Wednesday, June 5, 2024

David A. Burnett on the “Gods” of Psalm 82 being Heavenly Beings, not Human Judges

  

In Ps 81[82]:1, the figure identified as “God” ( אלהים MT, θεὸς LXX) judges (διακρίνει) the celestial gods (θεοὺς) of the divine council because they have judged “unjustly” (ἀδικίαν), failing in their intended role in which the celestial rulers (Deut 4:19; 32:8–9) were to exercise their rule “in law and justice” (δίκην καὶ νόμον, e.g. Philo, Spec. 1.13–19). Because of this, the immortal gods will “die like men” (ἄνθρωποι) and will fall like one the “rulers” (ἀρχόντων, Ps 81[82]:7; cf. the celestial bodies of Deut 4:19 in Philo, Spec. 1.13–19). The psalmist closes the psalm with a plea, “arise, oh God” (ἀνάστα, ὁ θεός), which, for the author, is intended to result in the “judgment of the earth” (κρῖνον τὴν γῆν) and to inherit the nations that were once apparently oppressively ruled by the gods/rulers (κατακληρονομήσεις ἐν πᾶσιν τοῖς ἔθνεσιν, cf. Deut 32:8–9). Hence, for Ps 81[82], the ultimate eschatological event within the context of the Deuteronomic vision of the cosmos consists of three things: (1) the “arising of God” (ἀνάστα, ὁ θεός); (2) the destruction of the gods or rulers (θεοὺς, ἀρχόντων); and (3) divine judgment and inheritance: “God” is called upon to “judge the earth” and “inherit the nations.” (David A. Burnett, "A Neglected Deuteronomic Scriptural Matrix for the Nature of the Resurrection Body in 1 Corinthians 15:39-42," in Scripture, Texts, and Tracing in 1 Corinthians, ed. Linda L. Belleville and B. J. Oropeza [The Scripture and Paul Series; Lanham, Md.: Lexington Books, 2019], 194)

 

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