Thursday, April 18, 2024

Konrad Schmid on Abraham as a Prophet

  

Abraham as Prophet

 

This supposition can be refined with another observation. Otto Kaiser has stressed the image of Abraham as a prophet in Genesis 15.51 This is clearly recognizable in the so-called word event formula (. . . היה דבר יהוה אל. . .) in 15:1, 4a, which stems from the prophetic books, and in the stylization of Genesis 15 as a “vision” (מחזה). Note also the revelation of YHWH’s judgment plan to Abraham in 15:13–16: the flow of salvation history is announced to Abraham in advance as YHWH’s prophet (see Amos 3:7).

 

The prophetic portrayal of Abraham has long been used to conclude that the time of the writing prophets is the terminus a quo for Genesis 15(:1–6). Yet, what are the theological reasons why Genesis 15 presents Abraham as a prophet? In my opinion, they lie in the literary horizon of Genesis 15, which reaches into the prophetic corpus. It will be shown that Genesis 15 was created literarily from this horizon (especially Isaiah 7). Genesis 15 makes Abraham the first prophet of YHWH to whom, as later with the writing prophets, the entire plan of history has been revealed. The institution of prophecy is as old as Israel itself, and Israel has over and over been directed to its prophets if it wants to experience something about God’s plans with his people. (Konrad Schmid, Genesis and the Moses Story: Israel's Dual Origins in the Hebrew Bible [trans. James D. Nogalski; Siphrut: Literature and Theology of the Hebrew Scriptures 3; Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 2010], 165-66)

 

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