The Psalms of Solomon and the New Testament: Intertextuality and the Need for a Re-evaluation

Full title
The Psalms of Solomon and the New Testament: Intertextuality and the Need for a Re-evaluation
Updated By
Research notes

Reader Checked|19/06/2013 SE

Reference type
Author(s)
Embry, Brad
Year
2002
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Journal for the Study of the Pseudepigrapha
Volume
13
Issue / Series Volume
2
Pages
99-136
Alternative title
JSP
Label
06/03/2006
Abstract

The Jewish Pseudepigraphic work Psalms of Solomon (Pss. Sol.), which contains one of the first examples of the phrase 'Lord's Anointed' outside the New Testament, is commonly used in christological discussions centering on Christ's self-perception. Often Pss. Sol.'s 'Christology' is misinterpreted by New Testament scholarship, which anachronistically colors the messianic motif in Pss. Sol. with New Testament categories. Pseudepigrapha specialists, moreover, contribute to the problem by suggesting that the document is something of an ad hoc composition. As a result, the messianic motif in the document is detached from the rest of the document. This article argues that, in fact, the document presents a cohesive thesis, and that the messianic motif functions in a particular role within that thesis. As such, it is suggested that the messianic motif in Pss. Sol. is comprehensible only within the purview of this central thesis.