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David Observed: A King in the Eyes of His Court.


DAVID David, in the Bible
David, d. c.970 B.C., king of ancient Israel (c.1010–970 B.C.), successor of Saul. The Book of First Samuel introduces him as the youngest of eight sons who is anointed king by Samuel to replace Saul, who had been deemed a failure.
 OBSERVED: A KING IN THE EYES OF HIS COURT. By Keith Bodner. Hebrew Bible Monographs, edited by David J David J. Haskins (b. April 24, 1957, in Northampton, England) is a British alternative rock musician. He was the bassist for the seminal gothic rock band Bauhaus. Life and work . A. Clines. Sheffield, UK: Sheffield Phoenix Press, 2005.

This book begins with David's first named appearance in 1 Samuel 16 and ends with 1 Kings 2, the chapter in which he dies. It does not cover everything in between but does explore closely several pivotal incidents and characters involved in David's life. It will be helpful for anyone studying or teaching in this area; throughout his work Bodner offers a good sampling of scholarly thought on the text, providing extensive quotations and a lengthy bibliography. He makes use of literary critic Noun 1. literary critic - a critic of literature
critic - a person who is professionally engaged in the analysis and interpretation of works of art
 Mikhail Bakhtin's concept of pseudo-objective motivation, Pamela Reis' analysis of 1 Samuel 21, and J. L. Austin's speech-act theory of language in addition to doing a good bit of constructive textual criticism textual criticism
n.
1. The study of manuscripts or printings to determine the original or most authoritative form of a text, especially of a piece of literature.

2.
. Bodner adds humor humor, according to ancient theory, any of four bodily fluids that determined man's health and temperament. Hippocrates postulated that an imbalance among the humors (blood, phlegm, black bile, and yellow bile) resulted in pain and disease, and that good health was  to the mix (his chapter on Abner's murder in 2 Samuel 3, in which Abner angrily asks if he is "a dog's head in Judah," has sections entitled en·ti·tle  
tr.v. en·ti·tled, en·ti·tling, en·ti·tles
1. To give a name or title to.

2. To furnish with a right or claim to something:
 "The Unleashing of Abner in the House of Saul," "Who Let the Dog Out," and "Reservoir Dogs").

Bodner's first topic is David's oldest brother Eliab, who appears in two scenes and has one speech. He may not seem worth the fourteen pages Bodner spends, but by the time he's through you'll believe that this apparently minor character serves a major function: before the fight with Goliath, Eliab tells his little brother "I know your presumption and the evil of your heart" (1 Sam 17:), the first time David's intentions and the nature of his heart--crucial throughout the entire book of Samuel--are questioned.

We are given a similarly detailed analysis of 1 Samuel 21-2 concerning the interactions among David, Ahitophel, Doeg the Edomite Doeg the Edomite

dispatches priests of Nob under Saul’s order. [O.T.: I Samuel 22:18–19]

See : Execution
, and Saul. It is Bodner's contention (following Reis) that Ahitophel is one of David's many allies and that he chooses to save David rather than himself.

The complications surrounding Abner's murder have always been my favorite My Favorite is an independent synthpop band from Long Island, New York. They released two CDs: Love at Absolute Zero and Happiest Days of Our Lives. My Favorite broke up on September 14, 2005, when singer Andrea Vaughn left the band.  part of 2 Samuel and Bodner offers a careful analysis of the text, including the politics in Israel and Judah, Joab's negative assessment of his king's understanding of Abner's threat and his probable multiple motives in the killing, and David's complicated public mourning for a man he never cared for.

I found his chapter on Nathan particularly interesting. Bodner analyzes the three scenes in which Nathan appears (2 Samuel 7 and 12; 1 Kings 1) and presents him as a careful speaker who knows how to create a fiction that will elicit e·lic·it  
tr.v. e·lic·it·ed, e·lic·it·ing, e·lic·its
1.
a. To bring or draw out (something latent); educe.

b. To arrive at (a truth, for example) by logic.

2.
 the desired response Bodner sees this in the story of the lamb in 2 Samuel 12 and of David's "oath to Bathsheba" in 1 Kings.

Four chapters are given to analyses of 2 Samuel 11: the first looks at the ambiguity in (and textual variants of) its first verse, the second deals with the 4QSam identification in 11:3 of Uriah as "the armor-bearer of Joab," the third presents Joab as a reader-response critic changing David's orders about how to kill Uriah in order to make them more practical, and the fourth looks at the different presentations of Joab's messenger to David in MT and LXX. (There is also a chapter on Ahitophel's reaction to what happens here.) These chapters are all interesting, particularly the third one dealing with Joab's relationship with David, but I was disappointed that in 46 pages of text dealing with 2 Samuel 11 he did not deal with Bathsheba's experience: was this an affair? Was it rape? He asks on p. 87 if she were "in any degree complicit com·plic·it  
adj.
Associated with or participating in a questionable act or a crime; having complicity: newspapers complicit with the propaganda arm of a dictatorship.
 in the matter" but does not follow that up. He does later illuminatingly compare her role in 1 Kings 1 to Rebekah's in Genesis 25 and provides a helpful analysis of her part (along with others) in the oaths--genuine or not--in 1 Kings 1-2, but the controversial way in which she became part of David's household is not a topic.

This book offers several different approaches to the texts in question and resolves the complicated issues of textual variants, complex characters, and the nature of the narrative itself in interesting and helpful ways.

Carol Stuart Grizzard

Pikeville College Pikeville College is a small private college located in Pikeville, Kentucky. It has about 1000 students.

The college was founded in 1889 by the Presbyterian Church as the Pikeville College Institute.
 

Pikeville, KY 41501
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Author:Grizzard, Carol Stuart
Publication:Biblical Theology Bulletin
Article Type:Book review
Date:Dec 22, 2006
Words:699
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