Contested Creations in the Book of Job Biblical Interpretation Series Editors in Chief Paul Anderson Yvonne Sherwood Editorial Board Akma Adam – Roland Boer – Musa Dube Jennifer L. Koosed – Vernon Robbins Annette Schellenberg – Carolyn J. Sharp Johanna Stiebert – Duane Watson Ruben Zimmermann VOLUME 113 The titles published in this series are listed at brill.nl/bins Contested Creations in the Book of Job The-World-as-It-Ought-and-Ought-Not-to-Be By Abigail Pelham LEIDEN • BOSTON The titles published in this series are listed at brill.nl/bins 2012 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Pelham, Abigail. Contested creations in the Book of Job : the-world-as-it-ought-and-ought-not-to-be / by Abigail Pelham. p. cm. — (Biblical interpretation series, ISSN 0928-0731 ; v. 113) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-90-04-21820-8 (hardback : alk. paper) 1. Creation—Biblical teaching. 2. Bible. O.T. Job—Criticism, interpretation, etc. I. Title. 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For Peter CONTENTS Prologue: The Author, the Reader, and the Professional Not-Knower .................................................................................................. 1 Writing and Un-Writing ........................................................................... 1 The Author in Biblical Studies ............................................................... 1 The Reader in Biblical Studies ............................................................... 5 It’s Complicated .......................................................................................... 9 ‘ Quod Scripsi, Scripsi ’: The Reader as Writer ..................................... 13 Job’s Ambiguity ............................................................................................ 17 The Will to Be Right and the Value of Being Wrong ...................... 21 1. Creation in the Book of Job: Reading Backwards and Forwards for Questions and Possibilities ............................................................... 24 Questions and Answers about Creation .............................................. 24 Two Problems: Job’s Response and the Epilogue ............................. 26 Reading Backwards and Forwards ........................................................ 31 2. Relationships Between Persons in the World-as-It-Ought-and-Ought-Not-to-Be: Centrality and Dispersion, Connectedness and Loneliness ....................................... 42 The Righteous and the Wicked .............................................................. 42 Chapter 29: Relations between Persons in Job’s World-as-It-Ought-to-Be ...................................................................... 46 Job’s Centrality in the World of the Prose Tale ................................ 49 Job’s Relationship to God and Hassatan in the Prologue .............. 52 How Job is the Real Winner of the Bet between God and Hassatan ................................................................................................... 53 Job’s ‘Phantom Greatness’ as Demonstrated by His Three Friends ...................................................................................................... 56 The Anti-World of Chapter 30: Job Displaced from the Center ..... 60 The Connectedness of the Righteous and the Loneliness of the Wicked: Interpersonal Relationships as Viewed by Job’s Three Friends .......................................................................................... 61 The Expectation of a לאג: Job Rejects the Friends’ Assertion that He is Fundamentally Alone ....................................................... 64 Summary of the Positions Taken by Job and the Friends ............. 70 viii contents The Wicked and the Righteous in God’s Speeches .......................... 71 God’s Speeches as a Response to Job’s Claims about the World-as-It-Ought-to-be ...................................................................... 73 The Attention of the Animals ................................................................. 75 The Aloneness of the Animals ............................................................... 78 God’s Centrality: The Question of Power ........................................... 79 Leviathan and God’s Power .................................................................... 83 The Place of Human Beings in God’s World ...................................... 86 3. Time in the World-as-It-Ought-and-Ought-Not-to-Be: Stasis, Change, and Death ..................................................................................... 92 Nothing Ever Happens: Stasis in Job’s World-as-It-Ought-to-Be .... 92 God as Agent of Change: Creator of the Anti-world ....................... 95 Excursus: God’s ‘Wisdom’ as God’s Whim .......................................... 98 The Friends on the Static Life of the Righteous Man ..................... 100 The Changeability of the Anti-world of the Wicked ....................... 104 Death as the Mark of the Supreme Changeability of the Lives of the Wicked .......................................................................................... 105 The Spirit’s Message: Mortality as Unrighteousness ....................... 107 Job and the Problem(s) of Human Mortality .................................... 115 The World According to God: The Stable Foundation of the Earth ................................................................................................... 120 God’s Changeable World .......................................................................... 122 The Purpose of Death in God’s Speeches ........................................... 127 God Challenges Job to Afflict the Wicked with Change ................ 130 Job and ‘The Beasts’: Survival in a Changeable World ................... 131 Leviathan as the Embodiment of Unpredictable and Uncontrollable Change ........................................................................ 134 4. Inside and Outside: The Configuration of Space in the World-as-It-Ought-and-Ought-Not-to-Be ............................................ 138 Introduction ................................................................................................. 138 Wilderness as the Anti-world ................................................................. 141 The Wicked as Outsiders and the Metaphor of the House as Inner Space .............................................................................................. 143 Job as Outsider/Death as Inner Space ................................................. 148 Job’s Antithetical Comments on the Outsideness of the Wicked .... 150 The Body as a Microcosm of the Human Community ................... 154 The Breaking of Job’s Body as Indication of His Outsider Status .... 157 contents ix Job’s Self-Identification as an Insider through His Preservation of the Inside/Outside Distinction ..................................................... 164 The “Senseless, Disreputable Brood”: Humans as Animals in the Outer Space of the Wilderness .................................................. 167 The Economics of Insider Status ........................................................... 170 Job’s Inability to Draw the Boundary Line ........................................ 172 The Meaning of God’s Answer from the Whirlwind ....................... 173 God’s Boundary-Making (or Lack thereof ) in the Founding of the Earth and the Birth of the Sea ................................................... 176 Questions about Place .............................................................................. 178 Animals and the Economics of Insider/Outsider Status ................ 179 The Economics of Leviathan .................................................................. 182 The Breakdown of the Distinction Between Inside and Outside Space .......................................................................................................... 183 5. The Explosive Finale: Reading Backwards from the Epilogue ..... 186 Job Goes Back Inside ................................................................................ 186 What Just Happened? ............................................................................... 189 Types of Readerly Expectation and Their Relative Value ............. 193 Job as the Creator of the World of the Epilogue .............................. 199 The Problem of the Prologue ................................................................. 203 The Prologue as Job’s Daydream ........................................................... 208 Job and the Chaos Monster .................................................................... 212 Excursus: What is Chaos? ........................................................................ 214 Job as Chaos, or Not .................................................................................. 220 Job’s Curse of Chapter 3 ........................................................................... 225 “You Can Have It”: Job’s Rejection of God’s Blessing ...................... 230 God’s Changeable World: An Alternate Reading of the Epilogue .................................................................................................... 235 So, Which Is It? ........................................................................................... 238 Epilogue: Negotiating and Renegotiating the World ............................ 240 Bibliography ...................................................................................................... 245 Index of Names ................................................................................................. 251 Index of Subjects .............................................................................................. 253 Index of Scriptures .......................................................................................... 258
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