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A Dialogic Reimagining of a Servant's Suffering: Understanding Second Isaiah's Servant of Yahweh as a Polyphonic HeroDavid.Williams@murdoch.edu.au, David Wyn Williams January 2007 (has links)
A definitive identification of the Servant figure of Second Isaiah is notoriously difficult, as attested by centuries of conjecture and debate. The interpretive obstacles are profuse: the Servant is addressed as Israel-Jacob, but then spoken of in terms that are not consistent with the nations experience; in some texts he seems to represent a community, while in others he speaks as an individual; he seems to suffer extreme hardship and persecution, but then is said to experience new life; some of his experiences appear to be historical, while others are best described as idealistic. Further hampering objective interpretations are the pervasive traditional approaches among Christian and Jewish readers, which associate the Servant, equally emphatically, with Jesus or Israel.
But a primary reason the Servant is so difficult to pin down is rarely considered, and that is that there exists no objective image of the Servant anywhere in Second Isaiah. As a literary character he is constituted entirely by dialogue; that is, by discourse addressed to him, spoken by him, and spoken about him by others in the form of a confession. His actions are never described, and his person is never defined. Scholars have referred to this as his fluid nature, but have lacked the methodological tools for a fuller study of this literary curiosity.
The ideas of literary theorist Mikhail Bakhtin speak to this type of characterisation. His polyphonic hero is a fictional character who is constituted by what is spoken to him or her, by what they overhear said concerning them, and by how they make that discourse, and the discourse of the wider world, an aspect of their own self-knowledge. They become known only by the discourse that converges on them, much as the Servant of Second Isaiah is constituted. This thesis develops a reading strategy based on Bakhtins theory of the polyphonic hero, as well as his broader theories of dialogism. It reimagines the inner discourse of the Servant in order to comprehend him according to the dialogue by which he knows himself, and not according to conventional reading strategies that seek for a fixed, opaque image. In the process it discovers that there are not multiple Servants, which is often posited as a solution to the problem of his fluid nature, but one Servant, Israel-Jacob, whose self-knowledge as the faithful Servant of Yahweh calls empirical Israel to faith in a time of national distress. It concludes that the Servant is present in the collection of Second Isaiah as a voice-idea, the embodiment of a theologically critical position that calls many of Israels theological and ideological presuppositions into question, in order to liberate her for a renewed history as a faithful witness to Yahweh her redeemer.
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JESUS, O MESSIAS: UM OLHAR DA COMUNIDADE PETRINA SOBRE O ANÚNCIO MESSIÂNICO DO SEGUNDO ISAÍAS / Jesus the messiah: a petrine community look at the messianic announcement of the Second IsaiahTannus, Gabriel de Oliveira 20 December 2017 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2017-12-20 / This dissertation explores the question about Jesus of Nazareth, from the First
Epistle of Peter, accomplishes the Suffering Messiah announced by the prophet
Second Isaiah of the Old Testament. The petrine community was able to perceive in
the suffering and oppression they were experiencing the resemblance of the image of
the Suffering Servant to their own suffering and the suffering of Jesus. Going through
the pericopes of 1Pd 2,21-25 and Is 53,1-10, it can be concluded that, in the eyes of
the petrine community, Jesus perfectly fulfilled the announced Messianic
characteristics. In order to understand the Messianic traits in these two communities,
classical and contemporary authors were used to establish due dialogue on the
issue. The academic reflections about Jesus Messiah Sufferer were made through a
bibliographical research, supported by the historical-critical method, enriched by the
sociological method and by the conflictual model. In making the approach of Jesus'
suffering to that of the Suffering Servant of the Babylonian captivity, the petrine
community realized the fulfillment of the Messianic promise, Jesus was the Messiah,
not the triumphalistic incarnation that the Jews expected, but the incarnation in
suffering. It is through suffering that the Petrine theology of Jesus Messiah the
Sufferer is established. / Esta dissertação explora a questão acerca de Jesus nazareno, da Primeira
Epístola de Pedro, realizar o Messias Sofredor anunciado pelo profeta Segundo
Isaías do Antigo Testamento. A comunidade petrina conseguiu perceber, no
sofrimento e na opressão que estavam vivendo, a semelhança da imagem do Servo
Sofredor com o próprio sofrimento deles e com o sofrimento de Jesus. Perpassando
pelas perícopes de 1Pd 2,21-25 e Is 53,1-10, pode-se concluir que, aos olhos da
comunidade petrina, Jesus cumpriu com perfeição as características messiânicas
anunciadas. Para perceber os traços messiânicos nessas duas comunidades,
utilizou-se de autores clássicos e contemporâneos estabelecendo o devido diálogo
sobre a questão. As reflexões acadêmicas acerca de Jesus Messias Sofredor foram
feitas por meio de uma pesquisa basicamente bibliográfica, amparada pelo método
histórico-crítico, enriquecida pelo método sociológico e pelo modelo conflitual. Ao
fazer a aproximação do sofrimento de Jesus com o do Servo Sofredor do cativeiro
da Babilônia, a comunidade petrina percebeu o cumprimento da promessa
messiânica, Jesus era o Messias, não a encarnação triunfalista que os judeus
esperavam, mas a encarnação no sofrimento. É através do sofrimento que se
estabelece a teologia petrina de Jesus Messias Sofredor.
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