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Books of Wisdom Proverbs Job Ecclesiastes (Qoheleth) Sirach (Ecclesiasticus) Wisdom of Solomon Psalms Song of Songs Tobit Baruch (9 books total). Writing flourished Contains maxims of good vs. evil/ virtues Sages (wise teachers)-adapted, goal was to inspire moral integrity
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Books of Wisdom • Proverbs • Job • Ecclesiastes (Qoheleth) • Sirach (Ecclesiasticus) • Wisdom of Solomon • Psalms • Song of Songs • Tobit • Baruch • (9 books total)
Writing flourished • Contains maxims of good vs. evil/ virtues • Sages (wise teachers)-adapted, goal was to inspire moral integrity • Promote obedience to the divinely established moral order =Happiness • God is the source of all wisdom • Speaks of wholeness, integrity and sin as disintegration • Writing styles-different types of poetry • Most are attributed to Solomon (-psalms)
Some were in Solomon’s monarchy—scribes in royal court collected and wrote down • Most written after the B. exile • Intended to instruct the young • Taught a virtuous life= success and prosperity / no hint of after life • Practical wisdom—wise sayings
WHY DO GOOD MEN SUFFER? • Mentality of the Babylonian exile (reward if good) is being questioned • Dilemma is known as “problem of evil” • Reasoned wasn’t always true: (good people get sick and are in poverty, and evil people have lots)
No belief in after life: (Rewards and punishments were in this life) • Poetic style @ virtuous man— • Loses everything—asks Why? • His friends insist Job’s sin was the reasons for his misfortune, that he must pray and repent and all would be well again. • Job defends his life—He feels the absence of God
God is silent through Jobs questions (37 chapters)— • Satan (adversary) not devil, a heavenly prosecutor whose job is to test the genuineness of human virtue • Discourse-- God reminds Job that God is creator and sustains existence. Transformation takes place • Job is humbled and awed admits the mystery of life is too big to understand God’s wisdom is far beyond him.
Book of Job did not answer why people suffer • Establishes that it is not a punishment, it leaves us with a sense of humility: some things we just cannot grasp. • We cannot rationalize evil in the world, instead we must trust God is in charge and loves and cares for us. • The ultimate message of this book is that even in the darkest moments, God is in charge, loving and caring for us through it all
1000-300 B.C.E • Attributed to David (@1/2) • Most likely not David • Used in worship • Sung • Liturgy of the hours • Poetry-format • Concrete language
150 • Psalter-book of Psalms only • Rhythms have been lost in language translations • Tehillim-Hebrew word for Psalm • Psalmos-Greek translation
Very honest and trusting • Told of Israel’s relationship with God • About their sorrows and joys • Types • Lament—need help or disconnect with God • Thanksgiving—about God’s amazing actions • Praise—God is creator
Ecclesiastes (or Qoheleth) • Is Life lived in vain? Is there meaning to life? • Written by a sage on the time of Greek rule of Jews • Qoheleth means preacher • Questioned • no concept of after-life • Appears pessimistic—Why? • Could have written this way to challenge students
Ecclesiastes • nothing makes a difference—we are born—we die and are forgotten // then Eccl 3 is written there is a time… • Conclusion: All things are rewarded for the righteous and punishment for the wicked will be accomplished but in God’s time and we cannot understand it. • Trust in God/Enjoy what God gives in life/ Everything has a proper time
The Song of Songs (Song of Solomon or Canticle of Canticles)
Differs from other wisdom literature—love poetry • Unknown authors @ 450 at time after the Babylonian Exile • Collection of love poems—a dialogue of bridegroom and bride • Beautiful/passionate poetry—love can even overcome death
In TheBible? • Translated literally: • Affirms goodness of human sexuality and love • Human love is powerful and holy bond good and a gift from God • As a religious allegory: • image of God’s love with Israel • --Christ’s love with Church • --Christ’s love with believer
Wisdom (Wisdom of Solomon)) What is our Final Destiny? • Author-scholarly Jew in Alexandria, Egypt @ 100BCE -(most recent writings of OT) • Written to preserve Jewish faith and heritage • Struggled with problem of evil • Refused to accept reward for good and punishment for evil in this life (re: he lived in a time where virtuous Jews were tortured and put to death for refusing to give up their faith)
Wisdom • Believed the answer was not in this life-death wasn’t end • Our destiny = life forever with God • Greek culture influenced this: Greeks believed in a soul • Jews believed the person was whole (inseparable) • Beginning of possibility of life beyond death • Message: keep faith
Three divisions: • Reward of justice • Praises of wisdom • Reflection of Exodus events • Literary characteristic—personification • Wisdom is: • Sophia • Feminine • Manifestation of the creative spirit of God
Other Wisdom Literature • Proverbs • Wise sayings • God is personified as a woman • Tells us where to find wisdom • Sirach (Ecclesiasticus) • Maxims for morality and instruction • Longest of Wisdom books (51 chapters) • Jesus ben Sirach ran a school of scripture study/ Jewish wisdom in Alexandria (under Greek empire) --200-175 BCE • Wanted to clarify confused students (between Jewish thought and Greek) • Wisdom = from God not from Greek thought • Depicts wisdom as a woman with God at creation • Wisdom tests us with difficulty—times to help us grow stronger