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The Rhetoric of Remembrance - An Investigation of the "Fathers" in Deuteronomy (Hardcover)
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The Rhetoric of Remembrance - An Investigation of the "Fathers" in Deuteronomy (Hardcover)
Series: Siphrut
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To whom is Moses speaking in Deuteronomy? This question is
controversial in OT scholarship. Some passages in Deuteronomy
indicate that Moses is addressing the first exodus generation that
witnessed Horeb (Deut 5:3-4), while other passages point to the
second exodus generation that survived the wilderness (Deut 1:35;
2:14-16). Redaction critics such as Thomas Roemer and John Van
Seters view the chronological problems in Deuteronomy as evidence
of multiple tradition layers. Although other scholars have
suggested that Deuteronomy's conflation of chronology is a
rhetorical move to unify Israel's generations, no analysis has thus
far explored in detail how the blending of "you" and the "fathers"
functions as a rhetorical device. However, a rhetorical approach to
the "fathers" is especially appropriate in light of three features
of Deuteronomy. First, a rhetorical approach recognizes that the
repetitiveness of the Deuteronomic style is a homiletical strategy
designed to inculcate the audience with memory. The book is shot
through with exhortations for Israel to remember the past. Second,
a rhetorical approach recognizes that collective memory entails the
transformation of the past through actualization for the present.
Third, a rhetorical approach to Deuteronomy accords well with the
book's self-presentation as "the words that Moses spoke" (1:1). The
book of Deuteronomy assumes a canonical posture by embedding the
means of its own oral and written propagation, thereby ensuring
that the voice of Moses speaking in the book of Deuteronomy
resounds in Israel's ears as a perpetually authoritative
speech-act. The Rhetoric of Remembrance demonstrates that
Deuteronomy depicts the corporate solidarity of Israel in the land
promised to the "fathers" (part 1), under the sovereignty of the
same "God of the fathers" across the nation's history (part 2), as
governed by a timeless covenant of the "fathers" between YHWH and
his people (part 3). In the narrative world of Deuteronomy, the
"fathers" begin as the patriarchs, while frequently scrolling
forward in time to include every generation that has received
YHWH's promises but nonetheless continues to await their
fulfillment. Hwang's study is an insightful, innovative approach
that addresses crucial aspects of the Deuteronomic style with a
view to the theological effect of that style. Jerry Hwang (Ph.D.,
Wheaton College) serves as Assistant Professor of Old Testament at
Singapore Bible College.
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