SarahB and Psalm 137:8-9 - Page 6

  • Aggressive
  • Amazed
  • Amused
  • Angelic
  • Angry
  • Artistic
  • Asleep
  • Bashful
  • Blah
  • Bored
  • Breezy
  • Brooding
  • Busy
  • Buzzed
  • Chatty
  • Cheeky
  • Cheerful
  • Cloud 9
  • Cold
  • Cold Turkey
  • Confused
  • Cool
  • Crappy
  • Curious
  • Cynical
  • Daring
  • Dead
  • Depressed
  • Devilish
  • Doh
  • Doubtful
  • Drunk
  • Energetic
  • Fiendish
  • Fine
  • Flirty
  • Gloomy
  • Goofy
  • Grumpy
  • Happy
  • Hot
  • Hung Over
  • In Love
  • In Pain
  • Innocent
  • Inspired
  • Lonely
  • Lurking
  • Mellow
  • Mischievious
  • Nerdy
  • None
  • Not Worthy
  • Paranoid
  • Pensive
  • Psychedelic
  • Question
  • Relaxed
  • ROFLMAO
  • Sad
  • Scared
  • Shocked
  • Sick
  • Sleepy
  • Sneaky
  • Snobbish
  • Spaced
  • Stressed
  • Sunshine
  • Sweet Tooth
  • Thinking
  • Tired
  • Twisted
  • Vegged Out
  • Worried
  • Yee Haw
  • Page 6 of 20 FirstFirst 12345678910111213141516 ... LastLast
    Results 76 to 90 of 296
    1. #76
      showmeproof's Avatar
      showmeproof is offline tWebber
      None
       
      Join Date
      March 10th, 2007
      Location
      Missouri
      Posts
      2,921
      Male - Atheist
      Blog Entries
      2
      Mentioned
      0 Post(s)

      Re: SarahB and Psalm 137:8-9

      Quote Originally posted by Chrawnus View Post
      And I would argue that this is an anachronistic and misinformed reading that doesn't take into account the hyperbolic character of ANE "warfare speech". The issue is not simply the fact that God forbids them from intermarrying with the surrounding groups, there's also the issue of the suggestion that Joshua for example, is credited with carrying out God's command to "utterly destroy" the Canaanite nations, while the text at the same time acknowledges that the same groups of people still lived on in the area.
      This is due to multiple sources and redactors being involved in the construction of the texts over a long period of time.

    2. #77
      Chrawnus's Avatar
      Chrawnus is offline Strawberry milk FTW!
      Relaxed
       
      Join Date
      December 10th, 2010
      Posts
      3,754
      Male - Christian
      Mentioned
      0 Post(s)

      Re: SarahB and Psalm 137:8-9

      Quote Originally posted by Otter View Post
      Yeah, I get that part: but the command itself, whether hyperbolic or not, is not mitigated by what follows, but intensified.

      To say, "Oh, hey, well, that's just rhetoric," is kind of a false trail. What do you think that false trail was attempting to do, if not pave the way for a divinely-sanctioned extermination of the people it targets?

      It's not MORE moral to say, "KILL THEM ALL!" if your aim is to do exactly that. The biblical texts are filled with trash-talk towards their enemies: look at the daughters of Lot and the alleged genesis of the Moabites. There is a virulent hatred contained in the texts, and the rhetoric was intended to intensify it, not a cushion against it.
      Well, the problem is that these commands to "Kill them all!" is exactly the commands that Copan argues are the ones who are hyperbolical in nature. I.e he, (and I agree with him) argues that these commands should not, and can not, be taken literally, because the text itself indicates that this is not the correct interpretation.

    3. #78
      Otter's Avatar
      Otter is offline tWebber
      ---
       
      Join Date
      March 5th, 2012
      Location
      New Orleans
      Posts
      138
      Male - Riparian
      Mentioned
      0 Post(s)

      Re: SarahB and Psalm 137:8-9

      Quote Originally posted by Chrawnus View Post
      As far as I can tell his explanation is simply that this was a literal and rhetorical convention of the time and culture. He's more focused on showing that the texts are engaged in this sort of rhetoric rather than discussing why it does so.
      Against that, I'd set the fact that urbicide WAS a reality, and a real possibility. That tends to suggest that the fact that hyperbole is a rhetorical device does not in any way obviate the moral responsibilities for that rhetoric. If you SAY "Kill him!" at a football game, you can get away with it because the odds of him being killed are pretty slender. But if you say, "Give him a headshot! Helmet to helmet! Give him a concussion!" you're advocating a very likely (and immoral or at least illegal) move.

      The Israelite rhetoric is more of the second type, and given that it's canonized and sanctioned by the priesthood, it's a little more like a coach than a fan saying it.


    4. #79
      Chrawnus's Avatar
      Chrawnus is offline Strawberry milk FTW!
      Relaxed
       
      Join Date
      December 10th, 2010
      Posts
      3,754
      Male - Christian
      Mentioned
      0 Post(s)

      Re: SarahB and Psalm 137:8-9

      Quote Originally posted by showmeproof View Post
      This is due to multiple sources and redactors being involved in the construction of the texts over a long period of time.
      Let's assume this is true. I find it highely unlikely that each and every redactor would have missed the apparent contradiction between on one hand the claim that Joshua fulfilled Gods command to utterly destroy the Canaanite people, and on the other hand the clear admission that the same groups of people that Joshua had allegedly exterminated still lived on in the area. One would think that the redactors would have "fixed" this inconsistency. But instead we find that they seemed to have no issues with what we would see as a problem. Perhaps because they understood correctly, that as Copan argues, these commands were hyperbolical in nature?

    5. #80
      Chrawnus's Avatar
      Chrawnus is offline Strawberry milk FTW!
      Relaxed
       
      Join Date
      December 10th, 2010
      Posts
      3,754
      Male - Christian
      Mentioned
      0 Post(s)

      Re: SarahB and Psalm 137:8-9

      Quote Originally posted by Otter View Post
      Against that, I'd set the fact that urbicide WAS a reality, and a real possibility. That tends to suggest that the fact that hyperbole is a rhetorical device does not in any way obviate the moral responsibilities for that rhetoric. If you SAY "Kill him!" at a football game, you can get away with it because the odds of him being killed are pretty slender. But if you say, "Give him a headshot! Helmet to helmet! Give him a concussion!" you're advocating a very likely (and immoral or at least illegal) move.

      The Israelite rhetoric is more of the second type, and given that it's canonized and sanctioned by the priesthood, it's a little more like a coach than a fan saying it.

      I don't really think that this is a problem at all. People in the ANE period were, I assume, more familiar with hyperbolic speech than we are, and so would, presumably, have recognized this sort of exaggerated rhetoric more easily than what we do. So I don't think that there really was any risk that the Israelites would have understood these commands literally, but would have understood, perhaps through clues that are not mentioned in the text itself, that these commands were not to be understood in a woodenly literal fashion.

    6. #81
      showmeproof's Avatar
      showmeproof is offline tWebber
      None
       
      Join Date
      March 10th, 2007
      Location
      Missouri
      Posts
      2,921
      Male - Atheist
      Blog Entries
      2
      Mentioned
      0 Post(s)

      Re: SarahB and Psalm 137:8-9

      Quote Originally posted by Chrawnus View Post
      I don't really think that this is a problem at all. People in the ANE period were, I assume, more familiar with hyperbolic speech than we are, and so would, presumably, have recognized this sort of exaggerated rhetoric more easily than what we do. So I don't think that there really was any risk that the Israelites would have understood these commands literally, but would have understood, perhaps through clues that are not mentioned in the text itself, that these commands were not to be understood in a woodenly literal fashion.
      Baseless assertions.

    7. #82
      showmeproof's Avatar
      showmeproof is offline tWebber
      None
       
      Join Date
      March 10th, 2007
      Location
      Missouri
      Posts
      2,921
      Male - Atheist
      Blog Entries
      2
      Mentioned
      0 Post(s)

      Re: SarahB and Psalm 137:8-9

      Quote Originally posted by Chrawnus View Post
      Let's assume this is true. I find it highely unlikely that each and every redactor would have missed the apparent contradiction between on one hand the claim that Joshua fulfilled Gods command to utterly destroy the Canaanite people, and on the other hand the clear admission that the same groups of people that Joshua had allegedly exterminated still lived on in the area. One would think that the redactors would have "fixed" this inconsistency. But instead we find that they seemed to have no issues with what we would see as a problem. Perhaps because they understood correctly, that as Copan argues, these commands were hyperbolical in nature?
      Put forth examples of ANE hyperbole and compare them to the commands given in the DtrH.

      ANE hyperbole is after-the-fact battle rhetoric intended to vaunt the Leader of a particular nation over and against his enemies. This type is found on tomb inscriptions and Victory Steeles. What we have in the DtrH is completely different in its medium, its intended audience, and time (hundreds of years after the supposed events rather than within the lifetime of the leader).

      Israel was writing a origin narrative for their nation.

      The common methodology that is used is the SPEAKING model;

      Setting: the location of the monument or inscription;
      Participants: the senders and the receivers of the communication, as well as individuals mentioned
      Ends: the objectives of the communciation;
      Act sequence: the order in which images were intended to be noticed;
      Key: the emotional tone or mood of the communication;
      Instrumentality: the particular medium used for the communication
      Norms
      Genres: the established/traditional/conventional patterns and motifs used in the language and images
      Last edited by showmeproof; March 6th 2012 at 07:19 PM.

    8. #83
      Otter's Avatar
      Otter is offline tWebber
      ---
       
      Join Date
      March 5th, 2012
      Location
      New Orleans
      Posts
      138
      Male - Riparian
      Mentioned
      0 Post(s)

      Re: SarahB and Psalm 137:8-9

      Quote Originally posted by Chrawnus View Post
      I don't really think that this is a problem at all. People in the ANE period were, I assume, more familiar with hyperbolic speech than we are, and so would, presumably, have recognized this sort of exaggerated rhetoric more easily than what we do.
      I've told you a million times that we're as capable of handling hyperbolic speech as they were. ;)
      So I don't think that there really was any risk that the Israelites would have understood these commands literally, but would have understood, perhaps through clues that are not mentioned in the text itself, that these commands were not to be understood in a woodenly literal fashion.
      Don't miss my point: rhetorical devices have an object or aim or purpose. Theirs was not merely a "trope" or rhetorical flourish. It intended to produce emotional results: a fighting spirit capable of crushing their enemies.

      You have to understand that ANE kingdoms were not well-regulated and decorous. They were like rival mobs in some ways, like European soccer teams in another. They were ruthless. When in Deuteronomy 7 YHWH says "You must show them no mercy," we can say, "Oh, hey, that's hyperbolic," but where is the evidence that it was intended to be taken with a grain of salt? There really isn't any.
      Last edited by Otter; March 6th 2012 at 07:49 PM.

    9. #84
      fm93's Avatar
      fm93 is online now That moment when...
      Sleepy
       
      Join Date
      November 16th, 2008
      Posts
      4,907
      Male - Christian
      Mentioned
      0 Post(s)

      Re: SarahB and Psalm 137:8-9

      Quote Originally posted by Otter View Post
      Yeah, I'm generally a fan of his, or at least of the movement towards authenticism that he spawned.

      But I think on the evidence that he's just dead wrong about this. (Note: he wrote The Syrian Christ in I think 1916 or thenabouts.)

      The inscriptions, the archeology, the population studies....

      They all kind of present overwhelming evidence that life in the ANE was pretty freaking violent.

      We might have to degree on our sources. But if you run a Scholar Google search on war in the ANE and various related terms ("herem," "urbicide," for instance), you turn up some pretty good scholarship that paint a picture at odds with Rihbany's.
      Don't get me wrong; I'm not saying the ANE was a peaceful Shangri La or anything like that. It's just that excessively harsh, threatening language used in non-narrative genres like poetry and prayers don't necessarily mean things happened that way. Really, what's the likelihood that those quoted statements are endorsements of such behavior?
      Life is just a phase you're going through. You'll get over it.--Anonymous

      If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph: "The only proof he needed for the existence of God was music."--Kurt Vonnegut

      Reading [a Tassman or bertatberts post] would be like willingly injecting yourself in the eyeballs with HIV.--Rational Gaze

    10. #85
      Otter's Avatar
      Otter is offline tWebber
      ---
       
      Join Date
      March 5th, 2012
      Location
      New Orleans
      Posts
      138
      Male - Riparian
      Mentioned
      0 Post(s)

      Re: SarahB and Psalm 137:8-9

      Quote Originally posted by fm93 View Post
      Don't get me wrong; I'm not saying the ANE was a peaceful Shangri La or anything like that. It's just that excessively harsh, threatening language used in non-narrative genres like poetry and prayers don't necessarily mean things happened that way. Really, what's the likelihood that those quoted statements are endorsements of such behavior?
      I'd say the likelihood is pretty good, honestly.... I certainly think that they meant to urge the people on toward murderous hatred of [some of] their neighbors, enemies, and distant cousins in the Semitic clan.

    11. #86
      fm93's Avatar
      fm93 is online now That moment when...
      Sleepy
       
      Join Date
      November 16th, 2008
      Posts
      4,907
      Male - Christian
      Mentioned
      0 Post(s)

      Re: SarahB and Psalm 137:8-9

      What, so you think sayings like "May your children be orphaned and your wife widowed" are implicit endorsements meant to urge the people on towards murderous hatred?
      Life is just a phase you're going through. You'll get over it.--Anonymous

      If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph: "The only proof he needed for the existence of God was music."--Kurt Vonnegut

      Reading [a Tassman or bertatberts post] would be like willingly injecting yourself in the eyeballs with HIV.--Rational Gaze

    12. #87
      Kane's Avatar
      Kane is offline Organic, nitrate free bacon.
      None
       
      Join Date
      February 4th, 2008
      Posts
      1,675
      Male - Atheist
      Mentioned
      0 Post(s)

      Re: SarahB and Psalm 137:8-9

      Quote Originally posted by lilpixieofterror View Post
      Are you?
      Nope.
      Anytime theology hits on something that is true, it is because it is from another discipline. One cannot have a field of knowledge built on something that essentially amounts to dressed-up agnosticism.

    13. #88
      Otter's Avatar
      Otter is offline tWebber
      ---
       
      Join Date
      March 5th, 2012
      Location
      New Orleans
      Posts
      138
      Male - Riparian
      Mentioned
      0 Post(s)

      Re: SarahB and Psalm 137:8-9

      Quote Originally posted by fm93 View Post
      What, so you think sayings like "May your children be orphaned and your wife widowed" are implicit endorsements meant to urge the people on towards murderous hatred?
      I think if we give the authors the dignity of assuming they mean what they say, I would argue that they're just what they are in our culture: curses and maledictions.

      Jesus certainly took them seriously, at least as traded between his followers, and I doubt that it was because he was concerned people would get their feelings hurt.

      Such utterances strike me as rhetorically different than the "official," canonical, divine writ of genocide and urbicide we get in the Deuteronomistic histories. But I could be persuaded they're similar.

    14. #89
      showmeproof's Avatar
      showmeproof is offline tWebber
      None
       
      Join Date
      March 10th, 2007
      Location
      Missouri
      Posts
      2,921
      Male - Atheist
      Blog Entries
      2
      Mentioned
      0 Post(s)

      Re: SarahB and Psalm 137:8-9

      Quote Originally posted by fm93 View Post
      Don't get me wrong; I'm not saying the ANE was a peaceful Shangri La or anything like that. It's just that excessively harsh, threatening language used in non-narrative genres like poetry and prayers don't necessarily mean things happened that way. Really, what's the likelihood that those quoted statements are endorsements of such behavior?
      Judging by their self-reported past behavior; highly likely.

    15. #90
      Doug Shaver's Avatar
      Doug Shaver is offline tWebber
      None
       
      Join Date
      June 6th, 2005
      Location
      Southern California
      Posts
      4,013
      Male - Atheist
      Mentioned
      0 Post(s)

      Re: SarahB and Psalm 137:8-9

      Quote Originally posted by lilpixieofterror View Post
      And I think skeptics that use arguments from outrage really are not worth debating with to start with.
      As a generality, I agree. If we're trying to get at the truth, it doesn't matter much how we feel about it.

    Page 6 of 20 FirstFirst 12345678910111213141516 ... LastLast

    Similar Threads

    1. Psalm 119
      By John Reece in forum Biblical Languages 301
      Replies: 177
      Last Post: July 2nd 2009, 02:59 PM
    2. A Psalm of JPH
      By jpholding in forum Tektonics.org
      Replies: 45
      Last Post: May 16th 2008, 02:40 PM
    3. Psalm 119
      By John Reece in forum Biblical Languages 301
      Replies: 0
      Last Post: September 28th 2007, 05:56 PM
    4. Psalm 22:16
      By Curry in forum Biblical Languages 301
      Replies: 7
      Last Post: August 29th 2004, 03:58 PM

    Tags for this Thread

    Posting Permissions

    • You may not post new threads
    • You may not post replies
    • You may not post attachments
    • You may not edit your posts
    •