones, and stones to be set in the ephod
and in the breastplate. And let them
make Me a sanctuary, that I may dwell among them. According to all that I show you, the pattern of the tabernacle
and the pattern of all its furnishings, just so you shall make it.'" Ex
25:1-9. These instructions are followed
by Ex 25:10-31:11 of God's instructions for the tent temple and its
furnishings, including priests' attire; from 35:1-to the end of the book
(40:38) are the detailed descriptions of the accomplishment of God's
instructions, again with abundant details of the artforms employed, the artists
commissioned and the lavish materials utilized.
[10]For example, the book of
Exodus [in the Pentateuch] divides neatly into two main sections: chapters 1-18 recount the deliverance of
Israel from Egypt. Chapters 19-40
records God's instructions. Three-fourths
of this second section includes God's lengthy directives regarding the
aesthetic particulars of His sanctuary and its officiants. Thus, it is hard to consider these
furnishings of great beauty as unnecessary luxurious embellishments for
Israelite worship, the instructions are too extensive.
[11]Francis A. Schaeffer, Art
and the Bible (Downers Grove, IL:
IVP, 1976), 15.
[12]Ibid., p. 16. Moreover, God Himself states: "The
glory of Lebanon shall come to you, the cypress, the pine, and the box tree
together, to beautify the place of My sanctuary; and I will make the place of
My feet glorious." Is 60:13
[13]the following material
on Bezalel is adapted from Gene Edward Veith, Jr., "State of the
Arts" From Bezalel to Mapplethorpe.
Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 199l,
pp. 103-116.
[14]The NT echoes the same
sentiment: "every good and perfect gift is from above." James 1:17.
[15]It could be argued that
artistic skill is a "spiritual gift."
[16]Gal 5:22-23
"But the fruit of the Spirit is ..."
[17]Jud 6:34
"But the Spirit of the LORD came upon Gideon; then he blew the trumpet,
and the Abiezites gathered behind him."
1 Sm 10:5-6 [Samuel speaking to
Saul after his anointing] "After that you shall come to the hill of God
where the Philistine garrison is. And
it will happen, when you have come there to the city, that you will meet a
group of prophets coming down fro the high place with a stringed instrument, a
tambourine, a flute, and a harp before them; and they will be prophesying. Then the Spirit of the LORD will come upon
you, and you will prophesy with them and be turned into another man."
Lk 1:15 [Angel to Zacharias]
"For he will be great in the sight of the Lord, and shall drink neither
wine nor strong drink. He will also be
filled with the Holy Spirit, even from his mother's womb."
Lk 1:41 "And it happened,
when Elizabeth heard the greeting of Mary, that the babe leaped in her womb;
and Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit."
Lk 1:67 "Now his father
Zacharias was filled with the Holy Spirit, and prophesied ..."
Acts 1:16 [Peter speaking]
"Men and brethren, this Scripture had to be fulfilled, which the Holy
Spirit spoke before by the mouth of David ..."
Acts 4:8 "Then Peter,
filled with the Holy Spirit, said to them ..."
Acts 28:25 "So when they
did not agree among themselves, they departed after Paul had said one word: "The
Holy Spirit spoke rightly through Isaiah the prophet to our fathers.
[18]G. Henton Davies, The
Interpreter's Dictionary of the Bible, Vol. 1, George A. Buttrick, ed. (New
York: Abingdon Press, 1962), 372.
[19]"Literary
considerations are indispensable to any adequate study of the prophets. Poetry is the language of most of the
literature. The messages were intended
not to inform minds but to change hearts.
It is therefore necessary to pay attention to the ways the poets spoke,
the forms and techniques they used in their efforts to make their word as
effective as possible."
"More than any other section of OT
literature, the prophetic texts must be appreciated for their literary artistry
as well as for the thoughts they contain." Alice L. Laffey, An Introduction to the Old Testament: A Feminist Perspective (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1988), 149, 151.
[20]Sternberg is one of many
who suggests that it is the literary nature of the biblical narratives for
example, that substantiates its validity:
In
line with his self-effacing policy, the biblical narrator no more lay any
explicit claim to inspiration than he makes other mentions of himself and his
terms of reference. But the empirical
evidence, historical and sociocultural as well as compositional, leaves no
doubt about his inspired standing. Meir
Sternberg. The Poetics of Biblical
Narrative: Ideological Literature and the Drama of Reading (Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 1985), 77.
[21]See Robert Alter, The
Art of Biblical Narrative (NY:
Basic Books, Inc., 1981). Other
examples: in the OT, the explicit
instructions of heavenly aesthetics followed immediately by the misuse of music
and art with Aaron and the Golden Calf.
[22]Faith and unbelief are major
themes in John's Gospel. Implied
explicitly and implicitly in John 3 and 4--the vibrant faith of a
"pagan" female divorcee is contrasted with that of the hesitant faith
of a prominent Jewish Pharisee, a
religious leader.
[23] "The parable is Jesus' most characteristic method of
teaching. It is a literary form akin to
the fable but taken from the familiar areas of common life. To understand properly what Jesus has to say
through this literary genre, the parable must be seen as a genuine art form
and, as such, creative imagination is necessary in getting to the parable's
intent." Calvin M. Johansson, Music
& Ministry: A Biblical Counterpoint
(Peabody, Mass: Hendrickson Publishers,
1988), 79.
[24]From John Stott, Romans:
God's Good News For the World. (Downers
Grove: IVP, 1994), 309.
James Bailey and Lyle Vander Broek
comment similarly:
One must not fail to notice, for example, that
the rhetorical crescendo leading up to the doxology in Rom. 11:36 is the
conclusion to an important section (Rom 9-11), and that ch. 12 begins a
different discussion.
James L. Bailey and Lyle D. Vander Broek, Literary Forms in the New
Testament: A Handbook (Louisville, KY: Westminster/John Knox Press, 1992), 75.
[25]Meir Sternberg. The
Poetics of Biblical Narrative: Ideological Literature and the Drama of Reading
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1985), 77.
G.B. Caird concurs: "There is,
then, an accumulation of evidence that the biblical writers were not only
skillful handlers of words (which is obvious) but were also well aware of the
nature of their tools. Yet this
conclusion would have been challenged by many Old and New Testament scholars
who, whatever their differences of approach, were agreed about one thing: that
biblical man was prescientific and therefore naive, that he inhabited a
mythical world, and that his intellectual development was at the stage which
some of them have designated 'the mythopoeic mind'. This was the presupposition which prompted, for example,
Bultmann's influential essay on demythologising. In the opening paragraphs he summarised the 'cosmology of the New
Testament', the pictorial framework within which men tried to make sense of
their existence and history. The world
is envisaged as a three-story house, in which mankind lives on the ground
floor, God and his angels on the floor above, and some much less desirable
tenants in the basement. So far from
being his castle, man's home is constantly being invaded by the occupants of
the other two stories. History 'is set
in motion and controlled by these supernatural powers. This aeon is held in bondage by Satan, sin,
and death ... and hastens towards its end.
That end will come very soon, and will take the form of cosmic
catastrophe ... All this is the
language of mythology ... To this extent the kerygma is incredible to modern
man, for he is convinced that the mythical view of the world is obsolete.' [fn:
Kerygma and Myth, 3ff.] Bultmann's thesis contained two enormous and
unargued assumptions: that the mythical creature he called 'modern man' would
be more comfortable among the abstractions of existentialist philosophy than
with the picture language of the Bible; and that biblical man took that picture
language as flat statement of fact....
Unitary perception is, to be sure, a
well-attested phenomenon, but it is characteristic not of the
primitive
but of the creative mind in all ages..."
G.B. Caird, The Language and Imagery of the Bible (Philadelphia:
Westminster, 1980), 193, 197.
[26]Also, "Grace and
peace be multiplied unto you through the knowledge of God, and of Jesus our
Lord, according as his divine power has given to us all things that pertain to
life and godliness, through the knowledge of him that hath called us to glory
and virtue: whereby are given unto us
exceeding great and precious promises: that by these you might be partakers of
the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world through
lust." 2 Pet 1:2-4.
[27]As Paul writes: "We
are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus ... " Eph. 2:10.
[28]Simone Weil is also
sensitive to the Incarnation of Christ: "The longing to love the beauty of
the world in a human being is essentially the longing for the Incarnation. It is mistaken if it thinks it is anything
else. The Incarnation alone can satisfy
it ... Beauty is eternity here below."
Simone Weil, Waiting on God (London: Fontana, 1959), 127.
[29]In identifying God's
glory with His beauty, Barth writes: "What is the more precise designation
of the glory of God, of the way in which God's light declares itself? ... that
of beauty. If we can and must say that
God is beautiful, to say this is to say how He enlightens and convinces and
persuades us. It is to describe not
merely the naked fact of His revelation or its power, but the shape and form in
which it is a fact and is power. It is
to say that God has his superior force, this power of attraction, which speaks
for itself, which wins and conquers, in the fact that He is beautiful, divinely
beautiful, beautiful in His own way, in a way that is His alone, beautiful as
the unattainable primal beauty, yet really beautiful.... God loves us as the One who is worthy of
love as God. This is what we mean when
we say that God is beautiful." Yet, reflecting the recurring attitude of
denying aesthetic value equal weight with theological argument, he seems to
refrain from speaking of beauty as an attribute of God:
The
Bible neither requires nor permits us, because God is beautiful, to expound the
beauty of God as the ultimate cause producing and moving all things, in the way
in which we can and must do this in regard to God's grace or holiness or
eternity, or His omnipotent knowledge and will. Karl Barth, Church Dogmatics, G.W. Bromiley and T.F.
Torrance, eds, T.H.L. Parker, et. al., transl.
(Edinburgh, 1957), II, pt. 1, 650-651, 652.
[30]Roland Andre Delattre, Beauty
and Sensibility in the Thought of Jonathan Edwards: An Essay in Aesthetics and
Theological Ethics (New Haven: 1968), 117.
Delattre continues: For Edwards, beauty is "first among the
perfections of God; it constitutes in itself the perfection of all the other
divine attributes; it provides a major clue to his doctrine of the Trinity; and
it defines his understanding of the nature of the divine transcendence and
immanence and of the relation between transcendence and immanence in God with
respect to His creation, governance, and redemption of the world." Ibid.,
p. 2.
[31]Delattre, 132-133.
[32]One European theologian,
Jurgen Moltmann, acknowledges the aspect of beauty within theology: "On
man's side, the corresponding terms [to God's beauty] are amazement, adoration
and praise; that is freedom which expresses itself in gratitude, enjoyment and
pleasure in the presence of beauty."
Jurgen Moltmann, Theology of Play, Reinhard Ulrich, transl. (New
York: 1972), 38. He also suggests that
the Western Protestant Church has "subjected Christian existence to
judicial and moral categories," so that only little of the doxology and
"transfiguration of Christ," which are of such importance to the
Eastern Church, remain. Ibid., 39.
[33]For example, J. Clinton McCann is
right in drawing our attention to the Psalter: " ... important that we be instructed by the
Psalms. They reveal to us a 'mode of
existence' that is desperately lacking among us. The Psalms tell us both who God is and what God does, and thus
who we are and what we are to do. To
listen and to learn is to walk the way that leads to life. The result is not disappointment, but rather
what Ps 1 means by 'happy.'" J. Clinton McCann, Jr. A Theological
Introduction to the book of Psalms: the Psalms at Torah (Nashville:
Abingdon, 1993), 55. And the entire
Psalter instructs such theological principles through poetry.
[34]Many have gazed long at
this amazing passage, and the profound nature of the
Creator's
discussion. Vinoth Ramachandra is one
who sensitively comments:
The teasing irony of God's speech exposes the
childish pretentiousness of Job and his friends. They are not the centre of reality. And the doctrine of retribution, though it has a legitimate place
in God's government of things, is not the key to understanding the
universe. The free and gratuitous love
of God is the hinge on which the universe turns. The world expresses the freedom and delight of God in
creating. Utility is not the reason
behind creation: not everything that exists was made to be useful to human
beings, and therefore their true meaning can never be fathomed within an
anthropocentric world-view.
Vinoth
Ramachandra, Gods That Fail: Modern Idolatry and Christian Mission
(Downers Grove, IL: IVP, 1996) 12.
Robert Alter also concurs: " ...
what on earth descriptions of a hippopotamus and a crocodile are doing
at the end of the Book of Job.... God's
poetry enables Job to glimpse beyond his human plight an immense world of power
and beauty and awesome warring forces.
This world is permeated with God's ordering concern, but as the
vividness of the verse makes clear, it presents to the human eye a welter of
contradictions, dizzying variety, energies and entities that man cannot take
in. Job surely does not have the sort
of answer he expected, but he has a strong answer of another kind. Now at the end he will no longer presume to
want to judge the Creator, having been brought through God's tremendous poetry
to realize that creation can perhaps be sensed but not encompassed by the
mind--like that final image of the crocodile already whipping away from our
field of vision, leaving behind only a shining wake for us to see. If Job in his first response to the Lord (40:2,
4-5) merely confessed that he could not hope to contend with God and would
henceforth hold his peace, in his second response (42:2-6), after the
conclusion of the second divine speech, he humbly admits that he has been
presumptuous, has in fact 'obscured counsel' about things he did not understand. Referring more specifically to the impact of
God's visionary poem, he announces that he has been vouchsafed a gift of
sight--the glimpse of an ungraspable creation surging with the power of its
Creator: 'By what the ear hears I had heard You,/but now my eyes have seen
You.'" Robert Alter, The Art of Biblical Poetry (New York: Basic
Books, 1985), 110.
[35]For example, Charles
Metzger describes the American poet, Ralph Waldo Emerson's ardent appreciation
of nature: "Emerson conceived of Beauty as one of the 'eternal trinity' of
Goodness, Truth, and Beauty, which, when joined together, form the One;
and, further, Emerson considered each of these three in its perfection to
include the other two. This is to say,
of course, that Beauty, or Goodness, or Truth–any one of them–in its perfection
approximates Deity. In view of this
connection, and in view of the fact that to Emerson's mind the terms Deity and
Nature existed very nearly as synonyms, it is not surprising to discover that
Emerson asserted Beauty to be not only a major aspect of Deity, but a major
aspect of God's handiwork (nature) as well.... Indeed, Emerson took Nature as
both the author and the model of Beauty.
He took Nature to be the author of Beauty, using the term 'Nature,' in
its deific sense–meaning God ..."
In so doing, he developed a subjective/fluctuating aesthetic: "In
deriving a major part of his total conception of Beauty from his observation of
phenomenal nature, Emerson came inevitably to see Beauty in terms of the same
flux which characterizes the numberless phenomena which constitute nature. Emerson came, therefore, to see nature, and
hence Beauty, not as fixed or static, but as dynamic of flowing."–what
Ames called "Emerson's aesthetic faith." Charles R. Metzger, Emerson's Religious Conception of
Beauty" in The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 11
(September 1952), 67, 68, 72.
[36]Many have written on
this phenomena, both Protestant and Catholic.
One example: "For all this
Scripture has its own language, which is largely that not of metaphysics but of
poetry.... in the images of the Bible he [God] takes as his media their
linguistic equivalents--verbal icons--to communicate his gracious truth. This befits our nature and situation. It bestows dignity on the material realities
in whose setting we live ..."
Aidan Nichols, O.P., The Splendour of Doctrine: The Catechism of the
Catholic Church on Christian Believing (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1995), 105.
[37]J.I. Packer is one who
has stressed the intimate connections between theology and aesthetic value: I
question the adequacy of conceptualizing the subject-matter of systematic
theology as simply revealed truths about God, and I challenge the assumption
that has usually accompanied this form of statement, that the material, like other
scientific data, is best studied in cool and clinical detachment. Detachment from what, you ask? Why, from the relational activity of
trusting, loving, worshiping, obeying, serving and glorifying God: the activity
that results from realizing that one is actually in God's presence, actually
being addressed by him every time one opens the Bible or reflects on any divine
truth whatsoever. This ... proceeds
as if doctrinal study would only be
muddled by introducing devotional concerns; it drives a wedge between ...
knowing true notions about God and knowing the true God himself." James I. Packer, "An Introduction to
Systematic Spirituality: in Crux 26.1 (March 1990), 6.
Alister McGrath concurs: "Any view of
revelation which regards God's self-disclosure as the mere transmission of
facts concerning God is seriously deficient, and risks making God an analogue
of a corporate executive who disperses memoranda to underlings. Revelation is God's self-disclosure and self-involvement
in history, and supremely God's decision to become incarnate in Jesus Christ,
so that whoever has seen Jesus Christ has seen the Father. Revelation concerns the oracles of
God, the acts of God, and the person and presence of
God." Alister McGrath, A
Passion for Truth: The Intellectual Conference of Evangelicialism (Downers
Grove, IL: IVP, 1996), 107.
[38]von Balthasar is
insightful that theology should abandon 'the extra-theological categories of a
worldly philosophical aesthetics (above all poetry)' and envelop its own
'theory of beauty from the data of revelation itself." Hans Urs von Balthasar, The Glory of the
Lord: A Theological Aesthetics, 7
vols., Edinburgh, 1982, vol. I, Seeing the Form, (Edinburgh: 1982),
9. However, within his seven formidable
volumes he is not successful in extricating himself from philosophical
discussion.
[39]The Reformers have often
been misunderstood in some of their statements regarding Protestant
liturgy. Their underlying concern was
not to vilify aesthetic display, but to realize that Catholic extravagances had
blinded believers to the importance of the Word:
The
Protestant Reformation looked back to early Christianity. It was the aim of the leaders to restore
Christianity to its former state. To
accomplish this they proposed to cut away all the luxuriant growth which the
Roman Catholic church had nurtured through the centuries.... The Reformation made Christianity a religion
of the Bible. In emphasized the worship
of the word. The Bible and the
exposition of the Scripture in the sermon must have the dominant place in
Protestant worship. Before the
Reformation the Bible was only one of several sources of authority; the
writings of the Church Fathers, the sacramental system of the Church, the
decrees of councils and Popes, and the impressive tradition weighed down with a
rich artistic heritage of liturgic art and music. All these existed as co-authorities with the Bible. Leslie P. Spelman, "Luther and the
Arts," The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 10 (December
1951), 166.
[40]T.R. Wright, Theology
and Literature. Oxford: Basil
Blackwell, Ltd., 1988), 2. Others have
noted the negative results of this type of thinking: " ... a parabolic
illustration of much of the history of Western thought. We have permitted the verbal, temporal,
analytical, and logical sphere of cognitive processing to restrict our vision
of reality. Especially since the rise
of modern philosophy and modern science, we have been largely inattentive to
the realities of the unseen, the intuitive, the affective, and the feeling
depths of reality. Consequently the
intuitive mode of consciousness has been denigrated and subordinated to the
rational mode of consciousness."
Laurence W. Wood, "Recent Brain Research and the Mind-Body
Dilemma," Ashbury Theological Journal, the Best in Theology
(Chicago: Carol Stream, n.p.d.), vol. 2, 215.
[41]Harold Byron Hannum, The
Christian Search For Beauty (Nashville: Southern Publishing Association,
1975), 39.
[42]T.R. Wright, Theology
and Literature (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, Ltd., 1988), 4.
[43]Paul Brand and Philip
Yancey, In His Image (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, year), 282.
[44]T.R. Martland, Religion
As Art: An Interpretation (Albany:
State University of NY Press, 1981), 12. Van Meter Ames suggests a similar idea: " ... art remains
itself a timeless present of realization amid the incompleteness of
existence." Van Meter Ames,
"Expression and Aesthetic Expression" in The Journal of Aesthetics
and Art Criticism 6 (December 1947), 175.
[45]Zemach terms this
"a Keatsian ("Truth is Beauty, Beauty Truth") thesis." E.M. Zemach, Studies in Analytical
Aesthetics (Tel Aviv: Daga Books, 1970), iv.
[46]John Wilson, One of
the Richest Gifts: An Introductory Study of the Arts from a Christian
World-View (Edinburgh: The Handsel Press, Ltd., 1981), 3.
[47]During the Reformation,
Calvin and others make strong statements against the arts. However, these must be seen against the
backdrop of the Roman Catholic aesthetic extravagances masking spiritual famine
that the reformers, since Huss, had deplored.
See footnote 20 above.
[48]It is not necessary
within this study to enter the debate dichotomy/trichotomy debate. This discussion is only commenting on the
facets of human nature.
[49]Larry Crabb, Jr., Finding
God (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1993), 181 (emphasis Crabb's). Robin Skelton is another who comments
insightfully on this point:
"Berdyaev states that 'Truth is apprehended not by abstract,
partial man who is referred to as reason, mind in general and universal spirit,
but by the whole man, transcendental man, the image of God.' [fn: Nicolas
Berdyaev, Truth and Revelation, trans. R.M. French, Geoffrey Bless,
1953, p. 20]. We can agree that the
'whole man' is the perceiver of truth.
We have been saying this all along, and we have argued that it is in
poetry that the 'hole man' is brought into view....
'I am the way, the truth and the life.' What does this mean? It means that the nature of truth ... must
be grasped integrally by the whole personality; it means that truth is
existential. [fn: Berdyaev, ibid., 22].
He goes on to point out that existentialist philosophy is reductionist
in that it limits itself to expressing only the cognitive mind." Robin Skelton Poetic Truth (London:
Heinemann Educational Books, Ltd., 1978), 120.
[50]It can be argued, contra
the Greek philosophical position, that the human body is capable, indeed
necessary for the reception of divine truth and not merely a "prison"
to be escaped.
[51]Amos continues:
Woe to you who put far off the day
of doom,
Who cause the seat of violence to
come near;
Who lie on beds of ivory,
Stretch out on your couches,
Eat lambs from the flock
And calves from the midst of the
stall;
Who chant to the sound of stringed
instruments,
And invent for yourselves with the
best ointments,
But are not grieved for the
affliction of Joseph.
Therefore they shall now go captive
as the first of the captives,
And those
who recline at banquets shall be removed. (Am 6:3-7)
[52]For example, even before
the monarchy, the Israelites as a nation were exhibiting one of their many
cycles of unfaithfulness, and as a result suffered subjection to the
Philistines, and the holy ark was captured.
During this time the prophet Samuel visited the cities and villages
throughout the land, seeking to turn the hearts of the people to the God of
their fathers; and his efforts were not without good results. After suffering the oppression of their
enemies for twenty years, the Israelites "mourned after the
Lord." Samuel counseled them,
"If you do return to the Lord with all your hearts, then put away the
strange gods and Astaroth from among you, and prepare your hearts to the Lord,
and serve Him only." Here it can
be seen that heart religion was taught in the days of Samuel as it was by
Christ when He was on the earth. The
glorious forms of religion are ever valueless without true conversion of the
heart.
[53]Ezl 16 is another
extended passage on Israel's heart-breaking misuse of the beauty God had given
them: " ... Your fame went out among the nations because of your beauty,
for it was perfect through My splendor which I had bestowed on you," says
the Lord GOD. "But you trusted in
your own beauty, played the harlot because of your fame, and poured out your
harlotry on everyone passing by who would have it...." (vv. 14-15).
[54]Calvin M. Johansson, Music
and Ministry: A Biblical Counterpoint (Peabody, Mass: Hendrickson
Publishers, 1988), 139.
[55]Harry B. Lee, "The
Cultural Lag in Aesthetics," The Journal of Aesthetics and Art
Criticism 6 (December 1947), 120-121.
[56]Since "Moses was
learned in all the wisdom of the Egyptians ...." (Acts 7:22). one can
safely assume that this included Egypt's worship, the visible aesthetics of
which are still widely visible, carved in relief in the tombs of the
Pharaohs. Through archaeologists we now
know that the worship of Apis was accompanied with the grossest licentiousness,
and the Scripture record indicates that the calf worship by the Israelites was
attended with all the license usual in heathen worship. The text states: "Thy rose up early on
the morrow, and offered burnt offerings, and brought peace offerings; and the
people sat down to eat and to drink, and rose up to play." (Ex 32:6) The
Hebrew word rendered "to play" signifies playing with leaping,
singing, and dancing. This dancing,
especially among the Egyptians, was sensual and indecent. The word rendered "corrupted" in
the next verse, where it is said, "Thy people, which you brought out of
the land of Egypt, have corrupted themselves," is the same that is used in
Gen 6:11, 12, where one reads that the earth was corrupt, "for all flesh
had corrupted his way upon the earth."
This helps to explain the terrible anger of the Lord, and why He desired
to consume the people at once.
[57]It is assumed in this
study that scriptural teaching is transcultural. McCann's brief comment underscores this issue: "Psalm 23 is
probably the most familiar passage in the entire Old Testament and perhaps in
all of Scripture.... It is remarkable
in a culture in which most people rarely see sheep and have never seen a
shepherd that Psalm 23 functions so pervasively and powerfully. In a real sense Psalm 23 speaks for itself
..." J. Clinton McCann, Jr., A
Theological Introduction to the Book of Psalms: The Psalms as Torah
(Nashville: Abindgon, 1993), 127.
[58]Calvin M. Johansson, Music
and Ministry: A Biblical Counterpoint (Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson
Publishers, 1988), 43, 44.
[59]Eddy M. Zemach,
Real Beauty (University Park, PA: The Pennsylvania State University
Press, 1997), 33-34.
[60]Ibid., p. 34.
[61]Ibid., p. 56, 199. Indeed, this principle appears in Joseph's
pronouncement of the certainty of his interpretation of Pharaoh's two dreams in
Genesis 42: "God has shown Pharaoh what He is about to do. ... And the
dream was repeated to Pharaoh twice [indicating the parallel
control] because the thing is established by God, and God will shortly
bring it to pass." (verses 28, 32, emphasis added).
[62]Eddy M. Zemach,
"Truth and Beauty" in The Philosophical Forum 18.1 (Fall
1986), 25. Even the coldly logical structure of mathematics has this aesthetic
element. Bertrand Russell, who did so
much work in mathematics, logic and philosophy, wrote: 'Mathematics possesses
not only truth, but supreme beauty–a beauty cold and austere, like that of
sculpture, without appeal to any part of our weaker nature, sublimely pure and
capable of a stern perfection such as only the greatest art can show.' [fn:
Bertrand Russell, Mysticism and Logic (Unwin Books, 1970),
49]." John Wilson, One of the
Richest Gifts: An Introductory Study of the Arts From a Christian World-View
(Edinburgh: The Handsel Press, Ltd., 1981), 21.
[63]John Wilson, One
of the Richest Gifts: An Introductory Study of the Arts From a Christian
World-View (Edinburgh: The Handsel Press, Ltd., 1981), 21. He continues: "Even the coldly logical
structure of mathematics has this aesthetic element. Bertrand Russell, who did so much work in mathematics, logic and
philosophy, wrote: 'Mathematics possesses not only truth, but supreme beauty–a
beauty cold and austere, like that of sculpture, without appeal to any part of
our weaker nature, sublimely pure and capable of a stern perfection such as
only the greatest art can show.' [fn: Bertrand Russell, Mysticism and Logic
(Unwin Books, 1970), 49]."
[64]Zemach,
"Truth in Beauty", 36.
Heidegger also suggests that aesthetic values is the superior revealer
of truth: "Truth is the truth of being.
Beauty does not occur alongside this truth. When truth sets itself into the work, it appears. Appearance–as this being of truth in the
work and as work–is beauty."
Martin Heidegger, "The Origin of a Work of Art" in Philosophies
of Art and Beauty, ed. Hofstadter and Kuhns (New York: Modern Library Giant), 700.
[65]For example, Susanne K.
Langer claims that works of art are expressions of human feeling in a
sensuous form presented for perception and contemplation. Her broad assumptions are similar to
theories presented by Croce, Collingwood, Dewey and others. Aesthetics is generally related to emotive
values, as Dorter summarizes: "There are at least four levels of
experience at which art seems to express a certain kind of truth: those of 1)
our emotions, 2) cultural values, 3) sensory experience, and 4) the elusive significance
of our experience." Kenneth
Dorter, "Conceptual Truth and Aesthetic Truth," The Journal of
Aesthetics and Art Criticism 48 (Winter 1990), 37 (emphasis Dorter's).
[66]Harold Osborne suggests
how this view prevailed, in the modern era, among the British
eighteenth-century Empiricists (including Hume), and the German Rationalists
(including Leibniz and Baumgarten).
Harold Osborne, "Some Theories of Aesthetic Judgment," The
Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 38 (Winter 1979), 135-144.
[67]Ibid.
[68]from his "Ode to a
Grecian Urn."
[69]Reward promises to
Israel in the OT and to the Church in the NT include extensive recounting of
physical and material blessings.
[70]Robert Browning, The
Ring and the Book, close of XII.
[71]This is not a solitary
reference. Early in Christ's ministry,
Philip expressed the same sentiment to Nathaniel: "We have found Him of
whom Moses in the law, and also the prophets, wrote–Jesus of Nazareth, the son
of Joseph." (Jn 1:45) Jesus also refers to this hermeneutic long before
His resurrection: "For if you believed Moses, you would believe Me; for he
wrote about Me." (Jn 5:46) The
Apostles continued this hermeneutic.
For example, Peter: "And He commanded us to preach to the people,
and to testify that it is He who was ordained by God to be Judge of the living
and the dead. To Him all the prophets
witness ..." (Acts 10:42).
[72]Calvin Seerveld so
argues: " ... the Bible is not a heterogeneous collection of
fragments. The Bible is not shards of
supernatural information, plus empirical insights, plus thrilling flights of
fancy which, when absorbed, lead to the Christian life. No, the Bible, I believe is at bottom simply
one true story of the great deeds of the Lord fraught with promises." Christ, in Lk 24, brings the focus even
closer–on Himself. Calvin Seerveld, Rainbows
for the Fallen World: Aesthetic Life and Artistic Task (Toronto: Toronto
Tuppence Press, 1980), 90.
Ellen White is eloquent: "In every page, whether history, or
precept, or prophecy, the Old Testament Scriptures are irradiated with the
glory of the Son of God. So far as it
was of divine institution, the entire system of Judaism was a compacted
prophecy of the gospel. To Christ 'give all the prophets witness.' Acts
10:43. From the promise given to Adam,
down through the patriarchal line and the legal economy, heaven's glorious
light made plain the footsteps of the Redeemer. Seers behold the Star of Bethlehem, the Shiloh to come, as future
things swept before them in mysterious procession. In every sacrifice Christ's death was shown. In every cloud of incense His righteousness
ascended. By every jubilee trumpet His
name was sounded. In the awful mystery
of the holy of holies His glory dwelt."
Desire of Ages 211-212.
[73]For example, Islam's
sacred Koran includes this narrative.
However, the intended victim of Abraham's knife is unnamed. By the end of the third Islamic century,
however, Ishmael has become the intended sacrifice. [R. Firestone, "Abraham's Son as the Intended Sacrifice:
Issues in Quranic Exegesis," in Journal of Semitic Studies, 34
(1989): 117. References to the
"Akedah" [the nomenclature given to the Gen 22 narrative in most
Jewish writings; derived from the verb in v. 9, when Abraham "bound"
Isaac] also appear in the earliest extra-biblical Jewish sources. Modern Jewish scholars continue probing
Genesis 22 for discussions of their "martyrdom" in the Holocaust and
other historical pogroms against their people.
They frequently interpret the Gen 22 narrative to mean that in Isaac the
Jewish people were thus "prophesied" and "destined" by God
to be "sacrifice" for the world.
However, since Isaac, there has been no halting of the knife from
heaven. For one example, see Elie
Wiesel, Messengers of God: Biblical Portraits and Legends (New York:
Random House, 1976), p. 97.
[74]The first follows
Abraham's daring rescue of Lot and the subsequent worship of Yahweh by Abraham
and Melchizedek (chapter 14).
"After these things" also opens chapter 15 where Yahweh speaks
again to Abraham and reaffirms His covenant, with its specific promise of
numerous descendants. The third
immediately follows Gen 22:1-19 so the reader will separate the next verses with
the just completed event. The final
appearance of "after these things" (chapter 48:1) introduces the
reader to the blessings of Jacob upon Joseph's two sons following the narrative
of Jacob's reunion in Egypt with his son Joseph.
[75]This is Calvin's understanding: "The expression, "after these
things," is not to be restricted to his last vision; Moses rather intended
to comprise in one word the various events by which Abraham had been tossed up
and down; and again, the somewhat more quiet state of life which, in his old
age, he had lately begun to obtain. He
had passed an unsettled life in continued exile up to his eightieth year;
having been harassed with many contumelies and injuries; he had endured with
difficulty an . . . anxious existence, in continual trepidation; famine had
driven him out of the land whither he had gone, by the command and under the
auspices of God, into Egypt. Twice his
wife had been torn from his bosom; he had been separated from his nephew; he
had delivered this nephew, when captured in war, at the peril of his own
life. He had lived childless with his
wife, when yet all his hopes were suspended upon his having offspring. Having at length obtained a son, he was
compelled to disinherit him, and to drive him far from home. Isaac alone remained . . . The meaning,
therefore, of the passage is, that by this temptation, as if by the last act,
the faith of Abraham was far more severely tried than before." Commentaries
on the First Book of Moses Called Genesis (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1948) p. 560-561).
[76]By comparison, the
readers of the Job narratives are carefully informed (Job 1) that Job's severe
trials come at Satan's provocation.
[77]Phyllis Trible correctly
notes:
"God, indeed God, tested
Abraham." Though such a procedure
is implicit throughout the preceding [Abrahamic] stories, only here does the
verb "test" (nissah) appear.
The explicit use startles the reader.
It portends a crisis beyond the usual tumult. How many times does Abraham have to be tested? . . . After delays and obstacles Isaac, the child
of promise, has come. Let the story now
end happily, providing readers and characters respite from struggle and
suspense. But that is not to be. Vocabulary and syntax show otherwise. The divine generic Elohim occurs with
the definite article Ha suggesting "the God, the very
God." Reversing the usual order of
a Hebrew sentence, this subject precedes its verb. The narrator makes clear that an extraordinary divine act is
taking place. "God, indeed God,
tested Abraham." (emphasis Trible's)
[78]i.e. "And Moses
said to the people, "Do not fear; for God has come to test you, and that
His fear may be before you, so that you may not sin." Ex 20:20.
[79]when God addresses Moses
at the burning bush (Ex 3:4), and when He addresses Jacob by name (Gen
31:11).
[80]Later, the lad Samuel
responds with "hineni" to who he thinks is Eli calling,
suggesting the attitude of obedience that Abraham exhibits in this narrative.
[81]l) Gen 12:1, leaving
kindred. 2) Gen 13:5-18, separation
from Lot.
[82]As God's initial 3-fold
command to Abraham in Gen 12:1 increases intensity as it unfolds: "Get out
of your country/from your kindred/from your father's house ..."
[83]Phyllis Trible is
sensitive to significance of this identification God announces:
the
object of the verb is not a simple word but heavy-laden language. It moves from the generic term of kinship,
"your son,' through the exclusivity of relationship, "your only
one," through the intimacy of bonding, "whom you love," to
climax in the name that fulfills promise, the name of laughter and joy, the
name Yishaq (Isaac). Language
accumulates attachments: "your
son, your only one, whom you love, Isaac." Thus far every divine word (imperative, particle, and objects)
shows the magnitude of the test." (Phyllis Trible, Texts of Terror: Literary-Feminist Readings of Biblical Narratives (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1984) p. 2.
[84]Gen 12:1 "Go
forth from your country and your kindred and your father's
house." It is found only two more
times in the OT (in Song of Songs 2:10, 13-- feminine form), obviously very
rare usage (again underscoring the solemnity of the command).
"The phrase 'go forth'
serves as a bridge between the 2 narratives about Abraham. The first tells about the demand at the
beginning of his history that he detach himself from his land, his home and his
father's house and go to the unknown country, at God's command, 'the land which
I will show you.' The second, at the
end of this history, describes the most difficult demand of all, that he go to
the land of Moriah and sacrifice his only, beloved son on one of the mountains
'which I will tell you.' Shimon
Bar-Efrat, The Art of the Biblical Story (New York: Almond Press, 1979),
213.
[85]Gabriel Josipovici, The
Book of God: A Response to the Bible (New Haven: Yale University Press,
1988), 71.
[86]Robert Alter, in The
Art of Biblical Narrative (New York:
Basic Books, 1980), includes a whole chapter on biblical
repetition. He makes the point that in
sparse narratives (of which Gen 22 certainly is one), any repetition
becomes even more significant.
[87]with his relatives to
resolve difficulties (Lot, chapter 13), to royalty (kings of the Plains and
Melchizedek, chapter 14 and king of Gerar, chapter 20), and most notably to God
(chapters 15, 17, 18).
[88]For example: "So rose early Abraham in the
morning": This is an identical
response to 21:14 when Abraham sent Hagar and Ishmael away at God's directive. Even though both this command and that of
chapter 21 were devastating for Abraham, one sees careful, prompt obedience. One cannot help but compare Abraham's
careful obedience to an unwanted task to that of the prophet Jonah.
[89]Bar-Efrat, p.
80.
[90]" ... a three-day
journey–which according to Kierkegaard lasted longer than the four thousand
years separating us from the event ..."
Elie Wiesel, Messengers of God:
Biblical Portraits and Legends.
(New York: Random House, 1976), p. 72.
[91]Generally speaking
commentators take this expression to indicate a literal upward movement of the
eyes. A closer look at its actual usage,
however, indicates that this might not necessarily be the case. See below, p. 17, for fuller discussion.
[92]Trible, p. 5.
[93]refer to comments v.
1, p 46.
[94]This is not a strained
reading of this conspicuous repetition.
It is an assumption of this paper that the Genesis book has one
author. Thus we find another example of
repetition for accentuation. Such is
also evident in the narrative of the first murder (Cain and Abel) where in just
three verses (Gen 4:8-10) the word "brother" is mentioned five times. The reader already knows Cain and Abel are
brothers. Thus, again, repetition
accentuates the horror of that scene even more. For the most shocking aspect of the incident is not only that
murder has taken place (as terrible as that is), but that fratricide has been
committed (point well-taken by Bar-Efrat, p. 213). In this pericope, the author again repeats family ties in another
critical event.
[95]Completing, thus, v. 2,
that Abraham was to ". . . go to the land of Moriah . . . on one of the
mountains of which I shall tell you."
[96]Trible suggests a
pattern which serves to heighten the tension:
Abraham built an altar
arranged wood
bound Isaac
his son
laid him on the altar, on wood
put forth Abraham his
hand,
took the knife to slay
his son" (Phyllis Trible, Texts
of Terror: Literary-Feminist Readings
of Biblical Narratives (Philadelphia:
Fortress Press, 1984), p. 7)
[97]in The Akedah: The Binding of Isaac. (Oakland, CA: BIBAL Press, 1988), p. 14.
[98]It is one of these six
verbs &*38$, with its solitary
appearance in the OT in this form, that subsequently becomes title for this
narrative in Jewish writings–"The Akedah." The narrative never reveals when Abraham told Isaac of God's
command. Thus, perhaps this verb of the
six identifies the last moment when Isaac would have had to know.
[99]i.e. "Few
narratives in Genesis can equal this story in dramatic tension. The writer seems to prolong the tension of
both Abraham and the reader in his depiction of the last moments before God
interrupted the action and called the test to a halt." John H. Sailhammer
in Pentateuch as Narrative.
(Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan,
1992), p. 178.
[100]The double call is rare
in the Pentateuch. Three other
occasions of urgency employ it: Jacob,
(Gen 46:2); Moses, (Ex 3:4); and Samuel (1 Sm 3:10). Very similar would be King David's mourning over his son (2 Sm
18:3). These occasions are also marked
with high intensity.
[101]Nahum Sarna is eloquent
on this point, describing it as the "definition of relationship between man
and God . . [which finds the] fullest expression in the realm of action."
(Understanding Genesis (New York:
Schocken Books, 1966), p. 163.
[102]Texts include: 1) Gen 13:10, Lot "lifting eyes"
and seeing Sodom (hinting that he was seeing more than just the fertile valley,
but was also considering what advantages there would be to living there). Also, he was in a position enabling him to
look down into the valley and thus didn't need to "lift" his eyes in a
physical sense; 2) Gen 24:63-64, used twice in two verses, as Isaac and
Rebekah first encounter each other (possibly denoting deep emotions both might
have been experiencing at this "arranged" marriage); 3) 33:1, when
Jacob "lifted his eyes" and saw Esau approaching, thereby suggesting
the anxiety he was experiencing (remembering his elder brother's fury at losing
the birthright); 4) Gen 43:29, Joseph
"lifted" his eyes and saw Benjamin as his brothers bowed
before him (with complex emotions seeing his brother again plus remembering his
past dreams and present fulfillment)--he certainly didn't need to raise
his eyes to view prostrate people; 5) Num 24:2, Balaam "lifts his
eyes" to view the Israelite camp in the valley beneath him.
[103]The "lifting up the
eyes" seems enigmatic and deserves attention. Gudmundur Olafsson, "The Use of NS' in the Pentateuch
and its Significance for the Biblical Understanding of Forgiveness", Ph.D.
Dissertation, Andrews University, 1988) pp. 148-154, and C. S. Reif ("A
Root to Look Up: A Study of the Hebrew
nasa ayin" in VTS 36(1985) 230-244) both begin to turn in this
direction.
[104]Victor P. Hamilton, Handbook
on the Pentateuch: Genesis, Exodus,
Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1982) p. 109.
[105]And this is the last
recorded time that God speaks to Abraham.
[106]This type of oath is
extremely rare in all of Scripture.
Three other examples: Is 45:23;
Jer 22:5; 49:13; (Heb 6:13, 14, the NT reference to this important oath).
[107] "saith the
Lord" is used constantly by the prophets, but is rare in the historical books
(Nu 14:28; 1 Sm 2:30; 2 Ki 9:26; 19:33).
[108]John Sailhamer is one of
many who singles out the Gen 22:
"Few narratives in Genesis can equal this story in dramatic
tension." John H. Sailhamer, The
Pentateuch as Narrative. Grand
Rapids: Zondervan, 1992, 178.
[109]ibid., p. 126.
[110] "And the LORD
visited Sarah as He had said, and the LORD did for Sarah as He had spoken. For Sarah conceived and bore Abraham a son
in his old age, at the set time of which God had spoken to him." (21:1-2).
[111]Gen 4:1, 25--Adam and Eve;
4:17--Cain.
[112]Derek Kidner, Genesis: An Introduction and Commentary (Downers
Grove, IL: IVP, 1976), p. 143.
[113]James Montgomery Boice
in Genesis: An Expositional
Commentary Volume 2, Genesis 12:1-36:43 (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1985) p. 218.
[114]See Robert Alter, and
David M. Gunn and Danna Nolan Fewel, Narrative in the Hebrew Bible
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993)
for two examples.
[115]Within the surrounding
chapters, we note that Isaac's name is
given by a divine being before birth (Gen 17:19: as will happen with Christ, Mt
1:21); the miraculous conception (of both Isaac and Christ); the victims (both
Isaac and Jesus) silent and yielding before death (Is 53:7); both Isaac and
Christ bearing the wood to the place of sacrifice (Gen 22:6; Jn 19:17);
resurrection on the "third day" (Isaac never dies; but he
"miraculously" rises from the altar on the "third
day." Even Jewish Midrash ties the
"third day" to resurrection with Hos 6:2. Genesis Rabbah, Vol. 1, 491. Also: "There are many three days mentioned in the Holy
Scripture, of which one is the Resurrection of the Messiah." (Bereshith
Rabba); and "The Holy One doesn't leave His just men in sorrow more
than three days," as it is said, 'After two days will He revive us; on the
third day He will raise us up that we may live in His presence'" (Hos
6:2). (Parasha 56.1). Thus Josipovici
rightly suggests: "[in the Bible] a section comes to a definite closure
and is followed by another with a clear beginning, often years later and in
another place. Yet gradually, as the
new section unfolds, elements of the earlier section start to be picked up and
we are made to sense a continuity between the two which is deeper than that of
mere chronology, alerting us to the fact that at all times and in all cases
chronology is but a weak joiner of two moments in time. There is ... in the Bible, a sense of the
infinite depths of individual moments, and the awareness of the possibility of
the perpetual enrichment of the material from within rather than by mere
extension." Josipovici, p. 86.
[116]Mt 3:17--Christ's
baptism; 17:5--Christ's transfiguration.
[117]See Johan Lust,
"Messianism and Septuagint" in Supplements to Vetus Testamentum,
36 (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1985) 174-195.
[118]Max Wilcox "'Upon
the Tree'--Deut 21:22-23 In the New Testament" in JBL 96/1[1977],
especially pp. 94-99) notes this important point.
[119]Jewish writers
indirectly validate this interpretation.
They blow the shofar horn,
recalling the ram caught in the Moriah thicket, in anticipation of Yom Kippur. Thus pointing forward to another divine
event through Gen 22. Indeed, in
addition to Gen 22, Christ's Atonement is prefigured all through the OT
sacrificial system and the many types in the Israelite economy, and rightly
so. The composition of the OT demonstrates
one can not focus too much on what Christ's Salvation Act involves.
[120]The NT writers would
have also noted (as we have) the constant repetition of "father" and
"son" and the poignant repetition of "the two of them
together"; and the first use of the word "love""--thus the
pointed accent on a father's love.
They also saw beneath the surface formula "he lifted up his eyes
and saw"–realizing that on Mt. Moriah Abraham was "seeing"
something more than just a mountain and a lamb. He was discerning not only the future Messiah but also now the Father's
part in giving His Son. Thus Abraham
named Moriah's mountain "The LORD sees . . . on the mountain of Yahweh, he
will be seen" (with the insistent occurrences of variants of "to
see" [vs. 2, 4, 12, 13], it makes sense to translate the verbs of v. 14
this way.–enhancing what the writer is trying to portray in both a primary and
secondary sense. The three-fold
repetition by God of "your son, your only/unique one" was also not
lost on the NT writers (Jn 3:16; 1 Jn 4:9, etc.).
[121]Milgrom, ibid., p.
62. Martin Buber says it equally
well: "Scripture does not state
its doctrine as doctrine but by telling a story and without exceeding the
limits set by the nature of a story. It
uses the method of story-telling to a degree, however, which literature has not
yet learned to use; and its cross-references and inter-connections, while
noticeable, are so unobtrusive that a perfect attention is needed to grasp its
intent--an attentiveness so perfect that it has not yet been fully
achieved. Hence, it remains for us
latecomers to point out the significance of what has hitherto been overlooked,
neglected, insufficiently valued." in "Abraham the Seer", Judaism
5 (1956) p. 296.