Scribal and Print Cultures

"Unlike scribal culture, which is inherently anti-individualist, print culture fosters ideas of personal fame by multiplying the author-as-signature indefinitely, projecting him both in space and in time into print-made immortality."

J. M. Coetzee, "Censorship and Polemic"

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Sermon: “God With Us, God For Us”

This is the audio (27:27, 31.4MB) of a sermon delivered at Lansdale Presbyterian Church on September 1 entitled, “God With Us, God For Us.” The text is 2 Chronicles 36:14-23.

Here is an excerpt:

What did Israel do with this blessing that God had given them—the blessing of his own presence? It says that they were unfaithful, that they “followed all the abominations of the nations,” that they “polluted the house of YHWH.”

Have you ever been given a really wonderful gift that you just carelessly ruined? An expensive book that slid off the back of the toilet into the water? A new smart-phone left in your pocket, and run through the wash? A sculpture or painting dropped and broken? You know that sinking feeling? Have you ever been on the other side of the equation—have ever seen a gift you’ve given treated carelessly or even destroyed? How does that feel?

How much more does God have the right to be angry when human beings sin against him? Too often we treat with so little reverence all the blessings that he’s given us—our lives and the lives of others, our families, the sun and rain, the air we breathe, His precious Son, his Holy Spirit, his written word. We sin just as grievously as the Israelites when we reject these things, because ultimately we are rejecting God’s greatest gift: himself. He wanted to live with his people, so he built a cloth tent, and a stone temple, and took on human flesh—and yet he was rejected.

Audio and text: ©2013 by Benjamin D. Giffone. Reproduction and distribution are permitted, providing that the author is properly credited and that no fee is charged.

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Sermon: “Falling Into YHWH’s Hand”

This is the audio (27:46, 31.7MB) of a sermon delivered at Lansdale Presbyterian Church on August 25 entitled, “Falling Into YHWH’s Hand.” The text is 1 Chronicles 21:1-22:1.

Here is an excerpt:

The Chronicler, reflecting on these events that occurred 600 years before his own time, sees clearly that YHWH’s plan all along was to use this sin of David as the catalyst for the building of the great temple—a temple where YHWH could live among his people, a temple where they could confess their sins (just as David did) and be forgiven.

Audio and text: ©2013 by Benjamin D. Giffone. Reproduction and distribution are permitted, providing that the author is properly credited and that no fee is charged.

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Home Stretch, Other Projects

I haven’t been able to blog as much in the last few months–having a new baby, a preschooler, a dissertation, and two jobs makes blogging difficult. As I move into the final six weeks of my dissertation work, I’m not sure I’ll be able to pick up the pace until November, Lord willing.

But I had the blessing of preaching two Sundays in a row at my church a few weeks ago, and I will be posting the audio this week. After Corrie and I finished Battlestar Galactica a few weeks ago, we’ve been spending more time in the evenings talking about the Psalter. I’d like to begin posting regularly on the Psalms–but we’ll have to see.

I already have some ideas for spring conference papers, so I may float some of those topics soon as well. Stay tuned.

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“The Music Truck.” Or, “Positive Externalities.”

My three-year-old son refers to the ice cream truck as "the music truck." He has no idea that it sells ice cream. To him, it’s just a truck that drives around playing music, which he loves. No ulterior profit motive–just positive externalities for the whole neighborhood.

How wonderful the world must be to a child…

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Make a Name for Oneself

UPDATE: It looks like Manziel has been suspended for a half-game–so, basically, nothing at all. Apparently, the page on which Texas A&M announced the statement with the NCAA had an advertisement from which you could purchase an autographed photo of Johnny Manziel. Too perfect. Dan Wetzel has another great column here.

A while ago, I wrote this “parable” intended to highlight the hypocrisy of college athletics. In the wake of the Johnny Manziel autograph scandal, more and more observers are beginning to agree that the system is inherently unfair. Rick Reilly writes in this stellar piece:

The NCAA has very clear rules: Everybody and their gastroenterologists can make money off Johnny Manziel except Manziel himself. The pursuit of wealth is available to every person enrolled at Texas A&M except student-athletes. The whiz pianist, the science prodigy, even the hopeful sportswriter. When I was at the University of Colorado, I worked 40 hours a week at the town newspaper, writing. Nobody threatened to throw me out of school.

Admittedly, the students represent the school in some way, and should be expected to abide by certain standards of behavior. But why should that by definition prevent any legal profiting off of their fame? Non-scholarship athletes are allowed to work, and athletes with other scholarships are allowed to work–why can’t scholarship athletes be permitted to sell their labor or brand?

What we have in college athletics is the mixture of two different sorts of services: education and entertainment. At top athletic schools, the football and basketball programs are highly profitable and are used to support the other athletic programs and the educational ventures of the university.

Without any historical background, it’s not entirely obvious why an institution should be running both an entertainment business for profit and an educational business not-for-profit (leaving aside whether a for-profit model is better for education). Professional franchises try to sell their product and drum up support by associating themselves with a city or state (or region: New England or Carolina). If another franchise moves to that region, they will be required to share profits with the established team for infringing upon their “territorial rights” in that sport.

College franchises sell their product through association with a college, which may extend the reach of their “fan base” beyond a region. College athletics is also billed as a different sort of product–anyone who follows the pro and college versions of football and basketball will know that the games are somewhat different. But there’s also the “spirit” of college athletics, a youth and excitement that the NCAA has been able to roll into a very compelling product.

College athletics began as a way for students to maintain healthy bodies with healthy minds. But with the growth of mass entertainment in college athletics, its profitability caused a specialization. Eventually, colleges ceased to care about a recruit’s academic abilities and focused only on their athletic promise. The student bodies at big state schools have “athletic specialists” whose talents are exploited by others to subsidize the “academic specialists.” This is wrong. Talented athletes should be paid based on the market value of their services.

Incidentally, other countries don’t permit their colleges and universities to be used as free farm-systems for their professional leagues. In Europe, soccer clubs can be formed at the lowest levels and can move up year by year based on their performance. There are no government subsidies for stadia/arenae and no giant college athletic programs.

Why have college athletics at all? Why not separate the two ventures? Or, we could make athletes employees of the university and just pay them based on the value they add to the school, like janitors, professors and presidents? I was amused to learn that the Chilean soccer team, Universidad de Chile, has no affiliation with the university. Let’s split off the education and entertainment businesses, allow the sports teams to use the “brand”–the name of the school–but the players will be paid and can do what they want with their money.

This won’t happen until the NCAA’s draconian restrictions on player compensation are challenged and overturned in courts. I hope that will happen soon. In the meantime, all the wealthy (mostly white!) administrators, pro franchise owners, and TV execs will continue to profit at the expense of the (mostly minority) athletes who are the product.

More interesting reading/listening:
http://www.econtalk.org/archives/2012/08/roger_noll_on_t.html
http://www.econtalk.org/archives/2007/01/michael_lewis_o_1.html

Posted in Culture-Economics-Society | 2 Comments

Languages

My sister, Rebekah Devine, has a great post on the value of learning biblical language. She has been in the throes of learning Hebrew this year in preparation for entering Wheaton’s graduate program, and I am very proud of her.

A choice quotation: "Language makes us better friends. It makes us better lovers and better parents."

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Elizabeth Shoshanah Giffone

I am very proud to announce the birth of Elizabeth Shoshanah Giffone, on Saturday, July 6. Mother and child are doing just fine! Elizabeth is a keeper. We are very excited and very grateful that she is healthy and beautiful.

Some folks have asked us about the meaning and origins of the names we chose. For those of you who are interested:

  • “Elizabeth” is Corrie’s middle name, and one of my favorite names. “Shoshanah” is my sister’s middle name, and the Hebrew equivalent of “Susan,” which is my mother’s name.
  • “Elizabeth” is the English spelling of the name of two women in the Bible: Aaron’s wife, Elisheba (אֱלִישֶׁבַע Exod 6:23), and the mother of John the Baptist (Ελισαβετ; Lk 1:5ff.). Derived from the root שׁבע, meaning “oath/swear,” it means something like “God of the oath/promise.”
  • “Shoshanah” is derived from שׁושׁן , “lily.” It is used a few times in 1 Kgs 7/2 Chr 4 in the descriptions of temple decorations, but eight times in the Song of Songs. (It also corresponds to the name of the ancient Persian city of Susa/Šušan, which is a fun connection to my research interests–but don’t tell Corrie!)
  • “Giffone” is my surname. It is derived from the Hebrew גפן, meaning vine–no, just kidding. It’s Italian, originally “Giffoni,” but changed at Ellis Island. My ancestors are from the town of Teggiano in Salerno, and there is no connection to the town of Giffone. No Hebrew etymology here–but I can dream, can’t I?

Corrie reached 39 weeks on Friday, and we had decided with her doctor to induce in order to avoid possible conflict with my father-in-law’s surgery this Wednesday. We arrived at the hospital around 8:30am, and Corrie began to receive pitocin around 9:45. The contractions were close together, but not very strong until the doctor broke her water around 1:45. Then they quickly became stronger, and Elizabeth made her appearance at 3:45pm. She is 8 lbs. 7 oz., 19.5 in.

My mom was able to be present for the birth, and Corrie’s mom, Daniel, my sister and my brother-in-law arrived soon afterward. We had a wonderful, celebratory evening, before going home tired and happy. Mother and child are healthy, so we couldn’t ask for anything more.

Thanks for your prayers. The more joyous of our two momentous occasions has arrived; the more serious of the two will come the day after tomorrow. Please pray for Joe’s surgeons, a successful surgery, and a complete recovery. Pray for God’s peace for Joe and all of us as we approach Wednesday.

In Christ,

Benj, for Corrie and Daniel

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Baby, brain, Benjamin

I just realized that it’s been two months since I posted here at ThinkHardThinkWell. Let me give a quick update…

Corrie is now 38 weeks pregnant. She is ready to go at any time now! We are hoping that Elizabeth Shoshanah makes her ex utero appearance sooner rather than later because…

…Corrie’s father, Joe, will be having surgery on July 10 to remove a brain tumor. About a month ago, Joe started acting strange–zoned out, and unable to speak much–and we were all suspicious. I drove him to the hospital for tests, and on our way he had a seizure that lasted about a minute. Once in the hospital, the doctors were unable to determine definitively the cause. Then he saw another specialist last week, and it turns out that he has a brain tumor–which appears to have grown in the three weeks between MRIs.

Needless to say, we are all quite nervous. We just got through Claudia’s bout with ovarian cancer, which–in God’s mercy–was discovered at stage two last summer and treated immediately. She is now cancer free and regaining strength after five months of chemo. And now Joe, the healthy one, needs brain surgery, followed by recovery and (perhaps) further treatment depending on the type of tumor they find.

Sometimes I wonder if I brought all this on our family by choosing to study Lamentations. OTOH, Claudia’s illnesses began long before I joined the family or even knew Corrie. Why do these things happen to godly people? Man’s oldest question has a biblical answer that is at least intellectually tolerable, if not emotionally satisfying. Sin brings death and sickness–not the individual’s sin, but Adam’s and Eve’s. Check. But why? Why Joe? Why us? The only way forward is to cling to the hope that a God who allows sin and death has some purpose greater than we can imagine, and that he has experienced the worst of suffering and death Himself–at the cross.

My research on the tribe of Benjamin in the Deuteronomistic History and Chronicles rolls along. I have completed five out of seven chapters of my dissertation, and I am reaching that critical point where I want so desperately to be finished, but need to muster that discipline to finish strong–because this is the most important part. I am looking forward to November, when I can be free of this wonderful but heavy burden. I have so many other research ideas that have been on hold, because a full-time job, a part-time ministry, a dissertation, and a family (oh–right–a family!) leave no time for side-research.

Blessed be YHWH’s name. More updates to come, with (d.v.) baby photos and recovery stories. Thanks for stopping by, San Diego.

Posted in Bible-Theology, Research | 2 Comments

Benjamin in the Divided Monarchy

During the divided monarchy, Benjamin appears to have played a key role as the border tribe between the Northern and Southern Kingdoms.[1] The exact nature of that role is the subject of much debate.

Levin observes that the language of the oracles to Solomon and Jeroboam (1 Kgs 11:11-13; 11:29-39) leaves Benjamin’s affiliation ambiguous: ten[2] tribes (vv. 31, 35) are torn from David’s line, and only one is left for David (vv. 13, 32, 36).[3] Levin argues that from the beginning of the period of divided monarchy the land of Benjamin was divided, torn between stronger ties to the north and southern kings attempting to create a buffer for their capitol:

Rehoboam [mustered] all of his influence and power, whether military, economic or political, in order to retain control over the border regions. In the end he was only partially successful. The border was set at Mizpah; towns to the north such as Bethel and Ophrah with their Benjaminite clans remained in Israel.[4]

Over time, southern Benjaminites came to identify themselves as a minority within Judah, while “[retaining] familial ties with their brethren ‘across the border.’”[5] The biblical secession story reflects an exilic or post-exilic stage of Benjaminite affiliation with Judah.

Davies rejects the idea that the North—which included Benjamin—was ever ruled by a Judahite king.[6] Challenging Schunck’s acceptance of the biblical assertion that from the time of Rehoboam onward Benjamin was associated with Judah (1 Kgs 12),[7] Davies argues rather that Benjamin was part of the Northern Kingdom until 722, when the conquering Assyrians “may have decided to grant this territory to their loyal allies”: the kingdom of Judah.[8] After Sennacherib subjugated all Judah but Jerusalem, Josiah may have subsequently reasserted temporary control of Benjaminite territory.[9] After the Babylonian conquest, the tables were somewhat turned: the province of Judah was ruled from a Benjaminite administrative center (Mizpah), and its primary cultic centers appear to have been Benjaminite as well (Mizpah, Bethel, Gibeon).[10]

Na’aman is critical of such attempts by Davies and others to associate Benjamin solely with the Northern Kingdom at from its earliest stages—a tendency which, he suggests, is based on the biblical story of Benjamin and Joseph as sons of Rachel.[11] Na’aman argues that from its earliest history[12] the Benjaminite region was associated with Jerusalem: “The results of the archaeological research strongly suggest that the highland district of Benjamin was an integral part of the kingdom of Judah in the monarchical period, and that its material culture differs from that of the hill country of Ephraim.”[13] Even though portions of the land of Benjamin were part of the Northern Kingdom—notably Bethel[14]—most of Benjamin was part of the kingdom of Judah during the divided monarchy.[15]

The scenarios proposed by Levin and Na’aman seem to make better sense of the material evidence, and of Knauf’s and Davies’s own suggestions that the annexation of Bethel was partly the means by which Israelite/Northern traditions (e.g., exodus and judges/saviors traditions) came south to Judah.[16] Na’aman rightly questions why the Assyrians—if they indeed gave the land of Benjamin to Judah after 722 BCE—would have detached Bethel, an important administrative and cultic center of the conquered Samarian kingdom, and given it to Judah.[17] Na’aman prefers to follow Alt’s proposal that “the area of Bethel was annexed to the kingdom of Judah after the Assyrian retreat from Palestine, probably in the 620s BCE.”[18]

Levin argues, contra Davies, that Benjamin’s ambiguous, tense relation to Judah throughout the DtrH is strong evidence of the historicity of at least a core of the biblical portrait of the united monarchy. If Benjamin was only annexed involuntarily to Judah after the fall of the Samarian kingdom, what would be the necessity for such a strong Benjaminite “substratum” in such a Judah-centered history—especially the founding of Israel by a Benjaminite king?[19] “The only possible reason for such a tradition to be included in the History is that it was known to the people of the authors’ own time, forcing them to deal with it.”[20] Rather, Benjamin seems to have been important to Judah from the beginning, since Jerusalemite rulers needed Benjamin’s support as a buffer against the North.

Levin, Davies, Na’aman and Knauf observe intertribal tensions embedded in the biblical texts, which reflect Benjamin’s status as a border tribe—Na’aman sees Benjaminite hostility toward Ephraim,[21] whereas Davies focuses on Benjaminite hostility toward Judah.[22] There is no doubt that both observations are correct, reflecting the “tug-of-war” over Benjamin found both in the narratives of 1-2 Kings and in the history of the ninth and eighth centuries BCE.

Economic activity is dynamic; ethnic and religious identities exhibit fluidity and flexibility. Any reconstruction of the political status of Benjamin during the divided monarchy must take these facts into consideration. Given that the written evidence seems to associate Benjamin with both the North and the South, it is reasonable to suggest that some Benjaminite families, settlements and towns switched their primary allegiances (in one direction or the other) at different times. The ethnic/clan association with Ephraim seems to have been stronger,[23] but the geography of Benjamin made economic, political and military ties with Judah a necessity as well.

Such a scenario assumes a certain measure of autonomy for “Benjamin” as a tribe/province/polity, and for Benjaminite individuals/families. In Knauf’s and Davies’s proposed scenarios, Benjamin is a passive entity, subjugated in succession by the Samarian government, the conquering Assyrians, the kingdom of Judah, Assyria, and finally Babylon. Yet political boundaries defined by military conquest, treaty, taxation and forced tribute do not always mirror economic, ethnic and religious affiliations. For example, it is perfectly conceivable that individual Benjaminite towns or families paid regular tribute to one larger political entity—and thus would be considered “part” of that entity—while simultaneously identifying ethnically, religiously and economically with another political entity. The material and literary evidence seems to demand nuanced explanations that emphasize complexity and fluidity, rather than proposals that generalize about one kingdom “handing over a region” to another.


[1] Klaus-Dietrich Schunck, Benjamin: Untersuchungen zur Entstehung und Geschichte eines israelitischen Stammes (BZAW 86; Berlin: Alfred Töpelmann, 1963), 171-172.

[2] The association of “ten tribes” is itself a stylization, since Simeon’s region was contained within Judah’s (Josh 19:9), and was apparently later absorbed into Judah: “The pattern of Judahite domination over and even absorption of Simeon is strongly suggested by the Deuteronomistic work” (Gary N. Knoppers, 1 Chronicles 1-9 [Anchor Bible Commentary; New York: Doubleday, 2004], 372). The Northern faction in Rehoboam’s day would only have included nine tribes: Reuben, Gad, Dan, Asher, Naphtali, Zebulun, Issachar, Manasseh, and Ephraim—and possibly Benjamin, which is the very question at hand.

[3] “I would suggest that rather than this being bad addition in an unskillfully told story, it is a purposeful reflection of the unclear status of the twelfth tribe, namely Benjamin, once again in an oracle attributed to a northern prophet” (Yigal Levin, “Joseph, Judah and the ‘Benjamin Conundrum,’” ZAW 116 [2004]: 229n27).

[4] Levin, “Benjamin Conundrum,” 229.

[5] Levin, “Benjamin Conundrum,” 230.

[6] Philip R. Davies, “The Trouble With Benjamin,” in Reflection and Refraction: Studies in Biblical Historiography in Honour of A. Graeme Auld (ed. R. Rezetko et al.; Leiden: Brill, 2007), 102.

[7] Schunck, Benjamin: Untersuchungen, 139-69.

[8] Davies, “The Trouble With Benjamin,” 103-104.

[9] Davies, “The Trouble With Benjamin,” 103. Ernst A. Knauf argues that Benjamin, “the Israelite south,” was annexed to Judah between 630 and 620 BCE: “Bethel: The Israelite Impact on Judean Language and Literature,” in Judah and the Judeans in the Persian Period (ed. Oded Lipschits and Manfred Oeming; Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2006), 316.

[10] Philip R. Davies, “The Origin of Biblical Israel,” in Essays on Ancient Israel in Its Near Eastern Context: A Tribute to Nadav Na’aman (ed. Yairah Amit et al.; Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2006), 142-144.

[11] Nadav Na’aman, “Saul, Benjamin and the Emergence of ‘Biblical Israel’ (Parts 1 & 2),” ZAW 121 (2009): 335.

[12] Na’aman argues that even pre-Israelite, Canaanite Jerusalem of the early second millennium included the territory that later became the land Benjamin: “Canaanite Jerusalem and its Central Hill Country Neighbours in the Second Millennium B.C.E.,” UF 24 (1992): 275-291.

[13] Na’aman, “Saul, Benjamin and the Emergence of ‘Biblical Israel,’” 217.

[14] Na’aman, “Saul, Benjamin and the Emergence of ‘Biblical Israel,’” 338-342.

[15] Na’aman, “Saul, Benjamin and the Emergence of ‘Biblical Israel,’” 224.

[16] Knauf, “Bethel,” 291-295; Davies, “The Trouble With Benjamin,” 104-110.

[17] Na’aman, “Saul, Benjamin and the Emergence of ‘Biblical Israel,’” 339.

[18] Na’aman, “Saul, Benjamin and the Emergence of ‘Biblical Israel,’” 339.

[19] “If, indeed, the whole of the Primary History was first “invented” either during the days of Josiah or in the post-exilic period, based on only a dim recollection of the past at best and perhaps even an intentional attempt to “re-write” history, then why even mention the northern origin of the Benjaminites and their king Saul? If the whole episode of the United Monarchy is no more than a Judean literary invention, why give the “honor” of its foundation to a northerner, whose followers then continued to pester the Messiah David?” (Levin, “Benjamin Conundrum,” 231-232)

[20] Levin, “Benjamin Conundrum,” 232.

[21] “Since the district of Benjamin was a buffer zone between Israel and Judah, and must have suffered in the course of the military clashes between the two kingdoms (as may be inferred from Hos 5:8-9; 9:9; 10:9), it might have grown hostile rather than fraternal in its relations with Ephraim, its northern neighbor” (Na’aman, “Saul, Benjamin and the Emergence of ‘Biblical Israel,’” 224).

[22] Davies, “The Trouble With Benjamin,” 102ff.

[23] Levin, “Benjamin Conundrum,” 224.

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