Zion, City of Our God.

AuthorKaminsky, Joel S.
PositionReview

Zion, City of Our God. Edited by RICHARD S. HESS and GORDON J. WENHAM. Grand Rapids, Mich.: WILLIAM B. EERDMANS PUBLISHING COMPANY, 1999. Pp. x + 206. $22 (paper).

This recent anthology, which "grew out of a special meeting of the Tyndale Fellowship Old Testament Study group held in Cambridge in 1996" (p. ix), is a collection of eight loosely connected essays reflecting on the city of Jerusalem in the historical and religious imagination of ancient Israel. It includes a study by Richard Hess on the textual and historical problems surrounding Sennacherib's invasion, an examination by John Monson of the ways archaeological evidence sheds light on the religious and political centrality of the Jerusalem temple, several contributions dealing with images of Zion or Jerusalem in various biblical books--including one on the "Psalms of Ascent" by Philip Satterthwaite, an article by Knut Heim on Lamentations, one on Ezekiel by Thomas Renz, two contributions on Chronicles--one by Martin Selman and one by Gary Knoppers, and concludes with a piece by Rebecca Doyle on Jerusalem's Molek cult.

While all of the essays make serious contributions to the field of biblical scholarship, they do vary in quality. Some, like Gary Knoppers' "Jerusalem at War in Chronicles," truly break new ground. Knoppers calls into question the continued endorsement by many scholars of von Rad's view that the battle accounts throughout Chronicles are strongly spiritualized, and puts forward a highly nuanced reading of the various types of war imagery in Chronicles. Others, such as Richard Hess' "Hezekiab and Sennacherib in 2 Kings 18-20" and Rebecca Doyle's "Molek of Jerusalem?" are...

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