
Flynn Contributes To The Emerging Field Of Childhood Studies In The Hebrew Bible By Isolating Stages Of A Child's Life, And Through A Comparative Perspective, Studies The Place Of Children In The Domestic Cult And Their Relationship To The Deity In That Cult. The Study Gathers Data Relevant To Different Stages Of A Child's Life From A Plethora Of Mesopotamian Materials (prayers, Myths, Medical Texts, Rituals), And Uses That Data As An Interpretive Lens For Israelite Texts About Children At Similar Stages Such As: Pre-born Children, The Birth Stage, Breast Feeding, Adoption, Slavery, Children's Death And Burial Rituals, Childhood Delinquency. This Analysis Presses The Questions Of Value And Violence, The Importance Of The Domestic Cult For Expressing The Child's Value Beyond Economic Value, And How Children Were Valued In Cultures With High Infant Mortality Rates. From The Earliest Stages To The Moments When Children Die, And To The Children's Responsibilities In The Domestic Cult Later In Life, This Study Demonstrates That A Child Is Uniquely Wrapped Up In The Domestic Cult, And In Particular, Is Connected With The Deity. The Domestic-cultic Value Of Children Forms The Much Broader Understanding Of Children In The Ancient World, Through Which Other More Problematic Representations Can Be Tested. Throughout The Study, It Becomes Apparent That Children's Value In The Domestic Cult Is An Intentional Catalyst For The Social Promotion Of Yhwhism.
This study investigates the social and religious status of children in ancient Israel by examining their roles within the domestic cult and their relationship to the deity. Shawn W. Flynn, a scholar in biblical studies, utilizes a comparative methodology to bridge the gap between sparse Israelite textual evidence and the more abundant Mesopotamian record. By analyzing stages of childhood—from pre-birth to death—Flynn argues that the domestic cult served as a primary site for establishing the value of children beyond mere economic utility, ultimately positioning this valuation as a mechanism for the promotion of Yhwhism.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of childhood studies and biblical history recognize this work as a significant contribution to understanding the domestic religious life of ancient Israel. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the rigorous comparative approach used to interpret fragmentary biblical texts.
Page Count:
248
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191087017
ISBN-13:
9780191087011
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!