21.1 Narrative and Proclamation
21.2 The Kerygmatic Nature of Narratives
21.3 Proclamation as Presence
21.4 Mesopotamian Proclamation as a Static Presence
21.5 Biblical Proclamation as a Dynamic Presence
ERRORS in databases:
- "Boson1918Assiriologia.d": duplicate bibliography "Boson1918Assiriologia" for site "Akk-lg".
- "Bottero1992Reasoning.d": duplicate bibliography "Bottero1992Reasoning" for site "Mes-rel".
- "Buccellati1972Teodicea.d": duplicate bibliography "Buccellati1972Teodicea" for site "Mes-lit".
- "Cauvin2000Birth.d": duplicate bibliography "Cauvin2000Birth" for site "Mes-rel".
- "DMB.d": duplicate bibliography "DMB" for site "Mes-rel".
- "Edzard2003Sumerian.d": duplicate bibliography "Edzard2003Sumerian" for site "Mes-rel".
- "Oshima2014Sufferers.d": duplicate bibliography "Oshima2014Sufferers" for site "Mes-rel".
- "Trinkaus1983Shanidar.d": duplicate bibliography "Trinkaus1983Shanidar" for site "Mes-rel".
21.1 Narrative and Proclamation
About orality and literacy in ancient Mesopotamia, see e.g. Michalowski 1992 Orality.
On the same topic in ancient Israel, see e.g. Miller 2012 Orality.
– [ Marco De Pietri, October 2020]
21.2 The Kerygmatic Nature of Narratives
For the šema` Yisrā’ēl (שְׁמַע יִשְׂרָאֵל), cf. supra 2.15.
– [ Marco De Pietri, October 2020]
For the akītu, the Mesopotamian ‘New Year’s Festival’, cf. supra 17.7.
– [ Marco De Pietri, October 2020]
For the Enūma elīš, cf. supra 5.2.
– [ Marco De Pietri, October 2020]
For Marduk, polyad god of Babylon (mentioned in Section 5.2, point (5)), see here.
– [ Marco De Pietri, October 2020]
For the text of Lv. 16, regarding the ‘day of atonement’, (cf. supra 13.13), see here.
– [ Marco De Pietri, October 2020]
Contra Buccellati’s statement that «In Mesopotamia we do not find such a tradition of explanatory proclamation, nor indeed many examples of even simple proclamation» see, however, the last verses of Atrahasis: «This song (is) for your praise. / May the Igigi- gods hear, let them extol your greatness to each other. / I have sung of the flood to all peoples/ Listen!» (ll. III viii, 14-19).
Cf. also Foster 1991 On Authorship, p. 31: «Traditing and dissemination of the text are referred to in Erra, the Creation Epic, Agushaya, Atrahasis, and the Assurbanipal hymns both synchronically and diachronically: “all people” are supposed to hear it, as well as succeeding generations in time».
– [ Stefania Ermidoro, November 2020]
On the connection between myth and ritual in ancient Mesopotamia, with a specific focus on the New Year Festival, see Sommer 2000 Akitu; Weeks 2015 Myth Ritual; Lambert 1968 Myth Ritual.
– [ Stefania Ermidoro, November 2020]
21.3 Proclamation as Presence
«God’s presence in the message requires and awaits the presence of the interlocutors who have heard it» (G. Buccellati, Chapter 21, Section 3). We can here envisage a connection between the presence (שכינה, shekinah) of God in the temple (see supra 20.6) and in the biblical message which is to be proclaimed to the people; God is not relegated in the temple (as the Mesopotamian gods), but can ‘get off’ the temple through his proclaimed message, i.e. the biblical scripture.
– [ Marco De Pietri, October 2020]
21.4 Mesopotamian Proclamation as a Static Presence
For the static presence of the ‘absolute’ in ancient Mesopotamia, see Buccellati 2014 Time.
– [ Marco De Pietri, June 2020]
21.5 Biblical Proclamation as a Dynamic Presence
For the dynamic presence of the ‘absolute’ in the Bible, see Buccellati 2014 Time.
– [ Marco De Pietri, June 2020]
For the concept of lectio divina, born at the time of the Fathers of the Church and later further developed as a Jesuitic way of reading the Scripture, see e.g. a brief introduction to this topic (in Italian) by Swetnam, James (S.J.) 1999, “La ‘Lectio Divina’”, online on the website of the Pontifical Biblical Institute.
– [ Marco De Pietri, October 2020]
For the Hebrew expression אֲרוֹן הַקֹּדֶשׁ, ´ărôn haqqodeš, ‘(the) ark, the holy’, see the Jewish Encyclopedia; more in detail, see DCH 1, pp. 372-373, under lemma אֲרוֹן, ´ărôn, ‘ark’ and DCH 7, pp. 196-204, under lemma קֹדֶשׁ, qodeš, ‘holyness/holy’.
– [ Marco De Pietri, October 2020]
For the concept of גניזה,genîza(h), lit. ‘hiding/hiding (place)’, from the Hebrew noun גֶּנֶז, genez, ‘treasury’ (see DCH 2, p. 368) was a kind of sacred place for the deposition of old scrolls of the Torah or other sacred Hebrew texts, see the Jewish Encyclopedia.
– [ Marco De Pietri, October 2020]