2 Samuel 21-24: A Theological Reflection on Israel’s Kingship

The chiastic arrangement of 2 Sam 21-24 signifies that it is not just a collection of miscellaneous material supplementing the Samuel corpus. Rather it is intentionally arranged so as to function as a theological reflection on Israel’s kingship. This paper shows that the three pairs of literary ele...

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Main Author: Grace Ko
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: OTSSA 2018-07-01
Series:Old Testament Essays
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ote-journal.otwsa-otssa.org.za/index.php/journal/article/view/188
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spelling doaj-f0cc1f8bd6c54694ba8ef3173141318c2020-11-25T02:04:06ZafrOTSSAOld Testament Essays1010-99192312-36212018-07-013112 Samuel 21-24: A Theological Reflection on Israel’s KingshipGrace Ko0Tyndale University College and Seminary The chiastic arrangement of 2 Sam 21-24 signifies that it is not just a collection of miscellaneous material supplementing the Samuel corpus. Rather it is intentionally arranged so as to function as a theological reflection on Israel’s kingship. This paper shows that the three pairs of literary elements, namely, the two narratives (2 Sam 21:1-14; 24:1-25); the two lists of warriors (21:15-22; 23:8-39); and the two poems (22:1-51; 23:1-7), demonstrate divine responses to Israel’s request for a king. Despite his displeasure of their request, God grants Israel their wish and installs kings for them. The two narratives show the failure of human kingship that brings calamity to the people. The warrior lists are the manifestations of God’s providence in giving them fighters. The two poems reveal divine election of David as his messiah and that Israel’s ideal kingship should be under the governance and supremacy of their divine King, Yahweh. https://ote-journal.otwsa-otssa.org.za/index.php/journal/article/view/188KingshipwarriorBook of SamuelKing DavidMessiah
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Grace Ko
spellingShingle Grace Ko
2 Samuel 21-24: A Theological Reflection on Israel’s Kingship
Old Testament Essays
Kingship
warrior
Book of Samuel
King David
Messiah
author_facet Grace Ko
author_sort Grace Ko
title 2 Samuel 21-24: A Theological Reflection on Israel’s Kingship
title_short 2 Samuel 21-24: A Theological Reflection on Israel’s Kingship
title_full 2 Samuel 21-24: A Theological Reflection on Israel’s Kingship
title_fullStr 2 Samuel 21-24: A Theological Reflection on Israel’s Kingship
title_full_unstemmed 2 Samuel 21-24: A Theological Reflection on Israel’s Kingship
title_sort 2 samuel 21-24: a theological reflection on israel’s kingship
publisher OTSSA
series Old Testament Essays
issn 1010-9919
2312-3621
publishDate 2018-07-01
description The chiastic arrangement of 2 Sam 21-24 signifies that it is not just a collection of miscellaneous material supplementing the Samuel corpus. Rather it is intentionally arranged so as to function as a theological reflection on Israel’s kingship. This paper shows that the three pairs of literary elements, namely, the two narratives (2 Sam 21:1-14; 24:1-25); the two lists of warriors (21:15-22; 23:8-39); and the two poems (22:1-51; 23:1-7), demonstrate divine responses to Israel’s request for a king. Despite his displeasure of their request, God grants Israel their wish and installs kings for them. The two narratives show the failure of human kingship that brings calamity to the people. The warrior lists are the manifestations of God’s providence in giving them fighters. The two poems reveal divine election of David as his messiah and that Israel’s ideal kingship should be under the governance and supremacy of their divine King, Yahweh.
topic Kingship
warrior
Book of Samuel
King David
Messiah
url https://ote-journal.otwsa-otssa.org.za/index.php/journal/article/view/188
work_keys_str_mv AT graceko 2samuel2124atheologicalreflectiononisraelskingship
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