The Deity in the Definite Article: laššāwʼ and related terms for Baʻal in Jeremiah

The general consensus is that the abstract noun šāwʼ (שׁוא) in the HB/OT, with the basic meaning of worthlessness, inefficacy, deceit, emptiness, falsehood, lie, could refer either to these qualities in general (typically translated in the English as “in vain”), or could refer to anti-Yahweh idolatr...

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Main Author: C Wynand Retief
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: OTSSA 2020-10-01
Series:Old Testament Essays
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ote-journal.otwsa-otssa.org.za/index.php/journal/article/view/363
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spelling doaj-abb3dc1af7d74553a8b316ab586b87092020-12-30T14:47:15ZafrOTSSAOld Testament Essays1010-99192312-36212020-10-01332323347https://doi.org/10.17159/2312-3621/2020/v33n2a10The Deity in the Definite Article: laššāwʼ and related terms for Baʻal in JeremiahC Wynand Retief0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6872-314XUniversity of the Free StateThe general consensus is that the abstract noun šāwʼ (שׁוא) in the HB/OT, with the basic meaning of worthlessness, inefficacy, deceit, emptiness, falsehood, lie, could refer either to these qualities in general (typically translated in the English as “in vain”), or could refer to anti-Yahweh idolatry. The choice has been rather arbitrary and inconsistent, relying on the reader’s view of what the text would want to convey. This study builds on the assumption that the definiteness of the noun determines its semantic value, and should be a major factor in determining the general versus polemic meaning of šāwʼ (שׁוא), although this grammatico-semantic distinction is unaccounted for in standard lexicons and most commentaries. The study limits itself to the book of Jeremiah, where šāwʼ only appears in its definite form, as laššāwʼ. Remarkably three other similarly defined nouns are located in the same text blocks in Jeremiah, namely haššeqer, habbošet and hahebel (mostly with prefixed prepositions). The fact that they all have indefinite counterparts in Jeremiah, strengthens the argument that the presence or absence of the definite article is not arbitrary, but noteworthy and meaningful. The fact that these four determined nouns (haššāwʼ, haššeqer, habbošet and hahebel) all function in the same broader text in Jeremiah, with the deity Baʻal also mentioned consistently and exclusively in the definite form (mostly singular habbaʻal, rarely plural habbeʻalîm) leads to the hypothesis that the defined nouns under discussion are all references to Baʻal, with a suggested rhetorical function of disparagement of the deity. The plausibility of the hypothesis is tested in this particular study by means of an exegetical exercise which zooms in on the interface of the nouns under discussion in a selected range of texts. The exegetical approach is obviously launched from the mentioned theoretical stance, seeking to discover features of the text that support interpretation in line with the hypothesis.https://ote-journal.otwsa-otssa.org.za/index.php/journal/article/view/363jeremiahbaalexegesis
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author C Wynand Retief
spellingShingle C Wynand Retief
The Deity in the Definite Article: laššāwʼ and related terms for Baʻal in Jeremiah
Old Testament Essays
jeremiah
baal
exegesis
author_facet C Wynand Retief
author_sort C Wynand Retief
title The Deity in the Definite Article: laššāwʼ and related terms for Baʻal in Jeremiah
title_short The Deity in the Definite Article: laššāwʼ and related terms for Baʻal in Jeremiah
title_full The Deity in the Definite Article: laššāwʼ and related terms for Baʻal in Jeremiah
title_fullStr The Deity in the Definite Article: laššāwʼ and related terms for Baʻal in Jeremiah
title_full_unstemmed The Deity in the Definite Article: laššāwʼ and related terms for Baʻal in Jeremiah
title_sort deity in the definite article: laššāwʼ and related terms for baʻal in jeremiah
publisher OTSSA
series Old Testament Essays
issn 1010-9919
2312-3621
publishDate 2020-10-01
description The general consensus is that the abstract noun šāwʼ (שׁוא) in the HB/OT, with the basic meaning of worthlessness, inefficacy, deceit, emptiness, falsehood, lie, could refer either to these qualities in general (typically translated in the English as “in vain”), or could refer to anti-Yahweh idolatry. The choice has been rather arbitrary and inconsistent, relying on the reader’s view of what the text would want to convey. This study builds on the assumption that the definiteness of the noun determines its semantic value, and should be a major factor in determining the general versus polemic meaning of šāwʼ (שׁוא), although this grammatico-semantic distinction is unaccounted for in standard lexicons and most commentaries. The study limits itself to the book of Jeremiah, where šāwʼ only appears in its definite form, as laššāwʼ. Remarkably three other similarly defined nouns are located in the same text blocks in Jeremiah, namely haššeqer, habbošet and hahebel (mostly with prefixed prepositions). The fact that they all have indefinite counterparts in Jeremiah, strengthens the argument that the presence or absence of the definite article is not arbitrary, but noteworthy and meaningful. The fact that these four determined nouns (haššāwʼ, haššeqer, habbošet and hahebel) all function in the same broader text in Jeremiah, with the deity Baʻal also mentioned consistently and exclusively in the definite form (mostly singular habbaʻal, rarely plural habbeʻalîm) leads to the hypothesis that the defined nouns under discussion are all references to Baʻal, with a suggested rhetorical function of disparagement of the deity. The plausibility of the hypothesis is tested in this particular study by means of an exegetical exercise which zooms in on the interface of the nouns under discussion in a selected range of texts. The exegetical approach is obviously launched from the mentioned theoretical stance, seeking to discover features of the text that support interpretation in line with the hypothesis.
topic jeremiah
baal
exegesis
url https://ote-journal.otwsa-otssa.org.za/index.php/journal/article/view/363
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