Psalms 111–112: Big Story, Little Story
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Preliminary Points
We should do Proverbs a poor service if we contrived to vest it in a priestly ephod or a prophet’s mantle, for it is a book which seldom takes you to church.
There are details of character small enough to escape the mesh of the law and the broadsides of the prophets, and yet decisive in personal dealings. Proverbs moves in this realm, asking what a person is like to live with, or to employ; how he manages his affairs, his time and himself.
The proper use [of rhetoric that shapes the emotions] is lawful and necessary because, as Aristotle points out, intellect of itself “moves nothing”: the transition from thinking to doing, in nearly all men at nearly all moments, needs to be assisted by appropriate states of feeling.
3. How Psalms 111–112 Function
3.1. Psalm 111
3.2. Psalm 112
3.3. The Two Psalms Interact
He sent redemption to his people;
He has commanded his covenant forever.
The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom;
All those who practice it have a good understanding.
His praise endures forever!
4. Christian Appropriation
There is, to be sure, one glaringly obvious ground for denying that any moral purpose at all is operative in the universe: namely, the actual course of events in all its wasteful cruelty and apparent indifference, or hostility, to life.
For what is this wisdom that He gives? As we have seen, it is not a sharing in all His knowledge, but a disposition to confess that He is wise, and to cleave to Him and live for Him in the light of His word through thick and thin.
Conflicts of Interest
References and Notes
- Throughout this essay, I cite Biblical texts according to the English verse numbers. Further, I will, for the sake of this discussion, take the esv as a satisfactory rendering of the Hebrew. Further, the term "Wisdom literature" conventionally apply to the Old Testament books of Job, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes (also called Qohelet), the Song of Songs, and certain psalms, as well as Ben Sira (Ecclesiasticus) and the Wisdom of Solomon in the Apocrypha.
- For one example of many, see Rolf Jacobson, and Karl Jacobson. Invitation to the Psalms. Grand Rapids: Baker, 2013, pp. 16–17. [Google Scholar]
- The other acrostics in the Psalter are: Psalms 9–10; 25; 34; 37; 119; 145. These differ in how much text one must negotiate before the next letter (the others are a full verse or more). Also, the "Davidic" acrostics (9–10; 25; 34; 37; 145) are "imperfect" in how strictly they adhere to the acrostic pattern (e.g., Psalm 34 repeats the p-letter at the last verse of the psalm).
- Roger T. Beckwith. “The early history of the Psalter.” Tyndale Bulletin 46 (1995): 1–27. [Google Scholar] carefully lays out the evidence that much of the Psalms’ content may well date from before the exile.
- Most of those who, like me, find the proposed canonical readings unpersuasive, nevertheless recognize "affinity groupings" in the Psalms, such as we have here. Hence Jamie Grant, in posing the alternatives as either a haphazard arrangement or a purposeful arrangement that a canonical reading can recover, sets an invalid antithesis: Jamie Grant. “The King as Exemplar: The Function of Deuteronomy’s Kingship Law in the Shaping of the Book of Psalms.” Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Gloucestershire, June 2002; p. 13. [Google Scholar]
- For discussion, see C. John Collins. “Always alleluia: Recovering the true purpose of the Psalms in the Old Testament context.” In Forgotten Songs: Reclaiming the Psalms for Christian Worship. Edited by Richard Wells and Ray Van Neste. Nashville: B&H, 2012, pp. 17–34. [Google Scholar]
- See also John Goldingay. Psalms, Vol. 1: Psalms 1–41. Grand Rapids: Baker, 2006. [Google Scholar]
- See further Tremper Longman III. Psalms. Downers Grove: InterVarsity, 2014. [Google Scholar]
- Shaye J. D. Cohen. From the Maccabees to the Mishnah. Philadelphia: Westminster, 1987, p. 42. [Google Scholar] (see also p. 76).
- Compare also William McKane. Proverbs: A New Approach. London: SCM, 1970, pp. 293–94. [Google Scholar] (on 3:9): “the wisdom literature is rather far removed from cultic concerns and one would not expect cultic prescriptions to be worked into it.”
- E.g., Katharine J. Dell. “‘I will solve my riddle to the music of the lyre’ (Psalm xlix 4 [5]): A cultic setting for wisdom psalms? ” Vetus Testamentum 54 (2004): 445–58. [Google Scholar]
- See also C. John Collins. “Proverbs and the Levitical system.” Presbyterion 35 (2009): 9–34. [Google Scholar]
- See further Mark Sneed. “Is the ‘wisdom tradition’ a tradition? ” Catholic Biblical Quarterly 73 (2011): 50–71. [Google Scholar]
- Derek Kidner. Proverbs. Downers Grove: InterVarsity, 1964. [Google Scholar]
- Ernst Wendland recognizes the extrinsic nature of the conventional forms and proposes to classify the various psalms according to their basic speech acts, particularly "eulogy" and "lament" or a combination of these (plus "homily" in Wendland’s more recent work). See Ernst Wendland. “Genre criticism and the Psalms.” In Biblical Hebrew and Discourse Linguistics. Edited by Robert D. Bergen. Dallas: Summer Institute of Linguistics, 1994, pp. 374–414. [Google Scholar]
- I find Wendland’s emphasis on the speech acts that psalms perform to be a salutary one; but that still allows for a grouping of major and minor functions, which results in a list that resembles the conventional forms—as he himself shows, in Ernst Wendland. Analyzing the Psalms. Dallas: Summer Institute of Linguistics, 2002, pp. 32–60. [Google Scholar]
- Probably discussions in genre theory from the linguists and rhetoricians would enrich form criticism of the Psalter: for example, Carolyn Miller argues that "a rhetorically sound definition of genre must be centered not on the substance or the form of discourse but on the action it is used to accomplish." Carolyn Miller. “Genre as social action.” Quarterly Journal of Speech 70 (1984): 151–67. [Google Scholar]
- See, for example, the critique by James Crenshaw. “Wisdom Psalms? ” Currents in Research: Biblical Studies 8 (2000): 9–17. [Google Scholar]
- A reply comes from J. Kenneth Kuntz. “Reclaiming Biblical Wisdom Psalms: A response to Crenshaw.” Currents in Biblical Research 1 (2003): 145–54. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- A rejoinder comes from James Crenshaw. “Gold dust or nuggets? A brief response to J. Kenneth Kuntz.” Currents in Biblical Research 1 (2003): 155–58. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Mowinckel supposed that, for example, the Wisdom Psalms were "a newer, private, learned psalmography" that was added "to the ancient cultic poetry," a supposition that goes beyond our evidence. However, he did acknowledge that "such private poetry came to be included in the present collection of cult psalms, and was even used in the official worship of the Temple." Sigmund Mowinckel. (1962) 2004, The Psalms in Israel’s Worship. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans. pp. 106, 114. [Google Scholar]
- See further Michael LeFebvre. “Torah-Meditation and the Psalms: The Invitation of Psalm 1.” In Interpreting the Psalms: Issues and Approaches. Edited by David Firth and Philip Johnston. Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 2005, pp. 213–25. [Google Scholar]: he supposes that "a wisdom text is supposed to deal with issues outside the cultus," and thus prefers to describe Psalm 1 as a "Torah meditation psalm" if it is to be suited to liturgical usage. I deem this reclassification unnecessary.
- C. S. Lewis. The Abolition of Man. London: Geoffrey Bles, 1943, p. 21. [Google Scholar]
- C. S. Lewis. A Preface to Paradise Lost. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1942, p. 52. [Google Scholar] The place in Aristotle is probably Nicomachean Ethics II.iii.2 (1104b), which speaks of having been trained from childhood to like and dislike the proper things. Some recent studies have helpfully explored the ways in which Proverbs shapes character, without exploring the affection-shaping aspect of the rhetoric.
- For an example from Proverbs studies, see Christopher Ansberry. “What does Jerusalem have to do with Athens? The moral vision of the book of Proverbs and Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics.” Hebrew Studies 51 (2010): 157–73. [Google Scholar]
- A further example comes from Anne Stewart. “Wisdom’s imagination: Moral reasoning and the book of Proverbs.” Journal for the Study of the Old Testament 40 (2016): 351–72. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Here I am building on Knut Heim. Like Grapes of Gold Set in Silver: An Interpretation of Proverbial Clusters in Proverbs 10:1–22:16. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2001, pp. 81–103. [Google Scholar]
- See also Knut Heim. “Coreferentiality, Structure and Context in Proverbs 10:1–5.” Journal of Translation and Textlinguistics 6 (1993): 183–209. [Google Scholar]I take his linguistic insights and develop their rhetorical and theological side in my "Proverbs and the Levitical system."
- For an example R. N. Whybray. Proverbs. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1994, p. 63. [Google Scholar]finds in the admonition to "honour the Lord with your wealth" (3:9–10) "the most blatant expression in the Old Testament of the principle do ut des [Latin, I give that you might give (in return)]—the offering of gifts to God solely in order to elicit material rewards from him." Rather, these gifts support the ministry of the priesthood, which is essential to the well-being of God’s people (at least so far as the Pentateuch is concerned).
- I will not here say much about the structure of either psalm, other than the acrostic pattern: it seems to me that in both psalms the flow of thought is governed by the demands of the acrostic. For arguments that there is more structure than that, see Beat Weber. “Zu Kolometrie und strophischer Stuktur von Psalm 111—mit einem Seitenblick auf Psalm 112.” Biblische Notizen 118 (2003): 62–67. [Google Scholar]
- For another view see Erich Zenger. “Dimensionen der Tora-Weisheit in der Psalmenkomposition Ps 111–112.” In Die Weisheit: Ursprünge und Rezeption. Edited by M. Fassnacht, Andreas Leinhäupl-Wilke and Stefan Lücking. Münster: Aschendorf, 2003, pp. 37–58. [Google Scholar]
- For still another study, see Pierre Auffret. “Essai sur la structure littéraire des Psaumes cxi et cxii.” Vetus Testamentum 30 (1980): 257–79. [Google Scholar]
- Philip S. Johnston. “Appendix 1: Index of form-critical categorizations.” In Interpreting the Psalms: Issues and Approaches. Edited by David Firth and Philip S. Johnston. Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 2005, pp. 295–300. [Google Scholar] helpfully compiles the categorizations from major sources. Some prefer to call it a psalm of thanksgiving, since it opens with "I will give thanks."
- See David A. Hubbard. “Wisdom.” In New Bible Dictionary, 3rd ed. Edited by I. Howard Marshall, James I. Packer, Donald J. Wiseman and Alan R. Millard. Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 1996, p. 1244a. [Google Scholar]: "the art of being successful, of forming the correct plan to gain the desired results."
- There are two Hebrew words commonly generally rendered "blessed": ’ašrê, as here (technically a noun, "O the blessedness of," but translated into Greek as an adjective), and bārûk (the passive participle of the normal verb "to bless"). When applied to a human, there is not much difference between them, except that perhaps ’ašrê celebrates the true happiness of the person (which here results from God’s blessing), while bārûk celebrates God’s activity of blessing someone (which results in true happiness).
- The Hebrew term is distinctively "man" (’îš). In application it does not exclude women or children; rather, I take the poetic style to stress the concrete example, from which others can learn by applying the mutatis mutandis principle.
- Heim, "Proverbs 10:1–5," has shown the paragraph coherence of Prov. 10:1–5. Unlike Heim, however, I find the message of the paragraph to be that the way in which Yahweh normally "does not let the righteous go hungry" (v. 3) is by instilling diligence in them (vv. 4–5). Conversely, Yahweh "thwarts the craving of the wicked" by allowing their indolence to have its proper consequence. Hence the frustrated "wicked" person also appears in this psalm (112:10).
- For a careful study of this subject, see Raymond C. Van Leeuwen. “Wealth and poverty: System and contradiction in Proverbs.” Hebrew Studies 33 (1992): 25–36. [Google Scholar]
- For example, Karen Elizabeth Durant. “Imitation of God as a Principle for Ethics Today: A Study of Selected Psalms.” Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Birmingham, August 2010; pp. 131–33. [Google Scholar] treats these two psalms under this rubric.
- A similar approach comes from Raymond C. Van Leeuwen. “Form criticism, wisdom, and Psalms 111–112.” In The Changing Face of Form Criticism. Edited by Marvin Sweeney and Ehud Zvi. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2003, pp. 65–84. [Google Scholar] at p. 84.
- E.g., Exod. 20:11; Lev. 1144–45; Letter of Aristeas, 188, 210; Eph. 5:1; Letter to Diognetus, 10:4; Ignatius, to the Ephesians, 1:1; idem., to the Trallians, 1:2; Justin Martyr, Second Apology, 4:2; contrast the shameful imitation of a (false) deity in Justin, First Apology, 21:4.
- This is not the place to enter into evaluation of the various notions of the image of God: Durant, "Imitation of God," 88–102 surveys the discussion, and, oddly given the emphases of her thesis, endorses a functional view, where "human beings are to be God’s representative on earth" (102). I do not deny that the functions of ruling and relating are involved; but it is clear—to me at least—that the ruling and relating are to be done in a way that resembles God’s own wisdom and benevolence—and thus a description of the image of God must include the moral and intellectual elements if it is to be adequate. (I consider this to be a proper inference from the showing style of Genesis 1, but will have to develop that argument in another venue.)
- On the synonymy, see Clifford John Collins. “Homonymous Verbs in Biblical Hebrew: An investigation of the role of comparative philology.” Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Liverpool, May 1988; pp. 62–63. [Google Scholar]
- As Longenecker observes, "The view that community and character are informed by narrative is not a novel one"; see Bruce W. Longenecker. “The narrative approach to Paul: An early retrospective.” Currents in Biblical Research 1 (2002): 88–111. [Google Scholar]
- Longenecker mentions Philo, who shows Moses to have been a superior legislator, because he "established a narrative framework that contained and undergirded the legal parameters of Jewish culture (e.g., Deut. 6.20–24; see Philo, On the Creation of the World 3; Life of Moses 2.47–51)." We might add that Josephus likewise insists that Moses built religion on the narrative of creation, Antiquities, 1.18–24.
- Indeed, Luke 1:68, "he has redeemed his people" (lit. "he has worked redemption for his people," epoiēsen lutrōsin tō laō autou), is quite similar to Psa. 111:9 lxx, "he sent redemption to his people" (lutrôsin apesteilen tō laō autou).
- C. S. Lewis. “Historicism.” In Christian Reflections. Edited by Walter Hooper. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1967, pp. 100–13. [Google Scholar] while noting that Christianity sees history as "a story with a well-defined plot" (p. 103), shows how unreasonable it is to suppose that one who is not a prophet can interpret how any individual event fits into that story.
- C. S. Lewis. “De futilitate.” In Christian Reflections. Edited by Walter Hooper. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1967, pp. 57–71. [Google Scholar] at p. 69.
- J. I. Packer. Knowing God. Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 1973, p. 94. [Google Scholar]
- An exegetical case for Packer’s reading also appears in J. Stafford Wright. "The interpretation of Ecclesiastes." Evangelical Quarterly 18 (1946): 18–34. Neither Packer nor Stafford Wright observe that the key word in Ecclesiastes is "find out" (mātsā’), used in the nuance "find out by research"; but this observation strengthens the case for their reading (see Eccl. 3:10–11; 7:14; 8:17).
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Collins, J. Psalms 111–112: Big Story, Little Story. Religions 2016, 7, 115. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel7090115
Collins J. Psalms 111–112: Big Story, Little Story. Religions. 2016; 7(9):115. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel7090115
Chicago/Turabian StyleCollins, Jack. 2016. "Psalms 111–112: Big Story, Little Story" Religions 7, no. 9: 115. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel7090115
APA StyleCollins, J. (2016). Psalms 111–112: Big Story, Little Story. Religions, 7(9), 115. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel7090115