Journal of Hebrew Scriptures - Volume 3 (2000-2001) - Review
Cohn, R. L., 2 Kings (Berit Olam; Collegeville, Minnesota: The Liturgical Press, 2000). Pp. xvi+186. ISBN 0-8146-5054-6. $ 34.95.
Despite its redundancy, the Second Book of Kings is
an intriguing text. Following the format of the Berit Olam Series, Robert
Cohn is presenting a final form reading of these 25 chapters. This implies that
he takes the narrative as it stands not entering into text-critical discussions
or into an analysis of the historical world around the text. Cohn presents a
coherent close reading of the text. The book aims at a general readership
including the informed layman and the trained biblical scholar. This readership
is informed about the literary qualities of 2 Kings: its narrative strategies
and its compositional qualities.
Cohn divides 2 Kings into four parts. 2 Kgs 1.1 –
8.6 form the story of Elisha; 8.7 – 13.25 are depicted as Revolutions in Aram,
Israel and Judah. Chapters 14 – 17 concentrate on Israel. They are strikingly
headed by Cohn as: ‘turmoil and tragedy’. After Ch. 17 only Judah remains:
‘renewal and catastrophe for Judah’ (18 – 15). Everyone who has read 2
Kings will understand that these divisions are not to be compared with concrete
watersheds. The four blocks are, as Cohn correctly observed, tied together by
several overlapping themes. As the story on Elisha refers back to the narratives
on Elijah in 1 Kings, they also prepare the way for the revolutions in Aram,
Israel and Judah. These relationship are for instances observed in an excursus
(pp. 91-95, where Cohn remarks that the Elisha-narratives probably were not at
home originally in the Omride-stories).
Cohn
discusses every textual unit by making remarks on features in relation to the
composition of that textual unit. Here he applies the literary model that
divides textual units into pieces that are arranged in orders that can be
depicted by the model of the traditional egg timer and its variants. 2 Kings 2,
for instance, is construed by him as follows:
A
Elijah and Elisha leave Gilgal
B
Elijah and Elisha at Beth-el
C
Elijah and Elisha at Jericho
D
Elijah and Elisha leave the sons of the prophets
and
cross the Jordan river
X
The ascent of Elijah
D’
Elijah crosses the river
And confronts the sons of the prophets
C’
Elisha at Jericho
B’
Elisha at Beth-el
A’
Elisha returns to Samaria
He discusses the separate episodes, but seldom makes
exegetical remarks on the composition as a whole, or phrased otherwise: A more
semiotic approach that accounts for the narrative programme(s) expressed by the
text is absent.
Another compositional feature that is not accounted
for by Cohn is indicated on p. 9 of his commentary. In discussing the final
lines of 2 Kgs. 1, Cohn correctly observes that an interruption between the
report of Ahaziah’s succession and the note about the date of this succession in the
chronology of the kings of Judah is marked by a long
open space within the line in the Massoretic tradition (see 2 Kgs. 1.17). He then states that the function of this open space
in not entirely clear. It seems Cohn has overlooked the pioneering work by
scholars like Oesch, de Moor and Korpel on the function of setuma and petucha
as unit delimiters within ancient manuscripts.
Within the limits of the approach, Cohn is offering
an interesting commentary. He sticks to his conviction that 2 Kings is not a
textbook on history. But, since I am raised in a comparative way of thinking, I
cannot forbear making the remark. 2 Kings is a text in history and has been read
at a specific point in history by its first readership. When discussing the last
four verses of 2 Kings, Cohn states that the day of Jehoiachin’s release
coincides with the day of the accession of a new king, Evil-Merodach, to the
throne in Babylon, and that his release should be compared with the release of
the cup-bearer in the Joseph story (Gen. 41.14). The day mentioned in 2 Kgs.
25.27 is not the day of Evil-Merodach’s accession to the throne – which was
a few months earlier. Jehoiachin’s release from prison is dated only two days
before the first New Year festival in the reign of the new king. The original
readership of 2 Kings most probably was aware of the custom – attested already
in the Ancient Near East – that such a festival was an occasion for new rulers
to grant amnesty to prisoners of all sort. This custom is presumably also in the
background of Gen. 41.
When reading his commentary, I was wondering why
Cohn made no remarks on the macrostructure of 2 Kings. My suggestion
that the book narrates the past ‘from a king fallen from grace’ to ‘a
people fallen from grace’ might be helpful when pondering the question why
Kings was divided into two books exactly at the transition to the reign of
Ahaziah.
Despite these remarks, I would nevertheless
recommend this commentary. It introduces its readers into the literary richness
of a text that too often has been reduced to merely a historical source.
Bob Becking, Faculty of Theology, Heidelberglaan 2, NL-3584 CS Utrecht, bbecking@theo.uu.nl