mark kennedy said:
What you are saying is true, the historicity of Job is essential but there is nothing emotional about it, its theological.
It's both. You are emotionally attached to a theology which requires the book of Job to be actual history. I have a different theology.
The book of Job is not ambiguous about this, For example events are described as anything other then a metaphor:
Well you have convinced me that when you throw around literary terms you are not using them according to their standard meanings. You just jumble together terms like metaphor, myth, analogy, farce as if they all meant the same thing and that same thing is "not fact, therefore false".
In fact, you asked Karl:"do you equate a myth with a metaphor?"
I hope Karl has the sense to say "no". A myth is not a metaphor. It may contain a metaphor, but so may a prosaic description of a factual occurrence. The presence of metaphor does not decide whether a text is fact or fiction.
Poetry is not a metaphor, though poetry often contains metaphors, and we expect poetry to be enriched by metaphors. But you can have sustained passages of poetry with no metaphors. That doesn't make the poetry fact.
Similes, metaphors, analogies, parables and allegories all make comparisons of some kind, but they are all different sorts of comparisons. Analogies tend to be used a lot in logical, philosophical discussion. Allegories, on the other hand, are stories in which all major characters and events are symbolic figures. In parables, the focus is on one symbolic connection and there is not necessarily a symbolic connection for other characters, objects or events in the story.
With the possible exception of allegory, all the above can be used in both factual and fictional texts.
On the other hand, there are a number of ways in which fiction can be presented: novel, poetry of various sorts, myth and legend, drama of various sorts, essay, tale, fable, and so on. One of the things you are doing is confusing figures of speech, like metaphor, which can be found in factual or fictional writing, with various genres of literary composition which are fictional.
Then, of course, we also have the common occurrence of blending historical fact and literary invention as in the historical novel or play or the poetic ode about an historical event. All of this blurs the line between straight-forward factual reportage and literary licence.
Throwing around these terms as if they had identical meanings shows either that you are ignorant of their meanings or that you simply use them as a compendium of derogatory terms.
1.Job lived in Uz had had seven sons and three daughters.
2.Job had 7,000 sheep, 3,000 camels, 500 yoke of oxen, 500 she asses...etc.
3.Job made sacrifices as an intercessory prayer for his children in case they cursed God.
4.Satan comes to the courts of heaven and God asks him about Job.
5.Satan questions Job's loyalty and is given permission to test Job's faith.
6.All of Job's substance is destroyed including his children and finally his own flesh is struck with a horrible skin disease.
This is not an appeal to or from emotional considerations these are presented as material facts and the discussions with his friends make no sense if this did not indeed happen as described.
Yes, they are presented as material facts
within the context of the story. All writers of fiction strive to maintain an illusion of reality which can include detailed descriptions of scenery, charactes, and "historical" events. Sometimes the illusion of reality is so strong some people become convinced it is reality. So one has tourists in London going to Baker Street to find the residence of Sherlock Holmes and flooding to Prince Edward Island in Canada to visit Green Gables as if Anne Shirley had been a real person instead of a character in a novel. There is no reason to be surprised at the appearance of a background of material facts in a fictional story. It's done all the time.
And indeed, these "material facts" are presented in the prologue to the story
so that the dialogues make sense. They are part of the overall structure of the story.
Agreed! They are indeed very different because one is an elaborate analogy and the other is an historical account of God's redemptive 'Acts', like Job.
Not an analogy. An allegory. There is quite a difference between these two. And just because Acts does contain history, it does not follow that it is only history.
Theologians on the other hand put a lot of stock in the historical importance of Job and Acts.
Actually they don't. They are much more interested in the theology of the writers. Like the German theologian you mention below, whether Job is actual history or not is a question that "doesn't matter" to them. Most of what I have been saying I have learned from theologians.
Here are some more references:
Was Job a real person?
Most Jews hold that Job was not a real historical figure. For instance, Rabbi
Simeon ben Laquish said that Job never existed (
Midrash Genesis Rabbah LXVII;
Talmud Bavli, Bava Batra 15a.) In this view Job was a literary creation by a prophet who used this form of writing to convey a divine message. In this view, the book was written under divine inspiration in order to teach theological truths, but was never meant to be taken as literally true in a historical sense.
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Book of Job
From this you can see that the non-literalness of Job is an idea that did not spring up with modern liberal theology, but has deep roots in rabbinic theology.
Taken from Nelson's New Illustrated Bibkle [sic] Dictionary
The book of Job is written in the form of a dramatic poem, that deals with several age old questions, among them the question of why the righteous suffer. [snip]
This prologue-body-epilogue format was often used in writings in the ancient world. The author of Job was a literary craftsman who knew how to bring words together in dramatic fashion to drive home his message. [snip]
The Book of Job teaches us to trust in God for all circumstances. When we suffer, it usually is a fruitless effort to try to understand the reasons for the difficulty. Sometimes the righteous must suffer without knowing the reason why; that is why it is important to learn to trust God in everything. [snip]
The dialogue sections of the book are written in poetry. Great truths are often expressed in such poetic language. These great truths are worth the slow, reflective reading it sometimes takes to grasp their meaning. Great art like that in this book often challenges our understanding. That is why we need to come back to it again and again.
http://www.ovrlnd.com/outlinesofbooks/Job.html
Check this link for a defence of the idea that Job may have been written not merely as a dramatic poem, but as a script for a staged drama.
http://www.intermix.org/JOB/jobtitle.htm
Historical Background of Job: The question has been raised whether Job was a historical person and all that is described in this book really happened as described. Ezekiel 14:14 and 20 mention a man named Job along with Noah and either Daniel or Danel. Whether this reference to Job speaks of the same person found in the book of Job is not known. A few Bible scholars believe that character of Job of the Book of Job was an actual historical person described in the prologue and epilogue and who spoke all the words attributed to him in the dialogues. Some Bible scholars believe all the references to Job are literary or parabolic. That is, they believe the author of Job created a character to teach spiritual lessons as Jesus did in the parables.
Most Bible scholars believe that there was a historical person named Job who is reflected in the prologue and perhaps epilogue. This man must have had some spiritual reputation for righteousness and perhaps patience as reflected in Ezekiel and James. However, most scholars believe that the author of Job composed the dialogues to show the different theological positions used in Israel to explain suffering. The final dialogue between God and Job then reflects the way the author believes a personal encounter with God will move one past logical explanations of suffering.
In fact, the message of Job is not dependent on which position a person takes regarding whether Job was a historical person or not. The book is not about Jobs history but about Jobs life and the way we relate to God as a result.
http://www.cresourcei.org/books/job.html
When you deal with any ancient artistic creation, do not suppose that it is anything against it that it grew gradually. The book of Job may have grown gradually just as Westminster Abbey grew gradually. But the people who made the old folk poetry, like the people who made Westminster Abbey, did not attach that importance to the actual date and the actual author, that importance which is entirely the creation of the almost insane individualism of modern times. [snip] The creation of the tribal epic was to some extent regarded as a tribal work, like the building of the tribal temple. Believe then, if you will, that the prologue of Job and the epilogue and the speech of Elihu are things inserted after the original work was composed. But do not suppose that such insertions have that obvious and spurious character which would belong to any insertions in a modern, individualistic book . . .
http://www.chesterton.org/gkc/theologian/job.htm
This whole commentary by G. K. Chesterton is well worth the read.
Again this is incomprehensible with regards to God's redemtive history. The historicity of Job is non-negotiable with regards to Job and it is either historically accurate or it is an elaborate myth.
Obviously it is incomprehensible and non-negotiable to YOU. It is part of YOUR theology that Job must be an accurate reportage of actual events. But as you see, this is not a position that has unanimous theological support. And btw, Job is not myth. It is a drama or dramatic poem. It does not have the literary features of myth.
our theology is reduced to metaphor and analogy
Again, the emotionally-laden term "reduced". You have not established that a non-literal theology reduces the book of Job in any way.
and this is poor science, divine science (aka theology) has rules and principles just as natural science and reasoning from analogy makes interesting stories but not systematic theology.
Systematic theology is perfectly capable of reasoning from non-literal sources. The point for systematic theology is the theological presentation of the issues, not their historicity. ps Job is not an analogy. It is a drama or dramatic poem. (except for the prose preface and epilogue).
There is a lot I haven't covered yet, but it is getting very late and I have to work tomorrow. So, I'll be back again later.