A transforming body: A post-exilic reading of Psalms 50 and 51 in the light of social norms communicated through the Leviticus sacrificial system and body imagery

Although Psalms 50 and 51 do not share the same superscription (a Psalm of Asaph and a Psalm of David), they do share multiple images relating to the body and the cult. Situated between a collection of Korahite (42-49) and Davidic psalms (51-70[51-72]) in Book II of the Psalter (42- 72), Psalm 50 i...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: L. Sutton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Free State 2021-12-01
Series:Acta Theologica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/at/article/view/5852
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1823858988378226688
author L. Sutton
author_facet L. Sutton
author_sort L. Sutton
collection DOAJ
description Although Psalms 50 and 51 do not share the same superscription (a Psalm of Asaph and a Psalm of David), they do share multiple images relating to the body and the cult. Situated between a collection of Korahite (42-49) and Davidic psalms (51-70[51-72]) in Book II of the Psalter (42- 72), Psalm 50 is considered to be part of the liturgy with a prophetic character. The psalm, with its strong focus on offering, brings about the renewal of Israel before God. Psalm 50 focuses on the community, while in Psalm 51, the focus is on the individual. In Psalm 51, body imagery becomes an essential part of describing the acts of purification, penitence and offering. Reading these Psalms in the light of social norms communicated through the Leviticus sacrificial system and body imagery, the body’s renewal process (community and individual) before God becomes apparent.
format Article
id doaj-art-6db0c5f775074009967209deb0c5e20f
institution Kabale University
issn 1015-8758
2309-9089
language English
publishDate 2021-12-01
publisher University of the Free State
record_format Article
series Acta Theologica
spelling doaj-art-6db0c5f775074009967209deb0c5e20f2025-02-11T09:35:48ZengUniversity of the Free StateActa Theologica1015-87582309-90892021-12-0110.38140/at.vi.5852A transforming body: A post-exilic reading of Psalms 50 and 51 in the light of social norms communicated through the Leviticus sacrificial system and body imageryL. Sutton0University of the Free State Although Psalms 50 and 51 do not share the same superscription (a Psalm of Asaph and a Psalm of David), they do share multiple images relating to the body and the cult. Situated between a collection of Korahite (42-49) and Davidic psalms (51-70[51-72]) in Book II of the Psalter (42- 72), Psalm 50 is considered to be part of the liturgy with a prophetic character. The psalm, with its strong focus on offering, brings about the renewal of Israel before God. Psalm 50 focuses on the community, while in Psalm 51, the focus is on the individual. In Psalm 51, body imagery becomes an essential part of describing the acts of purification, penitence and offering. Reading these Psalms in the light of social norms communicated through the Leviticus sacrificial system and body imagery, the body’s renewal process (community and individual) before God becomes apparent. https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/at/article/view/5852Psalms 50 and 51Social normsLeviticus sacrificial systemBody imagery
spellingShingle L. Sutton
A transforming body: A post-exilic reading of Psalms 50 and 51 in the light of social norms communicated through the Leviticus sacrificial system and body imagery
Acta Theologica
Psalms 50 and 51
Social norms
Leviticus sacrificial system
Body imagery
title A transforming body: A post-exilic reading of Psalms 50 and 51 in the light of social norms communicated through the Leviticus sacrificial system and body imagery
title_full A transforming body: A post-exilic reading of Psalms 50 and 51 in the light of social norms communicated through the Leviticus sacrificial system and body imagery
title_fullStr A transforming body: A post-exilic reading of Psalms 50 and 51 in the light of social norms communicated through the Leviticus sacrificial system and body imagery
title_full_unstemmed A transforming body: A post-exilic reading of Psalms 50 and 51 in the light of social norms communicated through the Leviticus sacrificial system and body imagery
title_short A transforming body: A post-exilic reading of Psalms 50 and 51 in the light of social norms communicated through the Leviticus sacrificial system and body imagery
title_sort transforming body a post exilic reading of psalms 50 and 51 in the light of social norms communicated through the leviticus sacrificial system and body imagery
topic Psalms 50 and 51
Social norms
Leviticus sacrificial system
Body imagery
url https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/at/article/view/5852
work_keys_str_mv AT lsutton atransformingbodyapostexilicreadingofpsalms50and51inthelightofsocialnormscommunicatedthroughtheleviticussacrificialsystemandbodyimagery
AT lsutton transformingbodyapostexilicreadingofpsalms50and51inthelightofsocialnormscommunicatedthroughtheleviticussacrificialsystemandbodyimagery