Praising God beside the Sea: An Intertextual Study of Revelation 15 and Exodus 15
By HaYoung Son and Gerald L. Stevens
()
About this ebook
HaYoung Son
HaYoung Son is Senior Researcher in the H. Milton Haggard Center for New Testament Textual Studies (CNTTS) of New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary.
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Praising God beside the Sea - HaYoung Son
Praising God beside the Sea
An Intertextual Study of Revelation 15 and Exodus 15
HaYoung Son
Foreword by Gerald L. Stevens
10629.pngPraising God beside the Sea
An Intertextual Study of Revelation
15
and Exodus
15
Copyright ©
2017
HaYoung Son. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers,
199
W.
8
th Ave., Suite
3
, Eugene, OR
97401
.
Wipf & Stock
An Imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers
199
W.
8
th Ave., Suite
3
Eugene, OR
97401
www.wipfandstock.com
paperback isbn: 978-1-5326-1291-6
hardcover isbn: 978-1-5326-1293-0
ebook isbn: 978-1-5326-1292-3
Manufactured in the U.S.A.
May 8, 2018
Table of Contents
Title Page
Foreword
Preface
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
The Problem, Its Setting, and Research Design
Literary Review
Importance of the Study
Chapter 1: Old Testament Sources in Revelation 15:3–4
The Scenery Background of the Song(s)
The Designation of the Song(s)
The Content of the Song(s)
The Context of the Song(s)
Chapter 2: Purpose of the Exodus Theme in Revelation 15
The Exodus Theme in the Old Testament
The Exodus Theme in the Intertestamental Literature
The Exodus Theme in the New Testament
The Exodus as an Eschatological Model
The Exodus as a Paradigm for Salvation
Chapter 3: Use of the Exodus Theme in Revelation 15
The Exodus Theme in the Book of Revelation
The Exodus Theme in Revelation 15–16
John’s Interweaving the Exodus Theme with His Eschatological Vision
Chapter 4: Conclusion
Summary and Conclusion
Contribution and Suggestions for Further Studies
Epilogue
Bibliography
To my grandmother PilHyun Sim
and my parents, MyoungSan Son and HwaJa Lee,
who love me and teach me how to live in the faith via their lives
and to people
who have supported me with their prayers, wisdom, love, and finances
from South Korea and in the U.S.A.
Foreword
by Gerald L. Stevens
While the barrage of John’s fantastical images can be somewhat daunting, even baffling, to a reader uninitiated into traditions of ancient Jewish apocalyptic literature, readers of the Apocalypse still seem to be able to penetrate that bizarre surface level at least to perceive, however superficially, that some story is being presented. This fairly universal impression of readers of Revelation over the centuries even to today is part of what feeds the typical end-time
scenarios that propagate so effortlessly and endlessly on Internet websites as the essence of Revelation’s story.
What always has been needed is a methodology that more dependably can ground deciphering the essence of the composition’s complex interaction of plot(s) and characters.
Narrative methodology has been appropriated by scholars of the Apocalypse to this end. This methodology has been harnessed to show how Revelation’s plot(s) and characters work together to tell a story. Uncovering the story world
of plot and character in Revelation reveals how this perennially compelling piece of literature delivers its dramatic and engaging impact. Reading the Apocalypse as narrative, we come to appreciate more deeply what John accomplished for his original audience and what he achieved in the history of literature. Even entire dramatic productions can be built around John’s powerful narrative world. Not only do we have the insights gained through John W. Bowman’s approach summarized in his several publications (1955, 1962), we also have the more recent dramatic production outlined effectively by Sylvie T. Raquel (2010).¹ Recent studies on the Apocalypse focused on its narrative aspects include Resseguie’s Revelation Unsealed (1998), Barr’s Tales of the End (1998), Lee’s investigation into The Narrative Asides in the Book of Revelation (2002), and Helms’s An Apocalypse for the Church and for the World (2006), to mention only a few. So, narrative study of the Apocalypse has been productive and has helped readers better to grasp the visceral response John intended with his dynamically evolving kaleidoscope of images he ingeniously compiled to move the story along.
While eminently worthwhile and making decided contributions to our understanding of Revelation as story, these narrative approaches cannot address fully other pertinent questions that can be raised from within the text itself. Most particularly, these internal questions include the interrelationships of the intertexts suffused throughout the narrative in Revelation. These intertexts in their own way significantly impact and direct how to read the story. One famous part of Revelation’s intertext phenomenon is Rev 15. In this chapter we encounter the Song of Moses.
This reference commonly and rightfully is seen as evocative of Exod 15. This Exod 15 intertext immediately and intuitively suggests itself as an important heuristic device by the author built into the narrative elements comprising this altogether too short a chapter.² Narrative methodology naturally does not address legitimate questions to be asked of the text by such intertexts for understanding what the author was doing in achieving the impact he desired on his original audience.
So we as readers have some innate sense of the presence of intertexts that also help us grasp the interpretive significance of how Revelation develops the intersecting trajectories of its story. What is astonishing, though, about John’s achievement regarding his intertexts is that he has been able to convince scripturally-literate readers that he has used in a profuse manner numerous passages from the ancient Scriptures—without ever actually making one direct quote! Thus, John’s writing style leaves us in the more murky waters of allusion and echoes (or whatever term you want to paste onto the admittedly nebulous concept). In this ambiguity, we are trying to hear
these subtle nuances that we are convinced are present but hard pressed to identify specifically. Identifying which intertext John has brought onto the reader’s or listener’s horizon of understanding impacts rather tellingly how the story is heard.
The field of intertextuality holds promise to contribute toward resolving these questions. Resolving such questions rewards the reader by more sharply defining at a richer level of reading the narrative plot and its development. While the field of intertextuality has yielded an abundance of studies in the scholarly guild on a wide-ranging number of texts and topics, one of the more fruitful biblical texts, then, for such study is the Apocalypse.
What HaYoung Son has accomplished in her innovative study is an intelligent and insightful combination of both narrative and intertextual methodologies to secure a more firm foundation for what we think we intuitively know
about John’s strange pattern of profuse allusions sans quotations. Why would any writer do this? Such an approach to intertexts actually seems to be counterintuitive to being clear about the nature of the composition. Son not only methodically teases out a convincing answer to this question of allusion from the available primary evidence that feeds into the apocalyptic genre, she then works with one of the decidedly known
allusions in Revelation, the Song of Moses
in Rev 15, to ground this allusion not only in its background scriptural context but also as a statement crucial to John’s high Christology. In this way, Son sets the stage for showing how this Christology directly addresses the needs of John’s original audience.
HaYoung Son’s research now has been brought to a broader readership in this new monograph that distills and condenses her work in a fine way. Converting dissertations to monographs is no easy task, as anyone knows who has made this journey. Further, when one realizes that English never was Ms. Son’s native language, but that she still came to the United States from Korea to pursue more education, then her accomplishments in her rich and rewarding dissertation study resulting in this impressive publication is all the more praiseworthy. I enthusiastically commend this study to you as worth your time. I am persuaded you will profit to engage this excellent study of the Song of Moses and of the Lamb.
1. Bowman, The Drama of the Book of Revelation; Revelation,
IDB,
4
:
58
–
71
; Raquel, Revelation as Drama: A Staging of the Apocalypse,
156
–
74
.
2. The chapter divisions in Revelation actually are quite poorly done and significantly negatively impact how one reads the developing story. What we have learned in narrative analysis of Revelation is that one pretty much has to ignore a good number of the chapter divisions to follow Revelation’s narrative flow properly.
Preface
This monograph is a revised version of my doctoral dissertation.³ Being able to publish my study in the U.S.A. is an incredible honor and encouragement. I never dreamed of this happening. In the oral defense of my dissertation, the guidance committee suggested that I publish my dissertation as a monograph. I accepted this suggestion as merely a compliment, so just smiled and said Thank you
and forgot the suggestion. However, after my oral defense, I heard the suggestion twice more from the guidance committee chairperson. I asked him, Are you serious?
He responded that he most certainly was serious. A book proposal to Wipf & Stock resulted in an offer to publish. Of course, I was delighted.
This research gradually developed from Dr. Roy E. Ciampa’s class The Old Testament in the New
and Dr. Sean McDonough’s guidance in my directed study Exodus in the Book of Revelation
at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary during my ThM degree program as well as Dr. Archie W. England and Dr. Charlie Ray’s class Biblical Intertextuality
and their guidance in my directed study Advanced Biblical Intertextuality
at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary during my PhD degree program. Learning from these wonderful professors and developing my interest in biblical intertextuality was a blessing from heaven. Research for a paper on biblical intertextuality during my ThM degree program, The Exodus Theme in the Book of Revelation: Especially on the Song of Moses and the Song of the Lamb (15:2–4),
provided keen insight in theological reflection on the nature of God’s grace. The Old Testament context made the New Testament context clearer, and the intertextuality revealed an amplified message on God’s enduring love and his sincere grace from the Old Testament to the New Testament. Further research into this topic became possible through a doctoral dissertation. Investigation during the dissertation writing process continued to deepen the appreciation for the depth of John’s theological reflection.
Without prayer and the help of others, I would not have been able to finish my doctoral studies and could not publish this book. First, I would like to express my deep appreciation to my New Testament professors at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary: Dr. Charles A. Ray Jr., Dr. Gerald L. Stevens, Dr. Bill Warren, and Dr. Craig Price. Dr. Ray was the Alpha and Omega
of my PhD degree program. He was my faculty advisor, the first reader of my dissertation as an expert on biblical intertextuality, and my best mentor. I am so grateful for his encouragement, advice, and help that have been given to me always beyond my expectations. Dr. Stevens has been an immeasurable blessing for my academic training, especially for my dissertation and this publication. As the second reader of my dissertation and an expert on Revelation, his elaborate and sincere guidance upgraded my dissertation and gave me courage to present a portion of my dissertation in an academic society and to publish this book. I am grateful to Dr. Warren, who gave me opportunities to work at the H. Milton Haggard Center for New Testament Textual Studies. He always encouraged me and considered my financial needs. Thank you
is not enough for him. Dr. Price’s joyful and humble attitude toward God and people is also a wonderful lesson to learn and follow, along with his academic diligent effort. His advice and help for my first teaching class in the U.S. was the best.
Having Dr. Archie W. England, an expert in biblical intertextuality and the Old Testament apocalypse, as the third reader of my dissertation was such an honor to me and God’s abundant blessing. In my directed study with him, he assumed our relation—professor and student—in the opposite way and asked me diverse questions as if he was my student to make me prepare for the class more and learn more through the class. Although I was challenged like a professor with an overly intelligent student, some portions of my dissertation were prepared in this directed study. Mrs. Pam Cole also should be mentioned here. She is my sincere and wise friend. Her prayers and concerns always followed me during my journey in New Orleans. She is an expert in academic writing. Her comments on my dissertation and this monograph deserve to be praised.
I also owe a lot to faithful friends who have prayed for me and supported me financially during my doctoral studies. Although I cannot mention all of them here, I absolutely remember what they have done for me and the Lord. Special thanks to church members who continued to support me spiritually and financially from South Korea, Boston, and New Orleans; family members (my faithful mother, whom I respect and love; my loving father, who can fight against the whole world for me; my energetic sister, two aunts, and relatives); and NT professors who have taught me (Drs. Chang Hee Kang, Hae Kyung Chang, Ju Hur, Dana M. Harris, Robert W. Yarbrough, David W. Pao, Roy E. Ciampa, Eckhard J. Schnabel, Sean McDonough, Aida B. Spencer, Catherine C. Kroeger, David L. Mathewson, Jimmy W. Dukes).
I appreciate Wipf & Stock for giving me this precious opportunity, and many thanks are due to the staff at Wipf & Stock who were in charge of the contract, edition, design, and marketing for this book. God bless them and the publisher.
Finally, Lord, all praise to you! Although this humble monograph is not a masterpiece, it is a token of my love for you and a starting point of my further journey for your kingdom. Thank you for being with me every moment and for being my Savior, my Lord, my friend, and my love.
3. HaYoung Son, "The Background of Exodus
15
in Revelation
15
: Focusing on the Song of Moses and the Song of the Lamb" (PhD diss., New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary,
2015
).
List of Abbreviations
AB Anchor Bible
AnBib Analecta biblica
AUSS Andrews University Seminary Studies
BECNT Baker Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament
BFCT Beiträge zur Förderung christlicher Theologie
Bib Biblica
BR Biblical Research
BSac Bibliotheca sacra
BT The Bible Translator
CBQ Catholic Biblical Quarterly
CGTC Cambridge Greek Testament Commentary
CNTUOT Commentary on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament
ConBOT Coniectandea Biblica Old Testament Series
CTJ Calvin Theological Journal
CTQ Concordia Theological Quarterly
CTR Criswell Theological Review
EstBib Estudios bíblicos
EvQ Evangelical Quarterly
ExpTim Expository Times
HvTSt Hervormde teologiese studies
IBS Irish Biblical Studies
ICC International Critical Commentary
Int Interpretation
JATS Journal of the Adventist Theological Society
JBL Journal of Biblical Literature
JETS Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society
JR Journal of Religion
JSNT Journal for the Study of the New Testament
JSNTSup Journal for the Study of the New Testament Supplement Series
JSOT Journal for the Study of the Old Testament
JTS Journal of Theological Studies
JTSA Journal of Theology for Southern Africa
NCB New Century Bible
Neot Neotestamentica
NICNT New International Biblical Commentary on the New Testament
NIGTC New International Greek Testament Commentary
NovT Novum Testamentum
NRTh La nouvelle revue théologique
NTC New Testament Commentary
NTS New Testament Studies
OTL Old Testament Library
Presb Presbyterion
PRSt Perspectives in Religious Studies
ResQ Restoration Quarterly
RevExp Review and Expositor
RevQ Revue de Qumran
RivB Rivista biblica italiana
RTR Reformed Theological Review
SBL Society of Biblical Literature
SBLSP Society of Biblical Literature Seminar Papers
SBLSymS Society of Biblical Literature Symposium Series
ScEccl Sciences ecclésiastiques
SwJT Southwestern Journal of Theology
TBT The Bible Today
TJ Trinity Journal
TS Theological Studies
TynBul Tyndale Bulletin
WBC Word Biblical Commentary
WTJ Westminster Theological Journal
WW Word and World
ZNW Zeitschrift für die neutestamentliche Wissenschaft und die Kunde der älteren Kirche
Introduction
The Problem, Its Setting, and Research Design
The book of Revelation contains many examples of praise or worship scenes. Among those, Rev 15 supplies an interesting scene in which the victorious multitude, having triumphed over the beast, appears and sings the song of Moses, the servant of God, and the song of the Lamb
(τὴν ῷδὴν