Rethinking the Northern Israelite Refugee Theory Koog-Pyoung Hong, Ph.D. Assistant Professor, Department of Theology Seoul Jangsin University It has been commonly assumed that a group of northern refugees flooded into Jerusalem after the fall of Samaria (722 BCE) and they played an important role in the ensuring religious reform in Judah. This essay reconsiders the biblical, historical, and archaeological evidence and explores its implications. The Hebrew Bible is almost entirely silent about any mass immigration from northern Israel to Jerusalem. The archaeological evidence of the expansion of the Jerusalem wall, which does prove a major societal change in Judah around the 8th century BCE, still remains inconclusive in proving the influx of northern refugees. Against the underlying assumption that the doomed Israelites would have found refugee in Judah given their ethnic tie, it is pointed out that the realpolitik around Judah and Israel at the wake of the Assyrian threat may not have allowed Hezekiah to accept Israelite refugees. To question the refugee theory is not to categorically reject the influx of Israelites; it is rather to critically rethink the implications of the ambiguity around this theory. While it is true that the refugee theory helps resolve many difficult questions around the composition history of biblical literature, the efficacy of the theory does not ensure its validity. As the uncritical basis of the theory lays bare, one must reconsider its implications to theories that are dependent upon the refugee theory. An uncritical acceptance of the refugee theory frequently resulted in a failure to pay attention to a complex dynamic involved in Judean's creative reception and reinterpration of the old Israelite tradition. It is suggested that in order to better understand this critical period in which Judah found a new self identity and went through a critical theological revolution, one must pay attention to the subtile dynamic between Judah and Israel at the aftermath of the Assyrian conquest. This will lead into a new way of understanding of the composition history of the texts that were composed or compiled in this period.
한국어
이 논문은 북왕국 난민 유입 가설을 비판적으로 재고하는 것을 목적으로 성서적, 고고학적, 역사적 증거를 조사한다. 필자는 난민 가설의 주된 근거로 사용되는 예루살렘 성벽 확장이 북왕국 난민의 유입을 증명하지 못함을 밝히고 그것이 신명기의 기원과 같은 여타 이론에 미치는 함의를 다룬다.
목차
1. 서론 2. 고고학적 증거 3. 북이스라엘 난민 가설의 문제 4. 난민 가설의 무비판적 수용의 문제 5. 결론 6. 참고문헌 목록 Abstract
키워드
북이스라엘 난민 가설예루살렘 확장넓은 성벽유다와 이스라엘성서의 형성사The northern Israelite refugee theoryJerusalem’s expansionBroad wallJudah and IsraelComposition history of the Bible
한국구약학회는 구약연구의 발전을 위해서 서로 협조함으로써, 교회에 봉사하며 신학교육의 향상에 기여함을 그 목적으로 창립하였으며, 구약학의 발전과 학술교류 활동에 관한 아래의 사업을 추진한다;
1. 학술 연구 활동과 발표회 및 강연회
2. 학회지 발간 및 구약학 연구에 필요한 자료 발간
3. 국내외 학계와의 학술 교류
4. 신학교육 향상을 위한 노력과 교회에 봉사하는 활동
5. 그 밖에 구약학 연구에 도움이 되는 학술 활동
간행물
간행물명
구약논단 [The Korean Journal of Old Testament Studies]