TY - BOOK AU - Takeuchi,Kumiko TI - Death and divine judgment in Ecclesiastes T2 - Bulletin for biblical research supplement SN - 9781575069913 AV - BS1475.T136.D438 2019 PY - 2019/// CY - University Park, Pennsylvania PB - Pennsylvania State University Press KW - Bible KW - Ecclesiastes KW - Criticism, interpretation, etc KW - Death in the Bible KW - Judgment of God KW - Eschatology, Jewish KW - Hebrew Bible KW - Old Testament Criticism & Interpretation KW - Christian Theological Anthropology N1 - Alumni Author; Bibliographical references (page 199-222); Index (page 223-238); Historical context --; How should we read Ecclesiastes? --; Issues of death and injustice in Qoheleth's monologue --; Qoheleth's dilemma and resolution --; Finding coherence between Qoheleth's monologue and the epilogue --; A possible role of Ecclesiastes in the emergence of Jewish apocalyptic eschatology; 2; 2; https://ciu.libwizard.com/f/copyright-requests N2 - In Death and Divine Judgment in Ecclesiastes, Kumiko Takeuchi provides a fresh take on the book of Ecclesiastes. Building on the current scholarly consensus that locates the composition of this book of the Hebrew Bible in the postexilic era, circa the late fourth or early third century BCE, Takeuchi proposes that Ecclesiastes may have served as a provocative voice for, or as a catalyst to, the emergence of apocalyptic eschatology and later sectarian conflicts within Judaism in the mid-Second Temple period. During the postexilic era, when retributive justice appeared to be absent or not assured, some Israelites began to question traditional views of death, Sheol, and divine judgment. Situating Ecclesiastes in this social and historical context, Takeuchi reveals the book's hidden arguments in favor of posthumous divine judgment as a means to rectifying premortem injustices. Takeuchi advocates a modified frame-narrative reading of Ecclesiastes, arguing that the role of the third-person narrative in Ecclesiastes is pivotal for understanding the paradoxes within Qoheleth's monologue, its relationship to the epilogue, and the book's overall purpose. The arguments in Death and Divine Judgment in Ecclesiastes challenge both traditional interpretations of the book of Ecclesiastes and conventional wisdom about when the belief in the postmortem application of divine justice began to take hold in Israelite society. This innovative interpretation is a must-read for biblical scholars, particularly those whose work focuses on the concept of justice ER -