Law for what ails the heart: Moral frailty in Psalm 86

Lasater, Phillip Michael

In: Zeitschrift für die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft, 2015, vol. 127, no. 4, p. 652-668

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    Summary
    Psalm 86 is a text that displays intertextual engagement with Exodus 32-34 and Jeremiah 30-33, both of which are older than the psalm. In studies of Psalm 86, a neglected issue is its anthropology, particularly the notion of the >>divided heart<<, which, according to the psalmist, is an ethical and theological problem that can only be solved by receiving instruction from Yhwh - an instruction that can >>unify<< the divided heart. By paying attention to the psalmist's application and reworking of older texts, as well as to the Rabbinic reception of Psalm 86, one can see how this text is part of an exilic and post-exilic conversation about human sinfulness as a flaw in human nature that impairs moral agency.