Deuteronomy. A Commentary.
Klein, Ralph W.
Deuteronomy. A Commentary. By Jack R. Lundbom. Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 2013. ISBN 978-0-8028-2614-5. xxx and 1034 pages. Paper.
$80.00.
This massive volume gives great attention to a fresh translation,
notes on rhetorical style (a specialty of the author, see especially pp.
2125, but also throughout the commentary), exegetical notes on
individual verses, and always a section on message and audience, that
is, attention to theological questions. While Hebrew quotations appear
on the vast majority of pages, readers restricted to English will not be
handicapped in reading this volume. The English translation of the
biblical text is an attempt to help the reader get a feel for the
language, grammar, and style of the original, and Lundbom makes no
attempt at achieving dynamic equivalence in his translation.
Lundbom is best known in the scholarly world for his three-volume
commentary on Jeremiah in the Anchor Bible Commentary series, and the
style and methodology of those volumes are repeated here. This
commentator has read widely, as his fifty-seven page bibliography
indicates. The only major name I missed was Lothar Perlitt, who was
writing the monumental commentary on Deuteronomy in the Biblischer
Kommentar series before his recent death. Lundbom has his favorite
authors: David Daube, S. R. Driver, David Noel Freedman, Abraham Ibn
Ezra, Rashi, Jeffrey H. Tigay, and Moshe Weinfeld. Also cited, but not
as much as I would have expected, are Georg Braulik and Norbert Lohfink,
two of the leading Deuteronomy specialists in Germany today.
Since the early nineteenth century, Deuteronomy has been associated
with the book of the law discovered by Josiah in 2 Kings 22:8. Lundbom
follows in large part this hypothesis but with his own unique take on
it. He holds the book that Josiah found not to be an early edition of
Deuteronomy 5-28, the majority opinion, but rather he finds the book of
the law to be the Song of Moses in Deuteronomy 32, a passage responsible
in his opinion for the indictment that the prophet Huldah issued against
Israel (2 Kgs 22:16-17). The first edition of Deuteronomy in
Lundbom's opinion embraced Deuteronomy 1-28, which he believes was
written in Judah despite containing many northern traditions. While most
scholars associate this book with the late seventh century. Lundbom
thinks it may go back as far as Jehoshaphat in the ninth century or
Hezekiah in the eighth century. Lundbom also follows Chronicles in
dating the beginning of Josiah's reform to 628 B.C.E. All of these
points are extensively defended, but they all go against the majority
opinion--that will therefore have to be reconsidered.
Theological concepts of major importance occur in Deuteronomy, such
as covenant, covenant obligations, Yahweh as a God of love, the election
of Israel, the gift of the land, and Holy War, and all are given
extensive attention. Lundbom recognizes that Holy War creates many
theological problems, especially when some of its most offensive
features are commanded by Yahweh. He sets Holy War, however, over
against the New Testament and the Christian just war tradition, and
adds, strangely in my judgment: "Needless to say, the Jewish
Holocaust of the twentieth century has been condemned by virtually
everyone" (67; cf. similarly, 333). It's not at all clear to
me what the Holocaust/ Shoah has to do with Holy War. In discussing ch.
20, dealing extensively with Holy War, Lundbom observes: "So far as
Canaanite cities are concerned, Yahweh will give them over to Israel,
after which the entire populations are to be devoted to Yahweh. This
means killing everything that breathes" (590). After citing various
atrocities by Assyrians, Arameans, and Ammonites, he observes:
"Moses' policy was a more enlightened one."
One cannot write a thousand-page book and expect every reader to
agree with you one hundred percent. In countless passages, however,
readers will find clear, helpful, and well-researched remarks that will
deepen their understanding of this reform document that was highly
formative of the Old Testament, and deeply influential in the New
Testament as well.
Ralph W. Klein
Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago