Seth Whitaker. Eschatology and the Use of Psalms in Hebrews: Songs for the Last Days. Bloomsbury T&T Clark.
Description
Seth Whitaker argues that
the Psalm texts function as the structural and theological backbone of
Hebrews from start to finish, and that few scholars have examined the
use of Psalms outside of quotations or connected the author of Hebrews'
use of Psalms with his broader eschatological outlook. Whitaker
suggests that the author's eschatology is his dominating exegetical
assumption, allowing numerous psalms to be read with multiple meanings.
Whitaker
further suggests that Psalms, for the author of Hebrews, not only
provide messianic material for his exegetical commentary, but also speak
to a deeper interpretive tradition that is detectable through
scriptural allusions, shared motifs, and narrative structures. Whitaker
examines three passages of Hebrews, 1:5–13, 12:18–28 and 13:15, which
correspond to three perceived gaps in scholarship: the relationship
between quoted texts, the author's cultural encyclopedia, and the
function of scriptural allusions. By focusing on Psalms and the
eschatological nature of the author of Hebrews' exegesis, Whitaker
concludes that readers will be better suited to situate Hebrews in
relation to other Second Temple and early Jewish interpretive
traditions.


No comments:
Post a Comment