2 research outputs found
Source and revision in the narratives of David's transfer of the Ark: text, language and story in 2 Samuel 6 and 1 Chronicles 13, 15-16
The aim of this thesis is to evaluate the relationship between Samuel and Chronicles in a
single synoptic story: David's transfer of Israel's sacred ark to Jerusalem in 2 Samuel 6 and I
Chronicles 13, 15 -16. Chapter one surveys areas of research related to Samuel and
Chronicles. First, the writer summarises research and perspectives on these books and their
stories of David's ark transfer. The review highlights competing approaches to Samuel which
centre on either sources or composition and on either a diachronic or synchronic
methodology. The literary history of Samuel is inadequate in conventional perspective, and
must be freshly unfolded, and consequently the relationship of Samuel and Chronicles must
also be re- evaluated. Second, the writer reviews the textual evidence for both books, focusing
on the received versions, the Greek translations, and in the case of Samuel, on the Dead Sea
Scrolls. The witnesses to Chronicles are relatively uniform, and it is suggested that the
pluriformity among witnesses to Samuel, and the character of the MT of this book, are related
to Samuel's editorial history. In particular, revisers reshaped the story of David's ark transfer
in Chronicles and Samuel. Chapter two surveys issues related to synchronic and diachronic
approaches to Samuel and Chronicles. The writer suggests that the impasse between these
competing approaches may be resolved by the textual- exegetical approach, that is, by using
text -critical controls on redactional arguments. The versional evidence substantiates the
validity of the diachronic approach -there are earlier and later forms of biblical texts and
editions of biblical stories -and scholars can use this evidence to discern literary origins and
developments- developments in the versions whose special features, and the reasons for
them, may be perceived and appreciated through holistic or final -form readings. Related to
this, the writer points out that the issues of text, language (grammar, vocabulary, style) and
story are interconnected. Textual variation and grammatical and stylistic incongruities and
lexical discrepancies frequently signal editorial developments in biblical compositions. Three
helpful models for understanding this developmental process are considered: McKane's
rolling corpus, Tov's and Ulrich's literary layers, and Fishbane's inner -biblical exegesis.
Finally, it is stated that the principal text -critical aim in this thesis is the detection of earlier
and later forms of biblical texts or stories, or to state it differently, the discovery of earlier and
later stages in their editorial histories. Using the aforementioned insights and methodologies,
chapters three through six closely examine 2 Samuel 6 and the synoptic portions of 1 Chronicles 13, 15 -16. The latter has one short and two lengthy pluses (13.1 -4; 15.1 -24; 16.4-
42) but the text and story in its synoptic material are more primitive than in synoptic MT
Samuel. 2 Samuel 6 has one short plus (vv. 20b -23) but the text and story in its synoptic
material have developed in MT Samuel beyond LXX Samuel and beyond synoptic
Chronicles. In other words, 2 Samuel 6 is a shorter version on the whole, yet in many
particulars the MT is a later version of the story of David's ark transfer. The text's 'poor
condition' is evidence of its editorial history. Overall, 2 Samuel 6 shows greater textual
variation and fluidity, more doublets, and more interpretative difficulties than does 1 Chronicles 13, 15 -16. Specifically, the MT reflects much literary creativity and ideological
bias. The readings special to this text relate to an apology of Davidic kingship, an apology of
Davidic and Yahwistic character, and cultic practice. In addition, many textual manipulations
in MT 2 Samuel 6 connect to the language of stories in 1 Samuel, especially chapters 2, 10-
15, 17 and 25. All these interconnected adjustments point to successive editorial interventions
over a substantial period of time and their cumulative appearance and objective may be
labelled a literary layer. The thesis concludes with observations regarding the implications of
the present investigation for the theories of A. G. Auld