The Go'el Concept: Comprehensive and Incarnational Redemption

by Carl Schultz, Ph.D.
Houghton College, Houghton, NY

 

I. INTRODUCTION

While a variety of predications can be provided for the establishing and administering of justice for the poor, none is, or should be, more influential in Wesleyan thought than the Scriptures. Facilely the New Testament comes to mind, but the Old Testament also offers significant direction.

A promising and productive topic of the Hebrew Scriptures that I believe can contribute significantly to a biblical foundation of justice for the poor is the go'el concept. It provides a model of principle and practice, establishing not only the appropriate action on behalf of the poor, but also determining the identity of the needy and the responsible and privileged respondent.

This paper will explore this go'el concept in its Semitic context and will establish principles and procedures of justice applicable to our times.

  

II. ETYMOLOGY AND PARALLEL ROOTS

Go'el is the active participle of the Qal stem of the verb ga'al which is used with its derivatives 118 times in the Hebrew Bible.1 While Go'el is a form of the verb, it is for all practical proposes, a substantive in its own right.

The root g'l appears to be almost exclusively Hebrew so that its original meaning cannot be determined etymologically.2 Its synchronic use, rather than its diachronic use, must be determinative in establishing its meaning. Basically, this root means to deliver, to rescue.3 The main word that stands in parallelism with, and is almost synonymous to ga'al is padha (to ransom).4 Further yasha (to save, deliver),5 natsal (to save, rescue in the Hip`il stem),6 and `azar (to help),7 also occur in parallel structure. The use of the Hebrew preposition min (from) also indicates that from which a person is rescued.8

Go'el, used some 44 times in the Hebrew Bible,9 designates a person or God who rescues, who delivers, who redeems. A consideration of the passages in which this word occurs will reveal both the function of the redeemer and the relationship between the redeemer and the redeemed.

 

III. APPEARANCES IN LEGAL PASSAGES

The go'el is found in five situations, depicting actions that a true man would take for a dependent kinsman.

A. The repurchasing of a field which had been sold in time of need, in order to restore the possession to the family.10

B. The freeing of an Israelite slave who had sold himself in a time of poverty.11

C. The avenging of a murder by familial retribution within the context of clan law.12

D. The restoration/redemption of a votive offering, dedicated to deity or the redemption of the firstborn of an unclean animal. In these cases the redeemer would have been the owner of the property.13

E. The receiving (rather than giving this time) as the responsible head of the family, of restitution for a wrong done to an injured party.14

These Pentateuchal passages emphasize that the family must be maintained both in terms of persons and possessions. Obviously, transmittible possessions are inconsequential if there is no family to receive and retain them. Both property and persons are viewed as God's possessions and therefore a special sense of stewardship surrounds not only the land, but also the relationships which human beings have one with another.15

But even in these judicial contexts, it must be noted that this responsibility of redeeming was social and not legal. There is no indication that failure to act resulted in legal penalty, nor that a person could be forced to respond by a legal process. While there was no legal consequence, clearly there was social consequence. Ultimately opprobrium was more attractive than suit for breach of duty.16 

 

IV. APPEARANCES IN FIGURATIVE PASSAGES

In contexts other than that of the Pentateuch, the go'el concept is used in a figurative sense. It is utterly critical for people to have a go'el.17 If they do not have such, there is no one to care for their rights and honor.18

In such extreme cases Yahweh is invoked. He is needed to plead the cause of the fatherless and widow19 and to save the worshipper from distress20 and death.21 But not only is this divine redemption personal, it is also corporate.

G'l is used in connection with the exodus from Egypt, emphasizing the deliverance from the distress of bondage.22 Minimally then, the release from slavery is in mind, but perhaps also the restoration of an earlier relationship between Yahweh and Israel is included since reference is made to the patriarchs with whom Yahweh had already entered into a covenant.23 Further, Ps. 74:2 characterizes the exodus as God acquiring a congregation which He in turn made His heritage. Whether restoring or acquiring, the matter of relationship seems to be included, thus again stressing the personal rather than the material aspect of redemption.

In Deutero-Isaiah g'l is used relative to the anticipated release from Babylonian captivity, which the prophet describes as a new exodus.24 Nine times go'el is used as a title for God25--a kind of stereotyped divine epithet, emphasizing a variety of saving acts, such as the forgiveness of sin,26 resulting in glorification of Yahweh.27

While the Deutero-Isaiah passages are likely late, suggesting that the secular use of ga'al preceded the religious use,28 the reference in Ex. 15:13--a twelfth-century triumph song--must be early. Perhaps also early is Gen. 48:16 where God's angel is praised by Jacob as the one who redeemed him from all harm. Thus this transition of usage to the divine probably began before Deutero-Isaiah. As Campbell observes: "This language is old enough to have been used about God very early in Israel's history with the full implication it bears in later legal formulations; God shows familial concern and protects both people and property (Israel is both to him!)."29 Gutiérrez observes that the term go'el had the family for its initial setting and then subsequently found a place in the sphere of the covenant.30

Snaith objects to the idea of kinship between God and Israel, for that relationship, as close as it was, was between unequals.31 Indeed, yet even the covenant was one of non-parity, but that did not prevent covenant language from depicting this relationship between God and Israel as spousal and paternal--rather close relationships. God represented as go'el must be seen, I believe, as the responsible relative of Israel,32 thus underscoring the personal dimension of go'el in the religious as well as the secular sphere.

 

V. APPEARANCES IN NARRATIVES

Narrative usage of the go'el concept will further elucidate its meaning. The Pentateuchal laws are not complete or codified, but are given to be illustrative and didactic33 or for less than routine occurrences.34 As Mendenhall notes: "Laws are then mutual understandings among human beings, culturally determined and relative--as well as changeable."35

This changeable quality is seen in the tale crafted by the wise woman of Tekoah in defense of Absalom. A widow, who had just two sons, one whom has killed the other in a quarrel, is confronted with the loss of the surviving son by go'el. Her appeal to David is heard as she is promised that the g, who seems to be prompted to action from self interest--to gain the inheritance, would be kept from acting.36

Campbell observes:

The narrative passages in Job and Ruth will be considered in this paper.

 

A. JOB

While it can be claimed that Job 19:25 is not narrative--indeed it appears in the dialogue part of the book, sandwiched in between the prologue and the epilogue--it can only be interpreted in the context of the narrative of the book. Job clearly qualifies as a person needing a go'el.

An examination of this verse will continue and intensify the personal dimension of the go'el. While translated "Redeemer" by the familiar KJV, it is better rendered "Vindicator" (NJPS, NEB and NRSV Footnote).38 Job does not primarily need to be rescued from death--in fact, he longs for it39--but needs to be vindicated before the accusing Satan figure (of which he is unaware) and the three friends.

His possessions are not critical. He never seeks their return. It is his person, his name, his relationship to God (now strained) that is the focus here. The context of this passage is forensic. He expects God to rise in court and speak on his behalf.40 He waits not for physical relief, but for moral vindication.41 As Ringgren observes, the language here is the figurative language of the lawsuit.42 That the anticipated Vindicator must be God can be seen in Job's strong language here in contrast to the more tentative language used when he wished for an arbiter or witness.43 As Hartley notes, "Choice of this term . . . . is an intentional allusion to the special nuances off deliverance and love that are associated with this title for God.44 Dhorme sees this role of Vindicator as one to which God is often invoked in the Psalms, being urged to defend the rights of the oppressed.45

Job needs more than the return of his material possessions. While in traditional wisdom teaching material possessions are indicators of divine favor, and while Job had likely held such a view prior to his suffering, he never prays for their return, but rather that God will vindicate him before death--which God does.46 The restoration of his wealth in the epilogue does not rehabilitate Job. He is already rehabilitated even before the return of his wealth, which is necessitated by the artistry of the book.47 It is vindication that is critical.

Here in Job the go'el concept again focuses on the individual rather than on his possessions.

 

B. RUTH

The go'el concept is explicated most fully in the Ruth narrative where this participial form is found eight times.48 It gives us the underlying principles, and shows us the policy at work in ancient Israel.49 Further, it provides remarkable insights which provide us with procedure for today. Nowhere is the personal dimension of the go'el function shown as here.

1. RELATIONSHIP OF BOAZ TO RUTH

This narrative fleshes out the Priestly materials, which apart from the release of debt in the Year of Jubilee, reflects old conditions.50 The P source alone provides information on the order of succession in filling the go'el role. The hierarchy of duty designates first, brother, then uncle, next cousin, and finally any fellow member of the mishpahah.51

Given these relationship and sequencing, what was it that made Boaz (and the unnamed nearer person) responsible to serve as go'el? They are not of the immediate house of Elimelech for all males of that house had perished.52 Apparently Boaz qualified as an instance of one of the fellow members of the mishpahah.

Translating go'el as "kinsman" can suggest that only a blood relative had the go'el responsibility and that a person lacking such a tie was exonerated, but the narrative in Ruth shows otherwise.

Boaz is not a blood relative of Ruth or for that matter, Naomi. While in some English translations of Ruth 2:1, he is identified as a relative, it must be noted that this rendering is based on the Qere53 rather than the Ketib which has MeYUDDA participle of YD` - a root associated with covenant terminology.54 Thus Campbell renders the text as per the Kethib "covenant-brother."55

This would then demonstrate the go'el responsibility goes beyond blood ties. As we noted above, Boaz would have qualified to assist by virtue of belonging to the same mishpahah - a unit larger than the b'th 'av-- the extended family.56 Clearly when the b'th 'av was unable to act on its own behalf, responsibility devolved upon the mishpahah, which Gottwald considers a technical term for a protective association of families.57

The size of the mishpahah is difficult to ascertain. While larger than the b'th 'av it is smaller than the bet58 The figures of Numbers 26 where some 57 mishpahoth are listed seem incredibly large, but Andersen states that a mishpahah must have had at least 10,000, by a conservative estimate.59

Gottwald believes that the book of Ruth throws some light on the size of a mishpahah.60 He notes that Elimelech and his family are said to be "Ephrathites from Bethlehem."61 This gentilic form is also used to identify David, "son of an Ephrathite of Bethlehem."62 Further, Rachel is "buried on the way to Ephrath (that is, Bethlehem.).63 The witness to the transaction of Boaz prompted this response, "may you prosper in Ephrathah and be renowned in Bethlehem."64 Finally Ephrathah is associated with Bethlehem by Michah "O Bethlehem of Ephrathah."65

While all these citations associate Ephrathah with Bethlehem, they also ". . . make it clear that Ephrathah was not simply an alternate name for Bethlehem, comparable to Laish-Dan or Bethel-Luz. Ephrathah appears as a place in its own right, near Bethlehem, and encompassable within Bethlehem conceived as the city and its environs."66

Gottwald locates Ephrathah as south of Bethlehem and concludes that this region was inhabited by a single mishpahah and that " . . . when Elimelech's family membrs are called 'Ephrathites' it means more than that they lived in Ephrathah; it means that they were of the protective association of families known as mishpahah Ephrati . . ."67

The go'el responsibility is thus not limited to the extended family, but goes at least to the phratry.68

Mendenhall notes the limitations of kinship:

No one is likely to deny the constant importance of real kinship in ancient Near Eastern cultures, or for that matter in most societies of human history. Nevertheless, the function of real kinship ties in society is so limited that something larger is needed, particularly as population density increases and social conflicts become more complex. Furthermore, kinship ceases to be of much importance as the common ancestor of two persons becomes more remote . . . .

Beyond the fourth generation of descendants there is no corporate responsibility, and probably no other important social function. Forms of social organization not based on kinship have already taken over in the earliest recorded historical societies.69

Campbell summarizes well the extension of the go'el responsibility beyond the extended family:

. . . the complex societal framework in which this practice was to function probably included both blood and covenant ties, the latter reaching out beyond family interests to a circle in which ties were entered upon even more voluntarily and graciously than might be the case in a family.70

 

2. RANGE OF RESPONSIBILITY

Not only is the personal dimension seen in the go'el, but also in the person receiving the assistance--in this case, Ruth.

Here levirate marriage is combined with redemption.71 Not only must a piece of property belonging to Elimelech and his family be redeemed, but the widow, Ruth, must be taken and provided a son.72 While no legal code juxtaposes the redemption and levirate practices, it is a natural one, based on principle.73

Campbell observes that the levirate practice

. . . is not simply concerned with producing a male child, nor even with producing an heir to the dead man's property; it is concerned every bit as much with the care of the widow. Indeed, the care of widows is the main motive of Naomi's speculations in chapter 1 about the prospects of levirate marriage for herself. . . . 74 

The concern of the go'el again is not simply with possessions, but with the person. While Boaz has been seen by some to have acted out of self interest,75 the narrative is clear that he was both proper76 and considerate. He respected Ruth whose own character was such that she deserved such treatment.77

 

VI. SUMMARY

The purpose of this summary is not to be exhaustive, but rather selective of data which contributes to the concern of this paper--comprehensive and incarnational redemption. Three distinct ideas stand out:

A. The go'el function is not simply concerned with possessions, but also extends to the person. Relationships are more important than things.

B. The go'el function is not limited to blood ties, but extends out to covenant relationships.

C. The go'el function is not to be implemented on legal pronouncements alone, but must be practiced on the basic principle of caring responsibility. It is not charity or pity, but the expression of a fundamental personal relationship.

 

 VII. APPLICATION

Space does not permit the development of these suggested applications. Nor do I feel totally competent functioning in the area of the social and economic. Hopefully, these practical conclusions with limited commentary, drawn from the go'el function, will stimulate discussion and provide a basis for action. It seems to me that the go'el function moves us:

A. Beyond rugged individualism.

Alexis de Tocqueville, who may have coined the term [rugged individualism], found it alarming. He defined individualism as "a mature and calm feeling which disposes each member of the community to sever himself from the mass of his fellows and to draw apart with his family and friends. He willingly leaves society to itself. Individualism saps the virtues of public life and destroys all virtues.78

B. Beyond a sense of pride which refuses to accept help.

In his Ethics, Aristotle advocates reluctance to accept service as a standard for the magnamious person:

He is the sort of person who does good but is ashamed when he receives it; for doing good is proper to the superior person, and receiving it to the inferior. He returns more good than he has received; for in this way the original giver will be repaid, and will also have incurred a new debt to him, and will be the beneficiary.

Jesus rejected such a position when He reminded the reluctant Peter that unless he allowed Jesus to wash his feet, Peter had no share with Him.80

C. Beyond concerns limited to the nuclear and extended families.

Rodney Clapp, in challenging the concept of the traditional family, observes:

Other aspects of the bourgeois family clash with family submitted to the redemptive and transforming gospel. Bourgeois family is exclusivistic, emphasizing its privacy over the good of others. It leaves the public life of commerce and industry untouched by the ideals of the kingdom, while maintaining its private comfort and order. Bourgeois family is flawed to the degree that it helped us so long neglect the social implications of the kingdom. It is flawed to the degree that it encourages blithe individualism and erodes a sense of the common good.81

 D. Beyond clinical and technical concerns based upon the letter of the law. Jesus criticized the legalists of His day, noting, "You have a fine way of rejecting the commandment of God. . . ."82 By hiding behind legalisms83 they freed themselves from legitimate and appropriate demands. Barclay observes: 

Jesus was attacking a system which put rules and regulations before the claim of human need. The commandment of God was that the claim of human love should come first; the commandment of the scribes was the claim of legal rules and regulations should come first. Jesus was quite sure that any regulation which prevented a man from giving help where help was needed was nothing less than a contradiction of the law of God.84 

E. Beyond narrow and minimum assistance, recognizing that the entire being has to be addressed, resulting in dignity and a sense of worth. Bruce Birch in his treatment of Shalom emphasizes this wildness:

Shalom is not only a spiritual condition, but the condition of well-being intended by God for all creatures. For humans, this includes food, health, security from danger, means of livelihood, shelter, clothing, family, community, and relationship to God. Thus, the vision of shalom as well-being forces attention to concrete dimensions of wholeness in day-to-day life. If the faithful community is to take up its task of embodying shalom, then it must be deeply involved in the effort to ensure this fullness of life for all.85


Copyright by author.


Endnotes

1. TWOT I:144.

2. TDOT II:350-351.

3. TDOT II:351.

4. Hos. 13:14; Isa. 35:10, Jer 31:11; Ps. 69:19. But the participle of padha never becomes a nominal term with any special role in law. With padha the emphasis is on the action, not the subject. (TDNT, IV: 311). This is a crucial difference from the nominal go'el which places emphasis upon the subject, a near relative, whose duty and privilege it is to redeem. TWOT, I: 144.

5. Isa. 60:16; Ps. 106:10.

6. Mic. 4:10.

7. Isa. 41:44.

8. Gen 48:16; Jer. 31:11; Hos. 13:14; Mic. 4:10; Ps. 72:14; 103:14: 106:10; 107:2.

9. As counted by The Mendelkern Concordance (Tel Aviv: Schocken, 1969), pp. 244-245.

10. Lev. 25:25-34.

11. Lev. 25:47-54.

12. Num. 35:12, 19-27, Deut. 19:6, 12.

13. Lev 27:11ff.

14. Num. 5:8.

15. The Levitical Year of Jubliee emphasized both the restitution of land and the restoration of individuals. Lev. 25:25-55.

16. Francis Lyall. Slaves, Citizens, Sons - Legal Metaphors in the Epistles. (Grand Rapids: Zondervan Publishing House, 1984), pp. 157-158. Rowley notes that the measure of stigma would be in direct ration to the nearness of the relationship. H.H. Rowley. The Servant of the Lord. (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1965), p. 181.

17. I Kings 16:11.

18. TDOT II: 352.

19. Proverbs 23:10-11.

20. Pss. 69:18; 119:154.

21. Lam. 3:58.

22. Ex. 6:6; 15:13; Ps. 106:10; Isa. 51:10. It should be noted however, that padha is used more frequently than ga'al in speaking of the exodus, especially in the Deuteronomic literature TDOT II: 354.

23. Ex. 6:3, 8. TDOT II: 353.

24. Isa. 48:20.

25. Isa. 41:14; 43:14; 44:16; 47:4; 48:17; 49:7, 26; 54:5; 60:16.

26. Isa. 44:22.

27. Isa. 44:23, 52:9.

28. Roland de Vaux. Ancient Israel - Its Life and Institutions (New York: McGraw, 1961), I, 22.

29. Edward F. Campbell, Jr. Ruth AB (Garden City: Doubleday and Co., Inc., 1975), p. 136.

30. Gustavo Gutierrez. On Job - God Talk and the Suffering of the Innocent. (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 1987), p.64.

31. Norman H. Snaith. The Distinctive Ideas of the Old Testament. (New York: Schocken Books, 1973), pp. 85-86.

32. Applied to God, the go'el thus denotes in family law the dignity of the nearest relative whose duty it is to redeem His elect, whether it be the forefather Jacob (Gn. 48:16) or the people Israel. Understood thus, the term leads us to the very heart of the relation between God and man. This is here a bond of course, by the law of blood, but by that of election. TDNT IV: 332. Johnson notes: " . . . ideally at least, Yahweh and His covenant people are one, and this being the case, He is their proper Protector, and they are properly His proteges." A.R. Johnson. "The Primary Meaning of ga'al." VT Sup (1, 1953) p. 76.

33. Ibid., p. 134.

34. Dr. Calum Carmichael, NEH Lecture, June 21, 1985, Cornell University.

35. George E. Mendenhall. The Tenth Generation. (Baltimore: The John Hopkins University Press, 1974), p. 195.

36. II Sam. 14:4-11.

37. Campbell, op. cit., p. 136.

38. H.H. Rowley, Job, (NCBC) (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1980), p.138.

39. Job 3:20-22.

40. Francis I Anderson. Job - An Introduction and Commentary (TOTC). (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity, 1976), p. 194.

41. Dianne Bergant. Job, Ecclesiastes (Wilmington: Michael Glazier, Inc., 1982).

42. TDOT II: 355.

43. Job 9:33-34; 16:19.

44. John E. Hartley. The Book of Job (NICOT). (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1988), p. 293.

45. 'Edouard Dhorme. A Commentary On the Book of Job. (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1984), p. 283.

46. Job 40:7.

47. Rowley. op. cit., p. 266.

48. Mendelkern, op. cit., p. 244.

49. Campbell, op. cit., p. 134.

50. Norman K. Gottwald. The Tribes of Yahweh - A Sociology of the Religion of Liberated Israel 1250-1020 B.C.E.(Maryknoll, New York: Orbis Books, 1985), p. 264.

51. Lev. 23:40-49. This P source seems to see the mishpaha as the widest social issue for go'el responsibility. Goddwald, op. cit., p. 264.

52. Ruth 1:5. Rash conjectures that Elimelech was an uncle of Boaz, with the closer kinsman being Elimelech's brother -- but this is indeed conjecture.

53. The Qere form is MODA which appears only one other time -- Prov. 7:4 -- where it is used in a parallel structure with sister, to designate the relationship of widsom to the sage's pupil.

54. In Ruth 3:2 another noun derivative of YD occurs which Campbell renders as "one of our covenant circle." Campbell, op. cit., p. 114.

55. Ibid., pp. 88-89.

56. Hans Walter Wolff. Anthropology of the Old Testament. (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1974), pp. 214-215.

57. Gottwald, op. cit., pp. 267-270.

58. Francis I. Andersen, "Israelite Kinship Terminology and Social Structure." The Biblical Translator (Vol. 20, 1969), p. 34. Vaux de, op. cit., pp. 20-21.

59. Andersen, op. cit., pp. 35.

60. Gotwald, op. cit., pp. 268-269.

61. Ruth 1:2.

62. I Samuel 17:12.

63. Genesis 35:19.

64. Ruth 4:11.

65. Micah 5:2.

66. Gottwald, op. cit., p. 269.

67. Ibid.

68. One verse, Ps. 72:14, suggests that the go'el responsibility is national, extending to the king. Johnson, noting this verse, argues that in the extreme, the go'el principle is so far-reaching that it expresses the responsibility of the reigning house towards the nation. Johnson, op. cit., p. 72.

69. Mendenhall, op. cit., pp. 177-178.

70. Campbell, op. cit., p. 137.

71. Such a combination is not found in a single text, but necessitates the linking of Deut. 25:5-10 with Lev. 25:25; 27:9-33.

72. Ruth 4:5.

73. Campbell, op. cit., p. 137. Rowley believes it significant that the other two references to the Levirate marriage are referred to in Ruth (Genesis 38/Ruth 4:12; Deuteronomy 25:9/Ruth 4:8) Rowley, op. cit., pp. 174-175.

74. Ibid., p. 136.

75. Rowley. op. cit., pp. 183-184. Rowley notes that Ruth's child -- Obed -- was by legal fiction regarded as Mahlon's, yet at the end of the book this child is reckoned as the child of Boaz.

76. Campbell, op. cit., pp. 137-138.

77. Ruth 3:10. Here here hesed is recognized.

78. IV: 53.

79. Cited in Newsweek (June 8, 1992), p. 19.

80. John 13:6-8.

81. Rodney Clapp. "Is the Traditional Family Biblical?" Christianity Today (Vol 32, September 16, 1988) p. 26.

82. Mark 7:9.

83. In this instance it is the use of Corban which is a difficult concept to define. Whatever its precise meaning, it designates a technical and legal way to escape a moral obligation.

84. William Barclay. The Gospel of Mark. Revised edition. (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1975) p. 171.

85. Bruce C. Birch and Larry L. Rasmussen. The Predicament of the Prosperous. (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1987) p. 150.


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