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A Form-Critical Rereading of Hosea
Marvin A. Sweeney
I
1.1 Scholars hold that the overall
structure of the book of Hosea comprises three basic textual blocks: Hosea
1-3, which presents Hosea's marriage to Gomer as a paradigm for YHWH's
relationship with Israel; Hosea 4-11, which articulates Hosea's message
of judgment against Israel and concludes with YHWH's passionate outcry
that denies the Deity's capacity to give up Israel or allow it to be destroyed;
and Hosea 12-14, which reiterates the history of YHWH's relationship with
Israel by employing elements of tradition that rehearse the grounds for
Israel's punishment and call for Israel's return to YHWH.[1]
Each of the three blocks begins with material concerning Israel's judgment
and ends with material pertaining to restoration. This structure both presupposes
and facilitates redaction-critical views that posit an original core of
judgmental material from the prophet that has been softened or modified
by the addition of material by later hands. Such additions are designed
to transform Hosea's message of judgment into one more favorably disposed
to Israel.
1.2 Nevertheless, this view of the
structure of Hosea is problematic in that it is not based entirely on an
assessment of the literary features of the book in its present form that
identify the speaker and addressee of a particular pericope, but on redaction
critical criteria that allow views concerning the book's compositional
history unduly to influence scholarly assessments of its literary structure.
This is evident in Hosea 1-3, for example, which is grouped together on
the basis of the narrative literary form in chapters 1 and 3 and by the
overall thematic concern with Hosea's marriage or marriages. But such a
view tends to suppress important literary features, particularly the narrative
voice of the text. The narrative in Hosea 3 is autobiographical, whereas
the narrative in Hosea 1 is written about Hosea in an objective form. Furthermore,
the poetic material beginning in Hos 2:4 is likewise styled as an address
by the prophet directed to the people of Israel. Hos 2:1-3, on the other
hand, is formulated in the objective style of chapter 1. This suggests
that Hosea 1-3 do not comprise a single block, but perhaps two distinctly
formulated textual blocks addressed by different parties to different audiences,
viz., Hos 1:1-2:3, which is addressed by the narrator of the book to the
reader, and Hos 2:4-3:5, which is addressed by the prophet alternatively
to the people of Israel in Hos 2:4-25 and to the reader in Hos 3:1-5. Similar
problems emerge in Hosea 4-11, which contain introductory address formulae,
analogous to that of Hos 2:4, that are directed to specific audiences among
the people of Israel. Such addressees include the people of Israel in Hos
4:1; the priests, house of Israel, and kings in Hos 5:1; unspecified audiences
that are commanded to sound horns in Hos 5:8 and 8:1; and Israel in Hos
9:1. These addresses are intermixed with descriptive material about Israel,
generally presented as the words of YHWH or the prophet to an unspecified
audience, throughout these chapters. The same phenomenon appears in Hosea
12-14, in which Hos 14:2 contains an address formula directed to Israel
in the midst of material that is either descriptive of Israel or addressed
specifically to the people. Finally, discussion of the form and contents
of Hosea is complicated by numerous references to Judah, which suggest
that the prophet's oracles may have been addressed to Judah as well as
to Israel or that they have been expanded by later redactors who attempted
to relate Hosea to the concerns of the southern kingdom.[2]
1.3 These considerations point to
the need for a reassessment of the structure and generic character of the
book of Hosea. Clearly, Hosea is not simply a three-part collection of
the prophet's oracles to Israel. The book appears to have a much more complex
structure, and it is formulated both to convey the prophet's oracles to
Israel and to address an unspecified audience. In order to specify the
book's structure, it is necessary to pay close attention to the formal
literary features of the text that indicate its speakers and addressees
and that convey its contents. By this means, the foundation will be laid
for establishing the overall message and perspective of the book together
with the settings in which it developed and was read.
II
2.1 In order to establish the structure
of Hosea, several initial observations concerning the form of the book
are necessary. Hosea begins with a superscription in Hos 1:1 which must
necessarily stand apart from the following material in that it serves as
an introduction to the balance of the book that identifies its contents,
author, and the historical setting in which it is to be read.[3]
In contrast to the contents of the book, which are attributed to Hosea
as the word of YHWH to the prophet, the superscription cannot be attributed
to Hosea, but to an anonymous narrator who presents the book to the reader.
Interestingly, the work of an anonymous narrator appears again at two key
points in the book. The first is the report of YHWH's speaking to Hosea
in Hos 1:2-2:3. The work of the anonymous narrator is evident in the initial the initial
statement of this pericope in Hos 1:2a, "the beginning of YHWH's speaking
with Hosea," and in the narrative indicators of YHWH's speeches to the
prophet and the prophet's subsequent actions throughout the balance of
the pericope in Hos 1:2ba1, "and
YHWH said to Hosea;" 1:3-4aa, "and he went and
he took Gomer bat Diblaim and she conceived and she bore a son to him,
and YHWH said to him;" Hos 1:6aab, "and she
conceived again and she bore a daughter, and he said to him;" and Hos 1:8-9aa,
"and she weaned Lo Ruhamah and she conceived and she bore a son, and he
said . . ." Hos 2:1-3 is clearly included as a component of Hos 1:2-9 in
that the introductory formula of Hos 2:1, "wehayah mispar bene yisrael kehol hayyam,"
"and the number of the children of Israel will be like the sand of the
sea. . ." establishes syntactical continuity with the report of YHWH's
speech to Hosea in Hos 1:9ab-b. Hos 2:1-3 thereby
constitutes a component of YHWH's speech to the prophet in Hos 1:9ab-2:3.
A new pericope begins in Hos 2:4, which clearly depicts the prophet's address
to the children born in Hos 1:2-2:3, rather than the narrative report of
YHWH's address to the prophet. The balance of the book comprises the prophet's
addresses to Israel or to an unspecified audience until Hos 14:10, in which
an anonymous narrator again addresses the reader, "Whoever is wise, let
him understand these things, whoever is discerning, let him know them,
for straight are the ways of YHWH, and the righteous shall walk in them
but the rebellious shall stumble."
2.2 Overall, these observations
indicate that the anonymous narrator plays a determinative role in constituting
the structure of the book of Hosea. The book thereby comprises three primary
structural elements, each of which is formulated by the anonymous narrator.
The superscription in Hos 1:1 constitutes the first major structural element
of the book in that it identifies the contents of the book as "The word
of YHWH which was to Hosea ben Beeri in the days of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz,
Hezekiah, kings of Judah, and in the days of Jeroboam ben Joash, king of
Israel." Hos 1:2-14:9 then constitutes the main body of the book, which
is formulated as the narrator's report of YHWH's speaking to Hosea in Hos
1:2-2:3 and the report of Hosea's subsequent speeches based on that experience
in Hos 2:4-14:9. Finally, Hos 14:10 constitutes the postscript of the book
that calls upon the reader to understand the book properly and thereby
to walk uprightly in the path of YHWH.[4]
2.3 This last point is particularly
important in the overall interpretation of the book in that it indicates
that the book of Hosea is presented not simply as a transcript or report
of the prophet's career and message, but that the book is presented for
didactic or persuasive purposes, i.e., the reader is intended to learn
something from this book and to apply what is learned as a means to choose
a preferred course of action over one that is considered to be undesirable.
This observation indicates that the generic character of the book is didactic
and parenetic in that it is designed to persuade the reader to adopt a
course of action based upon the lessons learned from a proper understanding
of the book. The major questions of course are to whom is the book of Hosea
addressed and what does it call upon the reader to do?
2.4 Consideration of the structure
and generic character of the body of the book in Hos 1:2-14:9 may be useful
in answering these questions. Modern exegesis of Hosea has generally proceeded
on the basis of the contention that the book of Hosea is addressed to the
northern kingdom of Israel.[5] This is
a natural conclusion to draw given that Hosea is a northern prophet and
that his message essentially focuses on the projected punishment of the
northern kingdom. The calls for Israel's repentance likewise feed into
this view. But the formal features of Hos 1:2-14:9 call for a critical
reevaluation of this contention. As noted above, the basic layout of this
text includes two major components: the report by the anonymous narrator
of YHWH's speaking to Hosea in Hos 1:2-2:3 and the report of Hosea's speeches
in Hos 2:4-14:9. The presence of the anonymous narrator is explicitly evident
only in Hos 1:2-2:3, and it conveys in the form of YHWH's words to Hosea
some basic elements of the message of the book. The report of Hosea's compliance
with YHWH's commands to take a wife of harlotry and to have children of
harlotry certainly articulates an important element of judgment against
Israel in the overall message of the book. It is clear from the report
of YHWH's statements that this judgment is directed against the people
in large measure because of the actions of the house of Jehu which came
to power through bloodshed in a coup against the previously ruling house
of Omri.[6] Nevertheless, the present
form of the narrative does not focus exclusively on a message of judgment.
The present form of Hos 1:6-7, for example, indicates that YHWH will show
no mercy to Israel, but that YHWH will pardon Israel, and that YHWH will
show mercy to and deliver the house of Judah, although not by military
means. Furthermore, Hos 2:1-3 articulates the patriarchal promise to Israel
to become as numerous as the sands of the sea.[7]
It thereby points to YHWH's intention not to destroy Israel entirely, and
it makes this clear by its statements that the people will ultimately be
considered "my people" and "pitied" in contrast to the names "not my people"
and "not pitied" given to Israel previously in the first part of the narrative.
This text indicates that as part of this process of restitution, the people
of Israel and Judah will be reunited again under the rule of one king.
At the end of the speech report, YHWH gives an instruction to speak this
message of restoration to the people, "Say to your brothers, `my people,'
and to your sisters, `pitied.'" Although this statement is part of YHWH's
speech to the prophet, the imperative plural form of `say' ('imrû)
indicates that this instruction is not directed to the prophet alone, but
to a larger group of people. This statement clearly does not address the
people of Israel, for they are the objects, not the addressees of this
instruction. Rather, it is addressed to the people of Judah, who are called
upon to accept the people of Israel as YHWH's people and as pitied at a
time when Israel and Judah will be reunited under the rule of a single
king. This statement suggests that the present form of the book as a whole
is addressed not to the people of Israel, but to the people of Judah.[8]
2.5 This conclusion is supported
by the formal features of the prophet's words that appear in Hosea 2:4-14:9.
Although a great deal of this material is addressed explicitly to the people
and leaders of the northern kingdom of Israel, as indicated by the introductory
formulae in Hos 2:4; 4:1; 5:1; and 14:2 as well as by other features of
this material, there is a great deal of material that does not represent
direct speech by the prophet or YHWH to northern Israel, but that constitutes
the prophet's or YHWH's speeches about Israel that is addressed to an anonymous
audience. This is evident in Hos 2:4-3:5, for example, in which Hos 2:4-25
is addressed to the children or to the wife of 1:2-2:3, but Hos 3:1-5 is
addressed to an anonymous audience and speaks objectively about the people
of Israel. It is likewise evident in Hos 4:1-19, which includes material
explicitly addressed to the people of Israel in vv. 1-6, 13b-16, but the
pericope speaks objectively about Israel to an unspecified audience in
vv. 7-13a and 17-19. Similar features appear throughout Hos 5:1-14:9. Such
an alternation of addressee could well be a rhetorical device employed
by the prophet in a situation of oral address to an Israelite audience,
in which he alternatively addresses his audience directly and then turns
for an aside that describes the people's wrongdoing to no one in particular.
But in the context of a written book that is removed from the setting of
oral speech, such addresses are directed to the reader. Insofar as the
written form of the book is formulated to presuppose a Judean reading audience,
that addressee becomes the Judean reader.
2.6 This has a bearing on the means
by which Hos 2:4-14:9 is read. Although these chapters contain a great
deal of material that is directed explicitly to a northern Israelite audience,
it is ultimately directed to a Judean reading audience and it is designed
to lead that audience to a certain set of conclusions concerning YHWH's
actions in relation to the northern kingdom of Israel as articulated by
Hosea. Overall, the formulaic addresses to the people and leaders of northern
Israel still provide the criteria for determining the basic structure of
the text, but it is evident that those addresses are embedded in material
that is directed to the anonymous audience of the book, identified above
as a Judean audience. In this respect, the book employs the addresses to
northern Israel as a means to articulate a series of contentions that are
designed to enable the Judean reader to conclude that YHWH has brought
about punishment against the people and leaders of northern Israel for
acting in a manner that is considered to be abandonment of YHWH. The kings
and priests of northern Israel take special blame for this situation, and
the material of the book continually returns to the themes of Israel's
unwarranted kingship, cultic apostasy, and its alliance with Assyria as
the basis for the charge of abandoning YHWH. The series holds out the possibility
of Israel's return to YHWH, however, and calls explicitly for this return
in the concluding segment of Hos 14:2-9.
2.7 The sequence of the structure
and argumentation of the book may be represented as follows. The first
major structural segment of Hos 2:4-14:9 appears in Hos 2:4-3:5. This text
is demarcated initially by its shift in form from the report of YHWH's
speech to the prophet in Hos 1:2-2:3 to the prophet's speech throughout
Hos 2:4-3:5. It is initially directed to the children, who were reported
to be born in the preceding section and it calls upon them to contend with
their mother so that she might return to her husband.[9]
Although the text is initially formulated as Hosea's appeal to his children,
it shifts in 2:18-22 to a report of YHWH's address to Israel as his wife,
calling upon her to return. It shifts again to a report of YHWH's statements
concerning the people in Hos 2:23-25 that articulates the projected restoration
of the people who will be called "my people" instead of the initial "not
my people" of Hos 1:2-2:3. The prophet's autobiographical report in Hos
3:1-5 of YHWH's command again to love an adulterous woman is tied syntactically
to Hos 2:4-25. It thereby returns the reader to the initial rhetorical
situation of Hos 2:4 in which the prophet is clearly speaking about the
restoration of his marriage relationship.
2.8 Hos 2:4-3:5 thereby constitutes
the initial premise of the prophet's message following YHWH's instructions
to him. It presupposes the prophet's marriage to Gomer and the birth of
the children, and builds these images into an allegorical portrayal of
the relationship between YHWH and the people of Israel. It articulates
both the disruption of the relationship, portrayed as Israel's "harlotry"
in relation to other gods, and its restoration as YHWH takes back the estranged
Israel just as Hosea will take back Gomer. The addressee of this particular
pericope is anonymous, but the statements that Israel will lose its king
and religious leadership and that Israel will ultimately seek YHWH as G-d
and David as king once again suggest that the anonymous reading audience
is Judean. Certainly, the portrayal of Israel's restoration corresponds
to an ideal Judean view of the situation.
2.9 The next major section of Hos
2:4-14:9 appears in Hos 4:1-19. This sub-unit is demarcated initially by
the call to attention formula in Hos 4:1, "Hear the word of YHWH, People
of Israel," which introduces the prophet's proclamation of YHWH's lawsuit
with the inhabitants of the land.[10]
An analogous formula in Hos 5:1 introduces the following unit. Overall,
Hos 4:1-19 develops the theme of harlotry from Hos 1:2-2:3 by portraying
Israel's lack of knowledge concerning G-d as the basis of its abandonment
of YHWH. It is formulated as a prophetic judgment speech, although it alternatively
addresses the people directly (vv. 1-6, 13b-16) and speaks objectively
about the people to an unspecified audience (vv. 7-13a, 17-19). It builds
upon the earlier themes of the mother and the children by arguing that
because the people have abandoned YHWH, YHWH will destroy the mother of
the people (v. 5) and abandon their children (v. 6). Although the passage
is addressed to the people at large, it focuses especially on the leaders
of the people, including the priest and prophet who are responsible for
seeing to the people's proper understanding of G-d. In this respect, it
begins to focus more specifically on the metaphor of harlotry among the
people introduced previously and the cause of that harlotry in the religious
leadership of the northern kingdom. The passage thereby condemns the cultic
establishment and leadership of the northern kingdom of Israel.
2.10 Following the presentation
of Israel as a faithless wife called to return to her husband in Hos 2:4-3:5
and the condemnation of Israel's religious leaders in Hos 4:1-19, the core
of the book then follows in Hos 5:1-14:9. Whereas the previous two sections
outline the general themes of the book, including Israel's abandonment
of YHWH and YHWH's appeal for Israel's return, Hos 5:1-14:9 engages in
a detailed examination of the issues involved in YHWH's/Hosea's complaint
against Israel which of courses aids in defining the conditions for Israel's
repentance or return to YHWH. Fundamentally, this unit identifies an alliance
between Israel and Assyria as the basic cause for Israel's abandonment
of YHWH and the corruption of its royal and cultic establishment. It concludes
with a call for Israel's return to YHWH. Again, these chapters constitute
of mixture of materials directly addressed to Israel and those that speak
about Israel but are addressed to an unnamed audience. The direct address
forms in Hos 5:1; 5:8; 8:1; 9:1; and 14:2 appear to be constitutive in
defining the overall structure of the text in that the material conveyed
directly to Israel serves as the basis for the prophet's comments to the
reading/listening audience.[11]
III
3.1 This analysis of the structure
and generic character of the book of Hosea provides the basis for several
observations. First, the organization and presentation of the full form
of the book indicates an interest to employ the Hosean material for didactic
or parenetic purposes, i.e., the book of Hosea is clearly intended to instruct
its readers and to persuade them to undertake a course of action. This
is evident from the concluding instruction to the reader in Hos 14:10,
who is to learn something from the material presented in Hosea and to apply
that knowledge by acting in a manner that is consistent with the "straight
paths of YHWH" in which the righteous walk. It is also evident in the retrospective
introduction to the book, both in the superscription in Hos 1:1 and in
the narrative report of YHWH's instructions to Hosea in Hos 1:2-2:3, which
are clearly formulated to present the reader with background information
on Hosea and his interaction with YHWH (and Gomer) as a basis for understanding
the words of Hosea in Hos 2:4-14:9.
3.2 Second, the contents of the
body of the book in Hos 1:2-14:9 are clearly organized to appeal for Israel's
return to YHWH. This is clear from the introductory reports of Hosea's
marriage to Gomer, which sets the basic paradigm for the portrayal of Israel
as an adulterous wife whose husband seeks her return. Following the initial
presentation of this paradigm, the book provides an extended analysis of
northern Israel's behavior that indicates its abandonment of YHWH together
with repeated statements by YHWH and the prophet that Israel will be punished
but that YHWH will also seek Israel's return. The concluding appeal for
Israel's return in Hos 14:2-9 is particularly important in that it points
to the return of Israel as one of the primary goals of the work. But it
also points to an interest in explaining and justifying the suffering of
Israel as a punishment brought about by YHWH that will eventually result
in Israel's return and the restoration of the relationship.
3.3 Third, the book of Hosea speaks
generally of Israel's abandonment of YHWH based on the paradigm of Gomer's
adultery in relation to Hosea as the basic problem in the relationship
between Israel and YHWH.[12] Religious
apostasy therefore constitutes an important theme of the book as indicated
by the addresses to the priests and prophets condemning them for their
failure to instill proper "knowledge of G-d" in the people and by the frequent
references to Israel's cultic sites, e.g., Beth-Aven (Beth-El), Mizpah,
Gilgal, Shechem, etc., as places for illicit worship of pagan deities.
But religious apostasy is not the only problem highlighted in the book.
Hosea points especially to the kings of Israel as one of the fundamental
causes for Israel's problems in that YHWH did not desire kingship for Israel
in the first place and because the northern kings are so closely associated
with the idolatry and violence that Hosea perceives throughout the land
(see esp. Hos 8:1-6). One particular aspect of Israel's abandonment of
YHWH appears again and again throughout the book, i.e., Israel's alliance
with Assyria and perhaps Egypt. This theme appears in the detailed discussion
of Israel's "harlotry" in Hos 5:13-14; 7:8-16; 8:7-14; 12:2 together with
references to Israel's exile to Assyria and Egypt in Hos 9:1-3; 10:6; 11:5,
10-11, and in the final appeal for Israel to return to YHWH in Hos 14:3,
where Assyria is presented as unable to deliver the nation. Such an alliance
would be undertaken by the kings of Israel, and is portrayed as an action
designed to protect the nation and to facilitate its role in trade between
Assyria and Egypt.[13] In this respect,
the king's alliance with Assyria is presented as the people's rejection
of YHWH.
3.4 Obviously, this suggests that
one means to repair the relationship between Israel and YHWH is to abandon
the alliance with Assyria and to eliminate the various manifestations of
pagan worship or contact that such an alliance might entail or encourage.
It is noteworthy that a great deal of the material in the book is directed
to the northern kingdom of Israel in order to call for its return to YHWH.
But the analysis of the structure and generic character of the book indicates
that although much material constitutes the prophet's direct address to
the northern kingdom, a great deal of the material speaks objectively about
Israel to another party, viz., the anonymous audience of the book. Although
the prophet may well have composed this material with a northern Israelite
audience in mind, various features of the book point to the identification
of this anonymous audience as a Judean audience in the final form of the
book.
3.5 First, there are numerous references
to Judah's guilt and punishment alongside Israel. These references have
been investigated as potential redactional additions designed to adjust
the message of the book for a Judean audience, but most seem to have been
a part of the original composition rather than later additions to the text.[14] Nevertheless,
they point to an interest in addressing Judah as well as Israel. Second,
this interest in Judah appears to express the fact that Judah will be punished
alongside Israel, but that Judah will find itself in a much better position
than Israel in relation to YHWH. The narrative in Hos 1:6-7 concerning
the naming of Lo Ruhamah indicates that YHWH will ultimately forgive Israel,
but that YHWH will have mercy on Judah and deliver Judah militarily, an
option that is not open to Israel. Likewise, Hos 12:1 indicates that Judah's
relationship with YHWH is still secure.
3.6 This interest in Judah is particularly
noteworthy in relation to the condemnation of the northern Israelite kings
throughout the book. Hos 10:15, for example, indicates that the northern
Israelite king will be destroyed. Statements concerning the future political
constitution of the people are enlightening in that they point to Judean
interest. Hos 2:1-3, for example reiterates the patriarchal promise that
the people of Israel will become as numerous as the sands of the sea, but
it continues with a statement that the people of Israel and the people
of Judah will be reunited and will appoint for themselves one king as a
result of the day of Jezreel, which clearly condemns the northern dynasty
of Jehu. Furthermore, Hos 3:1-5 presents an autobiographical statement
by the prophet concerning his (re)marriage which concludes with statements
that the people of Israel will dwell for many years without a king until
the return to YHWH and David their king in the latter days. These last
statements concerning a reunified people ruled by a Davidic monarch clearly
speak to Judean interests.
3.7 These considerations establish
the Judean identity of the anonymous reading audience of the book of Hosea.
The objective descriptions of northern Israel's abandonment of YHWH throughout
the book and the appeal to Israel to return to YHWH (and to David) clearly
have Judean interests in mind. This indicates that the book of Hosea may
be initially addressed to Israel, but it addresses Judah as well, and it
does so in a manner that defines the return of Israel to YHWH as a return
of Israel to Judah and the house of David. In such a context, the critique
of Israel's cultic apostasy would have to be taken as a call for Israel's
return to the Jerusalem Temple.
3.8 This analysis obviously raises
questions concerning the setting of the book. Although many scholars see
the final form of the book as the product of post-exilic redaction, there
appears to be little basis for the conclusion that any redaction of Hosea
must be set in the post-exilic period.[15]
Nothing in the book speaks explicitly of the problems generated by the
destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple, the Babylonian exile, or the potential
return of the Babylonian exiles and the rebuilding of the Temple. The themes
of the book focus entirely on the punishment and exile of the northern
kingdom of Israel during the Assyrian period. In cases where Judean suffering
is addressed, it is only in the context of the Assyrian threat against
Israel. Certainly, such themes could have been read in the context of the
Babylonian exile as a model for understanding Judah's experience, but the
composition of the book appears to have taken place prior to the Babylonian
threat against Jerusalem and Judah.
3.9 The interest in calling for
Israel's return to YHWH and in the reunification of Israel and Judah under
a single Davidic monarch is the key factor in establishing the setting
for the composition of the book of Hosea. Given such an interest, it would
appear that the period of Hosea's composition could extend any time from
the lifetime of the prophet in the mid-eighth century B.C.E. through the
reign of King Josiah in the late-seventh century. Certainly, the reunification
of Israel and Judah under a Davidic monarch is central to Josiah's concerns,
but the concern to show mercy to Judah and the interest in reuniting Israel
and Judah under one king is hardly exclusive to the period of King Josiah.
As indicated elsewhere, there is extensive interest in such issues during
the time of King Hezekiah and perhaps before that time as well.[16]
Nevertheless, such considerations point to the fact that the book of Hosea
would have been read in the late-seventh century B.C.E. as a prophetic
justification for the reform program of King Josiah.[17]
In such a scenario, Hosea's critique of the northern kingdom, including
its faithlessness, the failure of its religious leaders and kings, and
its alliance with Assyria, would all be read as fulfilled prophecy in the
time of Josiah. Only the last element of the prophet's message would need
to be realized at such a time, viz., the reunification of the people of
Israel with Judah and the return of Israel to YHWH and to the house of
David.[18]
STRUCTURE DIAGRAM OF HOSEA
| Prophetic Instruction:
Parenetic Appeal for Israel's Return to YHWH |
Hosea 1-14 |
|
I. Superscription |
1:1 |
|
II. Parenetic Appeal
for Israel's Return |
1:2-14:9 |
|
|
A. Report of YHWH's
speaking to Hosea: marriage and birth of children |
1:2-2:3 |
|
|
B. Report of Hosea's
speech concerning appeal for Israel's return |
2:4-14:9 |
|
1. report of Hosea's
appeal to children for mother's return: restoration of united people under
Davidic monarch |
2:4-3:5 |
|
2. report of YHWH's
controversy against Israel |
4:1-19 |
|
3. detailed report of
YHWH's call for Israel's return |
5:1-14:9 |
|
|
a. initial statement
of issues: Israel's harlotry/alien children |
5:1-7 |
|
|
b. concerning Israel's
alliance with Assyria/Egypt |
5:8-7:16 |
|
|
c. concerning Israel's
kings and cultic apostasy |
8:1-14 |
|
|
d. concerning Israel's
pagan cultic practice/rejection of YHWH |
9:1-14:1 |
|
|
|
1) announcement of punishment |
9:1-9 |
|
|
|
2) Israel as grapes
found in wilderness/rebellion at Baal Peor |
9:10-17 |
|
|
|
3) Israel as luxuriant
vine that will be grown over |
10:1-8 |
|
|
|
4) Israel as trained
heifer that must repent/return |
10:9-11:11 |
|
|
|
5) Ephraim's need for
exile and return like Jacob |
12:1-15 |
|
|
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6) Ephraim's exalted
status turned to punishment and death |
13:1-14:1 |
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4. Appeal for Israel
to return to YHWH/abandon alliance with Assyria |
14:2-9 |
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III. Postscript: Instruction
for wise to understand (Hosea) and to act properly |
14:10 |
Abstract
This paper proposes a
form-critical rereading of Hosea based upon synchronic
literary criteria. Past scholarship generally argues that the
book of Hosea articulates a message of judgment against Israel
in three basic parts, Hosea 1-3; Hosea 4-11; and Hosea 12-14.
Each component begins with material pertaining to Israel's
judgment, but concludes with material pertaining to
restoration. This view is based upon redactional-critical
criteria, and posits an original core of judgmental material
against Israel that has been supplement and "softened" by
later texts concerned Israel's restoration. A rereading of
the book in relation to its formal syntactical and semantic
features indicates a very different structure in which an
anonymous narrator presents Hosea's prophecy are parenetic
appeal to Israel to return to YHWH by abandoning its alliances
with foreign powers, specifically Assyria and Egypt. Although
Hosea's oracles were originally delivered in the north, the
present form of the book is directed to a Judean audience, and
may be read in relation to the reigns of either Hezekiah or
Josiah.
ENDNOTES
[1] See Hans Walter Wolff, Hosea (Hermeneia;
Translated by Gary Stansell; Philadelphia: Fortress, 1974) xxix-xxxii;
Gale A. Yee, Composition and Tradition in the Book of Hosea: A Redaction-Critical
Investigation (SBLDS 102; Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1987) 51-52; G.
I. Davies, Hosea (OT Guides; Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press,
1993) 102-107. Additional studies on Hosea that are primarily concerned
with the literary structure and composition of the book include, Edwin
M. Good, "The Composition of Hosea," SEÅ 31 (1966) 21-31 and
Martin Buss, The Prophetic Word of Hosea: A Morphological Study
(BZAW 111; Berlin: A. Topelmann, 1969). Back to text.
[2] See esp. Grace I. Emmerson, Hosea: An Israelite
Prophet in Judean Perspective (JSOTSup 28; Sheffield: JSOT Press, 1984),
for discussion of the references to Judah in the book of Hosea. Other studies
concerned with the role of inner-biblical exegesis and the literary growth
of Hosea include, Ina Willi-Plein, Vorformen der Schriftexegese innerhalb
des Alten Testaments. Untersuchungen zum literarischen Werden der auf Amos,
Hosea und Micha zuruckgehenden Bücher im hebraischen Zwolfprophetenbuch
(BZAW 123; Berlin and New York: Walter de Gruyter, 1971) 115-253; Thomas
Naumann, Hoseas Erben. Strukturen der Nachinterpretation im Buch Hosea
(BWANT 131; Stuttgart: Kohlhammer, 1991); Martti Nissinen, Prophetie,
Redaktion und Fortschreibung im Hoseabuch. Studien zum Werdegang eines
Prophetenbuches im Lichte von Hos 4 und 11 (AOAT 231; Kevelaer: Butzon
& Berker; Neukirchen-Vluyn: Neukirchener, 1991). Back
to text.
[3] Gene M. Tucker, "Prophetic Superscriptions and the
Growth of the Canon," Canon and Authority (eds., G. W. Coats and
B. O. Long; Philadelphia: Fortress, 1977) 56-70. Back to
text.
[4] Cf. C. L. Seow, "Hosea 14:10 and the Foolish People
Motif," CBQ 44 (1982) 212-224, who points out the interrelationship
between Hos 14:10 and various pericopes throughout the book in order to
demonstrate that the verse functions as the conclusion for the book of
Hosea. Back to text.
[5] So C. L. Seow, "Hosea, Book of," ABD III
293. Back to text.
[6] See 2 Kings 9-12 for the biblical accounts of Jehu's
revolt against the house of Omri. Back to text.
[7] Cf. Gen 22:17. Back to text.
[8] Wilhelm Rudolph, Hosea (KAT XIII/1; Gütersloh:
Gerd Mohn, 1966) 58-59. Cf. Wolff, Hosea 28, who understands this
verse as an address to the people of the northern kingdom, but it is precisely
the people of the northern kingdom who are the objects, not the addressees,
of this command. Others understand it as an address to the post-exilic
Judean community, e.g., J. Jeremias, Der Prophet Hosea (ATD 24,1;
Gottingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1983) 36. For a survey of the options,
see G. I. Davies, Hosea (NCeB; Grand Rapids: William Eerdmans, 1992)
63-64, who identifies the addressee simply as "the community as a whole"
(p. 63). F. I. Andersen and D. I. Freedman likewise attempt to escape the
problem by identifying Hosea's son Jezreel as the addressee, arguing unjustifiably
that the oldest son should be addressed with a plural form (Hosea
[AB 24; Garden City: Doubleday, 1980] 212). Back to text.
[9] Cf. Wolff, Hosea 33, who identifies the children
as the addressees of this passage, arguing that they represent the people
of Israel to contend against the land of Israel. Rudolph, Hosea
64, likewise identifies the children as the addressees. Back
to text.
[10] For discussion of the "call to attention" and
the "lawsuit" forms in this text, see esp. Wolff, Hosea ad loc;
Marvin A. Sweeney, Isaiah 1-39, with an Introduction to Prophetic Literature
(FOTL 16; Grand Rapids, MI, and Cambridge, U.K.: William Eerdmans, 1996)
544, 541-2. Back to text.
[11] Cf. Wolff, Hosea xxx, who points to similar
criteria in the identification of textual sub-units. Back
to text.
[12] For discussion of the marriage motif in Hosea
and its role as metaphor for the relationship between YHWH and Israel,
see esp., H. H. Rowley, "The Marriage of Hosea," Men of G-d: Studies
in Old Testament History and Prophecy (London: Thomas Nelson, 1963)
66-97; Davies, Hosea 79-92; Francis Landy, Hosea (Readings;
Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1995); Yvonne Sherwood, The Prostitute
and the Prophet: Hosea's Marriage in Literary-Theoretical Perspective
(GCT 2; JSOTSup 212; Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1996. Back
to text.
[13] For discussion of Assyria's interest in expanding
its trade relations in the western Asia and Egypt during the eighth century
B.C.E., see Moshe Elat, "The Economic Relations of the Neo-Assyrian Empire
with Egypt," JAOS 98 (1978) 20-34. Such interests would have motivated
Assyria to maintain its treaties with Israel throughout the rule of the
Jehu dynasty. Back to text.
[14] See Emmerson, Hosea. Back
to text.
[15] Cf. Brevard Childs, Introduction to the Old
Testament as Scripture (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1979) 377-380, who
likewise warns against attempts to place the redaction of Hosea in the
post-exilic period. Back to text.
[16] See my study, "A Philological and Form-Critical
Reevaluation of Isaiah 8:16-9:6," HAR 14 (1994) 215-231; Baruch
Halpern, "Jerusalem and the Lineages in the Seventh Century B.C.E.: Kinship
and the Rise of Individual Moral Liability," Law and Ideology in Monarchic
Israel (JSOTSup 124; eds., B. Halpern and D. W. Hobson; Sheffield:
Sheffield Academic Press, 1991) 11-107. Back to text.
[17] For discussion of the ideology of Josiah's reform,
see Duane Christensen, "Zephaniah 2:4-15: A Theological Basis for Josiah's
Program of Political Expansion," CBQ 46 (1984) 669-682; Marvin A.
Sweeney, "A Form-Critical Reassessment of the Book of Zephaniah," CBQ
53 (1991) 388-408; Naomi Steinberg, "The Deuteronomic Law Code and the
Politics of State Centralization," The Bible and the Politics of Exegesis
(Fs. Norman Gottwald; eds., D. Jobling, P. Day, and G. T. Sheppard; Cleveland:
Pilgrim, 1991) 161-170, 336-339; Marvin A. Sweeney, "Jeremiah 30-31 and
King Josiah's Program of National Restoration and Religious Reform," ZAW
108 (1996) 569-583. Critics correctly point to the absence of hard evidence
that Josiah could ever have realized a program of political expansion (e.g.,
Nadav Na'aman, "The Kingdom of Judah under Josiah," TA 18 [1991]
3-71; Ehud Ben Zvi, "History and Prophetic Texts," History and Interpretation
[Fs. John H. Hayes; eds., M. P. Graham, W. P. Brown, and J. K. Kuan; JSOTSup
173; Sheffield: JSOT Press, 1993] 106-120), but this does not negate Josiah's
aspirations to carry out such a program in the aftermath of Assyria's collapse.
Josiah's plans were thwarted by the Egyptians, who ultimately took control
of Judah in the late-seventh century (see J. Maxwell Miller and John H.
Hayes, A History of Ancient Israel and Judah [Philadelphia: Westminster,
1986] 381-402). Back to text.
[18] This is a revised version of a paper read at the
Society of Biblical Literature Pacific Coast Regional Meeting, Claremont,
CA, March 15-17, 1998. Back to text.
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