Job or Isaiah? What Does Paul Quote in Rom 11:35?

Romans 11:35 is almost unanimously treated as a quotation from Job 41:3. Although it differs significantly from preserved Greek and Hebrew readings of that verse, few have questioned this attribution. In this article, I will argue that Rom 11:35 has nothing to do with Job but is a verbatim quotation...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kujanpää, Katja (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: [publisher not identified] [2019]
In: TC
Year: 2019, Volume: 24, Pages: 1-13
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Bible. Römerbrief 11,35 / Bible. Jesaja 40,13-14 / Zitatenanalyse / Bible. Ijob 41,1-3 / Edition
IxTheo Classification:HA Bible
Further subjects:B Bible. Job
B Occupation
B Bible. New Testament
B Old Testament in the New Testament
B Quotations
B Bible. Old Testament
B Biblical Criticism
B Romans
B Bibel ijob 41,3
B ISAIAH (Biblical prophet)
B Isaiah
B Septuagint
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Description
Summary:Romans 11:35 is almost unanimously treated as a quotation from Job 41:3. Although it differs significantly from preserved Greek and Hebrew readings of that verse, few have questioned this attribution. In this article, I will argue that Rom 11:35 has nothing to do with Job but is a verbatim quotation from Isaiah. Scholars have mostly ignored the fact that Rom 11:35 agrees word for word with a Greek textual variant, a remarkably well attested plus in Isa 40:14. In the previous verse in Romans, Paul quotes Isa 40:13. I will demonstrate that it is improbable that the New Testament has influenced the textual transmission of the Greek Isaiah. Instead, the plus was probably in the version of Isaiah known to Paul. Moreover, I will suggest that the plus represents the original translation, offer a completely new reconstruction of its textual history, and thereby call into question the text-critical decision that Joseph Ziegler made in his edition of Isaiah. The final part of the article offers some observations concerning the scholarly discussion on Rom 11:35 and its attribution to Job and seeks to answer the question of why the plus has not been considered in detail before.
ISSN:1089-7747
Contains:Enthalten in: TC