“Blessed Are the Killers of Infants”—Understanding the Imprecation of Psalm 137 in Light of the Canonical Contexts of the Major Prophets

Authors

  • Ryu Park Evangelia University, USA; University of Pretoria, South Africa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2663-6573/7823

Keywords:

imprecation, imprecatory prayer, imprecatory psalm, Babylonian exile, Judah and Babylon, intertextuality, canonical contexts, book of Isaiah, book of Jeremiah, judgment and restoration

Abstract

The imprecation of Psalm 137, “Blessed are the revengers and the killers of infants” (vv. 8–9) does not seem to be in conformity with the broader messages of the Psalter, “Blessed is the man who delights in the law of Yahweh (Ps 1:1–2) and who dwells in your house and ever praises you (Ps 84:5)” and of the Old Testament, “Do not take revenge and love your neighbours and foreigners (Lev 19:18; Deut 10:19).” However, this imprecation of infants-death can be interpreted and understood in the literary contexts of the Major Prophets that show intertextual connection with Psalm 137 in terms of the imprecation and judgment themes (Isa 13:15–18; Jer 51:20–23). Certain passages of the Major Prophets contain the oracles of judgments against Israel’s enemies that are announced throughout Isaiah and Jeremiah as if the psalmist’s imprecation is answered. God would destroy Judah’s enemy, Babylon, in order to restore Judah.

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Published

2020-10-29

How to Cite

Park, Ryu. 2020. “‘Blessed Are the Killers of Infants’—Understanding the Imprecation of Psalm 137 in Light of the Canonical Contexts of the Major Prophets”. Journal for Semitics 29 (2):11 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/2663-6573/7823.

Issue

Section

Articles
Received 2020-05-18
Accepted 2020-08-29
Published 2020-10-29