The Wisdom Shaping of the Psalter: From Wisdom Psalms to a Wisdom Framework 

Much debate surrounds the alleged presence of wisdom in the Psalter. Many studies focus on the identity and nature of wisdom psalms. This approach remains controversial in that few interpreters agree on which psalms constitute wisdom psalms. This article argues that a preferable approach concentrates on the function of wisdom persons, terms and themes in shaping the Psalter. Key markers suggest that the final editors of the Psalter intended the book to be read and mastered as a wisdom writing by their placement of wisdom vocabulary, paragons and motifs as mnemonic benchmarks. These features include the governing position of Pss 1–2 as the twin introduction to the Psalter, the distribution of the ‘ashre’ formula, lexical and thematic ties to Proverbs, the use of the term ‘maskil’ in connection to David’s wisdom, the recurring presence of sages and the wisdom framing of Book V. These factors hint that wisdom carried a decisive, functional influence in shaping the Psalter.

In the latter grouping, he identified the genre Weisheitsdichtung (wisdom poetry), which he tied to wisdom psalms about human life and its necessary mastery to achieve favourable outcomes. 4Wisdom psalms were a late development in Israel's psalmody, an outgrowth of reflection on earlier forms. 5eyond the recognition of these varied psalm forms, no discernible pattern could be traced for the arrangement of individual psalms. 6Gunkel's approach would shape the works of the retinue of scholars who followed him. 7To discern wisdom influences on the Psalter, many would concentrate on identifying these so-called wisdom psalms, a form that Gunkel concluded was not extensive in the Psalter. 8e second shift came with Gerald Wilson's The Editing of the Hebrew Psalter (1985).9 Wilson's mentor Brevard Childs had asserted earlier that the Psalter be read as unitive, canonical Scripture rather than as an anthology of & Ruprecht, 1985), 3; cf.Hermann Gunkel and Joachim Begrich, Introduction to the Psalms: The Genres of the Religious Lyric of Israel (trans.James D. Nogalski; Macon: Mercer University Press, 1998). 4Gunkel and Begrich, Introduction to the Psalms, 293.Gunkel identified wisdom psalms as pertaining to form on the micro-level (e.g., proverbs, riddles, beatitudes, direct address, admonitions, instructions) and to themes (e.g., fear of YHWH, divine retribution, theodicy, contrast between the righteous and the wicked) (295-302).5 Gunkel and Begrich, Einleitung, 30.6 Ibid., 3. 7 Zenger notes that by 1969, F. Crüsemann's dissertation on the Psalms began with the assessment that Gunkel's approach "had rendered all previous attempts to structure the Psalter so as to arrive at a proper understanding of the individual parts obsolete and invalid"; Erich Zenger, "Psalmenexegese und Psalterexegese: Eine Forschungsskizze," in The Composition of the Book of Psalms (ed.Erich Zenger; Leuven: Peeters, 2010), 17, author's translation.For the development of Gunkel's approach, see Sigmund Mowinckel, The Psalms in Israel's Worship (trans.D. R. Ap-Thomas; 2 vols. in 1; reprint of 1962 ed.; Sheffield: JSOT Press, 1992); Artur Weiser, Die Psalmen: Übersetzt und erklärt, (5th ed.; Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1959); Hans-Joachim Kraus, Psalms 1-59 (trans.Hilton C. Oswald; Continental Commentary [based  on the 1978 German edition]; Minneapolis: Fortress, 1993); Kraus, Psalms 60-150  (trans.Hilton C. Oswald; Continental Commentary; Minneapolis: Fortress, 1993); Erhard S. Gerstenberger, Psalms, Part 1: With an Introduction to Cultic Poetry (FOTL  14; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1988); Klaus Seybold, Die Psalmen (HAT; Tübingen: Mohr, 1996); Gerstenberger, Psalms, Part 2, and Lamentations (FOTL 15; Grand  Rapids: Eerdmans, 2001); John Goldingay, Psalms Volume 1: Psalms 1-41,  (BCOTWP; Grand Rapids: Baker, 2006); Goldingay, Psalms Volume 2: Psalms 42-89 (BCOTWP; Grand Rapids: Baker, 2007); Goldingay, Psalms Volume 3: Psalms 90-150 (BCOTWP; Grand Rapids: Baker, 2008).8 Gunkel and Begrich,Einleitung,382. 9 Gerald H. Wilson, The Editing of the Hebrew Psalter (SBL Dissertation Series 76;  Chico: Scholars Press, 1985).discrete songs.10 Wilson in turn focused on the final form or canonical shape of the Psalter, arguing for 'purposeful, editorial organisation.'11 The arrangement, concluded Wilson, mirrored Israel's historical relationship to God, moving from prayer to praise, from Israel to the nations and from David's earthly kingship to YHWH's universal reign. Wilson would later observe a 'wisdom frame' within the Psalter, spanning the wisdom psalms of Pss 1, 73, 90, 107 and 145.14 The wisdom frame emerges in the opening and closing psalms of Book V, with both psalms ending with a call to wisdom in view of its benefits (Pss 107:42-43; 145:20-21).The frame reaches back additionally to encompass Ps 90 at the opening of Book IV, with its clear wisdom themes of God's sovereignty and human transience.15 Yet Wilson concluded that this frame lay in tension with the royal covenantal frame (Pss 2; 72; 89; 144).He subsumed the wisdom frame ultimately into the royal frame due to the perceived editorial strategy; the final compilers sought to bolster the collapse of the Davidic hope in Books I-III by focusing on Israel's true hope-YHWH's kingship-in Books IV-V.16

B THE CANONICAL APPROACH AND WISDOM'S ROLE
Numerous scholars have elaborated on Wilson's canonical approach to the Psalter, focusing to a greater or lesser degree on its alleged wisdom elements.Erich Zenger, for example, whose independent work and collaboration with Frank-Lothar Hossfeld have singularly influenced twenty-first century interpretation of the Psalter, contends that canonical interpretation provides a distinctive paradigm for approaching the Psalter.Psalms are to be interpreted in the light of their context through catchword connections, psalm groupings and psalm positioning. 17Hossfeld and Steiner expand these literary connections to eight devices that they discern as demonstrating canonical coherence across the Psalter including opening and closing catchwords and phrases, twin psalm pairings, cluster compositions and keyword and thematic groupings. 18One of the most comprehensive approaches is the recent study by Peter Ho, who proposes thirty-two organisational principles (thirteen formal and nineteen tacit), suggesting conscious editorial arrangement across the Psalter. 19 seeking to apply the canonical approach to the Psalter based on its perceived wisdom elements, some scholars have proposed a larger role for wisdom as the editorial theme of the book.Walter Brueggemann, for example, has suggested that to take seriously the start of the Psalter as Ps 1 is to understand the Psalter as a didactic summons to obedience with implications for the righteous person who attains a happy, fortunate life by adhering to the norms of Torah. 20Brueggemann builds on his proposed wisdom contour by identifying Ps 73 as critical to the theological and canonical shape of the Psalter. 21In this psalm, the reader follows the wisdom course laid out in Ps 1 by moving from doubt to faith and from faltering obedience to praise in order to achieve Torah piety, an essential component of wisdom. 22ank-Lothar Hossfeld, "Das Buch der Psalmen," in Einleitung in das Alte Testament  (ed.Christian Frevler; Stüttgart: Kohlhammer, 2016  35-37.Ho's formal techniques include the five book divisions, the prologue (Pss 1-2) and epilogue (Pss 146-150), symmetrical/concentric structures (i.e.chiasm) at the highest (book) level and at the lowest (couplet) levels, the five Davidic collections, the Elohistic psalter in Books II-III, strategic placement of acrostics and alphabetic psalms, the dynamic interplay of authorship superscriptions, the progression of historical superscriptions as tied to 1 Samuel, the deliberate placement of anonymous psalms, the colophon of Ps 72:20, the doxologies as the conclusions in Books I-IV and the use of numerical devices and symbolism (35-36).His tacit or informal techniques reside mainly at the level of thematic and catchword links, not all of which are equally persuasive (36-37).
Nancy de-Claissé-Walford finds a similar wisdom shape in the Psalter, one that she discerns by beginning with Book V and moving backwards. 23longside the trajectory lines of Davidic kingship, deClaissé-Walford discerns by retracing steps this way "an accompanying search for meaning and order, for an approach to reality, for an ethos, for assumptions and expectations about life in an ever-changing world." 24She attributes this thematic imprint as bearing the marks of postexilic wisdom centred on 'living in such a way that concretely embodied the instruction of God found in Torah, what has come to be known as "Torah Piety".' 25 John Kartje has developed this approach extensively in his monograph Wisdom Epistemology in the Psalter.For Kartje, wisdom revolves around suffering; wisdom's concern is to address "the fundamental problem of why people suffer and what they can do to make sense out of their suffering and perhaps alleviate it." 26He selects four wisdom psalms (Pss 1; 73; 90; 107), which he argues use metaphor and narrative to walk through the wisdom orientation process in the Psalter.The process begins with the fundamental worldview established in Ps 1, finds complication in the doubts and dissatisfaction of Ps 73, reflects on the brevity of life in Ps 90 and finally applies these realities practically to the receptive wise person who faces suffering and engages YHWH in the midst of the suffering in Ps 107. 27

C DETRACTORS OF THE CANONICAL APPROACH AND WISDOM'S ROLE
While many scholars have followed the trajectory of the canonical approach, 28 the methodology itself is not without its detractors.John Day, for example, concludes that "it is apparent that any attempt to find one grandiose scheme to account for the ordering of the psalms is bound to end in failure." 29Other interpreters share his scepticism. 30Perhaps the most detailed treatment to push against the canonical interpretation may be found in David Willgren's recent monograph. 31Willgren argues that the Psalter is an anthology rather than a unified book and that it possesses no coherent markers indicating conscious editorial arrangement.Rather, the Psalter's superscriptions, doxologies and thematic groupings were the result of late canonical implicatures added to the existing scrolls for practical and paratactical purposes rather than as the result of deliberate editorial organisation at the level of the psalms themselves.He concludes that more attention should be given to the Judean desert texts, especially 11Q5 as an alternative canonical collection, with the implication that the horizon of psalms study lies no farther than the psalm itself. 32hers downplay more specifically the role of wisdom in the canonical shaping of the Psalter.While discerning many intriguing intertextual links across the Psalter and the OT canon, Zenger, Hossfeld, Ho and other canonical interpreters pay comparatively scant attention to wisdom elements in the formation of the book.Ho contends that such endeavours are largely making a "marmalade" out of the wonderful individual pieces of fruit in the psalms themselves (as relayed privately to Erich Zenger and recorded in Zenger, "Psalmenexegese und Psalterexegese," 25).Cf. also Norman Whybray, Reading the Psalms as a Book (JSOTSup 222; Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 1996)  Gestalt, Theologie, und Intention der Psalmen 145 and 146-50 (BZAW 491; Berlin: de  Gruyter, 2016).
"impressionistic" due to the paucity of psalms often selected. 33In response to such critiques, a handful of scholars have sought to trace the presence of wisdom more generally by loosening the criteria by which to identify wisdom psalms.
Roland Murphy was one of the first to attempt a systematic approach to wisdom's presence in the Psalter.He freed himself to a large degree from the constraints of form criticism and focused instead on other factors including less rigid wisdom criteria, the sapiential milieu and didactic themes. 34He identified no fewer than seven literary markers of wisdom and five essential wisdom themes. 35To these markers J. Kenneth Kuntz added others, 36 while R.B.Y.Scott identified wisdom vocabulary as the key, leading him to compile sixty-four terms indicative of wisdom in the Psalter and elsewhere. 37While arguing for more generalised criteria, these scholars still applied their methodology specifically to the task of identifying wisdom psalms, a category that James Crenshaw had all but given up on. 38o other more recent contributions seek to refine the discussion surrounding wisdom's constitutive elements in the Psalter.Susan Gillingham proposes that rather than being bound to form-critical criteria, there are three different ways of assessing wisdom's impact on the Psalms: (1) wisdom as a particular way of writing (e.g.vocabulary, style, form); ( 2) wisdom as a particular mode of thinking (e.g.wisdom themes, practical orientation, adherence to Torah, creation theology, retributive justice); and (3) wisdom as a specific kind of living (e.g.family instruction, royal court wisdom, scribal tradition). 39anfred Oeming likewise concludes that an assessment of wisdom in the Psalter revolves around a matrix of at least five elements: (1) Torah piety; (2) a practical ethic of happiness or flourishing; (3) creation theology that reflects on human nature, world order and the mysterious workings of God; (4) personal dialogue with God through prayer, praise and lament; and (5) a direct causal connection between one's deeds and their consequences (the character-consequence nexus). 40 view of the preceding discussion, a few questions emerge.Does the integrative, canonical approach offer the best interpretative lens for the Psalter or do its potential detriments and, perhaps, fresh blind spots hobble its efficacy?What role, if any, does wisdom play in the formation of the Psalter, a theme often relegated to the peripheries of canonical studies?Is the discernment of wisdom's presence in the Psalter limited to formal criteria at the level of individual psalms?In this article, I contend that a canonical approach accounts best, in fact, for the continuity of pervasive literary features traceable across the Psalter.Further, I argue that a neglected focus on the Psalter's strategically placed, literarily binding wisdom components has led many to overlook a central aspect of its editorial organisation.Previous studies proposing a wisdom shape to the Psalter have centred on the form and placement of the wisdom psalms as integral to their reading of the Psalter.This approach carries weaknesses insofar as the identification of which psalms constitute wisdom psalms remains contentious. 41uch studies pay more heed to the form of wisdom in given contexts than to its function. 42Furthermore, these approaches often lose sight of the forest for the trees in focusing on the sine qua non of OT wisdom or on the fundamental elements of a putative wisdom genre with respect to individual psalms.These undertakings thus tend to overlook the larger structural wisdom links that develop across the Psalter.A preferable approach involves discerning a higher level, programmatic function for wisdom in the Psalter, one that is not inextricably linked to proving the existence and structure of wisdom psalms.To establish a hermeneutical horizon of wisdom within the Psalter I propose in the following a number of wisdom links within the canonical shape of the Psalter's five books.

D THE WISDOM FRAMEWORK OF THE PSALTER
A close reading of the Psalter suggests a number of wisdom elements that function as ligatures or connecting devices in the final form of the Psalter, hinting at an editorial impulse that crystallised as a thematic emphasis.These ligatures operate not on the level of individual psalms but also as programmatic for the shape of the Psalter as a unitive book.Such literary links likely acted as mnemonic signposts to facilitate memorisation of the book in that the mastery and recitation of sacred writings served as an integral feature in scribal training, as David   (34, 37, 112, 119) is the lowest, while the highest is Whybray, who sees twentyfive psalms as complete wisdom psalms or as possessing constitutive wisdom elements (8, 14, 18, 25, 27, 32, 34, 39, 49, 73, 78, 86, 90, 92, 94, 105, 107, 111, 112, 119, 127,  131, 139, 144, 146).Cheung, Wisdom Intoned, 1, lists A. Bentzen as identifying only three wisdom psalms, while L. Jacquet identifies thirty-nine. 42 While Ps 1 is usually classified as a wisdom psalm, our focus here lies on its functional wisdom elements as the doorway to the Psalter. 47Burger notes the numerous wisdom forms and content that converge in this psalm to support this understanding.He includes the following elements: 48 (1) the ashre formula or macarism ('blessed is the man'); (2) the use of wisdom comparisons with the conjunction ‫כְׁ‬ (i.e. the righteous are like a rooted and well-watered tree while the wicked are like wind-driven chaff); (3) the aphorisms in verse 5 and 6 providing proverbial contrasts between the righteous and the wicked; (4) reverence for the Torah; (5) the doctrine of retribution; (6) practical advice for success in everyday life; (7) the two paths or ways; (8) a negative attitude toward mockers; (9) admonition for the righteous to separate from sinners; and (10) the importance of opportune timing (i.e. the righteous bear fruit in the right season or time [ ‫ת‬ ‫עֵ‬ et], v. 3).
The 'blessing' or 'happiness' ‫י(‬ ֵ ‫ר‬ ְׁ ‫ש‬ ‫אַ‬ashre) theme characterising the Torah meditator becomes a key literary link refracted through the structure of the Psalter. 49The interjection ‫י‬ ֵ ‫ר‬ ְׁ ‫ש‬ ‫אַ‬ (ashre), the plural construct of ‫ר‬ ֶּ ‫ש‬ ֶ֫ ‫אֶּ‬ ('esher) connotes the 'happy,' 'fortunate' or 'blessed' status of those who are the beneficiaries of favour, peace and prosperity. 50The term occurs forty-four times in the Hebrew Bible, with more than half the occurrences in the Psalter and most other occurrences in wisdom contexts. 51The D-stem verbal form ‫אשר(‬ -'-sh-r), 'to consider fortunate/blessed,' occurs a dozen times, with half the occurrences in Psalms and wisdom. 52In his seminal study of the ashre formula, Janzen concludes that the pronouncement underscores the desirability of the person's status.The formula emerges from the wisdom context and presupposes the earlier receipt of favour with its benefits (e.g., fertility, victory, shalom), although sometimes proleptically (Ps 41:2; Isa 30:18). 53e use of ashre in blessing contexts prompts the question of its relation to the more common word for blessing in the Hebrew Bible, ‫ברך‬ (b-r-k).The latter verb in the D-stem usually connotes the bestowal of divine favour, with its concomitant benefits of fertility, peace, prosperity and dominion, conveyed by means of a relationship with God. 54Mitchell sees an overlap between the terms, with ‫ברך‬ forming the larger category of blessing; 55 yet a distinction between the senses seems likely, as words are rarely entirely synonymous. 56Several distinctions emerge from a close comparison. 57Ashre never invokes blessing, as baruk does but is always descriptive, while presupposing the favoured person's prior action.To be recognised as ashre, a person has undertaken an action or attained a status such as trusting God (Pss 2:12; 34:8 [9]; 40:4 [5]; 84:12 [13]), fearing YHWH (Pss 112:1; 128:1), submitting to Torah (Ps 119:1-2) or having sins forgiven (Ps 32:1-2).God never pronounces a person ashre-only humans describe other humans this way.Ashre does not form an antipodal word-pair with cursing.Rather, it pronounces a person as prosperous without necessarily relating the source of prosperity.In sum, bārûk connotes the divine favour and gifts that God grants to those in relationship with him, while ashre depicts the favourable status enjoyed by those who have attained such benefits, often through prior action. 58om this background the use of ashre in the Psalms gains clarity; the Psalter is structured so as to bring the reader/meditator into the status of divine favour and prosperity.Not only does the term ashre form an inclusio device opening and closing Pss 1-2 but the term appears at critical junctures throughout the five-book structure of the Psalter.The closing psalm of Book I uses the term to denote the blessing that surrounds the wise person who remembers the lowly: "Blessed ‫י(‬ ֵ ‫ר‬ ְׁ ‫ש‬ ‫)אַ‬ are those who have regard for the weak; the LORD delivers them in times of trouble" (Ps 41:1). 59The term appears in verbal form as a blessing on the Davidic king in the closing psalm of Book II: "Then all nations will be blessed through him and they will call him blessed ‫"!)אשר(‬ (Ps 72:17).The term occurs in the closing psalm of Book III to characterise the happiness of those who observe the festival with YHWH's blessing: "Blessed ‫י(‬ ֵ ‫ר‬ ְׁ ‫ש‬ ‫)אַ‬ are those who have learned to acclaim you, who walk in the light of your presence, LORD" (Ps 89: 15 [16]).Likewise, the closing psalm of Book IV mentions the term as a benediction for those who execute justice: "Blessed ‫י(‬ ֵ ‫ר‬ ְׁ ‫ש‬ ‫)אַ‬ are they who act justly, who always do what is right" (Ps 106:3).Finally, the opening psalm of the Psalter's epilogue (Pss 146-150) employs the term to describe the blessing 55 Mitchell, The Meaning of brk, 180.He notes that "ašrê is synonymous with bārûk over the entire range of meaning of 'ašrê . . .However, all that can be called bārûk cannot necessarily be called 'ašrê." 56Peter Cotterell and Max Turner, Linguistics and Biblical Interpretation (Downers Grove: InterVarsity, 1989), 159-161. 57See Grüneberg, Abraham, Blessing, and the Nations, 114-115. 58Robin L. Routledge, "Blessings and Curses," in Dictionary of the Old Testament: Prophets (Downers Grove: InterVarsity, 2012), 61. 59All Scriptural citations, unless otherwise noted, are from the New International Version (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2011). of those who hope and find refuge in YHWH: "Blessed ‫י(‬ ֵ ‫ר‬ ְׁ ‫ש‬ ‫)אַ‬ are those whose help is the God of Jacob, whose hope is in the LORD their God" (Ps 146:5).
Such distribution sets the tone for the Psalter as forming the pathway to human happiness or flourishing, attainable through attention to Torah and appropriation of its ethical demands and concretised through the reality of knowing YHWH and walking in his ways (Ps 1:6).Psalm 1 thus sets trajectory for the reading of the Psalter in tangible and implicit ways.The Psalms provide a pathway for the righteous to prosper by focusing on the understanding of and obedience to the Torah and by avoiding deleterious relationships that will corrupt and damage the righteous man's vibrant relationship to YHWH. 1b Psalm 2 and Wisdom While the wisdom elements present in Ps 1 are not as overtly traceable in Ps 2, the literary links binding the two psalms as discussed earlier suggest a cohesive framework, with Ps 2 likewise carrying sapiential features. 60In this way, several aspects merit mention.Psalm 2 portrays the wicked nations as plotting (v. 1) with the term ‫הגה‬ (h-g-h), which means customarily 'to meditate on,' 'to rehearse while meditating,' or 'to speak, proclaim.' 61The term appears eleven times in the Psalter, appearing in each of the five books (Pss 1:2; 2:1; 35:28; 37:30; 38:12 [13]; 63:6 [7]; 71:24; 77:12 [13]; 90:9; 115:7; 143:5).Within the Psalter the term is usually taken to carry one of three nuances, reciting from memory, reading the written text or singing the melody. 62The term occurs fifteen times elsewhere in the Hebrew Bible, often to denote the moaning/growling of animals (Isa 31:4;  38:14; 59:11) or to prioritise divine revelation as the source of wisdom and blessing (Josh 1:8; Job 27:4; Prov 8:7; Isa 8:19).The word appears only once elsewhere in Psalms to characterise the actions of evildoers, in Ps 38:12 (13)  where the wicked "meditate treachery all day long" against the psalmist.
In other places, the term appears in the context of wisdom formulations or didactic concerns such as in Ps 37:30, where the psalmist characterises the speech of the upright: "The mouth of the righteous utters ‫)הגה(‬ wisdom and his tongue speaks justice" (Ps 37:30).In Ps 90, the term describes the moaning or sigh that characterises life's end for fallen, mortal humans who nonetheless are encouraged to seek a heart of wisdom (90:9; cf.v. 12).In Ps 143, the psalmist meditates on the works of YHWH (v. 9) before asking YHWH to teach ‫למד(‬l-m-d) him to do his good pleasure ‫צֹון(‬ ָׁ ‫ר‬ratson), with the latter term in another context denoting the desire or favour ‫צֹון(‬ ָׁ ‫ר‬ratson) that YHWH fulfils for those who fear him (Ps 145:19), along with resonances to the pleasure or delight ‫ץ(‬ ‫פֶּ‬ ֵ ‫ח‬ khefets) that the righteous man finds in Torah (1:2) and that God finds in the righteous man (Ps 41:12).Psalm 2 speaks of the Davidic king's relationship to YHWH as grounded in a father/son covenant bond (v.7), calling to mind the pervasive father/son relationship so crucial to the transmission of wisdom elsewhere.The rhetorical strategy of Proverbs likewise grounds the fatherly relationship and training in the will of YHWH, tying vitally to the familial education program outlined in Deuteronomy (e.g.Prov 1:8, 10, 15; 2:1; 3:1, 11).With respect to the trajectory of the Psalter, this father/son relationship is crucial in David's own experience, as he is betrayed by the wrong son Absalom in Ps 3 before extending his legacy through the chosen son, Solomon, in Ps 72.The kings of the earth are warned in verse 10 to 'receive instruction,' using the wisdom term ‫ׂשכל‬ (s-k-l) with wisdom connections to the life of David as discussed below.The term likewise carries integral ties to Proverbs as a programmatic term denoting one of the key benefits of wisdom, viz., gaining insight for the successful execution of the well-lived life (Prov 1:3; 3:4; 10:5; 12:8; 15:24; 16:20).Instead of pursuing folly, these kings are to follow the course of fearing YHWH (v.11), the inception point and regulative principle of wisdom in Proverbs (1:7; 2:5; 9:10; 10:27; 14:27; 24:21;  31:30).The psalm concludes (v.12) with a reference to the way ‫ך(‬ ֶּ ‫ר‬ ֶּ ‫;ד‬ derek) of destruction as ostensibly contrasted with the way of the righteous, which is the way of life as outlined in Ps 1.Those who follow the right path by finding refuge in the Davidic king and ultimately in YHWH himself are characterised as 'blessed' ‫י(‬ ֵ ‫ר‬ ְׁ ‫ש‬ ‫,)אַ‬ linking back to the blessing that derives from Torah meditation in Ps 1.

Lexical and Thematic Ties to the Book of Proverbs
Not only do Pss 1-2 carry wisdom elements but they also carry intriguing ties to the larger program of wisdom outlined in the book of Proverbs.The book of Proverbs offers clues to its purposeful and intentional structure aimed at moving inexperienced youths toward character formation and training for socio-political leadership through the inculcation of the virtues of righteousness, justice and integrity. 63Instrumental to such a program is the literary framework of the book, which consists of seven stages of wisdom progression.In the prologue of the book (1:8-9:18) are ten speeches outlining the father's instruction to the son as the ground-level entry point for attaining wisdom.His voice is paired with that of Lady Wisdom, whose wholesome character presents an attractive patroness for the young man in his pursuit of wisdom. 64Interesting in this connection are the literary and thematic connections found in the father's opening speech in Proverbs (Prov 1:8-19), compared with Ps 1 and in Lady Wisdom's opening discourse (1:20-33) compared with Ps 2.
First, Ps 1 closely mirrors the father's first didactic speech in Proverbs (Prov 1:8-19).The father's correction in Proverbs is paired with the mother's instruction (Prov 1:8), with the latter characterised as 'Torah' ‫ה(‬ ָׁ ‫,)ּתֹור‬ the same term denoting the body of sacred truth upon which the blessed man of Ps 1 is meditating (Ps 1:2).The son in Proverbs is to avoid at all costs the enticement of 'sinners' ( ‫ים‬ ‫אִ‬ ‫טָׁ‬ ַ ‫ח‬khatta'im) (Prov 1:10), a group posing potential risk to the blessed man of Ps 1 as well (Ps 1:1).The latter does not stand in the 'path' ( ‫ך‬ ֶּ ‫ר‬ ֶּ ‫)ד‬ that these sinners traverse ‫הלך(‬h-l-k), implicitly the same path which the young son is also not to walk upon ‫)הלך(‬ or even enter (Prov 1:15).The sinners who cannot rise ‫קום(‬q-w-m) in the day of judgment in Ps 1:6 have their corollary in those whom the father describes as going down ( ‫ירד‬y-r-d) to the pit (Prov 1:12).In both cases, the righteous preserve their life and achieve success by observing the instruction given and by refraining from the path of sinners that leads to death.
Second, the admonition and instruction of Ps 2 have corollaries in Lady Wisdom's opening discourse (Prov 1:20-33).Lady Wisdom takes up the mantle of a prophetess in confronting the wisdom seeker with respect to the deadly consequences of folly similar to the psalmist in Ps 2. Lady Wisdom cries out from 'atop' ‫ֹאש(‬ ‫ר‬ -ro'sh) the city's commotion (Prov 1:21), a vantage point revealed later to be the highest points of the city (9:3), while the Davidic king echoes YHWH's decree from the summit of Mount Zion (Ps 2:6).Lady Wisdom addresses her discourse to scoffers who love their scorning (Prov 1:22), while the psalmist similarly addresses the foolish kings of the earth (Ps 2:10) who conspire together in vain (vv.1-2).YHWH enthroned in heaven 'laughs at' ‫ׂשחק(‬ s-kh-q) and 'mocks' ‫לעג(‬l-'-g) the wicked (Ps 2:4), much as Lady Wisdom promises to 'laugh at' ‫ׂשחק(‬s-kh-q) and 'mock' ‫לעג(‬l-'-g) the foolish ones who spurn her counsel (Prov 1:26), with the same terms in the same order.Those whom Lady Wisdom favours are those who choose the fear of YHWH (Prov 1:29), the same course the kings are admonished to take (Ps 2:11).Those who reject the counsel of Lady Wisdom will consume the fruit of their own way ( ‫ך‬ ֶּ ‫ר‬ ֶּ ‫ד‬ derek) (Prov 1:31), analogous to those who perish in their way due to the quickly kindled wrath of the king (Ps 2:12).'Blessing' or 'happiness' ‫י(‬ ֵ ‫ר‬ ְׁ ‫ש‬ ‫אַ‬ashre) is the outcome of submission to the rightful king (Ps 2:12), comparable to the flourishing available to those upon whom Lady Wisdom's spirit is poured, as they find the blessing that attends those who embrace her (Prov 1:23; cf.3:13).
Other lexical ties between Psalms and Proverbs emerge from careful comparison.The term ‫ה‬ ‫מָׁ‬ ‫כְׁ‬ ָׁ ‫ח‬ (ḥokmâ) is crucial to the message of Proverbs, appearing thirty-nine times in the book including the programmatic Prov 1:7 ('the fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge but fools despise wisdom and instruction').The term denotes 'skill,' 'expertise' or 'wisdom.' 65 The term focuses on the application of knowledge in the experiential and ethical realms.Cognates include the verb ‫חכם‬ (ḥ-k-m), 'to be wise, insightful' and the adjective ‫ם‬ ‫כָׁ‬ ָׁ ‫ח‬ (ḥakam), 'wise.'These terms appear collectively twelve times in Psalms, with growing frequency in Books IV-V. 66The opening psalm of Book V uses the term twice, with a closing appeal to whomever is wise to heed the message of the psalm (107:43).Later in Book V, the programmatic statement of Prov 1:7 is repeated nearly verbatim in Ps 111:10, "The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom." Other sapiential terms appear less frequently in Proverbs but often in Psalms.One is the verb ‫למד‬ (l-m-d), 'to learn' or in the D-stem, 'to teach.' 67 The term occurs twice in Prov (5:13; 30:3), together with the synonyms ‫ה‬ ֶּ ‫מֹור‬ (môreh), 'teacher' (5:13) and ‫ירה‬ (y-r-h), 'to instruct ' (4:4, 11; 6:13).These terms appear extensively, however, in Psalms, with 'learn/teach' (l-m-d) occurring twentyseven times. 68The term occurs in Books I, II, IV and V of the Psalter.Nearly all the occurrences centre on divine instruction that YHWH provides humanity through Torah.The urgency and pervasiveness of the instruction grows as the Psalter progresses, with two-thirds of the occurrences appearing in Books IV-V.The other verb 'instruct' (y-r-h) likewise occurs eight times in the Psalter, framed as well in Books I, II, IV and V. 69 These lexical benchmarks suggest strategic placement with growing poignancy as the book progresses.The wisdom terminology is highly framed, with Books I-II providing the counterpoise to Books IV-V, where the summons to wisdom through Torah gains force, especially in Ps 119.
Cumulatively, these intertextual links suggest a similar tack in Psalms and Proverbs, hinting that both books possess a two-fold opening that serves both to instruct about the proper path to take and wrong one to avoid (Ps 1; Prov 1:8-19) and to warn about the devastating consequences that ensue from failing to heed the counsel of YHWH and his designated agents (implicitly the Davidic king mediates in Ps 2, while the parents mediate in Prov 1:20-33).With respect to this twofold opening of the Psalter, Sumpter states: In sum, the Psalter opens with a delineation of the two paths to Godgranted happiness-obedience to God's torah and submission to God's Davidically mediated rule-and it exhorts humanity as a whole … to choose life by being wise and following these psalms' guidance by believing in their promises. 70ese openings likewise correspond to the thematic development evident in both books-God instructs humanity through Torah so as to attain the benefits accruing from covenant fidelity.

3
David and Maskil: Wisdom as Royal Success in the Psalter Already in Ps 2, those who oppose the path of wisdom through submission to the Davidic king are instructed to 'be wise' or 'receive instruction' (Ps 2:10).The term ‫ׂשכל‬ (s-k-l) denotes 'to be wise,' 'have insight' or 'achieve success.' 71 Tova Forti and David Glatt-Gilad demonstrate the integral role this term plays in the rise of David to prominence in the succession narrative of 1 Samuel. 72The term appears four times in 1 Sam 18 to describe David's ascension.Initially, David 'finds success' ( ‫)ׂשכל‬ in whatever Saul sends him to do (1 Sam 18:5).His rousing 'success' ( ‫)ׂשכל‬ ensues in 'all his ways' ‫ך(‬ ֶּ ‫ר‬ ֶּ ‫ד‬derek) and springs from the reality that YHWH is with him (18:14).This 'success' ‫)ׂשכל(‬ soon evokes Saul's enmity, his menacing presence posing a danger to David (18:15).Nevertheless, David's reputation grows because he 'succeeds' ( ‫)ׂשכל‬ in all his ventures beyond Saul's other commanders (18:30).In surveying the usage of the term elsewhere in the historical books, Forti and Glatt-Gilad conclude that the term carries three connotations: (1) the successful one heeds the Torah and thereby achieves success in a cause-effect relationship; (2) the successful one possesses the presence of YHWH in a unique way; and (3) the favourable outcomes of the successful one follows obedience and fidelity rather than the other way around.65 (2015):390-400. 73Forti and Glatt-Gilad, "The Function of the Root śkl," 398.
Returning to Psalms, the term ‫ׂשכל‬ occurs at key junctures in the Psalter.Outside its use in the opening framework of Ps 2, the term occurs in the closing psalm of Book I. Psalm 41:1 uses the term in tandem with ‫י‬ ֵ ‫ר‬ ְׁ ‫ש‬ ‫אַ‬ (ashre) to denote the blessing upon one who acts correctly toward the less fortunate: "Blessed (ashre) are those who have regard ( ‫ׂשכל‬s-k-l) for the weak; the LORD delivers them in times of trouble" (Ps 41:1).In the closing psalm of Book IV, the term denotes the failure of Israel's ancestors to properly discern YHWH's works: "When our ancestors were in Egypt, they gave no thought ( ‫ׂשכל‬s-k-l) to your miracles; they did not remember your many kindnesses" (Ps 106:7).Elsewhere, this kind of discernment is linked to the wisdom theme of fearing YHWH: "The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom; who follow his precepts have good understanding ( ‫ל‬ ‫כֶּ‬ ֶּ ‫ׂש‬sekel)" (Ps 111:10).
This connection of the term ‫ׂשכל‬ to the figure of David and to the theme of wisdom prompts a further question regarding the meaning of the term ‫יל‬ ‫כִ‬ ְׁ ‫ׂש‬ ‫מַ‬ (maskil), used as a heading in thirteen psalms (Pss 32; 42; 44; 45; 52; 53; 54; 55;  74; 78; 88; 89; 142). 74Six of these headings are attributed to David (Pss 32; 52;  53; 54; 55; 142), four to the Korahites (Pss 42; 44; 45; 88), two to Asaph (74;  78) and one to Ethan (Ps 89).The term has been interpreted traditionally to signify one of three different connotations: (1) a well-written or artful song; (2) a didactic song that teaches or illuminates; or (3) a successful or popular song. 75hile acknowledging the tension that a number of these psalms would not overtly be classified as wisdom psalms, our focus is not so much on genre classification as discerning the pattern of wisdom's function or presence in key junctures of the Psalter.Interesting in this regard is the placement of ‫יל‬ ‫כִ‬ ְׁ ‫ׂש‬ ‫מַ‬ in the psalms opening Book II (Ps 42) and closing Book III (Ps 89).Additionally, the term is first used as a heading and last used as a heading with two psalms attributed to David (Pss 32; 142), thus providing a Davidic frame and important textual link to the successful king whose imprint is determinative in the Psalms.
In considering David's wisdom imprint on the Psalter, another important feature in the structure of Psalms is the unique colophon concluding Ps 72: "The prayers of David, the son of Jesse, are ended" (Ps 72:20). 76  (v.15).Barbiero identifies several other catchword links to the Davidic covenant and to the historical narratives of David and Solomon.These connections suggest a wisdom link to the royal sages of David and Solomon and serve to frame Books I-II as the product of royal wisdom mediated through the character of these two kings.

Sages in the Psalter
In addition to the wisdom ligatures already discussed, another aspect of wisdom's function in the structure of the Psalter is the strategic placement of sages.For example, Ps 73 and the sage Asaph come at a critical juncture in the Psalter. 78Psalm 73 stands at the theological and canonical centre of the Psalter as the beginning of Book III and as the starting point of the second half of the Psalter.Further, Ps 73 echoes the Torah piety evident in Ps 1 as something of a secondary header reinforcing that the path of righteousness provides true blessing while the path of the wicked leads to destruction.Ps 73 carries evident traces of wisdom themes and metaphors even though its designation as a wisdom psalm remains controversial. 79Asaph is linked to the putative wisdom term ‫יל‬ ‫כִ‬ ְׁ ‫ׂש‬ ‫מַ‬ (maskil) twice elsewhere in the Psalter (Pss 74; 78) and is identified as a 'seer' (2 Chr 29:30), a 'prophet' (1 Chr 25:1-2) and the father of a prophet (2 Chr  20:14) outside the Psalter.This latter prophetic designation links him conceptually in the Psalter to the figure of Moses, who is designated as "the man of God" (Ps 90:1) in keeping with his identification elsewhere as Israel's greatest prophet (Deut 18:15; 34:10).In the Psalter, however, Moses assumes the garb of a sage, asking YHWH to "teach us to number our days so that we may get a heart of wisdom" (Ps 90 :12).Other strategic placement of sages includes Solomon, who is featured in the close of Book II (Ps 72) and in the centre psalm of the Songs of Ascent (Pss 120-134), a key grouping in Book V. 80 Moreover, two other sages occupy a key place in the Psalter and are likewise associated with the wisdom-tinged term ‫יל‬ ‫כִ‬ ְׁ ‫ׂש‬ ַ‫-מ‬the term appears in the headings of the psalms of Heman (Ps 88) and Ethan (Ps 89).Their psalms act in concert to close Book III of the Psalter.Both sages feature prominently also in the polemical presentation of Solomon as the greatest sage in 1 Kgs 4: Solomon's wisdom was greater than the wisdom of all the people of the East and greater than all the wisdom of Egypt.He was wiser than anyone else including Ethan the Ezrahite-wiser than Heman, Kalkol and Darda, the sons of Mahol.And his fame spread to all the surrounding nations (1 Kgs 4:30-31).
Such prominent placement of sages at critical junctures in the Psalter suggests their formative role in the trajectory of the book.

5
Wisdom Framing in Book V One final note concerning the prominence of wisdom framing in the Psalter turns on the placement of wisdom phrases in the opening and closing of Book V. Psalm 107 opens Book V with a rehearsal of God's movement to regather the exiles and bring them back to the land.The psalm ends with a wisdom admonition which prima facie appears to lie in tension with its context: "Let the one who is wise heed these things and ponder the loving deeds of the LORD" (Ps 107:43).This wisdom summons takes on a larger role, however, in setting a trajectory for Book V that receives its reply in the conclusion of the book. 81The ending refrain of Ps 145, prior to its concluding doxology, is a wisdom summation that answers Ps 107 while also reaching back to Pss 1-2 with their depiction of the two paths: "He fulfills the desires of those who fear him; he hears their cry and saves them.
The LORD watches over all who love him but all the wicked he will destroy" (Ps  145:19-20).Psalm 145 also carries an alphabetic structure as an acrostic, a device identified elsewhere as pertaining to the wisdom milieu.Acrostics function to mirror the order, completion and symmetry in creation in a way that corresponds to YHWH's own character. 82Fittingly, Proverbs also ends with an acrostic characterising the noble wife (Prov 31:10-31).Together these features suggest a wisdom finale to the Psalter intended to hark back to the opening of the book by solidifying the sapiential hue discernible at key junctures in the Psalter.

E CONCLUSION
In this article, I have argued that a wisdom framework played a key role in the shaping of the Psalter.The nature of its wisdom shaping lies not so much at the level of form and genre criticism, inasmuch as scholars have sought to establish a wisdom orientation for the Psalter through the identification of wisdom psalms.Rather, wisdom operates in perhaps a more subtle but effective way at the level of catchword and catchphrase connections, lexical and thematic ties to the canonical corpus of wisdom (especially Proverbs), the strategic placement of sages and wisdom terminology and in themes present at critical junctures in the Psalter.This consistent and discernible placement of wisdom persons, terms and themes serves a heuristic role in guiding and ultimately shaping the worshipper who reads and memorises the Psalter.As the reader writes the psalms upon the heart, the psalms in turn render wisdom with its attendant blessing, flourishing, stability and meaning.

F BIBLIOGRAPHY
Frank-Lothar Hossfeld and Till Magnus Steiner, "Problems and Prospects in Psalter Studies," in Jewish and Christian Approaches to the Psalms: Conflict and Convergence (ed.Susan Gillingham; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013), 240-258.

2 as the Wisdom Foundation to the Psalter Psalms
442 form a two-part introduction to the Psalter.44Severalcluespoint to these psalms as constituting a mutually interpretative opening to the Psalter by which they are to be read in tandem as casting lexical and thematic lines that reverberate through the book:(1)The term blessed or happy ‫י(‬ ֵ ‫תּול‬ ָׁ ‫ש‬shatul) by streams of water is similar to the king who is 'installed' ( ‫נסך‬ n-s-k) on Zion; (5) the contrast between the 'way of the righteous' and the 'way of the wicked' in 1:6 sets up the use of the term way ‫ך(‬ ֶּ ‫ר‬ ֶּ Kartje, Wisdom Epistemology, 67; Catherine Petrany, "Instruction, Performance, and Prayer: The Didactic Function of Psalmic Wisdom," in The Shape and Shaping of the Book of Psalms: The Current State of Scholarship (ed.Nancy L. deClaissé-Walford; Atlanta: SBL, 2014), 87-103. 43d M. Carr, Writing on the Tablet of the Heart: Origins of Scripture and Literature (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009).‫ד‬derek) in 2:11-12 ('lest you be destroyed in the way'); (6) the verb perish ( ‫אבד‬-'-b-d) is used for the wicked in 1:6 and in 2:12; (7) both psalms lack a superscription and traditionally are attributed to David.With these connections in mind, we turn now to wisdom elements present in these introductory psalms.1aPsalm 1 and Wisdom 73 70 Sumpter, "Canonical Shape of Psalms 1-14," 517. 71HALOT, 1328-29; DCH, 8:150-153. 72Tova Forti and David A. Glatt-Gilad, "The Function of the Root śkl in Shaping the Ideal Figure of David in 1 Samuel 18," VT 77alm 72 is attributed74The form ‫יל‬ ‫כִ‬ ְׁ ‫ש‬ ‫מַ‬ would customarily be parsed as the hip'il masc sing participle of the verb ‫.שכל‬The traditionally to Solomon in view of its superscription 'by/for/to Solomon' ‫ֹה(‬ ‫ֹלמ‬ ְׁ ‫ש‬ ‫לִ‬lishlomoh).Gianno Barbiero makes a persuasive case, however, for a likely reading of the psalm as 'written by David for Solomon' on the occasion of the latter's accession to the throne.77Heproposes a framing device through catchword links in the opening and closing lines of the psalm connecting Solomon to David's benediction and ultimately YHWH's blessing: 75Klaus Koenen, "Maśkîl-«Wechselgesang»: Eine neue Deutung zu einem Begriff der Psalmenüberschriften," ZAW 103 (1991):109-110. 76Gianno Barbiero, "The Risks of a Fragmented Reading of the Psalms: Psalm 72 as a Case in Point," ZAW 119 (2007):67-91; Hendrik Koorevaar, "The Psalter as a Structured Theological Story with the Aid of Subscripts and Superscripts," in Beyond this, David's 'prayer' ‫ה(‬ ‫לָׁ‬ ‫פִ‬ ְׁ ‫ּת‬tefillah) (v.20) links back to the 'prayers' ‫ה(‬ ‫לָׁ‬ ‫פִ‬ ְׁ ‫ּת‬tefillah) and 'blessings' invoked continually for the king and his reign