Hosea

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Hosea, Joel 3. The Hebrew Text of Hosea

Hosea contains possibly the most difficult Hebrew in the Bible (although many scholars would give that distinction to Job). Hosea is frequently elliptical, at times apparently ungrammatical, and often contains passing allusions to historical incidents and other texts of the Bible that are almost bewildering. Its logic is sometimes paradoxical. It also contains a fairly high number of obscure or rare words, the meanings of which scholars must struggle to recover.11 The difficulty of the Hebrew of Hosea naturally makes it inviting territory for those who wish to invade it with an arsenal of techniques for emendation.12 Critical scholars of a previous generation believed that the text had been severely corrupted13 and were sublimely confident in their ability to recover the text, but few scholars today feel free to rearrange, delete, and modify Hosea at will.14 For the

NAC 26. Scholars modify revise at will—many might be needed—problems in translation—obvious revisions in places that indicate departure from the MT
its like a new book too many revisions (27)
A number of recent scholars have fallen into this trap, and the average reader of modern translations of the English Bible would be surprised at how much of a given translation of Hosea is based on emendation, especially since some translations do not footnote emended readings —need to limit the emendations and stay true to MT
Hosea familiar with pagan literary motifs of his time:
Some scholars see parallels between Hosea and the Mari prophets.18 It is also possible that Hosea’s language reflects concepts found in Akkadian incantations.19 One might contend that there are elements of tragedy and comedy, analogous to the Aristotelian categories, integrated in Hosea.20 Even so, these external, non-Israelite parallels to Hosea are of limited use and certainty.(27)
Allusions to the Torah (28) and to Israelite history for he was facing crises of his generation—genesis stories and exodus dominate the book.
Hosea, Joel (1) Hosea and the Torah

1:10

22:17, blessing on Abraham

2:18

1:20–25, creation of wild animals

4:3

1:20–25, creation of wild animals

6:7

3:6, sin of Adam

6:9

34:1–31, destruction of Shechem

9:6

47:29, burial in Egypt

9:14

49:25, blessings of the breasts and of the womb

11:8

14:2 (and Gen 19), destruction of cities of the plain

12:2–5

25:19–35:15, story of Jacob

12:12–13

30:25–31:16, Jacob’s sheep

13:15

41:2, 18, Pharaoh’s dream

Hosea, Joel (1) Hosea and the Torah

the exodus are at 7:13; 8:4–6; 9:10; 10:9–10; 11:1–4; 12:9–10; 13:4–6. Examples of allusions to other biblical texts could easily be multiplied. For example, Hos 2:9–10 alludes to the curses of Deuteronomy 28; and Hos 4:2 all but cites the Decalogue. Hosea 9:9 looks back to the bizarre history of Judges 19–21. Most significantly, the foundational metaphor of Hosea, Israel as an adulterous wife, is founded upon the Pentateuchal depiction of apostasy as whoredom.24

Passing references to the Exodus p.29
Hosea’s critique is founded completely on the Pentateuch p.28(P texts)
have to see how Torah is used to interpret Hosea (29)
Imagery metaphors vivid imagery Israel’s love is like a morning mist (6:4)—Ephraim is as a senseless bird fluttering between Egypt and Assyria
looking for safety wandering far from God— (7:11) Hebrew wordplay (29)
Hosea, Joel (2) The Style and Imagery of Hosea

that Israel’s love is like a morning mist: it quickly disappears in the heat of the day (6:4). He can portray Ephraim as a senseless bird fluttering between Egypt and Assyria in search of a place of safety and wandering far from God (7:11). He can also describe Ephraim as a diseased, dried-up plant that bears no good fruit (9:16), a metaphor that condemns the Baal cult for failure to provide fertility in terms of both good harvests and strong children. Sometimes Hosea’s imagery turns on a Hebrew wordplay.25

Metaphors for God
metaphors for God are astonishing to the point of seeming irreverence. In addition to the traditional husband (2:2), father (11:1), and physician (14:4) images, Yahweh is also a fowler (7:1227), a lion or leopard (13:7), a bear (13:8), dew (14:5), a green tree (14:8), and even maggots or gangrene (5:1228). Employment of such language to describe God, as harsh as it is surprising, served to jolt and possibly awaken his jaded audience. (NAC29)
nation hot oven (7:4-7) full of intrigue and debauchery 7:8 dough in oven to be burned
Use of rhetorical questions:
example is 11:8: “How can I give you up, Ephraim? How can I hand you over, Israel? How can I treat you like Admah? How can I make you like Zeboiim? My heart is changed within me; all my compassion is aroused
god anthropomorphized—God at end of his rope with recalcitrant sin fulness
6:4, 8:5(29)
deliberate obscurity of Hosea—11;8 refers to destruction of the cities of the plain (not by using Sodom and Gommorah but Admah and Zeboiim cities not mentioned in Gen. 19—although linked to Sodom in Gen. 14:2(30)
riddles 12:11—ambiguous language—peculiar chronology
From the peculiar chronology at 1:1, to the partially told and heavily veiled account of Hosea’s marriage, to the final notice in 14:9, Hosea is a book that places high demands on the reader.(30)
Contradicts itself—God promises to redeem Israel then no compassion children will be slain pregnant mothers ripped open—jars reader with paradoxical pronouncements—no logical consistency—stark diverse shocjking truths forcing reader to deal with shocking impact of every word
pithy declarations not long speeches(30)
Structure—no agreement on structure—little consensus—break between 3;5 and 4:1 (30)
each scholar differs—seemingly random structure
Hosea’s rhetorical strategy “derived from 1-3” (34)
Hosea 1 births of 3 children who are
children are symbols of Israel’s future for both woe and weal. Second, Hosea describes his domestic life in two parts, the first being in the third person p 35 (chap. 1) and the second being in the first person (chap. 3). Third, the text portrays Israel as an adulterous woman who must undergo exile and deprivation but who will eventually experience restoration (chap. 2).(35)
Hosea, Joel (2) A New Proposal regarding the Structure of Hosea

In chap. 1 the accounts of the births of the three children become progressively longer. The account of first child, Jezreel, simply contains a mention of his birth and naming with an explanation of how his name represents the future punishment of Israel (1:3b–5). The story of the birth of Lo-Ruhamah includes the account of her birth, naming, and an explanation of how her name represents Israel’s doom; but it adds a reversal, a promise that God would one day restore Israel to its honored place (1:6–7). The account of Lo-Ammi’s birth is still longer. It includes all that was in Lo-Ruhamah’s birth account (birth, naming, significance of name as a sign of judgment, and reversal; 1:8–11), but it presses on to give a much more complete account of how Hosea’s family represents Israel. The first reversal in the Lo-Ammi text (1:10–11) is answered by a second, more detailed statement of restoration and reversal of judgment in 2:14–23. Between these two reversals stand a warning of punishment (2:2–4) and a prediction of a new exile as a redemptive punishment (2:6–13); 2:1 and 5 are transitional verses. Thus the Lo-Ammi oracle leads into a chiasmus:

A Restoration (1:10–11)

B Punishment (2:2–4)

B′ Punishment (2:6–13)

A′ Restoration (2:14–23).

This leads to the conclusion that chap. 2 is not an interruption but is the completion of the Lo-Ammi oracle. Drawing together all the symbolism of Hosea’s family, it asserts that the adulterous nation can be made faithful again and that Lo-Ammi, “not my people,” can again be made into the people of God. Chapter 3 then returns to Hosea’s domestic life to demonstrate in a living parable how Israel can be restored.

(35) motif of 3 children continues—number 3 key and frequent—indictment of 3 groups of people religioius leaders 4:4-10, common people 12-13a and women 13b-14. warnings to israel judah a fold call to repent
(35-36) shaped by symbolism of 3 children (4:1-7:16) predictions of woe to call to repent (6:4-7:16)
8:1-14:8 God speaks and hosea speaking (3rd person)
explanation for this phenomenon seems to be that it echoes the pattern established in chaps. 1–3, in the account of Hosea’s marriage: the first text is third person (1:2ff.) and the second is first person (3:1–5). (37) “antiphonal proclamations”
8:1-10;15
false security and prosperity of Israel nations relies on lovers foreign nations, gods and military might—fertility imagery—Israel will lose it all :allies gods and fertility
11;1-13:16 promise of restoration (1:7) atypical early promise
God not sure what to do about Israel—parent at end of rope:
God is here a perplexed parent at wit’s end, vacillating between leniency and severity toward a wicked son. Hosea, in his proclamations, responds to Yahweh’s torment over his son with two reflections on the story of Jacob as set over against the story of the children of Israel (12:1–8; 12:12–13:3). By the end of this series, Yahweh has determined and Hosea has affirmed that Israel must be severely punished (37)
5. call to repentance and grace (14:1-8)—by prophet and by God Hosea ends in hope
Structure Summary :
first, linkage is established between Yahweh and his prophet in the account of the marriage to Gomer, and the major themes of apostasy, judgment, and restoration are developed (1–3). Second, using the three children of Hosea to shape the text, the book presents a series of accusations dominated by the number three, but ends this section with a threefold call to repent; nevertheless, it asserts that at this stage repentance is impossible (4–7). Third, in three series of antiphonal proclamations, Hosea presents a distressed Yahweh torn over what to do with his people but who finally resolves upon exile as the solution; this is followed by a final, more optimistic, call to repent (8–140 (NAC37)
Historical Background:
No info about Hosea himself—name of father Beeri—no idea where he lived—education etc. however knowledge of Torah shows he was trained in Scriptures—highly intelligent was he in circles of power like Isaiah? do not know how he dies
know he married Gomer by divine command—was this his first act as a prophet? 1:2 could be a title or command description of first prophetic word commanded to marry Gomer no idea how he felt about it (22)
age when he lived known: 1:1 During reign of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz and Hezekiah—kings of Judah and during reign of Jereboam son of Jehoash king of israel. latter part of Jereboam’s reign (793-753 BC) and years following as late as (716-686 BC Hezekiah’s reign
—total career 760-710 BC—50 years(22) he saw the fall of Samariah (during Hezekiah’s reign 722 BC )(23) perhaps died in Hezekiah’s Jerusalem (no evidence)
Jereboam 2 reigned long 790-750 BC while enemies of Syria and Assyria internally conflicted capable ruler—prosperity of nation restored 2 victories recorded Amos 6:13 —domain of Israel extended to Damascus (2 Kings 14:25-26)
Signs of social trouble present lower class oppressed impoverished upper class power power and excess
political chaos ensues after Jereboam 2 lower sfter his death—anarchy approached:
almost every king of Israel died by assassination at the hands of his successor. Israel’s internal weakness, combined with the rise of an invigorated Assyria under Tiglath-pileser III (745–727 b.c.) and his successors Shalmaneser V (727–722 b.c.) and Sargon II (722–705 b.c.), sealed the fate of the Northern Kingdom.
8Zechariah son of Jerebaom 2 753 BC
assasinated by Shallum
ended dynasty of Jehu (841-814 BC)
Shahllum assasinated by Menahem (752-742BC)
most noteworthy act:a thousand talents of silver to Tiglath-pileser III (Pul) of Assyria in return for Assyria’s support for his claim to the throne (2 Kgs 15:17–22) Downward spiral of Israel follows after his reign
Pekahiah successor—also assassinated
Pekah, son of Remaliah, a high-ranking military officer, killed him after Pekahiah had held the throne for only about two years (741–739 BC.)
Pekah’s reign—20 years? 12 Kngs 15:27—scribal error? reign until 732BC he was hostile to Assyrian empire and had a rival government
formed coalition to resist Assyria—Ahaz and Jotham of Judah refused to be in it—tried to instate puppet king —replacing Ahaz with puppet king but Ahaz appealed to Tiglath -pilesar for aid and Pekah assasinatd by Hoshea son of Elah who took the crown carried on secret negotiations with Egypt to get support against Assyria—was discovered--
Shalmaneser V, invaded the land and took Hoshea captive.
Samaria held out for about two years, during which time Shalmaneser died;
but his successor, Sargon II, completed the destruction of Israel’s capital city. According to Assyrian records, 27,290 Israelite citizens were deported to Mesopotamia. (NAC 24)
No event in text correlates —
Hosea describes the volatile political situation following the death of Jeroboam II, a chaotic time in which power changed hands rapidly and self-styled kings made claims of royalty that were as hollow as they were ignored by the people (e.g., 7:3–7; 8:4; 10:3).
Probably f Hosea’s extant messages come from the last three decades of Israel’s history (NAC 24)
Message—apostasy of Israel using metaphor of unfaithful wife and symbols of 3 children— what is disctinction? Israel as wayward wife “
is the leadership, institutions, and culture of Israel. The children are the ordinary men and women who are trained and nurtured in that culture.40 Behind these two metaphors lies a story” (38)
chart Mom Israel: shrines sacrifices armies teachings priests kingsruling class who shapes exploit the people—mother israel gives people identity—forms every Israelite generation—culture
Children—common people farmers, who want crops moms who want children common folk who want blessing and prosperity—but everything has gone wrong
mother Israel has abandoned her husband yahweh—embraced new lover because he has given her jewels and clothed her in fine linens. she is seeking the protection of other nations and bounty of trade—mom has taught children to worship Baal—does’tt think she has broken marriage vows thinks she is staying true
Looking at the bulls of the shrines, she declares, “These are your gods, who brought you out of Egypt!” (cf. Exod 32:4). (39) confusion
Children have followed Mother allurements of Baalism the cult prostitute no knowledge of father Yahweh
cannot even say Yahweh is their father (40) lost generation—children of Baal no integrity, compassion, knowledge of God (deception complete)
only hope is to turn from Mother Israel” and serve Yahweh:
Hosea, Joel 6. The Message of Hosea

That is, to be true children of God they would have to abandon Mother Israel, for she is not his wife, and her children are Lo-Ammi, “Not-my-people.” But this they cannot do. She has too well instructed them in her ways, and they belong to Baal. What shall Yahweh do with a people who can neither repent, nor even understand the need for it, nor recognize that Baal is a lie, nor divorce themselves from their mother and her ways? He must strip Mother Israel of all she has. That is, the institutions of Israel must die. The shrines must burn, the crops must fail, the kings and army must perish, the priests and princes must fall into disgrace, and Mother Israel and her children must once again wander in the wilderness. When this happens, at last, they will see both the truth and the lies for what they are and return to Yahweh, Husband and Father.

God has to destroy Israel for children to see truth and return to him because they are deceived by lies—God’s megaphone of pain and suffering gets our attention
Other themes:
future kingdom of David
true nature of repentance
theology of history
message of Jesus who lamented over lost generation of Jews awhose way had been perverted by mother Israel (40)
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