Paul D. Hanson, ThePeople Called The Growth Of Community In The Bible, (San Francisco Harper And Row, Publishers, 1986), 560 + Pp., $31.95, ISBN 0 06 063700 5

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Paul D.

Hanson, ThePeople

Called: The Growth

of Community

in the Bible,

Francisco:

Harper

and

Row, Publishers, 1986),

560 + pp.,

(San

$31.95,

ISBN 0-06-063700-5.

Reviewed

by

Richard D. Israel*

The

People

Called,

by Harvard

Old Testament Professor Paul D. Hanson,

constitutes a substantive contribution to Old Testament

on the other.

Theology

on the one hand, and to Biblical

Theology

Old Testament

Theology

has been

struggling

since the dissolution

of von Rad’s traditio-historical

synthesis

to find a means of

expressing

itself in a manner

worthy

of the term

“theology”

as

contrasted with

“theologies. “The fragmentation

of biblical studies

into New and Old Testament, due in

part

to the sheer volume of

work

generated

in the last

century,

has also had its effect on

“biblical”

theology.

Hanson makes a

courageous

and innovative

contribution to both issues

by discerning

a theological triad in the

Old Testament and

tracing

it into the New Testament

(including

a

theological

treatment of the intertestamental

materials).

As though

this were not amibtious

enough,

he also has his

eye

on hermeneu-

tical issues for the

present “people

called.”

Hanson

approaches

the

quest

from a historical

vantage point,

rather than the canonical order of the texts. The Patriarchal

period

and the Exodus are treated as “the birth” of the Yahwistic notion of

community,

and the Sinai covenant,

conquest

and

early

settlement

of the land constitute “the

growth”

of the notion. That notion came

about in

“Response

to God’s

initiating saving activity,” (69)

has

“devotion to the one true God as the

unifying

heart of community,”

(69)

and is defined

by a

triad of

characteristics; righteousness,

compassion

and

worship

of the one true God. As

may

be expected

from his use of the term

“triad,”

the three

aspects

of

community

constitute a whole which are

interdependent

and

necessary

for a

valid

expression

of community.

Ensuing periods

of history are

analyzed

from the

perspective

of

how

they

measured

up

to the vision of community set forth in the

period

of its birth and

growth.

The

early

united

monarchy

is treated

as a

period

of

testing

and refinement in the

relationship

of the

monarchy

to prophecy

(Ch. 4). The divided monarchy

is covered in

two

sections,

one on the northern

monarchy,

characterized as

“growth through adversity,” (Ch. 5)

and one on the southern

monarchy, including kings, prophets

and

sages,

all of which

constitute a “variegated

portrait” exile,

the return and .

(Ch. 6). The

the

period

of Ezra-Nehemiah-Chronicler all receive individual

treatment

(Chs. 7-9). Chapter

10 treats

Joel,

Ruth and Jonah as

“witnesses to an alternative vision.”

Chapters

11 and 12 treat the

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201

intertestamental

period

from Ezra to the Maccabees and the last two centruies B.C.E.

respectively.

The New Testament is treated in two

chapters,

one on the

teaching

of Jesus and one on

community in the

early

church

(Chs.

13 and

14).

Among

the book’s

many strengths

is its

methodological clarity and

openness.

From the

preface

on

pp. x-xi,

to

Chapter

1 on the nature of the

study,

to the

appendix

on

“Underlying presuppo- sitions and method”

(519-546),

Hanson is at

great pains

to reveal how he is

going

about his task. This is an

open

invitation to dialogue

and

participate

in the

theologizing

of the book.

Hanson is interested

throughout

his

study

in

implications

for modern believers. At the end of some sections he will insert

thoughts

on

these, (cf. 78ff., 372ff.)

and he devotes the

entirety

of Chapter

15 to the issue as well as segments from his

appendix.

His study

leads him to a

strong

stand for social involvement in the interest of righteousness and

compassion

as the

necessary response of the

community

which

worships

the one true God. “In consider- ing

the biblical notion of righteousness, we thus must conclude that an asocial

private piety

is

simply

unbiblical”

(510).

“Even as the members

of the faith

community give thanks to God

for the new life they

have

received,

so too

they

look to God’s

Spirit

for

guidance

in living

true to their commitment to God’s order of shalom.

They

are thus characterized

by

an openness to the

Spirit’s leading,

and live in expectation

of continued transformation and

growth … ” (p 514).

This leads to an

appreciation

of the book’s

significance

for Pentecostal/

Charismatic scholars. For

Hanson,

” … belief in

the

Holy Spirit

as the

presence

of the risen Lord in the

community kept

alive the

dynamic

inferential

process

at the heart of

early Yahwism and the

prophetic

faith

according

to which the

quality

of life of the

community

was clarified and renewed

by each generation through

the

ongoing

encounter with the

living

God in life’s experiences” (437).

We who have

organized

around the

significance of the

experience

of the

Holy Spirit

would do well to consider how that

experience

informs our

ecclesiology

and ethics.

Whatever the fate of Hanson’s work

upon analysis

and

critique by

the

scholarly community,

it provides an

inspiring

vision and an evocative statement of biblical

ecclesiology.

One will not

go wrong investing

the time and

money

to

acquire

and assimilate this book.

*Richard D. Israel, a licensed minister with the Assemblies of God,

is a candidate for the Ph.D. in Old Testament at the Claremont Graduate School. He is currently

serving

as Assistant Professor of

Religion

at

Bethany

Bible

College

in Santa

Cruz, California.

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