SJOT on the Messiah Figure of the Old Testament

From the SJOT:

The Messiah Epithet in the Hebrew Bible
By Thomas L. Thompson
Scandinavian Journal of the Old Testament, Volume 15, Issue 1 June 2001 , pages 57 - 82

Abstract
Rather than a reference ‘’to a present, political and religious leader who is appointed by God, applied predominantly to a king, but also to a priest and occasionally a prophet’’ as proposed in 1985 by the first Princeton Symposium of Judaism and Christian origins, the term ‘MSH’ in the Hebrew Bible is an epithet or title which functions within a literary and mythic but not an historical context. The role of the messiah as played in the Hebrew Bible is not uniquely Jewish, but functions within the symbol system of ancient Near Eastern royal ideology and functions within a theology of divine transcendence and immanence. The coherence of the mythic role of the messiah is identified in relation to concepts of messianic time, as in the functions of expiating and mediating transcendence, of maintaining creation through war against the powers of chaos and the establishment of eternal peace. David’s role as messiah in the Psalter is described in his role as ideal representative of piety, and as ruler over destiny bringing the good news expressed in various forms of ‘’the poor man’s song.’’ Finally, the role of the messiah myth is integrated with utopian concepts of a new Israel.
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Posted by Nathan Bierma on 02/08 at 11:47 AM

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