How to Find Wisdom:
A Methodology in the Book of Job
and the
Roots of Scientific Method in the
Divination Modalities.
Exegesis of the “Hymn to Wisdom”
in Book of Job, Chapter 28
Author:
Tom Key, Student, Master of Divinity
THB
3007-01 “Hebrew Bible”
Professor: Marvin Sweeney
Date
Due: December 16-21, 2016
Table of
Contents
The “Hymn to Wisdom” appears as a short poem in
the middle of an epic poem, the Book of Job.
The Book itself is described as “a great work of art”. The
Hymn is 28 verses long and takes up the entirety of the 28th Chapter
of the 42 Chaptered work. The Book of
Job is part of the Writings – Ketuvim—in
the Canon of the Tanak. This Scripture is
the outcome of centuries of theological processes and “shaping”.
We take only
Chapter 28 as our pericope, the subject of this study. The Chapter asks “Where can Wisdom be
found?” The 28th verse concludes
the Chapter by deliberately eliding the Where Question, and instead defining
the What: Wisdom is “fear of the
Lord.
We explore the
answer hidden in previous verses.
We submit the discovery that the Hymn inserts a practical methodology for
finding Wisdom, which is remarkably contemporary. Indeed it spells out what we call “Scientific
Method” today. Furthermore, the method
is spelled out, and demonstrated, in the first 26 verses. No other Scripture provides this step-by-step
demonstration of Scientific Method.
Not only is the
Method spelled out, but the demonstration is by the deity. In other words, this methodological language
is a dramatic shift from almost every other ancient sky god of wisdom which
typically knows all because from their exalted vantage point, they see all. Here, the deity is not wise merely because he
is the creator, but because he saw, measured, studied, and probed the location!
The verses appear
to acclaim the mighty creator of the meteorological mysteries – “He looks to
the ends of the earth; He sees all that is under the heavens”. (Job 28:24). The deity appears, with the divine title Yahweh, in verse 23, and with the title Adonay,”Lord”, in verse 28. This single Adonay, appears in no other part of the Book. Spelling out the path, or “way” to find
wisdom, is also facially incompatible with the preceding poem in which Job and
his friends repeatedly acknowledge Wisdom as inaccessible. Some commentators however have noted the fact
that the Hymn expressly submits a path to Wisdom through personal discovery. The unique divine title “Lord” Adonay in this verse may be a deliberate
contrast with the “fear of Yahweh” and Elohim
of the Patriarchs and Job elsewhere before and after this Chapter. Here, God finds Wisdom by using scientific
method, taking steps which humans can do.
This unique title is another “flag” for a hidden meaning. The steps limned in verses 24-26, are then
tightly summarized with four delocutive verbs in the 27th. This
Methodology is “hidden” above the 28th verse which functions as an
evasion.
Finally, we show a
relationship between this Methodology for finding Wisdom, and Divination, which
was the “science” as understood in the Ancient Near East. The roots of Scientific Method lie in occult
efforts to understand the world.
Divination practices were essential to explaining reality, not just
predicting the future or contacting gods.
This understanding requires a look at the dialogical context, the
historical and literary setting, and an analysis of the intention of the Hymn’s
unknown author or authors. For
comparison, we use a remarkable Play written by Aeschylus, the Greek dramatist
who was roughly a contemporary. Divination
and occult arts as boons for humankind are the subject of Prometheus Bound.
Addressing the
language of the Chapter, we distinguish epideictic presentation, examine the
meaning of the poetic images, show appreciation for sod or secret practices and text, and then focus on four delocutive
verbs in the penultimate verse. The
methodology is “hidden” behind the out-of-place prosaicism of the 28th verse
which does not answer the call. The
summarizing verbs in Verse 27 answer the Question, and reveal a methodology
which approximates Scientific Method:
See it – (r’y)
look for things; know from direct first hand experience;
Declare it – (spr)
ventilate and document what you find, specify;
Establish it –
(kwn) appraise, measure, weigh; record it; and
Test it – (hqr)
search and probe; investigate duplicates; look into its workings
We conclude by
showing that at the heart of the Hymn, verse 27 is a holon. We
discuss its holonic fit in the Book of Job, which is a holon of Scripture. Nothing is sacred if it is not part of a quest
for Wisdom. Scripture is a process, a
stage, and a step of and toward Scientific Method. A single verse, hidden behind the prosaic
cover of the final verse, develops the foundation of Science from the Divination
praxis of the Ancient Near East, carefully scrolled by the tradents of the Temples. The quest for Wisdom reflects the most
fundamental element of theology. In this
Judaic text and ancient Middle East context, Wisdom is advanced with Scientific
Method, and both object and process are the subject of Theology.
The pericope is the 28 verses of the 28th
chapter of the 42 chapters in the Book of Job. A copy is provided in the
Appendix. The Book on the whole presents not only a mix
of genres but also contrasts in linguistic sophistication, and
more surprisingly, in theological outlook. In turn, the pericope itself reflects that
mix of styles, genres, and linguistic creativity, in small.
Translation issues
are legion,
and are exacerbated by the demands of a “sacred” text which clearly hides or
disguises the message. Most exegetes
agree that the Hymn was exposed to natural corruption and reflects shaping and
redaction activity, as does the entire Book, reflecting a range of agendas we
may never understand. The narrative of Job itself is hoary,
reflects literate post-Persian and pre-literate oral traditions, and was no
doubt first displayed in what is now an unknown language. The hinge of a repeated refrain (Job 12 and
20) may even suggest it was set to music,
although no cantillation or even a Selah
has survived.
The Chapter is a work
of creativity and beauty. As with all “art”, it is true that the esthetics and
cultic expressivity can be “lost” in translation. With hymnic poetry, we step
into the Saussurian dragon’s mouth, blind and deaf: If we try to “objectify” we lose much beauty
and perhaps the quality of the “sacred”. Translation also risks the loss of
conceptual content, and the “art” of the dramaturge. For example, the Book has
been compared with Aeschylus’ “Prometheus
Bound” which we compare from across numerous translations. Only with
good translations of both artifacts can we attempt this exercise. However, once well translated, the epic
elegance of the dramatic Jobian dialogue “literally” bootstraps the comparison
to the Greek playwrights.
Some scholars have
shown that conveying an idea from an earlier time, using different media, with
different semiotics, and in different natural languages, make the conveyance of
an exact idea, or even close equivalence,
unlikely. One
of many systemic differences between Hebrew and English lies in presupposition
structures. Hebrew allows relative
clauses to be formed in syntactic contexts not possible in English.
At the heart of
the lexical prosody in the chapter are a series of “metaphors”. Figurative language is itself a generator of
linguistic change, increasing the effort required to understand translations. “Most lexical items are dead metaphors”, as
one linguist has pointed out.
Finally, we note
that the translation issue is also sharpened with respect to “religious” texts
where some objects, such as the “gold” described in five different ways in this
pericope, could be Fetishistic. Fetishism
is a form of religion that is almost universal, and Ancient Israel contains a
profusion of fetish objects:
Abraham had a sacred grove, and perhaps a Black “kissing” Rock used in the Kaaba;
Jacob anointed a stone at Bethel; Moses erected a fiery serpent of brass upon a
pole; Egyptian contemporaries worshiped animals. Judaism was in a syncretic phase when the
Hymn was written, and we may not appreciate at this distance, the numerous
objects described.
In drawing upon the English version
provided by the Jewish Publication Society, I have only contrasted the four
delocutive verbs to show how other translators understood these four
interesting words cited in our Introduction and discussed below. No “discrepancy” altering the finding of a
Methodology in the four verbs is noted – all the translations make the same
point. No attempt to master ancient
Hebrew has been made.
Our focus is on a
Chapter of the Book of Job (Iyyob),
the third book of the Ketuvim, in
the Hebrew Tanak. The Tehillim
(Psalms) leads the first three, followed by Mishle (Proverbs). The Ketuvim
represent the Present where the law and history represents the Past, and
the Prophets – literally practicing Divination modalities -- touch the Future. The books are wheels in the wheels of the
Tanak in a cyclical sacred world of Creation. The recurring pattern of liturgical
celebration and encounter between human beings, nature, the text, and G-d
constitutes the core of Jewish experience captured in the order of Torah. Thus the pertinence and telicity of verbs
which constitute a Methodology for prediction (“divining”) and gaining an
understanding of the world.
For example, a
dialectic and interpersonal dynamic is immediately raised by the hymnic form of
Chapter 28. It may have been a song, it
certainly can be sung, and as such matches the hymnic forms which appear
elsewhere in the Book (hymns of Praise in Job 5.9-16, 9.4-10, 13-25, and
26.5-14, another wisdom poem in 24:13-18.), and in other Books (Psalms 104,
compare Amos 4.13, 5.8-9). The cry for
Wisdom echoes Proverbs – “Doth not wisdom cry?”
The riddling question of “Where is the place of understanding?” (28:12) echoes
issues anticipated in Psalms and Qoheleth particularly. The didactic question
reflects a vast heuristic of Wisdom literature across the Torah, and across the
region. In fact, this quest is a many-wheeled “engine”, a methodology, for
scientific innovation and discovery.
Curiously, the OT
reverses the order and begins with the Book of Job. While this appears to be significant –
primacy-- the reasons remain speculative. Is it part of the linear
eschatological paradigm of Christianity which looks for a scriptural vector
Ending with a Messiah? Is Job
eschatological? Is Wisdom?
We prefer to leave
speculation to the Diviners. Not only are the Christian sects disputing their
own canonization (at the level of Canonization achieved by Judaism for the Masoretic
Text), but any doubts rising from lack of original texts are compounded. We are presented with the re-ordering, but we
have little agreement about why, and absolutely no information about who,
did the re-ordering over the centuries.. The re-naming of the Torah, calling it the
“Old Testament”, is an obvious polemic. However,
we no longer understand, if anyone ever did, the displacement of the primacy of
the Psalms by the Book of Job. It is
possible that a suffering but righteous man, tortured by G-d’s angel, may raise
a reflection of a crucified Christ. However,
the naked theodicy and denial of an after-life is not likely to inspire Alexandrian
or Syrian believers to their “Christian” purposes. Perhaps
a polemic against the Egyptian cultic beliefs in resurrected immortality is
involved. The search for Wisdom requires
less not more speculation.
The Book of Job is
first included in the Christian scriptures compiled by the Unitarian (“Arian”)
Universalist, Clement of Alexandria (150-215 AD). By that time, scroll-writing was being superseded
by technologies of book-making out of parchment. The re-ordering became quasi-canonical in these
first efforts to select the “scripture”.
The displacement of the Psalms by
Book of Job remains a mystery. Logically,
Christians could just as well prefer primacy of place for the Psalms with
promises of a Messiah, over a Book which questions the moral character of G-d.
Most
scholars agree that Chapter 28 is highly structured, and tightly versed. Even though it is likely an inclusio, with
inclusios, translators concur it is composed
by an author having the same high level of literary skill demonstrated by the
author of the Book of Job. The Hymn has three
parts, separated in two “hinge” places by two almost identically repeated, almost
teasingly not chiastic, interrogatory refrains: [Underlining added to highlight the difference
between the two.]
Verse 12 : “But wisdom, where shall it
be found? And where is the place of understanding?”
Verse 20: ““Whence then cometh wisdom?
And where shall it be found?” then repeating the second half identically.
The
difference creates reflection on the fact that some wisdom has to be sought to
be found, and some comes, without seeking it.
The reflection is a wonderful introduction to “scientific method” itself
which must provide for both modalities of discovery.
We further consider
what the structural contribution is. The
inserted Hymn is an obvious diversion, leaving the intense personal engagement between
the suffering Job and his “friends” for an abstract lark about “Wisdom”. The Hymn wanders off through a catalog of
geography and gold, then ends in a prosaic cliché. The diversion is deliberate, crafted. The cliché covers a summary of the previous
specific steps which “G-d” uses to find Wisdom, and which are shown step by
step. Following the Hymn, Job begins
a new lament for the old days: “And Job again took up his
parable, and said Oh that I were as in the months of old, As in the days when
God watched over me.” This statement within statement, wheel within wheel, is a
structure which highlights the fact that things are different now.
Little wonder that
Job demands exegetical strategies of interpreters,
and touches upon its own deconstructed and dialogic character, while
endlessly raising issues of intertextuality as a brilliant and often-repeated literary
text. One exegete even calls the structure of its catalogic-anthological
“lists” to be part of a “blemished perfection”.
The formal components are a poetic triptych of
panels separated with two hinge Questions which
are parallel, almost identical, and create a drama around a heuristic for how
to find wisdom expressed in four delocutive verbs,
which are also parallel and chiastic. The four verbs were remarked in the
Introduction, and we treat them in detail below.
The last and 28th verse, completing
the 28th chapter, is a couplet echoing piety expressed repeatedly elsewhere
in Scripture. Psalms 111:10 ;
Proverbs 1:7; 3:7;
16:6. The Hymn is the 28th chapter inserted into the 42 chaptered
Book of Job, as an independent interruption or “self-contained” unit, of the riddled
Job narrative. A “bottom line” consensus
about the Hymn among scholars is that they agree on lack of consensus. Even the relationship of Wisdom and Creation
in the Hymn is disputed, apparently for lack of feminine referents in Job, and
in Genesis, in spite of Proverbs 8. One
doubts if any of the Commentators are surprised by lack of consensus,
considering the complexity of Job. For example, consideration is given to its
unique theme, syntax, genre, and forward and backward “pointing” gestures. The commentators also disagree concerning the discordant
tone of the concluding couplet. This suggests the sod cover.
The
Form is distinctive as almost self-cantillated hymnic poetry, itself unique within
both the Book,
and except what it shares dialectically, within the rest of Scripture. Commentators
opinions range from openly embarrassed—because theodicy, because G-d is morally
repugnant-- to the conviction that with the closing lines, a counterpoint and
synthesis of the entire Book, if not all Scripture, is asserted. The style is intellectually serene, somewhat
befitting its insertion in an almost action-free tragedy. The Hymn limnically refutes the prior
arguments and sets the stage for G-d’s appearance and non-argument in Chapter
39. The Hymn references “gold” (1, 6,
15, 16, 17, 17b, 19) seven times, and elemental earth (5, 24), fire (5),
“water” (11,25,26) and weighted winds (25) and storms of thunder (26), and
declares G-d “knows”. And then he shows
exactly how G-d “understands the way”:
The methodology of four verbs is illustrated, in verses 23-26, and then
concisely “summarized” in verse 27.
The final triptych
is like the final argument in a trial, after the testimonial dialogues among
“friends”, and presaging Job’s subsequently-imagined prosecution of G-d in a
court of law. Text-linguistic
and literary-synchronic approaches of Form criticism are well-placed to address
the synchronic display of Chapter 28 as a wisdom composition. Social-scientific
criticism is perhaps best-suited for comparing the Hellenic (Prometheus Bound) and Judaic (Hymn to Wisdom) texts as reflections of complex
social structures and symbolic matrices.
This discussion necessarily and briefly explores the intertextual dialectic
between the Hymn and the full canonical context, and like Brevard Childs, this
can be done without explicitly invoking “canonical criticism”, which is still
emerging as a discipline.
In
addressing the very specific themes of divination and “scientific methodology”
in the Hymn, it is useful to draw upon the description of canonical exegesis distilled
Mary Callaway, understood to be interwoven with literary, historical and
socio-anthropological methods. Callaway describes four features of canonical
criticism, as follows:
THEOLOGICAL. First, the underlying concern is “to find the
locus of authority…analyzing the ways in which the texts were authoritative for
the believing communities that received them as scripture.”
DYNAMIC. Second, focus on the dynamics by which the
communities of faith and developing traditions shaped each other.
HERMENEUTIC. Third, an assumption that interpretation and
understanding can
be “appropriated”,
and need not be imported from systems outside the scriptures themselves.
DIALECTICAL. Fourth, the insistence that authority resides
only in the full canon, and each “particular tradition is heard canonically
against other voices and points of view; no position is absolute.”
The early, often
and continuous invocation of Wisdom creates both authority and religion
itself. Wisdom can be taken as a
theology. A methodology for finding
Wisdom, is not only practical but developmental – by looking at the literature,
we can trace the roots of Scientific Method back through Divination/Oracles and
kitchen middens. The hermeneutic feature
runs squarely into the reality that scripture presented is cobbled together
from pre-scriptural sources, and an ironic feature of hermeneutics is its
origins in the systematic study of Greek literature. Both allegorisis
(saying something different) and hyponoia/hypothesis
(underlying meaning/working conjecture) were practiced widely in the Stoic and
Neoplatonist schools since the sixth century BCE. Hence, our comparison with a roughly
contemporary dramatist who drew from the same “suffering saint” theme, Prometheus Bound.
Finally, as to the
fourth feature, we note that the Hymn tells a story – limns a quest – within
the “story” of the Book. And by
repeating “themes” from the Book and Scripture at large, it is not merely
story, but lively dialectic constantly responding to different facts.
Divination. The practice of
foretelling the future, or “discovery of what is hidden or obscure by supernatural or magical means”. [Emphasis added.] The Hymn straddles divinatory incantatory
roots and references, and introduces non-magical step-by-step instructions for
discerning real Knowledge.
Science.
Knowledge acquired by study, and as opposed to belief or opinion. Demonstrated
truths or observed facts systematically classified under general laws using
trustworthy methods.
Scientific
Method. A
method or procedure that has characterized natural science since the 17th
century, consisting in systematic observation, measurement, and experiment, and
the formulation, testing, and modification of hypotheses. Exposure to criticism
and dialectic by publication is an essential component.
Wisdom.
Turning to how one expert with the Wisdom Tradition defines the Term as forged
in the sapiential literature of the Ancient Hebrew, Leo G. Perdue offers a
definition of Wisdom, hokma, with
four general features:
First, it is a body of knowledge about the world,
nature, humanity and an understanding of G-d.
Second, it is a discipline designed to “lead to the
formation of character”.
Third, wisdom was moral discourse. “Through the
attainment of wisdom, the sages were able to enter into and dwell within an
esthesis of beauty, order, justice, and life”.
Fourth, the semantic range included terms for
“untutored fools”, court wisdom for kings and scribes, including skills with
communication.
Interestingly, Professor Perdue includes “teachings of
the cult” and mantic knowledge, such as divination, or hidden activities of
G-d. Finally, he notes that Wisdom is associated with the divinity, and as
such, “often a personified and eventually hypostatized attribute seen in the
activities of Woman Wisdom”.
Scripture both
condemns and invokes Divinatory practices.
The apparent contradiction may reflect a contemporary misunderstanding
of both “Divination” and “Scientific Method”.
The Hymn of Wisdom illustrates both practices at a period of time
when the testing and investigatory observational techniques were functionally
the same. Divination formed a major part of the scholarly and royal libraries
and the temple libraries. For example, Beate
Pongratz-Leisten points out that “the divination tablets in Assurbanipal’s
library making up more than a quarter of the holdings thus showing its
importance in the ancient world view”. The fact is, foretelling the future was
important to decision-making.
In Job’s day, learned
people turned to nature to discern divine purpose. Wisdom itself is concerned
with the natural world. Existence was explained
as a Creation. The effort to discern Divinity in nature, and
a Divine Will behind events, was a concern of all who would be “wise”. In
addition, assuming the Book is created after the Babylonian exile (“Exile”),
most investigators assert that “earlier themes no longer obtained in a world of
national holocaust,” and presume that the poetic book is “a theological
investigation”. Clearly, the Exile raised a question of the
existence of the Deity, as well theodicy and justice. Put more bluntly, the
express existential challenge to a Deity in the Book is likely to be its
intention. It looks to alternatives.
“Wisdom” in
pre-scientific ages has been linked to the occult because that is what we had
before we had “Science”. “The sage’s knowledge derives from personal
experiences and perhaps very little from ancestral teachings or reveleations
from divinities. The fact that priests relied
on visions and mastery of omenology and the public spectacle of examination of
entrails is an admission of an absent god .” Mantic
wisdom was prominent in Mesopotamia and in the book of Job.
At the same time,
fraudulent and cunning deceptions by tricksters pretending to legitimacy are
repeatedly condemned throughout Scripture.
Divination is specifically condemned in Hebrew scripture in what may be
polemics against con-artists in general, and specifically against competing
priesthoods of Egyptian, Hellenic, and Canaanite or nature-worshiping
practices.
The condemnation
is clear and repeated: Joshua 14:6
putting a divinator to the sword; Ezekiel 12:21-25 forbidden in the House of
Israel; Deuteronomy 18:9-22 forbids learning “the abhorrent practices of those
nations [in the land]. No one shall be found among you who makes a son or
daughter pass through fire, or who practices divination, or is a soothsayer, or
an augur, or a sorcerer, or one who casts spells, or consults ghosts or
spirits, or who seeks oracles from the dead.” The express rationale is “You
must remain completely loyal to the Lord your God”. The passage notes that “these
nations that you are about to dispossess do give heed to soothsayers and
diviners, as for you, the Lord your God does not permit you to do so.” However,
in the very next verse, the Deuteronomist predicts that “The Lord your
God will raise up for you a prophet like me from among your own people”.
Deuteronomy 18:15. To insure the fidelity of prophesy, the passage includes a death
penalty: False prophets “shall die”. (18:20).
And Jeremiah laments the fact that the land is full of ungodly prophets
and priests (Jeremiah 23:11, 13-14), and the Lord cautions against listening to
prophets who are “deluding you”. (23:16; “who has stood in the council of the
Lord so as to see and to hear his word?” 23:18).
However, the
Exilic Hebrew faced the unknowns of the future with what appeared to be one
certainty: That the God of Exodus did not prevent the Exile. Our own generation
is still just recovering from such an “epoch-making” event in the Shoah.
Perhaps in the Exile, a scholar such as today’s Emile Fackenheim argued that in
spite of “no proof of G-d’s existence”, Jews must affirm G-d “to maintain
Jewish identity” and to see the future of Judaism against those who seek
to rob it. Perhaps in the Exile, a scholar such as
Eliezer Berkovits rejected the notion that the destruction of the Temple was mippenei hatta’einu “because of our
sins”. And instead posed the call to righteousness using the example of Job: As Professor Sweeney describes this position:
“G-d must withdraw from the world at times to allow humans the opportunity to
develop morally, to exercise free will, and to fulfill the divine purpose for
human beings in the world.” The burden of this Essay is to show that Job,
explicitly in the Hymn, turned to Scientific Methodology.
Here we submit the
Hymn to a textual comparison with Aeschylus’ Prometheus Bound: Aeschylus and the Author of Book of Job may
not be exact contemporaries or had any access to each other’s work. However,
they both ask “Where can Wisdom be found?” and question the justice of a
powerful deity who causes great suffering.
The similarity of features is as dramatic as the dialectical plots they
share.
Prometheus is a
Titan who brought fire and the arts of divination to humankind. Without “just cause”, Zeus has Prometheus
chained to a mountain and tortured.
While he suffers, various “friends” visit him to offer what turns out to
be useless comfort. The play consists of
dialogue. The following selection is
between a Chorus of nymphs and Prometheus, and in Section 6B below we compare
this extract to Chapter 28, line by line.
This extract provides an introduction to the modes of divination which
were widespread in the Ancient World.
Chor.
Foul
shame thou sufferest: of thy sense bereaved,
Thou
errest greatly: and, like leech unskilled,
Thou
losest heart when smitten with disease,
And
know’st not how to find the remedies
Wherewith
to heal thine own soul’s sicknesses.
Prom.
Hearing what yet remains, thou’lt wonder
more,
What arts and what resources I devised:
And this the chief: if any one fell ill,
There was no help for him, nor healing
food
Nor unguent, nor yet potion; but for want
Of drugs they wasted, till I showed to
them
The blendings of all mild medicaments,
Wherewith they ward the attacks of
sickness sore.
I gave them many modes of prophecy;
And I first taught them what dreams needs
must prove
True visions, and made known the ominous
sounds
Full hard to know; and tokens by the way,
And flights of taloned birds I clearly
marked—
Those on the right propitious to mankind,
And those sinister—and what form of life
They each maintain, and what their
enmities
Each with the other, and their loves and
friendships;
And of the inward parts the plumpness
smooth.
And with what colour they the Gods would
please,
And the streaked comeliness of gall and
liver:
And with burnt limbs enwrapt in fat, and
chine,
I led men on to art full difficult:
And I gave eyes to omens drawn from fire,
Till then dim-visioned. So far, then, for
this.
And ‘neath the earth the hidden boons for
men,
Bronze, iron, silver, gold, who else could
say
That he, ere I did, found them? None, I know,
Unless he fain would babble idle words.
In one short word, then, learn the truth
condensed—
All arts of mortals from Prometheus
spring.
Here, the debate with a Chorus of
Ocean Nymphs, continues. Just as Job’s
friends came ostensibly to comfort him, the Nymphs sit with Prometheus, but end
up only torturing him more by reminding him that “Zeus the Lord, Whose sovran
sway rules all”, has brought woe to him because of what he did: “For thous in
pride of heart, Having no fear of Zeus, In thine own obstinacy, Does show
for mortal men, Prometheus, love o’er much.”
Just as in Job, the witnesses tell
the victim he deserves to suffer.
Of
course, we are noting the correspondence of the oracular references between the
Promethean seer and the Hymn, both of which step through the modes of
divination as useful praxis. See
below, Section 6(A). To understand the
efforts of these masters at the dawn of Sciencia,
we first turn to a review of the Sitz in
Leben und Literatur.
Hymnic
compositions and story-telling around a “wise one” suffering at the hand of a
deity was a wide-spread and ancient theme in the region. A Sumerian trove of proverbs clearly takes up
the idea of Wisdom as a goal and a struggle. The earliest fragments are as yet un-dated,
but it takes the literary idea back to the pre-Semitic Mesopotamian civilization
which flourished from the 3rd millennium to 2600 BCE.
The search for
“wisdom” is clearly the subject of the Hymn, which is itself embedded in a Book
which questions the indifference or antagonism of Deity during “troubles”. Most scholars agree that this theme is
widespread and ancient., This evidence points to the established fact
that Wisdom is a universal value.
Functionally, the search for wisdom unites people. The Hymn interrupts
all argument and narrative, with a purposeful leap into this “Wisdom”
tradition. And the pericope explicitly
places a high value upon it –“it cannot be gotten for gold” (28:15), “it cannot
be valued with the gold of Ophir” or with “pure gold” (28:16, 19).
The point is that
Wisdom is long, highly, and universally valued.
The Hymn appeals to, invokes, and gives fresh legs to the search for
Wisdom. Discovery of some 200 Sumerian collections
of proverbs antedate Hittite, Egyptian and Hebrew wisdom literature, giving further
proof of the ancient foundation of the Canon, and Job in particular. Scholars and investigators clearly present
proof of the universality of the high value given to wisdom – through time and
space and even piercing “the crust of cultural contrasts and environmental
differences”.
Exact dating
of the text and its numerous putative emendations is difficult
and beyond the scope of this analysis. Professor Mitchell says that “Job
probably dates from the seventh to fifth centuries before the common era.” Based on wine-stopper technology referred to
by Elihu in another portion of the text, the Book goes back at least to sixth
century BCE.
The late John Gray completed a text-critical study of the Book of Job with a
chapter on “Date and Provenance”.
He carefully concludes that the Book of Job was substantially composed between
450 and 350 BCE, granting that the 28th chapter may be a part of the
expansions which reflect “continued preoccupation with the definitive book”.
The Sitz im Literatur, in this case, is
clearly later than what appears to be the Sitz
im Leben setting of the book in an early Pre-Israelite period. Not surprisingly, the text itself is problematic
in that Job is a wealthy desert sheikh in Chapter 1, and becomes a city-dweller
of noble estate in Chapters 29-31.
Indeed, from a righteous man warm to the widows and the helpless, he is
restored to even greater wealth at the end. He then accepts, yet does not give,
boons. Maimonides notes that he never was or ever becomes a “wise man”. But for the Book, and similar Literatur, the figure is absent from
history.
Form critics have
identified standardized formal language of Prophetic speech used to validate
their message. For example, “Thus says YHWH” is often featured formula.
Additional Form criticism of the Book of Job would be required before the
theory, suggested here by historical likelihood and intertextual comparison, is
taken seriously.
Of course, the
writing itself has antecedents. While
accepting the Canon text, socio-historical scholarship notes evidence of “a
very old story”. The pre-Semitic Sumerian “Job Tablets”
predate possible oral traditions among any early “Hebiru” people. The
substantial theological dialectics and techniques for finding Wisdom, however,
may be evidence of re-working by a sophisticated post-exilic priesthood from the
“later times of the Persian Empire”.
For example, the tension between theodical arguments in the core of the book,
and the theophany in the frame which restores Job’s losses and health, reflect
a well-worked text almost signed by a priest writing late Second Temple dissent
literature.
The
Hymn is inserted in a Book which contains strong exegetical evidence of a long
process of re-working by tradents and a sapient tradition which culminated in this
Scroll. The timing is coincident with a Golden Age reaching across the known
world.
As discussed
above, the Book reflects a process of redaction and inclusio. Here it is
necessary to the analysis to admit the multi-cultural, Universalist, and
“science” dimension of this process. With the gradual development of improved
alphabet-based writing systems, led by the Hebrews, the human spirit was
stirred to a remarkable degree in the century between 750 to 650 BCE. This was
the time of the first four writing Prophets, Amos, Hosea, Isaiah, and Micah,
as Israel struggled between Assyria and Egypt.
In neighboring
Aegean Greece, Homer’s epic poetry was also written down for the first time. In the next centuries, the 2d Golden Age of
Athens opened, with the great impious tragedian Aeschylus dying in 456 BCE, and
succeeded by god-challenging Sophocles, Aristophanes, and Euripides.
In India, the
Upanishads appeared, and Zoroaster was born in an “imperially” expanding Persia. The Buddhist reformation was spreading to
China, leading to wisdom-worshiping Confucius and Lao-tse. These and a thousand
other great writers rocked the world with the search for “wisdom” which Job
opens and hymns.
The
identity of the author of the pericope, is not necessarily the author of the
rest of the Book of Job, or Job himself.
The fact that the text reveals little about the author, and that no
other writer refers to him, may suggest that he is not a “Prophet” or Priest. Women often “disappear”, so perhaps the
author was a woman. Job’s un-named
wife. See the following Section , and Job
2:9. The genius of the hymn burned into
a charismatic text, should give pause to speculation. Of course, the author clearly claims to have
conversations with G-d, a charismatic authentication for both prophets and
priests.
Ideological
Criticism reveals additional polemics in the Hymn. For example, “Wisdom” in
Proverbs is always feminized, and
is grandly so viewed throughout Egyptian,
Hellenic and the Phoenician-Aramaic Ishtar-dominated Middle East. Wisdom is a womanly attribute.
Indeed even the post-exilic commentators accepted without comment the fact that
a wise woman priestess authenticated, with authority, the Deuteronomic texts
found in the Temple during Josiah’s reconstruction.
However, in the
Hymn, both actual and allegoric feminine features are absent. Das
ewigweiblische nichts dran uns hinan,
may Goethe forgive me.
Female as a source of Wisdom is not even considered. The
attribute of Wisdom is male, and G-d is male. The debates are among males. Male
activities – like mining, and hunting, as opposed to cooking and weaving – are
the loaded metaphor.
Indeed, the only
woman in the entire Book is Job’s wife, who appears briefly before and after
the Hymn. Although Job’s wife is introduced,
she is not even named. Job 2:9. She is extraordinarily fertile with two
cohorts of offspring, and she even has a significant line: “Curse God and die!” She is immediately reproached for speaking, “as
one of the impious women”. In
Job, women and feminine power are subordinated and removed. Desaparecida.
As Job asks
“Whence cometh Wisdom?” the Feminine is not referenced, and the iterations of
the question are followed by “Man knoweth not” (Job 28:13), and it is to a male
-- “unto man” the male G-d issues his final dispensation: “Fear of the Lord,
that is wisdom” (Job 28:28). Job
presents a contrast with the roles of gender depicted in Proverbs.
And conclusions
must also be drawn from the association of Wisdom with a supreme deity,
the Christian doctrine on charism. The text is also a contrast with the Love
covenant of Judaism expressed by the major Prophets, where
the Hymn is profoundly and apparently deliberately, silent about any
relationship with Elohim. Why is this important? It is exactly these types of omissions, biases
and dialectics which point to a sod
or hidden intention.
The
intention is not always apparent from the text, even when read synchronically
or structurally. Granted, almost all
commentators join in the general observation that biblical authors wrote “to
communicate something to a specific audience”.
A structural exegesis would expose the explicit semantic oppositions in the
Hymn. For example, the panels of the triptych and the two hinge queries can be
compared, and the subtle differences in wording could elucidate the system of
convictions.
A
“hidden” intention would not be obvious, although direct textual mirroring
makes it hard to miss. For example, we
show mirroring between the accounts of Prometheus and Job. Prometheus was the
prophetic god, skilled in Divination and oracular arts. The Hellenistic
Pantheon prevailed in the Aegean/Asia minor region at the time Book of Job was
written. Most of what we know about Prometheus is drawn from one play written
by Aeschylus – Prometheus Bound. This tragic play adopts a plot with
similarities to Book of Job. In
addition, Prometheus is confronted with the rewards and risks of divination,
the same challenge faced by Hebrew cults.
Numbers 22:7. In effect, we take
a second pericope, this drawn from a comparable tragic poem, Prometheus Bound, and compare it with our
examination of Chapter 28.
Verses
12 and 20 show parallelism, with incomplete inversions, and together, they
function as a repeated interrogatory refrain, hinge-ing the three parts of the
narrative. The Questions are opened with Separative Ablatives—“where” and
“whence”. The opposition between “wisdom” and “understanding” is reduced by the
question of “where” and the singular verb ---really looking for ONE thing.
The
second appearance of the Questions, verse 20, repeats the “Understanding”
refrain, but creates an elision if not an opposition, in the idea of Wisdom
“coming” rather than being “found”. While the difference may be of interest to an
apprentice prophet, it does not appear to affect the tool-kit or techniques of
divination which indulge all the senses and observances. Further examination of the translated words (maugre translation issues), leaves us
susceptible to Lundblum’s comment about excesses of Form criticism being
“little more than an exercise in textual description”.
Shifts
in content, framing, and theology make understanding the differences problematic. All the more reason to utilize appropriate
methodology up to the task, in our case, of discerning the emergent proto-methodology
of scientific method. In this analysis, we
apply the methodology of modified canonical tradition-historical criticism
because we presume to explore or trace the transmission of the divinatory
complexes from a Greek poet playwright to a leading poet/dramatist of the
Hebrew Yehud.
Chapter
28 begins without an epigraph or superscription but with an asseverative
particle ki with the noun mosa literally meaning “place of coming
forth”.,
The JPS provides the translation:
1.
For
there is a mine for silver,
And a place for gold which they refine.
The
significance of this paratactic is that although most Commentators seem to
agree that the entire Hymn is an insert, the first words lead in from what
was last said in the last Chapter – expressing deliberate but indefinite reference. The subject, however, is not continuous. Chapter
27 has Job ventilating about “the portion of the wicked man”, and Chapter 28 is
about finding Wisdom. However, the
indefinite referents are clearly deliberate – “there is” – and this may be a
“Delphic” technique
used by diviners. The Oracles are famous
for ambiguity. 1 Kings 22. To ascertain what was the subject of Chapter
27, we insert redacted verses from the last subject discussed: {Italics used
for emphasis.}
13. This is the portion of a wicked man
with God, And the heritage of oppressors, which they receive from the Almighty.
…
21. The east wind carrieth him away, and
he departeth; And it sweepeth him out of his place.
22.
Yea, it hurleth at him, and spareth not; He would fain flee from its
power.
23.
Men shall clap their hands at
him, And shall hiss him out of his place.
We note that hand-claps
were used in the Delphic caves, and in mines for signaling. Of course in nature
they are, and are literary portents of, thunder.
“Hissing” is a sound associated with
snakes. Sounds, especially hissing and
whispering fricatives, and snakes of any kind, are especially noteworthy among
the diviners.
From the teacher
of divination, in Prometheus Bound:
“I
gave them many modes of prophecy;
And
I first taught them what dreams needs must prove
True
visions, and made known the ominous
sounds”
The 28th Chapter continues, in
the first of the triptychs, addressing the manly and difficult pursuit of
mineral extraction from the earth:
.
1.
For
there is a mine for silver, And a place [maqom]
for gold which they refine.
2.
Iron
is taken out of the dust, And brass is molten out of the stone.
In Prometheus Bound, the fact that men
search and do not find (28:24), with the list of metals having value, hidden,
below ground, dimly seen/ shadowed (28:3):
Till
then dim-visioned. So far, then, for this.
And
‘neath the earth the hidden boons for men,
Bronze,
iron, silver, gold, who else could say
That
he, ere I did, found them?
3.
Man
setteth an end to darkness, And searcheth out to the furthest bound The stones
of thick darkness and of the shadow of death.
How do humans “end
darkness”? With fire. Hymn does not
credit any deity for the Promethean boon.
Humans themselves used fire and continue to search. But this recalls “All arts of mortals from
Prometheus spring”. The “searcheth out”
matches Prometheus’ “found them” for us.
The “stones of
thick darkness” may also recall stones used for casting lots and oracles, drawn
from the dark pocket enclosure of priestly garments, possibly like the “Urim and Thummim”. Ezra 2:63;
Numbers 27:21.
4.
He
breaketh open a shaft away from where men sojourn; They are forgotten of the
foot that passeth by; They hang afar from men, they swing to and fro.
The commentators
have devoted paragraphs to the meaning of this verse, noting that the Egyptians
employed Semites in the mines of Sinai, and the Hymn clearly shows technical
and dramatic familiarity with mining. The difficulty of
finding “hidden” things, in remote areas (forgotten of the foot, afar from men)
without fire is obvious.
5.
As
for the earth, out of it cometh bread, And underneath it is turned up as it
were by fire.
This
verse spells out the link to fire, not just as a created element, but as a tool.
The fire “turns up” the hidden things underneath.
6.
The
stones thereof are the place of sapphires, And it hath dust of gold.
Sapphires
were “magic” stones, because of their celestial hues and inner light. King
Solomon and Abraham wore talismans of sapphire, and there are numerous
references in priestly rituals or vestment.
Exodus 28:19; 39:13; Ezekiel 28:14.
Sapphire is not only a beautiful
semi-precious stone, but Yehud Hebrews associated it with healing, comforting,
and magical qualities. “ Isaiah 54:11-17:
“O you afflicted, tossed with tempest, and not comforted, behold, I will
lay your stones with fair colors…”.
Greeks
wore Sapphire or Lapis Lazuli for wisdom at Delphi when seeking answers
from the Oracle. Diviners used stones among
the “many modes of prophecy” Prometheus remarks. Dust and powders were used in painting/marking,
making oil or water paste, and in coloring castings for divination. Prometheus
notes the different “colour they the Gods would please”.
7.
That
path no bird of prey knoweth, Neither hath the falcon’s eye seen it;
The
poet now moves to discernment of other “forms of life” invoked by Prometheus as
part of the divination tool kit. The raptors
that daily afflicted Prometheus correspond to the “bird of prey”. Diviners
would face a direction (or orient to the sun path or moon vale) and observe the
flights of birds. Prometheus “clearly marked” the “right propitious” from the
“sinister”. They had learned that falcons could see what we could not. The Egyptian tutelary deity, Horus, was
falcon-headed and could see the future.
8.
The
proud beasts have not trodden it, Nor hath the lion passed thereby.
The
commentators note yet another Jobian reference to “lion”, and the fact that Job
describes the creature with five different words. The reference to
different creatures reflects the diversity in “what form of life They each
maintain” of which Prometheus instructed humans. Biblical stories abound with
animals which “see” what humans do not. Numbers 22:27 involves Balaam’s
speaking ass.
9.
He
putteth forth his hand upon the flinty rock; He overturneth the mountains by
the roots.
The
“flinty rock” is one used to cut and also make fire, a direct Promethean
reference. It may also be used in ritual, and possibly the Umim and Thumim.
10.
He cutteth out channels among the rocks; And
his eye seeth every precious thing.
11. He
bindeth the streams that they trickle not; And the thing that is hid bringeth
he forth to light.
These verses supplant deity. Hewing the earth itself,
and “seeing” the precious, are divine powers. “Binding” streams is magical, and
bringing “light”/fire to the hidden. Prometheus boasts “I gave eyes to omens
drawn from fire”. This is exactly why
Zeus bound Prometheus to the rock, for enabling men to be as gods.
12.
But
wisdom, where shall it be found? And where is the place of understanding?
This
is the first of the hinges between triptychs. The set of questions echo
Prometheus’ rhetoric “Who else could say That he, ere I did, found them?” So the hinge rests on the verb, and shares
the goal: “In one short word…learn truth”.
Here, Prometheus and Proverbs pronounce the same cry of Wisdom. Compare, Proverbs 8:1 and 5, 7. Wisdom builds the same house and her cry is
the apercu shared with the Promethean lament.
13.
Man
knoweth not the price thereof; Neither is it found in the land of the living.
The second triptych now continues the interplay with
elements and valuable things, pointing to a treasure which is priceless and
unequaled. Examples of priceless treasures would be “All arts” and Wisdom.
14. The
deep saith: ‘It is not in me’; And the sea saith: ‘It is not with me.’
The Hebrew for “deep” or subterranean water, is tehom.
The word often reflects the Akkadian tiamtu and the primordial powers associated with pre-creation Chaos
in both Genesis and the Baal story of the Canaanites. And Yam
for the “sea”. Some commentators see a double reference to Wisdom, but that
assumes Wisdom was with God “in the beginning”. Proverbs 8:22-31.
15.
It
cannot be gotten for gold, Neither shall silver be weighed for the price
thereof.
Having
looked for it with the senses, the Hymn declared it. The poet now turns to appraising it.
16.
It
cannot be valued with the gold of Ophir, With the precious onyx, or the
sapphire.
17.
Gold
and glass cannot equal it; Neither shall the exchange thereof be vessels of
fine gold.
18.
No
mention shall be made of coral or of crystal; Yea, the price of wisdom is above
rubies.
19.
The
topaz of Ethiopia shall not equal it, Neither shall it be valued with pure
gold.
This
systematic comparison concludes with documentation – “establishing” it.
20.
Whence then cometh wisdom? And where is the
place of understanding?
This
Question is the second hinge, repeating the Questions invoked in verse 12, but
expressing an active and passive verb. This suggests that Wisdom can be found
by actively seeking it or by letting it “cometh” by revelation. This insight is apparent in the Aeschylus’
tool kit for Divination as well – as the skill-set includes both “what dreams
needs must prove” and what is taught about “True visions” understood and
received only passively. The “proof” standard shows that Aeschylus regarded
divination practice as valid.
21.
Seeing
it is hid from the eyes of all living, And kept close from the fowls of the
air.
This
verse makes the distinction clear, that “seeing” and actively searching is not
enough. In the third triptych the poet considers the mortality of human, looks
beyond, and invokes the divine. Prometheus also ends with the reminder of the
limitations of mortals—“All arts of mortals from Prometheus spring”. Aeschylus here uses the word “mortals”, the other
word for “humans”, reflecting on the fact that Death takes its turn with them.
22.
Destruction
and Death say: ‘We have heard a rumor thereof with our ears.’
23.
God
understandeth the way thereof, And He knoweth the place thereof.
24.
For
He looketh to the ends of the earth, And seeth under the whole
heaven;
25.
When
He maketh a weight for the wind, And meteth out the waters by measure.
26.
When
He made a decree for the rain, And a way for the storm of
thunders;
These
verses turn to divinity as explanation for mysteries. This is exactly why Divination seems to work:
the invocation of the ineffable to explain the inexplicable. It shows the
sincerity of the author in his art and science.
We
also underline the verbs to bring attention to the fact that a
methodology is described: listen for
clues, look everywhere at everything, figure out the way things work, measure
and weigh them, and then pronounce your discovery so that it can be considered
by others.
By
comparing these methodological verbs with Aeschylus, we find the same
methodology as a form of instruction by Prometheus explaining his
teaching: “I showed them”, I gave them
many modes of prophesy” and “what dreams needs must prove”, in “visions” and
“made known the ominous sounds”, “I clearly marked”, the “forms of life” and
their characteristics to be discerned, including the “inward parts” and their
“colours” and textures. “I gave eyes to omens drawn from fire”, for humans to
find the boons of the earth, and “learn the truth”.
In this explicit language we see the
Methodology for finding facts, documenting knowledge, and ultimately “the way”
to Wisdom. We see the emergence of
Scientific Method from the tool kit of the Diviners and professional Sooth-sayers.
27.
Then
did He see it, and declare it; He established it, yea, and searched it out.
This
is the penultimate verse, and it provides four delocutive verbs of an emergent
Scientific Method:
See
it – (r’y) look for things; know
first hand;
Declare
it – (spr ) ventilate and document
what you find;
Establish
it – (kwn ) appraise, measure, weigh;
and
Search
it out – (hqr ) test what you found;
probe; look into it.
There
is little consensus on exact translation of the four verbs, but the differences
are within poetic ranges. Considered
together, they lose their illusive telicity and become an inter-related quadrafecta
of Scientific Methodology. A
step-by-step approach to proof, where ultimate Wisdom is an ongoing process. Wisdom now functions as a gerund. The action-verb
cluster is intended for finding Wisdom, and in fact constitutes an early
formulation of Scientific Methodology.
In Job 27, the
penultimate verse, we not only see, but appraise/measure, establish/document,
and probe/test our findings. These four verbs are a How To for making
Science. The four verbs are demonstrated
in verses 24-26, summarized in 27, and hidden by the prosaic final verse, which
falls back on the proverbial forever waiting “wisdom” of Proverbs:
.
1.
And
unto man He said: ‘Behold, the fear of the Lord, that is wisdom; And to depart
from evil is understanding.’
C.
Comparison
to the Wisdom of Proverbs.
The final verse, clearly
invokes the “fear of the Lord” formula which appears throughout the Tanak. It is a prosaic and Proverbial formula. Here it is instructive to compare these Jobian
steps to the call of Wisdom in Proverbs. Proverbs 8 announces “instruction”, but fails
to provide steps. The “instruction” simply
does not rise to a methodology, praxis,
or technique:
8:32
Now therefore, ye children, hearken unto me; for happy are they that
keep my ways.
8:33 Hear instruction, and be wise,
and refuse it not.
8:34
Happy is the man that hearkeneth to me, watching daily at my
gates, waiting at the posts of my doors.
8:35 For whoso findeth me findeth
life, and obtaineth favour of the LORD.
8:36
But he that misseth me wrongeth his own soul; all they that hate me love
death.'
Proverbs 8:1-35 is a powerful invocation
of Wisdom, and it mentions gold and silver, understanding and truth. It also invokes feminine attractions,
explicitly promises love and life, and the favor of the Lord. Job does not promise those things.
In other words, the
formula in Proverbs fails to provide a methodology for How to become
wise or How to find Wisdom. The end
falls upon passive verbs, the blessed boon of Wisdom simply calling out to us. We may or may not hear her cries. But we wait for her--“waiting at the posts”
of the door. What is missing is action
or methodology.
Norman C. Habel places
great significance on this closing verse as the key to the Chapter. He notes that it is a “traditional saying”
presented as a solution to the ancient riddle repeated in 12 and 20. The final verse is also linked to the
Prologue 1:1, creating a frame for the first half of the book. “Understanding”, Habel translates bina as Discernment, often paired with
Wisdom hokma and characterized with
“shunning evil” sur mera, which is
how Job was introduced.
Here, the Chapter 28
concludes. Chapter 29 then begins, with
a misdirection. While Job may be
resuming his speech, he does not in fact “take up again his parable” as he
says. Instead, he opens a new subject,
reflecting upon better times:
29:
1 And Job again took up his parable, and said: 2Oh that I were as in the months
of old, As in the days when God watched over me;
Wisdom
and Theodicy touch each other in the Scripture, often arising from the same
texts. Wisdom Scripture in the Tanak/Old Testament
tends to follow the argument of Proverbs that articulates an ideal created
world in which wisdom may be learned by observing the patterns of creation and
society insofar as “G-d consulted Wisdom in creating the world”. Some commentators deny that Wisdom is
involved in Creation itself, where it is not mentioned in Genesis. For example, Gerhard von Rad offers
that wisdom is somewhere in the world, and yet separate from the works of
creation. He denies that it is a personification or a divine attribute. Quite contrary to Proverbs 8 and 9, Job
provides a literal dialectic, and argues that whatever it is, “the attainment
of wisdom is not so easy”. Indeed, the steps may be “hidden” or kept
secret.
Positioned
after two sections describing the disaster and suffering inflicted upon Job,
the “Wisdom” poem suggests that wisdom may be unattainable since no one knows
where it is or what its source is. And G-d eventually enters the dialogue with
no answer, but with more questions out of “wind”. Job 37:9, 38. Therefore, our
reading of the steps taken by G-d to find wisdom, the explicit methodology in
verses 24-26, summarized in verse 27, and reflecting modes of Divination in the
Promethean tool-kit, is all the more compelling.
The Book is also
in “dialogue” with other Scripture.
Professor Sweeney describes the Book of Job as a contrast to Proverbs,
and a challenge to G-d while expanding the Psalmic and Prophetic view of divine
Power: “Proverbs is a wisdom book that instructs its readers on how to live in
the world”, positing a stable world of creation with “wisdom as the first of
creation” consulted by G-d. “Job questions the stable world of creation and
moral order” and argues that “divine wisdom is difficult to understand”, citing
chapter 28. Thus, the hidden
“methodology” inserted into the Book, drawn from forbidden Divination texts,
makes perfect sense.
Commentators remain
profoundly divided but may “school” among evangelicals, liberals, and those
adhering to traditional views. Curiously, we barely achieve consensus on what
“Wisdom” is. The
final couplet of Chapter 29 may have replaced or added to accommodate a
spectrum of views among the tradents. Murphy
suggests that the reason for the insertion is that for different generations of
Israelites, wisdom itself carried different meanings. The
G-d who can be questioned by Job in the rest of the Book, and the G-d loosely-limned
in the pericope, are inconsistent and in contrast with each other. G-d is immoral, finds torture amusing enough
to support multiple wagers for sport, and is largely absent when needed. The
G-d of the pericope is hidden and hiding, but powerful and understanding all –
“He knoweth”. Job 28:23. We can find methodology in the steps he
takes. Job 24-27. We find several Jobs,
and several G-ds, in the Book and within the pericope itself. Absent, however, is any mention of a moral,
loving, powerful, just and wise supreme Lord acting in a relationship with
humankind.
For comparison,
and because Isaiah almost always has something to say, we note that Wisdom in
Isaiah holds a position of pride and place. The enlarged editorial framework of
this prophetic, visionary, and oracular book, comprises the
introductory section. Isaiah 1–5. The
visions are followed by Chapters 7 through 48 relating to Judah’s history under
overpowering empires. The concluding chapters, 49–66, shift the entire emphasis
of the work, and focus on Wisdom as a value second only to peace for the
world. This tie-in to Wisdom in the
conclusion of Isaiah is described by Goran Eidevall:
Even
though Judah is constantly threatened by other nations, the identity of the
attackers and colonizers seems to be of minor importance (cf. Isa 1:7–8;
3:1–4:1; 5:13, 26–29). Sooner or later they are bound to fall, all of them.
Judah and YHWH will take revenge on their enemies, symbolized by Edom (63:1–6).
In the end, the motif of foreign armies surrounding Jerusalem (7:1; 29:1–8;
31:4–5; 36–37) will be transformed into a picture of peaceful pilgrimage. From all parts of the world people will
travel to Zion, seeking wisdom and bringing material goods (2:2–5;
60:1–14). That seems to be the message of the editorial framework of the
book of Isaiah. [Emphasis added.]
Wisdom, in the Isaiah vision, is not
only an individual achievement, but a uniting national goal and universal
end. It will ignite and sustain an
industry of pilgrimage.
It appears that Isaiah’s
vision reflects the divination Arts and oracular skills of the region. With the methodology developed by the Jobian
author, the Arts gradually develop into Scientific Methodology. Job is remarkably secular in his piety. He does not fear G-d or Death. In Job, the methodology is practical, and it is
no longer divinatory or oracular. The
quadrafecta of verbs are what humans do.
By proposing the methodology, we have a way to reach Wisdom, directly. The holonic divinatory Quest for Wisdom is the
kernel which grows into Scientific Method.
8. Divination,
and “Science”, as the Solution
Scripture is
filled with Magic, Divination and Sorcery. For what reason? These are now out-moded labels, but they
reflect the same intentions we have today exercised under the labels of
Scientific Method: Humanity seeks
understanding. We have Questions: Where
did we come from? And, What are we
supposed to be doing? Do you hear the
cry of “Wisdom” rising out of the Proverbial Deeps?
The concept of
Wisdom, and its learning, is not new or modern.
The idea of Wisdom has been remarkably constant over the centuries. But our methods change, sometimes
quickly. We now use different means of
searching it out. Methods change with
cultural paradigms, relationships with nature, definitions, and entire
“religions”. Anthropologists have not found, in time or
space, a people who have not “prayed”. {Nor
an anwering deity.}
In
the past, to answer questions, we resorted to “divination” -- drawing lots
(Proverbs 16:33; Judges 1:1; Joshua 7:14), inspecting the entrails of
sacrificed animals (Ezekiel 21:21; Numbers 23:1, 14), tracking the movements of
animals (Number 22:27 Balaam’s she-ass; 1 Samuel 6:12 kine), and discerning the
omens drawn from fire and water (Genesis 44:5).
The scripture contains multiple reference to “Urim and Thummim,”
involving a repeated form of divination sanctioned by G-d, and conducted by
priests with special vestments. (Exodus 28:30, Leviticus 8:8; Numbers 27:21;
Ezra 2:63). Significantly, these two parts of a sacred oracle are connected to
an equally mysterious “ephod”. Taken together, the three oracular
components may be analogous to the Babylonian Tablets of Destiny worn on the
breast of Marduk, but this is still speculation.
The
diviners who practiced in ancient Israel were developing an art founded upon
discerning observation and logical processes which were accumulated and shared
by specialists of the day. They were
practicing early “science”. Divination is an “early” form of science,
antecedent to the now accumulated facts.
Today, our specialists gather and use “information” in a more informed
manner. We now understand as coincidence what once was confused with causality.
The diviner’s reasoning may be wrong, but it was based on observation and the
applied understanding of the day. The application of the same methodology,
the same process, is now called “scientific method.
9.
Conclusion -The Message of the Text.
Exegetical
methods provide a somewhat unified interpretation of what the author of Book of
Job was saying about “Wisdom”. Granted,
that Wisdom is a moving target of inquiry.
In the past, the best minds have studied the Book of Job, often caught
up in the ironic presentation of theophany in the teeth of theodicy. Others look for insight into Wisdom. Maimonides,
for example, traces Job’s progress from
merely righteous, to being wise. Modern readings are characterized by an
interest in “human perception”, backed away from the transcendent. Wisdom, in scripture/Job, not G-d, is the
goal—that is, G-d never appears with a theological context, and Wisdom appears
with a geological context. Wisdom is sought with a How To manual for
finding it. Practical steps are described. Wisdom found, learned and gained by
executing delocutive verbs: “Then did he see it, and declare it; He
established it, yea, and searched it out.” (Job 28:27) . In verses 23-26, the author describes G-d
doing what men do. YHWH plays a third person, the apophatic“He”. G-d does not answer, and does not displace
Wisdom. “He” is, however, doing exactly
what men can do in order to find Wisdom.
The four-part
heuristic instruction for finding Wisdom is followed by the remainder of the
Book, which includes G-d threatening Job, censoring his friends, and “answering
questions with questions.” The
restoration of all Job’s losses at the end is quick, partial justice, and has
no credibility. His wife suddenly has ten more children, and the most beautiful
daughters. The Hymn is an invitation to follow the
Methodology which was used by YHWH to
find Wisdom. Four steps to find the wise
path, to elevate human conduct. .
While
scholars debate the details, a consensus flourishes around the understanding
that the Hymn highlights a path toward gaining a valuable autotelic human
faculty. The great tragedy of Job sets the stage for this
anthem to Wisdom. The Hymn is
deliberately anthemic, and it sings from the heart – the rough middle -- of the
Book.
Yet this advanced
step-by-step practical methodology appears to be “hidden” in the Hymn, above
the Final Verse. The key to Wisdom is
not given pride of place. Why not? And why is it presented as the acts taken by YHWH to find Wisdom, but not as an
express invitation to everyone? Perhaps
the “sod” view is that Wisdom, and
even G-d, is not a noun, but a moving target, a gerundive verb.
By comparing the
text with other Wisdom literature, we find that the Book of Job refined the divination
techniques known to the Ancient World.
By comparing the text with the Proverbial “fear of the Lord” formula
used in other texts, we find that the Hymn offers a Methodology for finding
Wisdom. The Hymn provides practical
steps that can be taken in the real world, by humans, to gain discernment and
understanding of the real world. By
comparing these practical steps to what we now know as Scientific Method, we
find that the Book of Job reflects a dramatic step toward scientific
understanding.
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Apophatic – the
belief that God can be known only in terms of what He is not (such as 'God is
unknowable')
Taught
and demonstrated by Maimonides.
Chiastic –
inversion of 2d of parallel phrases; e.g. Job 28:27 per Gordis, but see below.
Delocutive – as
to verbs in Hebrew – word coined by Emile Beneviste, more useful than piel or hiphil.
Demonstration
with Job 28:27 action verbs, revealing proto-scientific methodology:
See it – (r’y) look for things; know first hand;
Declare it – (spr) ventilate and document what you
find;
Establish it –
(kwn) appraise, measure, weigh; and
Search it out –
(hqr) test what you found; probe;
investigate; look into it.
Dialectics –
arriving at truth by exchanging logical arguments. 2. Interaction of ideas
Epideictic – as
for presentation – designed for rhetorical display, possibly hiding secret
content (Sod)
Exegetic –
explanation or critical interpretation, especially of Scripture.
Hermeneutics –
interpretation of texts; Compare, “Double hermeneutic” – Giddens (1984:20)
“[t]he concepts of the social sciences are not
produced about an independently constituted subject-matter, which continues
regardless of what these concepts are. The ‘findings’ of the social sciences
very often enter constitutively into the world they describe.”
Holon -
simultaneously a whole and a part. Coined by Koestler in “The Ghost in the
Machine”.
Compare
“synecdoche” – in which a part represents the whole or vice versa {not a whole}
Example:
“England lost by six wickets”, where the cricket team is not England.
Paratactic –
literary technique, short sentences with coordinate conjunctions.
Pericope -- A selection or extract from a book; esp. a
selection from the Bible, used as a text for study
Here, the Book of
Job, Chapter 28.
Telicity –
reference to goal or endpoint; compare telic and atelic.
__________
* “Key Terms and Traditions” are defined in
Section 4 of the Text:
Divination, Science,
Scientific Method, and Wisdom.
28:1 For there is a mine for silver, and a place for gold which they
refine.
28:2 Iron is taken out of the dust, and brass is molten out of the stone.
28:3 Man setteth an end to darkness, and searcheth out to the furthest bound
the stones of thick darkness and of the shadow of death.
28:4 He breaketh open a shaft away from where men sojourn; they are forgotten
of the foot that passeth by; they hang afar from men, they swing to and fro.
28:5 As for the earth, out of it cometh bread, and underneath it is turned up
as it were by fire.
28:6 The stones thereof are the place of sapphires, and it hath dust of gold.
28:7 That path no bird of prey knoweth, neither hath the falcon's eye seen it;
28:8 The proud beasts have not trodden it, nor hath the lion passed thereby.
28:9 He putteth forth his hand upon the flinty rock; He overturneth the
mountains by the roots.
28:10 He cutteth out channels among the rocks; and his eye seeth every precious
thing.
28:11 He bindeth the streams that they trickle not; and the thing that is hid
bringeth he forth to light.
28:12 But wisdom, where shall it be found? And where is the place of
understanding?
28:13 Man knoweth not the price thereof; neither is it found in the land of the
living.
28:14 The deep saith: 'It is not in me'; and the sea saith: 'It is not with
me.'
28:15 It cannot be gotten for gold, neither shall silver be weighed for the
price thereof.
28:16 It cannot be valued with the gold of Ophir, with the precious onyx, or
the sapphire.
28:17 Gold and glass cannot equal it; neither shall the exchange thereof be
vessels of fine gold.
28:18 No mention shall be made of coral or of crystal; yea, the price of wisdom
is above rubies.
28:19 The topaz of Ethiopia shall not equal it, neither shall it be valued with
pure gold.
28:20 Whence then cometh wisdom? And where is the place of understanding?
28:21 Seeing it is hid from the eyes of all living, and kept close from the
fowls of the air.
28:22 Destruction and Death say: 'We have heard a rumor thereof with our ears.'
28:23 God understandeth the way thereof, and He knoweth the place thereof.
28:24 For He looketh to the ends of the earth, and seeth under the whole
heaven;
28:25 When He maketh a weight for the wind, and meteth out the waters by measure.
28:26 When He made a decree for the rain, and a way for the storm of thunders;
28:27 Then did He see it, and declare it; He established it, yea, and searched
it out.
28:28 And unto man He said: 'Behold, the fear of the Lord, that is wisdom; and
to depart from evil is understanding.'
–Sense it (r’y)
look for things; know from direct first hand experience;
Declare it – (spr)
ventilate and document what you find, specify;
Establish it –
(kwn) appraise, measure, weigh; record it; and
Search it out – (hqr)
test, pursue and follow it