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The Notion of God and the Editing of the Hebrew Book of Psalms

Willgren, David LU (2011) OTSEM Annual Conference, 2011
Abstract
Psalm studies at the end of the twentieth century bear witness of a major paradigm shift. Recent research no longer treats the Book of Psalms as a loosely assembled hymnbook with no overarching organization, but rather as a book that got its present shape through careful editing. In recent years an increasing interest in the arrangement of the Book of Psalms has produced a substantial volume of literature, and there is a remarkable consensus that the purposeful arrangement of psalms within the final collection seems to have given it both a function and a message greater than the sum of its parts.



One of the main strands of research has treated the Book of Psalms at a macro-structural level, paying attention to the large... (More)
Psalm studies at the end of the twentieth century bear witness of a major paradigm shift. Recent research no longer treats the Book of Psalms as a loosely assembled hymnbook with no overarching organization, but rather as a book that got its present shape through careful editing. In recent years an increasing interest in the arrangement of the Book of Psalms has produced a substantial volume of literature, and there is a remarkable consensus that the purposeful arrangement of psalms within the final collection seems to have given it both a function and a message greater than the sum of its parts.



One of the main strands of research has treated the Book of Psalms at a macro-structural level, paying attention to the large contours and overall theme(s) of the book, and although it is an intricate task, some significant progress has been made. One influential theory is that the Book of Psalms has a final wisdom frame, as well as a royal covenantal frame; discussion concerns how these two relate to each other.



Even though much work has been done in defending either a wisdom theme or a royal/messianic theme, no one has yet attempted to evaluate these themes from a thematic approach. The aim of this study is hence to advance the discussion by looking at images of God conveyed by the psalms at a macro-structural level. Do the conveyed images of God correspond to either frame or does the Book of Psalms describe God differently? (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
unpublished
subject
conference name
OTSEM Annual Conference, 2011
conference location
Copenhagen, Denmark
conference dates
2011-08-21 - 2011-08-24
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
The information about affiliations in this record was updated in December 2015. The record was previously connected to the following departments: Centre for Theology and Religious Studies (015017000)
id
7db7a2e7-ba03-410e-8adb-f6c601dbfaec (old id 4668521)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 12:52:45
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:11:13
@misc{7db7a2e7-ba03-410e-8adb-f6c601dbfaec,
  abstract     = {{Psalm studies at the end of the twentieth century bear witness of a major paradigm shift. Recent research no longer treats the Book of Psalms as a loosely assembled hymnbook with no overarching organization, but rather as a book that got its present shape through careful editing. In recent years an increasing interest in the arrangement of the Book of Psalms has produced a substantial volume of literature, and there is a remarkable consensus that the purposeful arrangement of psalms within the final collection seems to have given it both a function and a message greater than the sum of its parts.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
One of the main strands of research has treated the Book of Psalms at a macro-structural level, paying attention to the large contours and overall theme(s) of the book, and although it is an intricate task, some significant progress has been made. One influential theory is that the Book of Psalms has a final wisdom frame, as well as a royal covenantal frame; discussion concerns how these two relate to each other.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
Even though much work has been done in defending either a wisdom theme or a royal/messianic theme, no one has yet attempted to evaluate these themes from a thematic approach. The aim of this study is hence to advance the discussion by looking at images of God conveyed by the psalms at a macro-structural level. Do the conveyed images of God correspond to either frame or does the Book of Psalms describe God differently?}},
  author       = {{Willgren, David}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{The Notion of God and the Editing of the Hebrew Book of Psalms}},
  year         = {{2011}},
}