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E-grāmata: Chronicles and the Politics of Davidic Restoration: A Quiet Revolution

(Durham University, UK)
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David Janzen argues that the Book of Chronicles is a document with a political message as well as a theological one and moreover, that the book's politics explain its theology. The author of Chronicles was part of a 4th century B.C.E. group within the post-exilic Judean community that hoped to see the Davidides restored to power, and he or she composed this work to promote a restoration of this house to the position of a client monarchy within the Persian Empire. Once this is understood as the political motivation for the work's composition, the reasons behind the Chronicler's particular alterations to source material and emphasis of certain issues becomes clear.

The doctrine of immediate retribution, the role of 'all Israel' at important junctures in Judah's past, the promotion of Levitical status and authority, the virtual joint reign of David and Solomon, and the decision to begin the narrative with Saul's death can all be explained as ways in which the Chronicler tries to assure the 4th century assembly that a change in local government to Davidic client rule would benefit them. It is not necessary to argue that Chronicles is either pro-Davidic or pro-Levitical; it is both, and the attention Chronicles pays to the Levites is done in the service of winning over a group within the temple personnel to the pro-Davidic cause, just as many of its other features were designed to appeal to other interest groups within the assembly.

Papildus informācija

A political reading of Chronicles, arguing that the work was created to convince interest groups within the post-exilic Judean elite to support an approach to the Achaemenids to restore the Davidides as a client monarchy.
Abbreviations ix
Chapter 1 What Historians Do: The Chronicler's Historiographic Goal
1(33)
1 Introduction and Outline of the Book
1(9)
2 The Date of Chronicles and Client Monarchies in the Fourth Century BCE
10(14)
3 The Chronicler's Use of Samuel-Kings
24(10)
Chapter 2 Judean Local Government and the Davidides in Chronicles
34(61)
1 The Temple and Judean Leadership in the Persian Period
34(29)
2 The Kingship of the Davidides in Chronicles
63(32)
Chapter 3 The Davidides, the Levites, and the Assembly
95(43)
1 The Davidides and the Levites
95(22)
2 The Davidides and the Assembly
117(21)
Chapter 4 The Good and Bad Deaths of Josiah: Prophecy and Peace in Chronicles
138(20)
1 The Problem of Josiah's Death in Chronicles
138(7)
2 Josiah's Bad Death and Prophecy in Chronicles
145(8)
3 Josiah's Good Death and Peace in Chronicles
153(5)
Chapter 5 The Davidides and the Achaemenids
158(23)
1 Achaemenid Hegemony
158(13)
2 Peace and Chronicles' Mockery of Achaemenid Hegemony
171(10)
Chapter 6 The Development of and Challenge to the Pro-Davidic Vision
181(1)
1 Judean Political Factions and Pro-Davidic Visions in the Sixth Through Fourth Centuries
181(28)
2 Ezra-Nehemiah, the Assembly, and Chronicles' Quiet Revolution
209(17)
Chapter 7 Conclusion
226(3)
Bibliography 229(34)
Index of References 263(18)
Index of Authors 281
David Janzen is Senior Lecturer in Old Testament at Durham University, UK.