Theodicy in Habakkuk
By Grace Ko
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About this ebook
COMMENDATION
"Theodicy in Habakkuk is a welcome addition to the interpretation of the prophetic message of Habakkuk. This sensible, clearly written book deserves the attention of all serious Old Testament scholars and students."
- J. Glen Taylor, Wycliffe College, University of Toronto, Canada
Grace Ko
Grace Ko was a pharmacist-owner until 1998. Responding to God's call and a desire to pursue theological education, she enrolled and received a master's degree from Tyndale Seminary in Old Testament. She then did her doctoral studies at Wycliffe College in the University of Toronto, and obtained her Ph.D. in Theology from the University of St Michael's College in 2009. Apart from teaching at Tyndale Seminary and Canadian Chinese School of Theology at Tyndale Seminary, Professor Ko has preached and taught at different churches. She is also an adjunct lecturer at Canadian Chinese School of Theology at Ambrose Seminary.
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Theodicy in Habakkuk - Grace Ko
CHAPTER 1
Introduction
The book of Habakkuk is unique among the prophetic books in many ways. Not only does it differ from the other books in form and style,1 but more importantly, it differs in content as well. It does not contain the usual prophetic disputation against the people of Israel in order to pronounce Yahweh’s judgment as just and righteous. It does not call for repentance nor does it allow room for people to change their heart and return to the Lord. Rather, Habakkuk questions Yahweh’s justice. It laments God’s inactivity to punish in the face of injustice and looks for God’s action to save and to put things right (1:2-4). But when Yahweh announces that he is raising up the Chaldeans against Israel (1:5-11), Habakkuk challenges Yahweh’s decision, and is angered by God’s apparent bad judgment in his choice of agent (1:12-17). Thus Habakkuk struggles with the issue of theodicy,2 stands on the side of the Israelites,3 and accuses Yahweh of his complicity in allowing Chaldean depredations.
4
The problem created by the issue of theodicy is acute for Habakkuk, as the apparent inactivity of God clashes with the traditional understanding of God’s attributes.5 First, Habakkuk does not accept the traditional prophetic resolution of the issue by laying blame on Israel’s sin,6 even though he is fully aware of the wickedness in Israel’s society.7 Secondly, he refuses to accept Yahweh’s appointment of foreign invaders as righteous punishment. In fact, the divine response in 1:5-11 that he is raising up Chaldeans further infuriates Habakkuk to a point that he openly questions Yahweh’s character: Your eyes are too pure to behold evil, and you cannot look on wrongdoing; why do you look on the treacherous, and are silent when the wicked swallow those more righteous than they?
(1:13).8 This bold accusation of divine injustice has a huge implication, especially when it is made by someone who is a prophet, a called messenger of God. David W. Baker comments that the prophet was supposed to urge the people to return to the covenant when they strayed from it, but instead Habakkuk was calling God into account when his actions did not seem to correspond to those demanded by the covenant.
9 Crenshaw suggests that this illustrates the confusion resulting from continued belief in Yahweh’s justice regardless of the evidence undercutting such conviction.
10
Survey of scholarship on the study of the Book of Habakkuk
For a book that contains only three short chapters, Habakkuk has certainly generated a disproportionate amount of scholarly works. Peter Jöcken surveyed the work of more than three hundred scholars on the book of Habakkuk between 1820 and 1977.11 Indeed, Rex Mason describes questions raised by the book of Habakkuk as a minefield for critical study.
12 Historical questions, in a large part, relate to the identities of the wicked
and the righteous
in 1:4, 13; and 2:4. Researchers ask questions such as:13 Who are the wicked
and the righteous
? Do these terms refer to the same groups mentioned in all the passages above, or do they refer to different groups in different contexts? Are the wicked
internal oppressors within Judean society or are they foreign oppressors?14 What is the historical setting of the book and of the prophet?15 Other questions concerning the composition of the book include: Are there any redactional layers discernible in the book?16 Is the psalm in chapter 3 an integral part of the whole book or a later addition?17 How are the different sections of the book related to each other? What is the genre of the book?
Historical issues: identification of the historical players and the dating of the book
To understand the issue at hand, a brief description of the content of the book of Habakkuk is in order. The book begins with a superscription (1:1). It is immediately followed by Habakkuk’s initial complaint of violence (1:2-4). A response, presumably from Yahweh, states that he is the one who raises Chaldeans (1:5-11).18 Then comes the prophet’s second complaint about God’s choice of agent (1:12-17).19 The second chapter begins with a narration by the prophet describing how he waits for God’s response to his second complaint (2:1). Yahweh answers him by commanding him to write down the vision (2:2-5). Then a list of five woe oracles is pronounced (2:6-20).20 The third chapter starts with a separate superscription and musical notation (3:1). The hymn which describes the theophany (3:3-15) is framed by the lament (I-speeches) from the prophet (3:2, and 16-19).
Even after a century of research, the identification of the wicked
and the righteous
remains a contentious issue; no clear consensus seems to be in sight.21 Some scholars argue that the wicked
in the book refers to the same group of people throughout the book. Earlier scholars identified various foreign invaders with the wicked. The list includes: Assyria; Egypt; the Greeks and Macedonians under Alexander; and even Nicanor.22 Since Chaldeans
are mentioned in 1:6 and later identified as the wicked
who swallow the righteous
(1:13), most scholars think that the wicked
most likely refers to the Babylonians. But by identifying the wicked
with the same group in both 1:4 (Habakkuk’s initial complaint) and 1:13 (Habakkuk’s second complaint after God’s response) raises difficulties, for Habakkuk would not have any objections to God punishing the foreign oppressors. Moreover, if the wicked
in 1:4 were the same group of foreigners in 1:13, then Yahweh’s answer in 1:5 becomes illogical or out of place, for this would not be a surprise to the prophet if he was complaining about them.
More recent scholars, such as Marshall D. Johnson, Michael H. Floyd, David Cleaver-Bartholomew, and Gert T.M. Prinsloo, try to solve the literary issues by proposing that the first chapter is not a dialogue between Yahweh and the prophet, but rather Habakkuk’s complaint. Johnson proposes that 1:5-11 does not portray the Chaldeans as an answer to the issue raised in 1:2-4, but rather as a heightened complaint.23 Floyd argues that the vision is in 1:5-11, which is the cause of the prophet’s complaint in 1:2-4.24 Cleaver-Bartholomew holds a similar view, with the following chronology: (1) Yahweh’s initial revelation (1:5-11), (2) Habakkuk’s complaint (1:2-4, 12-17), (3) Habakkuk seeks further clarification (2:1), and (4) Yahweh’s response (2:2-20).25 Prinsloo applies the principles of unit delimitation on the first chapter of Habakkuk and argues that this should be read as a single pericope, and thus it should be a continuous lament rather than a dialogue. He interprets 1:5-11 as Habakkuk’s recalling Yahweh’s inexplicable deed, rather than Yahweh’s response to the prophet’s complaint in 1:2-4.26 The weakness of this view is that the chronological order of the text has to be rearranged to fit the interpreter’s conjecture. One would question the validity of this practice, for the text makes sense as it stands, and it gives no literary clues that 1:5-11 is antecedent to 1:1-4.
While he thinks that it is best to interpret the wicked
as referring to the Babylonians throughout the book, Marvin A. Sweeney does not agree with the view that 1:2-17 is a complaint rather than a dialogue between Yahweh and the prophet.), both stating the purpose of the Chaldeans’ establishment.
On the other hand, Robert D. Haak identifies the wicked to be from within Judean society in both 1:4 and 1:13. After an extensive historical-critical analysis, he argues that the wicked are to be identified with Jehoiakim and his pro-Egyptian team, while the righteous are to be identified with Jehoahaz, who was deposed by Pharaoh Necho II, and those who hope for the restoration of Jehoahaz.30 Most scholars, however, do not identify the wicked and the righteous with the royal figures. Furthermore his insistence on portraying Habakkuk to be a staunchly pro-Babylonian prophet seems to contradict the tone of the text, which has a negative view of the Chaldeans. Also, while the woe oracles in 2:6-19 may have elements similar to Jeremiah’s woe oracle against Jehoiakim in Jer 22:13-19, it is doubtful that these oracles are directed against Jehoiakim in their present context, especially in verses 2:5, 8, where peoples
and nations
are mentioned as the victims of oppression caused by the wicked.
Haak attempts to solve this problem by stating that the references are not to Jehoiakim but rather to the Egyptians.
31 The problem with this view is that there is no mention of Egypt in the text. To address the issue that some oracles are similar to the ones pronounced against Jehoiakim by Jeremiah, William L. Holladay proposes that there are two recensions, one addressed to Jehoiakim, which included 2:5a, 6-7, 10abβ, 11, and 12; and the other addressed to Nebuchadrezzar, which added 2:5bβγδ, 8, 10bα, and 13-20.32 Brevard S. Childs sees the woe oracles in 2:6-19 as a reshaping of earlier traditional material to apply it against the Babylonians.33
Georg Fohrer identifies two separate foreign powers as the wicked mentioned in different passages in the book: the Assyrians in 1:4 and the Babylonians in 1:13. He postulates that Habakkuk is announcing that Assyrian rule, under which Judah suffered along with other nations, is about to be destroyed by the Babylonians, acting as Yahweh’s instrument.
34 The obvious weakness of this argument is that it is inconceivable that Habakkuk would have any difficulty over the downfall of Assyria, and that he would have called the Assyrian more righteous than the Babylonian (1:13). The prophet’s reaction makes sense only if the righteous in 1:13 is Israel considered as a whole and the wicked are the Babylonians sent by God.35
The majority of scholars hold the traditional view, which argues that the wicked
in 1:4 and in 1:13 are two different groups: the former are those from within Judean society, while the latter are identified with the Chaldeans. This view has a long history. It is interesting to note that the earliest interpretation to identify the wicked
as those within Judean society may have been the Qumran sectarians who identified the wicked
as the Hasmonean priests. The Pesher of Habakkuk states, Its prophetic meaning is that the ‘wicked’ is the Wicked Priest, the ‘righteous’ is the Righteous Teacher.
36 But this view is not without difficulties. As its critics hold, if Babylonians are being sent by God to punish Israel, why would the latter be described as more righteous
than the former (1:13);37 and why did the prophet complain about the judgment when it was him who asked for divine justice in the first place (1:1-4)?38 As early as 1925, W.W. Cannon tried to answer these challenges by suggesting that the prophet’s thought developed as events happened and that the oracles in the book of Habakkuk were not all written at the same time.39 In other words, the prophet made his initial complaint to the Lord when he saw injustice in Judean society. But after he saw the rise of the Chaldean empire and its ruthlessness, he worried for Judah and made a second complaint. J.J.M. Roberts seems to follow the same argument: after analyzing the evidence from the text and the historical situation, he states that the individual oracles that make up this compositional whole were originally given at widely separated times in the prophet’s ministry.
40
) are juxtaposed, the wicked
are Israelites unless otherwise stated (e.g. Exod 23:1-9; Isa 5:7-15; and I would add Micah 3:9).41 Indeed, as suggested by Richard D. Patterson, to identify two different groups of the wicked—that 1:2-4 refers to the Judean citizens and 1:13-17 refers to the Babylonians—is the simplest way of understanding the text and would pose the least literary difficulties.42
Closely associated with the issues of the identification of the wicked and the righteous is the issue with regard to the dating of the book. The proposed dates range from the ninth century BCE, according to an early Jewish rabbinic tradition that speculated that Habakkuk was the son of the Shunammite woman who lived in the reign of King Jehoram of Israel (2 Kgs 4:16), to the Maccabean period, according to Paul Haupt who identifies the wicked to be Nicanor.43 Most scholars take the mention of Chaldeans in Hab 1:6 seriously as a clear historical clue for a date.
Earlier scholars such as Bernhard Duhm, followed by C.C. Torrey, tried to argue for a fourth century date by emending Kasdîm to Kittîm, a term used to designate Cypriots or Greeks in general.44 This view was refuted when the Qumran text of the Habakkuk scroll actually reads Kasdā’îm ) while the pesher (1QpHab), which reflects a later situation contemporary with the Qumran community, interprets it as Kittî’îm ).45
Fohrer, following his identification of Assyrians as the wicked
mentioned in 1:4, dates the book after 626 BCE, when the Chaldeans arrived on the historical scene after the successful revolt of Nabopolassar, and before the fall of the Assyrian Empire in 612. He points out that Habakkuk must have appeared before 622, just a little later than Nahum.46
For those scholars who take the wicked
in 1:4 as referring to people within Judean society, there are three proposals for the period. Patterson supports the Jewish tradition47 that Habbakuk was active during the reign of Manasseh (698-642 BCE), when the Judean apostasy was at its worst, and the prophetic words of the rising of the Chaldeans would require the most prophetic foresight.48 C.H. Bullock sees the early days of Josiah’s reign between 641-627 BCE as the most appropriate date for the book, when the Judean sins enumerated in 1:2-4 were in evidence and the prophecy of the Chaldean power would come as a surprise to the people.49
Although there is still a wide range of opinions as to the dating of the book, most scholars now regard the reign of King Jehoiakim (609-598 BCE) as the most likely period for the ministry of prophet Habakkuk.50 Roberts argues that God’s announcement (1:5-6) could only be a surprise to the Judean audience if the prophecy was made before the Chaldeans defeated the Egyptians at Carchemish in 605 BCE. However, Habakkuk’s description of the Chaldeans in 1:11-17 and the nation’s characterization as oppressor in 2:6-19 presuppose a much longer experience of Babylonian rule over Judah, probably after Nebuchadnezzar’s first invasion of Jerusalem in 597 BCE. Hence he proposes some of Habakkuk’s oracles date from before 605 and others from after 597 BCE.51 Holladay, developing Robert’s analysis, suggests plausible historical contexts for Habakkuk’s prophecy in four steps from 605 to 594: The prophet is bewildered by Judean injustice (1:2-4); God responds that the Chaldeans will be a chosen instrument for punishment (1:5-11). The prophet further complains that the Chaldeans are themselves heartless (1:12-17); then God assures him of divine sovereignty and control so that the Chaldeans will ultimately fall (ch. 2), and offers a vision of God’s march into the Promised Land (ch. 3).52 Some scholars such as Mason are more cautious and are content with a date in the last part of the seventh century.53 C.E. Armerding finds it best to see the dialogue in the book as Habakkuk’s spiritual struggles over a long period of time, possibly beginning as early as 626 and continuing as late as 590 or after.
54 Waylon Bailey agrees with the date under the reign of Jehoiakim, but suggests that a broader time span is possible.55 James Bruckner thinks that each section of Habakkuk is best understood in its specific historical context, and that the subject matter of the book covers sixty-six years from 605 to 539 BCE.56
In my opinion, if one takes Yahweh’s answer in 1:5 seriously that the raising up of the Babylonians would utterly astound
the prophet, then the time of the initial complaint and the first divine response has to be dated prior to the Battle of Carchemish in 605 BCE, because the Babylonians only became a significant threat to Judah after 605 BCE. The most likely date for this section (1:2-11) is during the early period of Jehoiakim’s reign before 605 BCE. Then Babylonian aggression was increasingly felt by Judah after the defeat of the Egyptians at Carchemish, which then prompted the second complaint by the prophet (1:12ff). Therefore I concur with the view that Jehoiakim’s reign (609-598 BCE) is the most likely setting for the book. The closing remark of Habakkuk in 3:16 which indicates that the day of calamity is yet to come also confirms this date.
Literary critical issues: history of the composition of the book
Some scholars employ literary criticism57 to tackle questions concerning the history of the composition of the book. Mason gives a well-organized survey of various scholars’ positions for and against the unity58 of the book.59 Although some scholars, such as R.H. Pfeiffer60 and R.P. Carroll, read it as a ragbag of traditional elements
put together in an apparently slapdash fashion,
61 most agree that the book is a coherent literary unit in its present form, even if it may not have been written by one author.62 Prinsloo, among others, argues that a close reading of the book shows that Habakkuk is best read as a literary unit.63 Among those who argue for the literary unity of the text, their positions may be further distinguished by their view of the history of the composition of the book: some presume an original unity of the entire book; some presume only minor redactional activities on the book; while a few argue for a more complex literary composition process.64
Unity of the entire book
J.N. Boo Heflin asserts that the Book of Habakkuk is indeed a well-constructed literary unit written by Habakkuk, recording his ministry which extended over several years.65 He also warns against extensive changes to the received text of the book, for despite its textual difficulties, the book of Habakkuk is open to meaningful interpretation without resorting to deletion, emendation, or transposition of major sections.66
O. Palmer Robertson thinks that the book of Habakkuk consists of authentic words of the seventh century prophet, and that there is no evidence that provides adequate ground for denying the integrity of the material.67
Patterson also favors the unity of the book; to him the carefully crafted literary structure
strongly indicates that it was designed by the author himself.68
James W. Watts argues for the unity of the book by suggesting that a single writer composed the work by incorporating older materials (most notably 3:3-15) into an exploration of Yahweh’s power in the face of military disaster.
69 While some may argue that the incorporation of older material is a redactional activity, it can also be regarded as the creativity of the prophet by adapting existing material for the artistic expression of his view.
Michael E.W. Thompson admits the eclectic nature of the book but argues that the unique combination of the genres is Habakkuk’s maverick
way of tackling the theodicy theme.70 Indeed, the mixing of genres could be another witness to the creativity of the author.
Bailey thinks that the essential unity of the book appears best as one looks at the literary devices the author used to create a book. He lists twenty-one rhetorical features that are employed by the prophet to give artistic form and meaning to his message.71 He also criticizes House’s over-emphasis of the unity on the Twelve and the existence of an implied author
who stands behind the scenes of the Twelve
72 as not describing Habakkuk from the viewpoint of the prophet and his audience,
but from the postexilic work of the implied author.
73
Except for Otto Eissfeldt, the proponents of the unity of the entire book all see Habakkuk as the author of the book and regard the so-called evidence for the stratification of redactional layers as the literary devices used by the prophet to create a book.
Eissfeldt maintained that the content of the book of Habakkuk does form a unity and that all three chapters originated from the prophet himself; however in form these passages could not be regarded as a literary unity, but rather as a loose collection
of a group of songs of lamentation and oracles (1:2-2:4), a series of six cries of woe (2:5-20), and the prayer of chapter 3.74 This view was in direct contrast with some earlier form critics who argued for the unity of Habakkuk precisely based on the liturgical form of the book.75 While it is debatable whether there were cultic prophets in ancient Israel,76 this shows that it is precarious to judge a book’s unity based purely on the form-critical approach. Also forms are theoretical abstractions of real literature, not vice versa.77 Hence it is better to say that the book of Habakkuk as a literary unity based on its content and its rhetorical devices, and that these various literary forms are artistically and deliberately employed by the prophet in a logical structure to convey his message rather than a loose collection.
Bailey is certainly right when he says, Most prophetic books require dissecting into brief oracles in order to understand the message. Habakkuk almost demands that the reader read the entire book before the message becomes clear, the component parts serving more to support the entire message than to provide an individual message of its own.
78
Unity with some redactional activities
As Bailey notes, the eclectic nature of literary genres in the book of Habakkuk and the literary ties to the other books of the Twelve automatically raises the issue of unity.79 Scholars readily attribute some parts of the book to the incorporation of earlier material (either by the author himself or as an addition by a later generation) and to the redactional work by a later generation. For example, Elizabeth Achtemeier, while admitting that the core of the work comes out of a concrete historical situation,
nonetheless points to the author’s adaptation of earlier materials (2:5-20), a strong autobiographical (1:2-3, 12; 2:1-2; 3:1, 16, 18-19) and biographical emphasis (1:1; 3:1), and subsequent use of portions of the book within Israel’s cult (3:1, 3, 9, 13, 19), and concludes that both Habakkuk himself and later editors have given the work a universal and timeless validity which has made it a witness to every age.
80
W. Rudolph, while arguing strongly for the basic unity of the book, dates several verses as late: 2:6a, 13a, 14, 17b, 19b; 3:6b (including the first two words of verse 7), and 3:17.81 These late additions seem to be editorial comments rather than redactions, for they do not significantly alter the meaning of the text.82 While I do not deny the possibilities of later editorial additions, I wonder why these verses could not have come from the prophet himself.
Roberts sees different stages of Habakkuk’s activities reflected in individual texts: sections 1:2-4 and 1:5-6 originated in the period 609-605 BCE, whereas 1:11-17 was written after 597 BCE by a creative redactor who rewrote and expanded Habakkuk’s original oracles, turning the woe oracles in 2:6-20 against a Judean oppressor such as Jehoiakim into oracles against a foreign oppressor. Meanwhile the vision in 3:3-15 appears to be a reworking of an archaic poem by the prophet to express his visionary experience.83
In sum, these scholars attempt to describe and explain the apparently incongruous verses in the book and to propose a historical situation surrounding those verses by resorting to later editors. While it is quite plausible that editorial additions exist, it is nearly impossible to single out individual verses and attribute those to a particular epoch. Thus any proposal must remain provisional. Moreover, there is not sufficient evidence to indicate that those verses could not have come from the prophet himself. In an article discussing the problem of historical reconstruction in prophetic books, Roy F. Melugin cautions that persuasive evidence for historical reconstruction is very often unavailable, and so questions the ability of historical criticism to reconstruct its historical situation.84
A complex redactional history
Other scholars such as Eckart Otto, Peckham, Nogalski, Seybold, and Lescow, assume an even more complex history of composition.
Otto discerns five redactional layers in the book of Habakkuk.85 The first layer is the proclamation of the prophet Habakkuk in 1:2-4, 12a, 13-14, in which he complained against injustice within Judean society, and the subsequent answer from Yahweh in 2:1-5abα. Then the woe oracles from the prophet are pronounced in 2:6b, 7, 9, 10abβ, 12, 11, 15-16. The second layer is the inclusion of the oracles in 1:5-11, 12b to give a new interpretation of an anti-Babylonian thrust. It is at this stage that a structure of double lament and oracle was shaped. The third layer is the anti-Babylonian tradition by a redactor in 1:15-17, 2:5bβ, 6a, 8, 10bα, 13, 14, 17. The fourth is the early post-exilic addition of 1:1, 2:18-3:16 as well as 3:3-15 and 16 to the third layer. And finally, the ritual-cultic addition in 3:1, 3, 9, 13, 17-19 put the psalm in chapter 3 to cultic use. This redactional process took place, according to Otto, between 612 BCE and the early post-exilic period.
Peckham asserted that the book of Habakkuk is a composite unity.86 He posited that the book is a composition of text and commentary,
87 which consists of Habakkuk’s original vision in the form of a lament and a later commentary that changes the lament into a book by a complex process of modifying some stanzas and adding others.
88 He then tried to uncover the sources that underlie both the lament and the commentary. He concluded that both the lament and the commentary interpret the same literary and historical traditions, but belong to different stages in their development. The lament explained that the resurgence of Babylon fulfilled all of Isaiah’s expectations, and the commentary explained that the destruction of Babylon fulfilled all the conditions of the law.
89
According to Nogalski, the book of Habakkuk was substantially expanded when it was integrated into the corpus of the Twelve Prophets.90 He postulates that the core of Habakkuk has a wisdom-oriented discussion concerning the prosperity of the wicked in Judah.
91 Then the Joel-related layer,
which consisted of a Babylonian commentary (1:5-11, 12b, 15-17), and portions of the woe oracles in 2:5-19, and then a concluding hymn in chapter 3, were added to it.92 He further speculates that "both the wisdom-oriented layer and its Babylonian expansion are post-exilic.93 But as Bailey rightly comments,
Such a complex history of Habakkuk is not necessary. It represents a minimalist view in regard to the work of the original prophet and removes the ‘Babylonian commentary’ into a period when Babylon had long vanished as the foe in focus for Israel."94
Seybold thinks that the book of Habakkuk consists of three major layers:95 The oldest layer is Habakkuk’s original prophecy which consists of his lamentation in 2:1-3, 5-19 directed against internal injustice; and his vision of foreign invasion in 1:1, 5-11, 14-17. This original prophecy was written down by the prophet himself on tablets according to 2:1-3. Then the tradents during the exilic period (around 550 BCE) added the hymnic texts of 3:1, 3-7, 15, 8-13a with framework at 3:2, 16. Finally the post-exilic editors added a lamentation that permeates the entire book: 1:2-4, 12-13; 2:4, 20; 3:13b, 14, 17-19a. In Seybold’s opinion 2:4, which is central to the text’s theological history, can only be explained as the prayer of an accused man, and belongs to the latest text layer.
Theodor Lescow, on the other hand, maintains that the book has a three-phase model, which is arranged in a concentric manner of A > B < C.96 According to him, there are three continuations in addition to the basic text which consists of a lamentation (A: 1:2-4, 13), an