User Tools

Site Tools


holladay_1978

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision
Next revision
Previous revision
holladay_1978 [2017/04/04 07:46] francescoholladay_1978 [2017/04/28 14:39] (current) francesco
Line 10: Line 10:
 V. //Renewal After Disaster?// V. //Renewal After Disaster?//
  
-[93] We have found no room yet in our picture of Isaiah for a figure who projects events 700 years into the fure.\\ +[93] We have found no room yet in our picture of Isaiah for a figure who projects events 700 years into the future.\\ 
-   Part of our difficulty\\ + 
-Further, we vaguely assume that we are striding forward into the future but that the landscape is foggy and we [94] can't see ahead very well. The Israelite image, on the other hand, was that whats is “ahead” of us in space is what has happened //formerly//, in the past; while what is “behind” us in space is what will happen //hereafter//, in the future. [...] The mental picture, then, is that we are moving backwards into the future, as when we row a boat on a lake — we row backwards and thus see where we have been but see new trees and inlets only as we come abreast of them. This view of past and future seems thoroughly realistic, and it also emphasizes the twofold division of time about which we have been speaking: the past (what can be seen) and the future (what cannot yet be seen).+Part of our difficulty [...]\\ 
 +    
 +Further, we vaguely assume that we are striding forward into the future but that the landscape is foggy and we [94] can't see ahead very well. The Israelite image, on the other hand, was that what is “ahead” of us in space is what has happened //formerly//, in the past; while what is “behind” us in space is what will happen //hereafter//, in the future. [...] The mental picture, then, is that we are moving backwards into the future, as when we row a boat on a lake — we row backwards and thus see where we have been but see new trees and inlets only as we come abreast of them. This view of past and future seems thoroughly realistic, and it also emphasizes the twofold division of time about which we have been speaking: the past (what can be seen) and the future (what cannot yet be seen).
  
 **"Second Isaiah"**\\ **"Second Isaiah"**\\
holladay_1978.1491284799.txt.gz · Last modified: 2017/04/04 07:46 by francesco