Abstract

Proposing the term ‘congruent ethos’ for studying Old Testament ethics, this article indicates (in line with existing research) that opposing ethical viewpoints are found in the Old Testament. The modus operandi followed was firstly to compare the penitential prayer in Daniel 9:4–19 with those in Ezra 9:6–15 and Nehemiah 9:6–37. This comparison shows that the phenomenon of conflicting ethics was present in Yehud during the Second Temple period. Whilst the Daniel text reflects a more universal attitude, the penitential prayers in Ezra and Nehemiah propose a nationalist view of God and an exclusivist identity for Israel. Although Daniel can be dated later than Ezra-Nehemiah, the tendency to juxtapose an exclusivist viewpoint with an inclusivist one was already present in the earlier period of the Second Temple. This is evidenced by the literature of Isaiah 56–66, Ruth, Jonah, Esther, Tobit, Judith and even Joshua.

Highlights

  • Ethics and ethosThe disciplines of Old Testament Ethics and Old Testament Theology are related to each other

  • The type of Old Testament ethics we pursue is directly linked to the type of Old Testament Theology we cultivate

  • According to Pleins’ (2001:196) view, the book of Daniel depicts, in agreement with Ezra, Nehemiah and Esther, 9. Barton (2001:663) referred to ‘Judaism in all its different forms’, he did not distinguish between these different forms, but follows the older unifying principle used in Old Testament theologies looking for a coherent Mitte and deducted from this a unified ethical system in the Bible

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Summary

Congruent ethos in the Second Temple literature of the Old Testament

Proposing the term ‘congruent ethos’ for studying Old Testament ethics, this article indicates (in line with existing research) that opposing ethical viewpoints are found in the Old Testament. The modus operandi followed was firstly to compare the penitential prayer in Daniel 9:4–19 with those in Ezra 9:6–15 and Nehemiah 9:6–37. This comparison shows that the phenomenon of conflicting ethics was present in Yehud during the Second Temple period. Daniel can be dated later than Ezra-Nehemiah, the tendency to juxtapose an exclusivist viewpoint with an inclusivist one was already present in the earlier period of the Second Temple. This is evidenced by the literature of Isaiah 56–66, Ruth, Jonah, Esther, Tobit, Judith and even Joshua

Ethics and ethos
History of the concept of conflicting ethics or congruent ethos
Investigating conflicting ethics
Inclusivism and exclusivism in EzraNehemiah
Inclusivist trends in Israel during the Second Temple period
Conclusion

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