The praise of God and his name as the core of the Second Temple liturgy

Updated by: 
Michal Drori Elmalem
Research notes: 
MDE/reader Checked/29/11/2015
Reference type: 
Journal Article
Author(s): 
Pajunen, Mika S.
year: 
2015
Full title: 

The praise of God and his name as the core of the Second Temple liturgy

Journal / Book Title || Series Title: 
Zeitschrift für die Alttestamentliche Wissenschaft
Volume: 
127
Issue / Series Volume: 
3
Pages: 
475-488
Work type: 
Essay/Monograph
Abstract: 

Praise of God has always been understood by scholars as a primary element of the liturgical life of the Second Temple period. Form-critics have situated the praises of God in the liturgical practice of the period most of all by analyzing the Psalms now in the MT Psalter. However, at least in the late Second Temple period the role of laments seems to be marginal. Thus far a link has been missing in scholarship between this centrality of praise perceivable in the liturgical practice of the Hellenistic period and the all-encompassing nature of praise in the texts of the Qumran movement from the first century BCE. This is a link that may in part explain why prayer, or during this time more properly praise, came to be seen in early Judaism as an obligation towards God. This question is explored by investigating how the Second Temple liturgy is in many texts from the second century BCE given an explicit basis in the creation, and how such traditions in turn served an important function in the composition of new liturgical texts.

Label: 
30/11/2015
Record number: 
100 957