2015
DOI: 10.1177/0309089215577592
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Honor and Shame in Hosea's Marriages

Abstract: While Hosea's marriage has often been read in terms of an analogy of action, so that the ‘whoring’ of Israel parallels the whoring of Gomer, this article argues that the analogy rests on a status of shame. Yahweh commands Hosea to take on the shameful status of being married to a whoring wife. Hosea thereby embodies Yahweh's shameful status in being bound to Israel. By noting this we are able to understand the paucity of details that leave commentators puzzled and to reckon with the marriage statements as they… Show more

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“…Leung Lai 2004) or what biblical metaphors are meant to connote or to evoke in their readers. Shame is an example of an emotional and social biblical phenomenon that could benefit from this kind of integrative research (e.g., Bechtel 1991; Stiebert 2000; 2002; Haddox 2011; Moon 2015; Hadjiev 2016; cf. Kollareth, Fernandez-Dols, and Russell 2018).…”
Section: Metaphor Studies and The Hebrew Bible Since 1980mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Leung Lai 2004) or what biblical metaphors are meant to connote or to evoke in their readers. Shame is an example of an emotional and social biblical phenomenon that could benefit from this kind of integrative research (e.g., Bechtel 1991; Stiebert 2000; 2002; Haddox 2011; Moon 2015; Hadjiev 2016; cf. Kollareth, Fernandez-Dols, and Russell 2018).…”
Section: Metaphor Studies and The Hebrew Bible Since 1980mentioning
confidence: 99%