Lecture 14 - The Deuteronomistic History: Response to Catastrophe (1 and 2 Kings). The tension between covenant theology, emphasizing the conditional Mosaic convenant from Mt. Sinai, and royal theology emphasizing the unconditional covenant with David in his palace on Mt. Zion, is traced.
Following Solomon's death, the united kingdom separated into a northern and a southern kingdom (named Israel and Judah respectively), the former falling to the Assyrians in 722 and the latter to the Babylonians in 586. Analysis of the Deuteronomistic School's response to these historical crises and
subsequent exile to Babylonia is evidenced through redaction criticism. (from oyc.yale.edu)
Lecture 14 - The Deuteronomistic History: Response to Catastrophe (1 and 2 Kings)
Time
Lecture Chapters
[00:00:00]
1. The Uncompromising Honesty of the Story of David
[00:10:29]
2. Tensions in Kings I and II
[00:31:21]
3. The Separation of the Kingdom Following Solomon's Death