A Theocentric Interpretation of ???? ??? ??? : The Knowledge of Good and Evil as the Knowledge for Administering Reward and Punishment
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10
3525564996
ISBN-13
9783525564998
Publisher
Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht GmbH & Co KG
Imprint
Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht GmbH & Co KG
Country of Manufacture
DE
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Apr 26th, 2021
Print length
336 Pages
Weight
712 grams
Product Classification:
ChristianityOld Testaments
Ksh 22,300.00
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On a primary level, the author seeks to answer the question, what is the best interpretation of, The Knowledge of Good and Evil, in Gen 2:9, 17; 3:5, and 3:22? In Gen 3:5 and 3:22, this knowledge is said to be possessed by YHWH and the divine beings. This study analyses the permutations of (good) and (evil/bad) in the Hebrew Bible, with a majority focus in Genesis and the Deuteronomistic History and with a focus upon those textual instances in which YHWH has influence over 'good' and 'bad/evil.' Due to the results of the data, the author brings in a second level of discussion that focuses upon the hermeneutical principle of divine retribution as a structuring element for ancient Near Eastern historiography. On a third level, the author turns to divine blessing and cursing, and its association with good and evil in ancient Near Eastern texts and in the Hebrew Bible. Due to this specific theocentric analysis of the lexemes juxtaposed with the author's wider study of ancient Near Eastern history and culture, the answer to the guiding question of this study is therefore proposed by the author as, 'The Divine Knowledge for Administering Reward and Punishment.' Ergo, the Eden Narrative tells a story of how humans partly attain divinity becoming like YHWH and the divine beings (Gen 3:5; 3:22; Ps 82) in having acquired the forbidden divine knowledge for wielding ultimate power.
On a primary level, the author seeks to answer the question, what is the best interpretation of, The Knowledge of Good and Evil, in Gen 2:9, 17; 3:5, and 3:22? In Gen 3:5 and 3:22, this knowledge is said to be possessed by YHWH and the divine beings. This study analyses the permutations of (good) and (evil/bad) in the Hebrew Bible, with a majority focus in Genesis and the Deuteronomistic History and with a focus upon those textual instances in which YHWH has influence over ''good'' and ''bad/evil.'' Due to the results of the data, the author brings in a second level of discussion that focuses upon the hermeneutical principle of divine retribution as a structuring element for ancient Near Eastern historiography. On a third level, the author turns to divine blessing and cursing, and its association with good and evil in ancient Near Eastern texts and in the Hebrew Bible. Due to this specific theocentric analysis of the lexemes juxtaposed with the author''s wider study of ancient Near Eastern history and culture, the answer to the guiding question of this study is therefore proposed by the author as, ''The Divine Knowledge for Administering Reward and Punishment.'' Ergo, the Eden Narrative tells a story of how humans partly attain divinity becoming like YHWH and the divine beings (Gen 3:5; 3:22; Ps 82) in having acquired the forbidden divine knowledge for wielding ultimate power.
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