Andrew E. Arterbury - William H. Bellinger, «“Returning” to the Hospitality of the
Lord. A Reconsideration of Psalm 23,5-6», Vol. 86 (2005) 387-395
The image of God as host in Ps 23,5-6 is best interpreted in light of the ancient
custom of hospitality. The subsequent interpretation then emboldens us to
translate Ps 23,6 more literally as “I shall return to the house of the Lord” rather
than “I shall dwell in the house of the Lord”.
Source of Law in the Biblical
and Mesopotamian Law Collections
Numerous scholarly studies have compared biblical and cuneiform
laws, and noted the many similarities between them. I wish to take a
somewhat different approach here, and emphasize what I think is the
fundamental difference between the two types of laws. I acknowledge
scholarly assumptions that though there were external influences on
Israelite law, its uniqueness consists of the changes effected for the
purpose of adapting it to its particular theology (1). The pivotal factor
in this uniqueness is, in my opinion, the perceived source of the law.
Biblical law is perceived to be of divine source. Cuneiform law, in
contrast, has its source in the king.
This distinction entails several consequences. The source of law
affects what is classified as an offence, and how and by whom the
offence is to be redressed. In biblical law, some offences disrupt the
divine order; in cuneiform law an offence affects public order.
Consequently, redress in biblical law is often primarily concerned with
punishing the perpetrator; in cuneiform law, it is generally concerned
with compensating the injured party. Biblical law admits of no change
nor commutation of punishment; cuneiform law not only reflects
changes, but allows punishment to be deferred or delegated.
1. Methodology
I will not be limiting my biblical examples to the Book of the
Covenant. I have frozen my analysis in a different moment of time
than most scholars — that is, after the compilation of the assumed later
books of the Pentateuch. Questions about the priority of the laws of the
different books and their interrelation have been raised by various
scholars (2). In general, however, these books represent the further
(1) See, e.g. S.M. PAUL, Studies in the Book of the Covenant in the Light of
Cuneiform and Biblical Law (VTS 18; Leiden 1970), as well as the works of J.J.
Finkelstein and others, particularly with respect to the laws of the goring ox.
(2) See, e.g., A. FITZPATRICK-MCKINLEY, The Transformation of Torah from
Scribal Advice to Law (Sheffield 1999) 176-177. Cf R.H. PFEIFFER, Introduction
to the Old Testament (New York – London 1941) 216; J. VAN SETERS, “Cultic
Laws in the Covenant Code and their Relationship to Deuteronomy and the Holi-