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The psalms in israels worship / Mowinckel, Sigmund
Título : The psalms in israels worship Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Mowinckel, Sigmund, Autor Mención de edición: 1° Editorial: Jsot Press Fecha de publicación: 1992 Número de páginas: 303 páginas Nota general: <27331> Idioma : Español Clasificación: 223.2/M88/(ING) Resumen: Volume I
Chapter I
THE PSALMS AND THE CULT 1
1. The problem 1
2. Testimonies about the cultic use of the psalms 2
3. Allusions to the temple cult in the psalms song, music and dance 5
4. The cultic origin of psalmody as such, and the problem of the excellent psalms 12
5. What is 'cult? 15
Chapter II
THE METHOD OF THE CULTIC INTERPRETATION 23
1. The form critical (form historical) view point 23
2. The cult functional view-point 29
3. The sources for our knowledge Israelite cult life 35
4. Preliminary classification of the psalms 37
5. Psalms outside the Psalter 40
6. Ancient oriental psalm poetry 41
Chapter III
'I' AND 'WE' IN THE PSALMS-ROYAL PSALMS' 42
1. “I” and 'we'. 'Corporate personality' 42
The Israelite conception of community and individuality, 49-The cdc community a an T, 43-The community's cultic representative, 43-T AS an expression for the pirate personality, 44-Smenda theory of the 'Collective I' and its core of truth, 46The king as the community's cultic Incorporation and representative, 46
2. What are 'royal psalms? 46
No particular 'psalm type' but psalms in which the king takes a leading place, 46-An actual Israclite/Judacan king, 47-Not a future 'Messiah', 48-The king ideal as a future-looking form for the empirical king, 49
3. The ancient Israelite conception of the king 50
Linked up with that of the Near East in general, 50-Ancient Near Eastern king ideology, 50-The Israelite development of the king ideology, 52-Yahweh's anointed', 53-The king's divinity'. 53-His ideal world dominion, 55-His relationship to Yahweh and people, 55—The king as repre sentative of the community, 56-Israelite modification of the king's 'divinity', 57—The king as Yahweh's adopted son and intermediary, 58-The king's role in the cult, 58
4. The place of the royal psalms in the cult 61
In general, 61–The ritual of annointing and Ps. 2, p. 62 - Ps. 110, p. 63-Ps. 101, p. 65–Ps. 72, p. 67-Ps, 20, p. 69- Ps. 21, p. 70-Ps. 89, P. 70 Ps, 18, p. 7-P. 15, P. 73 Ps. 28, p. 74-Isa. 38. gff., p. 74–Summing up, 75
5. Royal and national psalms 76
6. National psalms in the T form as royal psalms 76
Imagery, 76- The title 'by David', 77-Summing up, 78
7. 'Democratization of religion 78
Chapter IV
THE HYMN OF PRAISE 81
1. Form and content, composition 81
Introit, summons to praise, 81-The main section of the hymn, B3 -The two main types: the enumerative and the descriptive style, 85-The themes, Yahweh's 'excellencies', 86-Mood,88-Petition in the hymn’s place in the cult, 89
2. Varieties of the hymn 90
Zion hymni', 70-The hymn to God's Law,go-The reflex tive contemplation, gr-The 'I-hymn', ga-The individual song of praise, 93-The 'I-form' as the most ancient, 93
3. The hymns and the annual festivals 94
Paschal psalm, 94-Harvest and epiphany psalms, 94-New year psalms, 95
4. Hymnic elements in other psalm types 95
Hymnic motifs in psalms of petition and of lamentation, 95 Older and unmixed style, 96-Imitations of the hymnic style, 97
5. The delineation of God in hymn and psalm 97
CHAPTER V
PSALMS AT THE ENTHRONEMENT FESTIVAL OF YAHWEH 106
1. The meaning of 'enthronement psalms' 106
2. The political situation imagery): the enthronement of Yahweh 107
3. The cultic situation: the interpretation of the enthronement psalms 109
The contemporaneous character of the psalms: Yahweh has now become king, 109 - Historical interpretation, 110 Eschatological interpretation, 110-Mythico-cosmic realities experienced as contempornacous, 1 -Cultic character of rich experience, 119-The political situation presupposes a corresponding cultic situation: an enthronement festival of Yahweh, 113
4. Enthronement psalms: the age of the literary hype and of the corresponding
festival 116
5. The enthronement festival 118
Connection with the festival of epiphany, harvest, taber nacles, new year, consecration of the temple, 118 The enthronement festival of Yahweh a special aspect of the old new year festival, the feast of tabernacles, 121
6. The pro-Israelite background and prototypes of the festival 130
The Canaanite festival of the new year and renewal of life, and survivals thereof in the Yahweh cult, 130--The general pattern of ancient oriental cultic new year festivals and its influence upon the Yahweh cult, 135
7. The specifically Israelite character of the festival 136
The elimination of the idea of the death and resurrection of the deity, 136 History as Yahweh's act of salvation, 139
8. The festal myths 140
Psalms of other types which belong to the enthronement festival or derive from its plexus of ideas and experiences, 140 Yahweh's 'coming', his epiphany, 141-The myth of creation, the fight with the dragon or primaeval ocean, 143—The judgment': what is to happen in the re-created earth, i.c., allotting the fate of the new year, 146-Yahweh's relationship to the other gods and their judgment, 148-The myth of the fight of nations, 151-The election and the exodus: the exodus myth, 154-The renewal of the covenant, the covenant myth, 157–The commandments, 157-The promises of Yahweh, 159-Yahwch's admonition and rebuke, the problem of theodicy, 160-Universalism and particularism, 161-The gifts of the kingdom of Yahweh, 162 The earthly king, 164-The epic formulation of the festal myths, 165
9. Some of the main acts and rites of the festival 169
The processional road (via sacra). 170-The great procession, Ps. 68, p. 72-The cult drama of the re-finding of the ark, Ps, 132, p. 174--Ps. 24 and 15, and the 'laws of entry: 177-The procession up to the altar, Ps. 18, p. 180-The 'sham fight', Yahweh's fight and victory, Pus. 46 and 48. p. 18
10. Form and content of the true enthronement psalms against the background of the experiences of the festival 183
11. The emotion and mood of the festival 184
12. The retrospective and prospective elements in the festival and its psalms 186
13. The relationship of the festival to the Jewish hope of restoration and to
eschatology 189
Chapter VI
NATIONAL PSALMS OF LAMENTATION 193
1. Days and rites of penitence 193
2. Psalms for such days of penitence and prayer 194
3. Form and content of the psalm of lamentation 195
Invocation, 195-Hymnic introduction, 196—The lament; description of the need (danger) and of the enemies, 196- The enemics' curse ('awen), 199 The petition, 201-The excoriation of the enemies, 202-Pleas for revenge, 203 Motivation for hearing the place, 204-Motive of compass. sion, 204-Motive of confidence, 206—Motive of innocence and psalms of innocence, 206—The 'righteous' and the 'wicked' in the psalms, 207–Motive of penitence and psalms of penitence, 214-The ideal of religious humility, 215 The vow, 216–Certainty of the hearing of petition, 217
4. Protective psalms; 'psalms of confidence 219
5. Psalms for the annual days of penitence and prayer; petitions for the nation's return 220
6. Psalms of general petition 221
7. Intercessory psalms 224
Chapter VII
NATIONAL PSALMS of LAMENTATION IN THE I-FORM 225
1. The king ('T) as the people's representative in the properly national psalms
of lamentation 225
2. Royal psalms of lamentation and petitions on the occasion of public
disaster or danger 225
3. The lament over wicked tongues and false accusers 227
4. Style, form, and content 229
The various 'moments': invocation, petition, lament, motive of confidence of being heard, vow, assurance of the hearing of the petition, the anticipatory song of thanks, 229 Examples, 230-Differentiations in form and content between 'we' and T psalms of lamentation, 235-'Protective psalms' and 'psalms of confidence', 237
5. Need or danger envisaged as a dwelling in the Realm of the dead, a concept common to psalms of both lamentation and thanksgiving 239
6. Real suffering or cultic 'mock suffering'? 241
7. Analogies with Babylonian 'I' psalms 246
The psalms in israels worship [texto impreso] / Mowinckel, Sigmund, Autor . - 1° . - [S.l.] : Jsot Press, 1992 . - 303 páginas.
<27331>
Idioma : Español
Clasificación: 223.2/M88/(ING) Resumen: Volume I
Chapter I
THE PSALMS AND THE CULT 1
1. The problem 1
2. Testimonies about the cultic use of the psalms 2
3. Allusions to the temple cult in the psalms song, music and dance 5
4. The cultic origin of psalmody as such, and the problem of the excellent psalms 12
5. What is 'cult? 15
Chapter II
THE METHOD OF THE CULTIC INTERPRETATION 23
1. The form critical (form historical) view point 23
2. The cult functional view-point 29
3. The sources for our knowledge Israelite cult life 35
4. Preliminary classification of the psalms 37
5. Psalms outside the Psalter 40
6. Ancient oriental psalm poetry 41
Chapter III
'I' AND 'WE' IN THE PSALMS-ROYAL PSALMS' 42
1. “I” and 'we'. 'Corporate personality' 42
The Israelite conception of community and individuality, 49-The cdc community a an T, 43-The community's cultic representative, 43-T AS an expression for the pirate personality, 44-Smenda theory of the 'Collective I' and its core of truth, 46The king as the community's cultic Incorporation and representative, 46
2. What are 'royal psalms? 46
No particular 'psalm type' but psalms in which the king takes a leading place, 46-An actual Israclite/Judacan king, 47-Not a future 'Messiah', 48-The king ideal as a future-looking form for the empirical king, 49
3. The ancient Israelite conception of the king 50
Linked up with that of the Near East in general, 50-Ancient Near Eastern king ideology, 50-The Israelite development of the king ideology, 52-Yahweh's anointed', 53-The king's divinity'. 53-His ideal world dominion, 55-His relationship to Yahweh and people, 55—The king as repre sentative of the community, 56-Israelite modification of the king's 'divinity', 57—The king as Yahweh's adopted son and intermediary, 58-The king's role in the cult, 58
4. The place of the royal psalms in the cult 61
In general, 61–The ritual of annointing and Ps. 2, p. 62 - Ps. 110, p. 63-Ps. 101, p. 65–Ps. 72, p. 67-Ps, 20, p. 69- Ps. 21, p. 70-Ps. 89, P. 70 Ps, 18, p. 7-P. 15, P. 73 Ps. 28, p. 74-Isa. 38. gff., p. 74–Summing up, 75
5. Royal and national psalms 76
6. National psalms in the T form as royal psalms 76
Imagery, 76- The title 'by David', 77-Summing up, 78
7. 'Democratization of religion 78
Chapter IV
THE HYMN OF PRAISE 81
1. Form and content, composition 81
Introit, summons to praise, 81-The main section of the hymn, B3 -The two main types: the enumerative and the descriptive style, 85-The themes, Yahweh's 'excellencies', 86-Mood,88-Petition in the hymn’s place in the cult, 89
2. Varieties of the hymn 90
Zion hymni', 70-The hymn to God's Law,go-The reflex tive contemplation, gr-The 'I-hymn', ga-The individual song of praise, 93-The 'I-form' as the most ancient, 93
3. The hymns and the annual festivals 94
Paschal psalm, 94-Harvest and epiphany psalms, 94-New year psalms, 95
4. Hymnic elements in other psalm types 95
Hymnic motifs in psalms of petition and of lamentation, 95 Older and unmixed style, 96-Imitations of the hymnic style, 97
5. The delineation of God in hymn and psalm 97
CHAPTER V
PSALMS AT THE ENTHRONEMENT FESTIVAL OF YAHWEH 106
1. The meaning of 'enthronement psalms' 106
2. The political situation imagery): the enthronement of Yahweh 107
3. The cultic situation: the interpretation of the enthronement psalms 109
The contemporaneous character of the psalms: Yahweh has now become king, 109 - Historical interpretation, 110 Eschatological interpretation, 110-Mythico-cosmic realities experienced as contempornacous, 1 -Cultic character of rich experience, 119-The political situation presupposes a corresponding cultic situation: an enthronement festival of Yahweh, 113
4. Enthronement psalms: the age of the literary hype and of the corresponding
festival 116
5. The enthronement festival 118
Connection with the festival of epiphany, harvest, taber nacles, new year, consecration of the temple, 118 The enthronement festival of Yahweh a special aspect of the old new year festival, the feast of tabernacles, 121
6. The pro-Israelite background and prototypes of the festival 130
The Canaanite festival of the new year and renewal of life, and survivals thereof in the Yahweh cult, 130--The general pattern of ancient oriental cultic new year festivals and its influence upon the Yahweh cult, 135
7. The specifically Israelite character of the festival 136
The elimination of the idea of the death and resurrection of the deity, 136 History as Yahweh's act of salvation, 139
8. The festal myths 140
Psalms of other types which belong to the enthronement festival or derive from its plexus of ideas and experiences, 140 Yahweh's 'coming', his epiphany, 141-The myth of creation, the fight with the dragon or primaeval ocean, 143—The judgment': what is to happen in the re-created earth, i.c., allotting the fate of the new year, 146-Yahweh's relationship to the other gods and their judgment, 148-The myth of the fight of nations, 151-The election and the exodus: the exodus myth, 154-The renewal of the covenant, the covenant myth, 157–The commandments, 157-The promises of Yahweh, 159-Yahwch's admonition and rebuke, the problem of theodicy, 160-Universalism and particularism, 161-The gifts of the kingdom of Yahweh, 162 The earthly king, 164-The epic formulation of the festal myths, 165
9. Some of the main acts and rites of the festival 169
The processional road (via sacra). 170-The great procession, Ps. 68, p. 72-The cult drama of the re-finding of the ark, Ps, 132, p. 174--Ps. 24 and 15, and the 'laws of entry: 177-The procession up to the altar, Ps. 18, p. 180-The 'sham fight', Yahweh's fight and victory, Pus. 46 and 48. p. 18
10. Form and content of the true enthronement psalms against the background of the experiences of the festival 183
11. The emotion and mood of the festival 184
12. The retrospective and prospective elements in the festival and its psalms 186
13. The relationship of the festival to the Jewish hope of restoration and to
eschatology 189
Chapter VI
NATIONAL PSALMS OF LAMENTATION 193
1. Days and rites of penitence 193
2. Psalms for such days of penitence and prayer 194
3. Form and content of the psalm of lamentation 195
Invocation, 195-Hymnic introduction, 196—The lament; description of the need (danger) and of the enemies, 196- The enemics' curse ('awen), 199 The petition, 201-The excoriation of the enemies, 202-Pleas for revenge, 203 Motivation for hearing the place, 204-Motive of compass. sion, 204-Motive of confidence, 206—Motive of innocence and psalms of innocence, 206—The 'righteous' and the 'wicked' in the psalms, 207–Motive of penitence and psalms of penitence, 214-The ideal of religious humility, 215 The vow, 216–Certainty of the hearing of petition, 217
4. Protective psalms; 'psalms of confidence 219
5. Psalms for the annual days of penitence and prayer; petitions for the nation's return 220
6. Psalms of general petition 221
7. Intercessory psalms 224
Chapter VII
NATIONAL PSALMS of LAMENTATION IN THE I-FORM 225
1. The king ('T) as the people's representative in the properly national psalms
of lamentation 225
2. Royal psalms of lamentation and petitions on the occasion of public
disaster or danger 225
3. The lament over wicked tongues and false accusers 227
4. Style, form, and content 229
The various 'moments': invocation, petition, lament, motive of confidence of being heard, vow, assurance of the hearing of the petition, the anticipatory song of thanks, 229 Examples, 230-Differentiations in form and content between 'we' and T psalms of lamentation, 235-'Protective psalms' and 'psalms of confidence', 237
5. Need or danger envisaged as a dwelling in the Realm of the dead, a concept common to psalms of both lamentation and thanksgiving 239
6. Real suffering or cultic 'mock suffering'? 241
7. Analogies with Babylonian 'I' psalms 246
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