The Poetics of Angelic Discourse: Revelation 2–3 and the Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice

Full title
The Poetics of Angelic Discourse: Revelation 2–3 and the Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice
Updated By
Research notes

SHS/not checked/02/09/2018

Reference type
Author(s)
Mizrahi, Noam
Year
2018
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Journal for the Study of the New Testament
Volume
41
Issue / Series Volume
1
Abbreviated Series Name
JSNT
Pages
107-123
Work type
Label
08/10/2018
Abstract

Revelation extensively employs the number seven not only as a symbolic figure, but also as a structural principle for constructing sevenfold literary units, and yet some specific aspects of this literary hallmark remain obscure. Among other things, no satisfactory rationale has been found, so far, for the series of proclamations to seven churches of Asia Minor that comprise the literary unit of Rev. 2–3. This mystery, however, can be illuminated (at least to some degree) by reading Revelation against the background of poetic traditions of the Second Temple period. Analysis of a poem included in the Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice – a liturgical composition whose fragmentary copies were discovered among the Dead Sea Scrolls – prompts a new solution to the questions posed by Rev. 2–3. At the same time, the comparison also sheds light on some literary peculiarities of the Songs.