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OLD TESTAMENT: HOW TO USE THIS BOOK
Much of the following will be familiar to you if you have already
read the "How to use Barron's Book Notes" section on this disk. We
have included this information individually here because there are
many unique things you should be aware of when using Barron's Book
Notes for the Old Testament.
The Old Testament is a monument in the development of theology,
morality, and law, the foundation stone of three of the world's great
religions--Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Moreover, it is an
important documentary record, used by historians and archaeologists
to understand the growth of civilization in the ancient world. But
the Old Testament can also be read as a pageant of poetry and
prophecy, of lyrical beauty and high drama--in other words, as one of
the world's great works of literature.
You have to know how to approach literature in order to get the most
out of it. This Barron's Book Notes volume follows a plan based on
methods used by some of the best students to read a work of
literature.
Begin with the guide's section on the Old Testament and its times.
As you read, try to form a clear picture of the life and thought of
the ancient people of Israel. The background should make it easier
for you to understand the Bible's view of God, the world, and
humanity's role in it.
Then go over the rest of the introductory materials--such sections as
those on theology, personalities, setting, themes, style, and form of
the work. Underline, or write down in your notebook, particular
things to watch for, such as contrasts between peoples and
personalities, key concepts of morals and law, and repeated literary
devices. At this point, you may want to develop a system of symbols
to use in marking your Bible text as you read. (Of course, you
should only mark up a plain study Bible you own, not a fine
collector's edition or a Bible that belongs to another person, to
your school, or to your house of worship.) Perhaps you will want to
use a different letter for each major theme of the book, a different
number for each important literary device, a special color to signal
important historical events. Put your marks in the margins so that
you can find them again easily.
Now comes the moment you've been waiting for--the time to start
reading the biblical text. You may want to put aside your Barron's
Book Notes volume until you've completed the assigned reading. Or
you may want to alternate, consulting the Book Notes analysis of each
section as soon as you have finished reading the corresponding part
of the original. Before you move on, reread crucial passages you
don't understand. (Don't take this guide's analysis for
granted--make up your own mind as to what the work means.)
Once you've finished the assigned sections, you may want to review
them right away, so you can firm up your ideas of what the text
means. You may want to leaf through the assigned readings
concentrating on passages you marked with reference to major themes
or historical patterns. This is also a good time to reread the Book
Notes introductory material, which pulls together insights on
specific topics.
When it comes time to prepare for a test or to write a paper, you'll
already have formed ideas about the work. You'll be able to go back
through it, refreshing your memory as to the exact words and events
described, so that you can support your opinions with evidence drawn
straight from the work. Patterns will emerge, and ideas will fall
into place; your essay question or term paper will almost write
itself. Give yourself a dry run with one of the sample tests in the
guide. These tests present both multiple-choice and essay questions.
An accompanying section gives answers to the multiple-choice
questions as well as suggestions for writing the essays. If you have
to select a term paper topic, you may choose one from the list of
suggestions in the book. This guide also provides you with a reading
list, to help you when you start research for a term paper, and a
selection of stimulating or provocative passages from commentators,
to spark your thinking before you write.
The Bible has been translated into English many times and in many
different styles. Unless otherwise noted, all biblical quotations in
this Barron's Book Notes volume are from the Authorized (King James)
Version, the translation in which the Old Testament has made its
greatest impact on English language and literature. Personal
pronouns relating to God (Me, Thou, He, Him, etc.) have been
consistently capitalized. You can read more about the different
versions of the Old Testament in the section "Translations and
Editions," which can be found in the bibliography for this book.
OLD TESTAMENT: BRIEF CHRONOLOGY OF OLD TESTAMENT TIMES
BRIEF CHRONOLOGY OF OLD TESTAMENT TIMES
AGE OF THE PATRIARCHS -- Mesopotamia: Ur
destroyed by Semitic
Abraham leaves Ur for -- 2000 B.C. invaders
Egypt and Canaan
---------
/ 1900
/ ---------
Isaac, Jacob, Joseph / 1800
\ --------- -- Egypt: Hyksos take
\ 1700 power
-- Mesopotamia:
--------- Hammurabi code
1600
Hebrews enslaved in -- ---------
Egypt 1500 -- Egypt: Hyksos expelled
---------
EXODUS AND CONQUEST 1400
---------
Moses -- 1300
--------- -- Egypt: Raamses II
Joshua in Canaan -- 1200 \__ Trojan War
---------
Judges -- 1100
UNITED KINGDOM ---------
David -- 1000
Solomon -- ---------
DIVIDED KINGDOM 900
Israel and Judah --
separate ---------
Israel Falls -- 800
---------
700
"Book of the Covenant" -- ---------
Judah falls -- -- Babylonia conquers
600 Assyria: Nineveh
EXILE AND RETURN falls
Decree of Cyrus -- ---------
Pentateuch canonized __/ 500 \ -- Persia conquers
\ Babylonia
Ezra and Nehemiah -- --------- \ Golden age of Athens
400 /
--------- /
HELLENISTIC ERA 300 -- Alexander the Great
Pentateuch translated -- ---------
into Greek (Septaugint) 200 -- Antiochus IV
Maccabeans -- ---------
100 B.C.
NOTE: The traditional date for the birth of Christ is the turning
point of the Western calendar, the year 1. Dates before then are
labeled B.C.; dates after then are labeled A.D. The higher the
date B.C. the earlier it is; the lower the date B.C., the closer
it is to the Christian era. For years labeled A.D., the higher the
number, the later the date is. Some histories of Old Testament
times, especially those by Jewish scholars, replace the
abbreviations B.C. and A.D. with B.C.E. and C.E., respectively.
OLD TESTAMENT: THE OLD TESTAMENT AND ITS TIMES
Suppose a powerful army invaded your town, destroyed your house and
those of your neighbors, sacked all places of worship, and carried
your entire community off to a distant land. Uprooted and unhappy,
you would face the desperate task of rebuilding your life in an alien
environment. Of course, your most pressing task would be to provide
for immediate needs--food, clothing, shelter. But you might also
begin to ask some very painful questions. Who was to blame for this
terrible disaster? Why did God allow it to happen? Had you somehow
failed God, or had God failed you?
OLD TESTAMENT: ORIGINS OF THE HEBREW PEOPLE
This is the crisis the ancient Hebrews faced about 2500 years ago.
Their entire identity as a people was based on the idea, told in the
book of Genesis, that God had promised the land of Canaan to their
ancestor Abraham and his children about 1500 years earlier, in other
words, around the year 2000 B.C. This promise took many centuries to
fulfill. The Hebrews were a migratory people, and after Abraham's
death many of them settled in Egypt, to the southwest. For many
years the Hebrews prospered in Egypt, but changes in Egyptian society
around 1500 B.C. led to a drastic decline in the status of all
non-Egyptians and--according to the book of Exodus--to the
enslavement of the Hebrews. Sometime between 1300 and 1200 B.C. the
Hebrews, led by Moses, fled Egypt and settled in Canaan. During the
next two centuries, through conquest and intermarriage, they
gradually made the land their own. (This story is told in the books
of Joshua, Judges, and Samuel.) In the process, the Hebrews, who had
begun as nomads with a society based on clans or tribes, developed a
centralized kingship and worship based in Jerusalem.
For a few centuries the Hebrews, also called Israelites, were masters
in their own land, the land of Israel. But weakened by economic
rivalries, political divisions, and pagan influences, the Israelites
fell prey to powerful enemy empires, first the Assyrians and then the
Babylonians. In the year 586 B.C. the armies of the Babylonian king
Nebuchadnezzar besieged Jerusalem and destroyed the great Temple
built by Solomon about 350 years earlier. Many hundreds of civic and
religious leaders were killed, and thousands more were exiled to
Babylon. This tragic story is recounted in several books of the Old
Testament, notably 2 Kings, 2 Chronicles, and Jeremiah. (The "2"
given before the name of the book is a shorthand way of saying
"Second Book of....")
OLD TESTAMENT: THE FAITH OF THE HEBREWS
Central to the faith of the Hebrews was their belief that the land of
Israel had been promised by God to their forefathers Abraham, Isaac,
and Jacob. But now the Promised Land had been laid waste, and the
exiled Israelites had every reason to fear that they would never see
their homeland again. The Babylonians felt certain that their
victory over the Israelites proved that the gods of Babylon were more
powerful than the God of the Hebrews. How were the ancient
Israelites to answer this challenge and preserve their faith?
If you have ever lived away from home for any length of time, you may
have felt the impulse to assimilate--to take on the language,
customs, and beliefs of those around you. Surely there were many
Israelites who, starting out as alien captives in Babylon, became
just like their Babylonian captors. But you may also have felt the
opposite impulse--the urge to hold onto your former identity, to
cling to those qualities that made you special and different from
those around you. Many of the exiles had this same reaction. This
is why the period of exile, far from undermining the Hebrew religion,
ushered in a great religious revival. The Old Testament records the
words and deeds of the prophets and political leaders who made this
revival possible.
OLD TESTAMENT: THE HEBREW SCRIPTURES
No one is sure which sacred writings the Israelites brought with them
to Babylon. The likelihood is, however, that the Book of
Deuteronomy--the fifth book of the Old Testament--was among them.
This book, a summary of the basic laws of Israel, takes the form of a
long farewell address by Moses to his people before they cross the
Jordan River into the Promised Land. Deuteronomy--or part of it--is
probably the "Book of the Covenant" referred to in 2 Kings 23:2.
(The notation "23:2" means the second verse of Chapter 23.) Many
scholars believe that Deuteronomy was the first part of the Old
Testament to be written down in anything like its present form. This
does not mean, however, that Deuteronomy is the oldest part of the
Bible. When the Israelites wrote down the Old Testament in its
definitive form, they may also have included many older documents,
along with a wealth of laws, legends, myths, folk tales, songs,
poems, and proverbs that had been passed down orally from generation
to generation.
Today, people make a clear distinction between history and legend,
between myth and fact. After hearing a juicy bit of gossip about a
rock group or a movie star, you might well ask, "Is that really
true?" When you read in the Old Testament about Lot's wife turned
into a pillar of salt, about Samson tearing apart a lion with his
bare hands, or about the boy David slaying the giant Goliath with a
slingshot, you may find yourself asking the same question. Biblical
commentators have been seeking to separate fact from myth for many
hundreds of years, and the biblical archaeologists now digging in the
Holy Land are also trying to distinguish history from legend.
Weighing all the textual and historical evidence to decide for
yourself what is "really true" is a very important part of reading
the Old Testament as history and as literature.
But you should bear in mind, as you read critically, that the peoples
of Old Testament times did not separate fact from myth as we do. The
Israelites who over the course of centuries established the text of
the Old Testament thought they were weaving a seamless web. The
creation of the world, the revelations to the patriarchs, the
chronicles of the people of Israel, the visions of the prophets--all
these, the ancient Hebrews believed, bore the unmistakable stamp of
divine purpose. Today, many Christians and Jews believe the same
thing, although believers differ among themselves as to whether the
texts are all literally true and, if not, how much interpretation
they require.
Within the growing body of Hebrew scripture, the first five books of
the Old Testament had special importance. These five books, which
are familiar to us by their Greek names--Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus,
Numbers, Deuteronomy--were believed to have been given by God to
Moses on Mount Sinai (also called Horeb) after the Israelites had
escaped from bondage in Egypt. These Five Books of Moses are often
called the Pentateuch, which is Greek for "five books." In the Hebrew
language, however, these books bear the name Torah, a word that has
great significance in Judaism, the religion evolved by the Hebrews,
who are today known as Jews. The root of the word Torah is "to
teach," and the term applies not only to the teachings themselves but
also to the scroll from which the Five Books of Moses are read
regularly in Jewish houses of worship all over the world.
The ancient Hebrews also had special names for other sections of the
Bible. The narratives by and about the ancient prophets of
Israel--men such as Isaiah and Jeremiah--were called Nevi'im, which
means "prophets" in Hebrew. (Today we usually mean by a prophet
someone who can foretell the future, but the Hebrews meant something
quite different--one who speaks or acts for God. Be on the lookout
for this special meaning of the word "prophet" when you read about
Noah, Moses, and other "spokesmen for God.") Finally, a third section
of the Old Testament, consisting of proverbs, songs, psalms, and
historical and pseudohistorical narratives, was called Ketuvim, which
in Hebrew simply means "writings." Borrowing letters from Torah,
Nevi'im, and Ketuvim, the Hebrews came up with the anagram Tanak,
which they applied to the entire Old Testament. The books of the
Tanak--the Hebrew Bible--constitute the whole of scripture for Jews
and are the basis of the Old Testament in Roman Catholic, Protestant,
and Orthodox Christian Bibles.
OLD TESTAMENT: THE GREEK INFLUENCE
One term that does not stem from ancient Hebrew is Bible, The origin
of this familiar English word is byblos, which in Greek means "book."
The term byblos stems from the Phoenician city of Byblos (near
present-day Beirut, in Lebanon), which was famous in ancient times as
an exporter of papyrus.
You might be wondering at this point why so many words we use to
describe the Hebrew scriptures come from Greek. The answer lies in
the conquest of the land of Israel in 332 B.C. by the brilliant
Macedonian Greek general Alexander the Great. The impact of Greek
power and culture on the Hebrews was so overwhelming that Greek
became a common language in Israel, and knowledge of Hebrew was
confined to only a few scholars. To prevent knowledge of the Hebrew
scriptures from dying out along with the use of Hebrew, scholars
during the third century B.C.--the century after Alexander conquered
the Holy Land--translated the books of the Bible into Greek. This
translation became known as the Septuagint ("seventy") in honor of
the 70 (or 72) translators who composed it.
OLD TESTAMENT: THE OLD TESTAMENT AND THE NEW
Old Testament, a term commonly used in English but frowned upon in
Jewish scholarship, has its origins in the birth and growth of
Christianity during Roman times. Today it is common to think of
Judaism and Christianity as completely separate religions, with
different beliefs, holidays, and places of worship. But the fact is
that Christianity developed out of Judaism. Jesus of Nazareth was a
Jew, and most of his early followers were Jewish. They had been
raised to believe in the Jewish God (as opposed to the pagan gods of
the Greeks and Romans) and to revere the Jewish scriptures. The
disciples of Jesus did not think they were starting a new religion.
Rather, they believed that the coming of Jesus as the Messiah (or, in
Greek, Christos, or Christ) was the fulfillment of prophecies
contained in the Jewish scriptures.
The split between Christianity and Judaism developed between A.D. 50
and A.D. 150, as the Jewish authorities rejected the claims made for
Jesus and as the followers of Christ sought to spread their beliefs
and define the differences between the Christian and Jewish faiths.
In the process, these early Christians developed their own body of
writings, consisting of narratives of the life of Jesus and documents
explaining their beliefs to fellow Christians, pagans, and Jews. The
early Christians accepted the Jewish belief that God had made a
special agreement, or covenant, with Abraham. (You should keep this
idea of a covenant in mind as you read the Book of Genesis.) But the
Christians also believed that the birth and crucifixion of Jesus
marked a turning point in Jewish history. Because the Jews did not
recognize Jesus as the Messiah, early Christians concluded that the
Jews had forfeited their special relationship with God. Christians
came to believe that those who showed faith in Jesus had inherited
the covenant and, with it, God's special favor.
The word testament comes from a Greek root meaning "to bear witness";
in church Latin, testamentum means "covenant." By calling the ancient
Jewish scriptures the Old Testament and the basic writings of
Christianity the New Testament, the Christians were really saying
that the new covenant--belief in Jesus as Savior and Christ--had
replaced the old. Many Jewish writers, rejecting this Christian
version of Jewish history, use the terms Hebrew Bible and Tanak (also
spelled Tanakh and Tanach) rather than Old Testament.
OLD TESTAMENT: ENDURING POWER OF THE OLD TESTAMENT
Why should the Old Testament, portraying the experiences and beliefs
of the ancient Hebrews, have retained its importance over so many
centuries and among so many different peoples? One answer,
maintained by many traditionalists, is that the Old Testament is the
unchanging word of God. The Old Testament is thus the infallible
record of God's revelations to and through the Hebrew people. This
is the view of orthodox Jews and fundamentalist Christians. After
reading the Old Testament, you too may share their belief, but that
decision is yours alone to make. Nor is it necessary to believe that
every word in the Old Testament is literally true in order to
appreciate the power and beauty of its vision. Those who depart from
literalist views maintain that even if the Old Testament is the word
of God, it was written with the hand of man. How, they ask, can we
expect it to be wholly free of human imperfection?
You might want to consider another way of looking at the uniquely
enduring power of the Old Testament. At various times in history,
Christians have come into conflict with Jews, Protestants have fought
against Roman Catholics, and Muslims have warred with all three. But
all these different and sometimes bitterly antagonistic peoples have
looked to the Old Testament for aspects of their most basic identity.
For the Jews, the Old Testament is a living record of peoplehood.
Even in their periods of most profound suffering and widest
dispersion, the Jews could look to the Tanak as a chronicle of their
continuity as a people over a period of 1600 years, from the time of
Abraham to the return from Babylonian exile. The early Christians
looked to the prophecies of the Old Testament to establish their
claim that God had foretold the coming of Jesus and chosen the Jews
to receive this great new revelation. The Protestants of the
Reformation period turned to the Old Testament to support their
argument that the Roman Catholic Church had strayed from the word of
God, and that the Protestants were themselves the true bearers of
God's covenant. The Muslims also would find in the Old Testament a
major source of their beliefs and identity. They honored the Hebrew
Bible for its revelation to the world that God was one, and saw in
the figure of Abraham's son Ishmael the founder of their race.
OLD TESTAMENT: THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CANON
The next time you're in a library or bookstore, take a few moments to
browse in the religious books section. If the library or bookstore
is a good one, you'll see many different translations and editions of
the Bible, along with the sacred books of other religions Buddhism,
Taoism, Hinduism, Islam. The surprising thing is that, like the Old
and New Testaments, a great many of these texts were first written
down or compiled during the 1200-year period between 500 B.C. and
A.D. 700. Moreover, all these sacred books are anthologies. Some
of these texts derive their unity from the presence of a central
human figure--Buddha in the Buddhist sutras, Jesus in the New
Testament, Muhammad in the Koran--but even these works of scripture
are collections. The earliest Buddhist scriptures were not written
down until centuries after the time of Buddha; the New Testament
consists of writings about Jesus, not by him; and even though
Muhammad is said to have dictated to his secretaries his revelations
from God, or Allah, the definitive version of the Koran did not
appear until about two decades after his death.
There are special problems in understanding how and when this
anthology called the Old Testament came to be written. For
centuries, the ancient Hebrews had no written language. The oldest
known Hebrew inscription dates from the ninth century B.C., but the
events described in the Torah extend back to 2000 B.C. and even
earlier. Moreover, although commentaries indicate that the order of
the Hebrew Bible was well established by the time of Jesus, the
oldest known manuscript of the complete Hebrew text dates from the
tenth century A.D., almost a thousand years later. Scholars have
learned much about individual books of the Old Testament from the
hundreds of separate manuscripts and manuscript fragments in Greek,
Hebrew, and Aramaic. But even the richest source of such evidence,
the Dead Sea Scrolls, which were inscribed between 200 B.C. and A.D.
100, offers Hebrew and Aramaic versions of texts that must first have
been written down centuries earlier.
OLD TESTAMENT: SOURCES OF THE PENTATEUCH
When you write a research paper, you list your sources at the end.
Anyone who examines your bibliography will immediately know the
books, articles, and other documents you consulted before you wrote
your piece.
But the Old Testament has no bibliography. No investigative reporter
interviewed the authors to find out what sources they used. Although
the Hebrew Bible makes mention of the "Book of the Covenant" and of
Ezra's reading the "Book of the Law of Moses" to the Israelites in
assembly (Nehemiah 8:1-8), no such ancient books have survived
independently--that is, outside the Old Testament itself.
For the orthodox Jew and the fundamentalist Christian, this lack of
authenticated documentary sources does not present a problem. Their
answer is that the sole source of the Bible is divine inspiration.
The Bible comes from God. Any speculation about other sources is
irrelevant.
For modern scholars, however, the problem is acute. Archaeologists,
historians, and students of comparative religion need to know why and
how Judaism developed as it did. Obviously, they cannot go to a
public library and "check" the sources of the Old Testament as your
teacher or professor can check the sources of your research paper.
What they can do, however, is to compare the Old Testament text with
what they know of neighboring cultures in order to draw parallels and
make connections between what the Bible says and what other cultures
believed.
You can better understand the story of Noah (Genesis 7-8) if you know
the flood stories written down by other Middle Eastern peoples. You
can enrich your understanding of the covenant between God and the
Hebrew patriarchs by learning about the kinds of legal contracts that
other peoples used. And you can more fully appreciate the law code
of the Pentateuch if you compare it to the great Code of Hammurabi,
inscribed in Babylonia about 500 years before the time of Moses.
OLD TESTAMENT: THE CRITICAL APPROACH
During the nineteenth century, a group of German scholars, focusing
on what they saw as discrepancies of style and content within the
Five Books of Moses, launched an attack on the belief that all the
books of the Pentateuch had been given to Moses at the same time and
exactly as we have them. Instead, these biblical critics argued--and
most modern scholars now agree--that different parts of the
Pentateuch were written down by different people at different times.
(Which parts were written at which times, and exactly how these
different narratives were woven together, remain subjects of
dispute.)
The German critics identified several different "authors" of the
Pentateuch and distinguished them by the names they applied to God.
According to the critics' view, most of Genesis was written by "J,"
so-called because of that author's persistent use of YHWH, or Yahweh
(the Y is given as a J in German). A second writer, responsible for
part of Genesis and most of Exodus and Numbers, was called "E"
because of repeated references to God as Elohim. (For more on the
Old Testament names for God, see the section "God in the Old
Testament.") Other important writers identified by the German critics
were "D," the author of Deuteronomy, and "P," who was credited with
authorship of the first chapter of Genesis, the Book of Leviticus,
and other priestly documents. These authors were thought to have
lived between the ninth and the fifth centuries B.C.
The German critics' argument that the Pentateuch was written by
different writers at different times is sometimes called the
"documentary hypothesis," but it is important to remember that no
such clearly identifiable "documents" have survived. The J writer
and the P writer, if they existed, left no other samples of their
work and no clear statement--outside the Bible itself--of their
beliefs and intentions.
Critical theory offers modern scholars a powerful tool for analyzing
the Old Testament and tracing its chronological development.
However, critical theory has been unable to dislodge the belief that
the ultimate source of the Pentateuch was Moses or God, which is
exactly what orthodox opinion, rejecting both the methods and
conclusions of the biblical critics, continues to maintain. Even on
its own terms, all that the "documentary hypothesis" has thus far
been able to establish conclusively is that (1) for a long time the
biblical traditions of the Hebrews were passed down either orally or
in scrolls that have since been lost and (2) the language and outlook
of the Hebrews changed over the very long period during which the
different parts of the Pentateuch were edited and written down.
OLD TESTAMENT: FORMATION OF THE CANON
Why are some books included in the Old Testament and not others? Who
decided that the canon of the Old Testament--the number, order, and
contents of the accepted books--had to be closed, and when was that
decision made? If variant versions of a sacred text existed, how did
the editors of the Old Testament choose which version to include?
Such questions become inescapable when we consider the fact that
although Catholic, Protestant, and Jewish editions of the Bible agree
on thirty-nine books of the Old Testament, the Catholic version
includes several books and parts of books that Jewish and Protestant
editions omit. Moreover, many other documents have at various times
been considered for inclusion in the Old Testament. Some of these,
now excluded from virtually all editions, are called Pseudepigrapha
(literally, "falsely inscribed"); others, excluded by Jewish
editions, considered canonical in Catholic editions, and consigned to
a special edition in some Protestant editions, are called Apocrypha
(literally, "unknown, spurious").
The distinction between Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha is complicated.
At the core of the Old Testament is the Pentateuch, thought by
traditionalists to have come directly from God. In the ring
surrounding the Pentateuch are the prophetic, historical, and wisdom
books, which Judaism, Roman Catholicism, and Protestantism all treat
as divinely inspired. The Apocrypha in the next ring consists of
books regarded by the Protestant reformer Martin Luther as being
worthy of study but lacking the force of holy writ. (Also included
in the Apocrypha are certain sections of the books of Esther and
Daniel that are not considered canonical by Protestants and Jews.
All three religious traditions consider the books themselves as part
of the canon, however.) From a Roman Catholic point of view the books
of the Apocrypha are holy writ, and from a Jewish standpoint these
books are no different from the Pseudepigrapha, which all faiths
agree have no place in the biblical canon. (The Pseudepigrapha are
sometimes called noncanonical or extracanonical works.)
Most of the Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha fall into the categories of
historical works or wisdom literature, which in the Hebrew Bible make
up the Ketuvim. By the time of the Septuagint (the first translation
of the Hebrew Bible into Greek), the canon of the Pentateuch and the
prophets had been reasonably well established. The editors of the
Septuagint must also have had some basis on which to select the
Ketuvim, but we do not know what their criteria were. One thing we
do know is that some books included were relatively late: 1 and 2
Maccabees, for example, deal with events in the second century B.C.
OLD TESTAMENT: JEWISH AND CHRISTIAN BIBLES
By the time the New Testament was taking shape, the Jews had endured
a calamity comparable to that of the Babylonian Exile. In A.D. 70,
as the Romans moved to suppress a Jewish rebellion in and around
Jerusalem, the Second Temple was destroyed, most Jewish communal
institutions were wiped out, and Jerusalem was sacked by the Romans
even more relentlessly than it had been by Nebuchadnezzar's troops
more than six centuries earlier. Once again the Jews faced a
spiritual crisis, and once again they responded with an attempt to
reconstruct their religious life by codifying their scriptures.
Commentaries that had been written on the Bible, as well as new
interpretations by and anecdotes about the sages of Judaism, were
brought together in two huge anthologies known as the Palestinian and
Babylonian Talmuds. In the academies of Palestine and Babylonia
where the two Talmuds were compiled, rabbinical scholars also worked
to establish a definitive version of the Bible in Hebrew. The task
of perfecting this Hebrew edition, which is known as the Masorah
("transmission"), or the Masoretic text, went on from Roman times
into the Middle Ages. Today, Jewish editions of the Hebrew Bible
still follow the order of the Masoretic text. Medieval Christian
editions of the Old Testament, on the other hand, were based on the
Greek version, or Septuagint, as translated into church Latin. The
Roman Catholic version of the Old Testament follows this medieval
tradition, but many Protestant editions reflect a revival of Hebrew
scholarship at the beginning of the Renaissance.
The criteria used to establish the Jewish canon after the destruction
of the Second Temple are relatively clear. First, no book could be
more recent than the time of Ezra--the fifth century B.C.--when,
according to popular belief, divine inspiration had ceased. Second,
the language had to be Hebrew, not Aramaic or Greek. Third, the text
had to have some history of use within the Jewish community. Fourth,
the teachings had to be in the mainstream of Jewish religious thought
as defined by the Pharisees, the dominant Jewish sect after Rome
crushed Jerusalem. Application of the first criterion meant that
some books included in the Septuagint were now excluded from the
Hebrew Bible. Of course, exceptions were made, generally when a text
failed one of the tests but met the others. For example, portions of
Ezra, Jeremiah, and Daniel are in Aramaic.
The missionaries who carried the message of Christianity throughout
the Mediterranean world frequently referred to the Jewish scriptures.
But these missionaries were often Greek-speakers, preaching to
Greek-speaking audiences, and the scriptures they quoted were in
Greek. Thus, even as the rabbis of talmudic times were narrowing
down the Hebrew canon, the early Christians incorporated into their
teachings the full range of Septuagint texts. The Septuagint
formally entered the canon of Catholic scripture at the church
council, or synod, of Hippo in A.D. 393. In subsequent centuries
the authority of the Apocrypha--those books the Septuagint included
but the Masoretic text didn't--rose or fell depending upon the status
of Hebrew scholarship: the more prestige attached to the Hebrew
texts, the more the books of the Apocrypha were called into question.
The Protestant downgrading of the Apocrypha was based, in part, on
the fact that the Catholic Church cited such Septuagint texts as
authority for the idea of purgatory and certain other doctrines the
Protestants denied.
OLD TESTAMENT: THE CANON
THE OLD TESTAMENT CANON
JEWISH PROTESTANT ROMAN CATHOLIC
LAW (TORAH) PENTATEUCH PENTATEUCH
Genesis Genesis Genesis
Exodus Exodus Exodus
Leviticus Leviticus Leviticus
Numbers Numbers Numbers
Deuteronomy Deuteronomy Deuteronomy
PROPHETS HISTORICAL HISTORICAL
(NEVI'IM) BOOKS BOOKS
Joshua Joshua Joshua
Judges Judges Judges
1 Samuel Ruth Ruth
2 Samuel 1 Samuel 1 Samuel
1 Kings 2 Samuel 2 Samuel
2 Kings 1 Kings 1 Kings
Isaiah 2 Kings 2 Kings
Jeremiah 1 Chronicles 1 Chronicles
Ezekiel 2 Chronicles 2 Chronicles
The Twelve Ezra Ezra
Hosea Nehemiah Nehemiah
Joel Esther * Tobit
Amos * Judith
Obadiah Esther
Jonah * 1 Maccabees
Micah * 2 Maccabees
Nahum
Habakkuk POETIC WISDOM
Zephaniah BOOKS LITERATURE
Haggai
Zechariah Job Job
Malachi Psalms Psalms
Proverbs Proverbs
WRITINGS Ecclesiastes Ecclesiastes
(KETUVIM) Song of Solomon Song of Songs
* Wisdom
Psalms * Sirach
Proverbs PROPHETIC
Job BOOKS PROPHETIC
Song of Songs BOOKS
Ruth Isaiah
Lamentations Jeremiah Isaiah
Ecclesiastes Lamentations Jeremiah
Esther Ezekiel Lamentations
Daniel Daniel * Baruch
Ezra Hosea Ezekiel
Nehemiah Joel Daniel
1 Crronicles Amos Hosea
2 Chronicles Obadiah Joel
Jonah Amos
Micah Obadiah
Nahum Jonah
Habakkuk Micah
Zephaniah Nahum
Haggai Habakkuk
Zechariah Zephaniah
Malachi Haggai
Zechariah
Malachi
* Books marked with an asterisk appear in the Septuagint the
medieval Latin editions of the Bible but not in the Masoretic text.
They have been accepted into the canon of the Roman Catholic Bible
but not of the Protestant and Jewish versions. These books, as
well as other writings, appear in some Protestant Bibles as
appendices. The technical term for these additional works is
Apocrypha, a Greek word that literally means "hidden" or "unknown."
In this Barron's Guide, these books are considered as a group under
the heading "Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha" at the end of the
section Books of the Old Testament.
OLD TESTAMENT: GOD IN THE OLD TESTAMENT
Do you believe in God? If you answered yes to that question, do you
also believe that God, in your own time, perhaps on this very day,
could speak to you from a burning bush, bet with Satan to test your
faith, free an entire people from slavery, make the seas divide, or
destroy the world by flood or fire? If someone you knew told you
that God had spoken directly to him, and that he was now speaking as
God's prophet, would you believe him, or would you tell him he was
crazy? If you were a father and God told you to prepare to kill your
favorite young son as a sacrifice to Him, would you do it?
If you are beginning to feel a little confused or doubtful, don't be
embarrassed. As you grow and develop, even as you read the Old
Testament, your ideas about God may very well change. This is
understandable, because a close reading of the Old Testament shows
that the ancient Hebrews' own ideas about God changed over the
centuries.
OLD TESTAMENT: NAMES OF GOD
Of course, you know the Bible was not originally written in English,
so the ancient Hebrews never wrote or heard the word "God." In the
Old Testament, God has several different names. The ones that appear
most frequently are
-El Elyon, meaning "the Most High";
-El Shaddai, usually rendered in English as "God Almighty";
-Elohim, a noun applied in the plural form to the pagan gods (or any
supernatural beings) and in the singular to the God of Israel;
-Adonai, meaning "the Lord"; and
-Yahweh (also Jahweh or Jehovah), the personal name of the God of
Israel, a name so holy that its four Hebrew consonants (equivalent to
YHWH), known as the Tetragrammaton, have long been the object of
mystic contemplation.
Experienced translators of and commentators on the original Hebrew
text have long used the different names of God as clues to
interpretation. For example, the rabbis whose views are recorded in
the Talmud (second to fifth centuries A.D.) believed that the use of
the name YHWH was meant to emphasize God's mercy, while the name
Elohim reflected God's role as Judge. At Genesis 15:2 and 15:8,
Abraham refers to God as Adonai; scholars have used the knowledge
that adon in the Bible also means someone having legal authority (as
we might say the "lord of the manor") to explain the covenant God
made with Abraham.
OLD TESTAMENT: MONOTHEISM VS. POLYTHEISM
In order to appreciate the revolutionary quality of Hebrew
monotheism, or belief in one God, you have to know how other ancient
peoples thought of the powers that ruled the universe. Except for
the Hebrews, virtually all peoples of the ancient Near East during
the biblical period were polytheistic; that is, they believed in many
gods. It is no exaggeration to say that the ancient Mesopotamians
recognized thousands of gods. Each city had a god. Each town had a
god. Each village or tribe had a god. Each household had its own
wooden or clay idols, which supposedly took on godlike powers if the
right words were uttered and the correct sacrifices performed. Each
aspect of nature had its own god or goddess; if enough rain did not
fall, if the sun did not shine, if crops did not grow, if a woman did
not bear children, this occurred because the gods of rain or sun or
fertility were angry or, worse still, at war with each other. The
kind of fear and frustration that belief in many gods could lead to
is well expressed in this ancient Mesopotamian lament:
The god whom I know or do not know has oppressed me;
The goddess whom I know or do not know has placed suffering upon me.
Although I am constantly looking for help, no one takes me by the hand;
When I weep they do not come to my side.
OLD TESTAMENT: GOD AS A HERO
No such doubt afflicts the author of Genesis 1:1, the first line of
the Old Testament: "In the beginning God created the heaven and the
earth." It has been said that God is the hero of the Old Testament,
and in Genesis you will meet God in all His incomparable and solitary
grandeur. No "proof" of the existence of God is offered, nor does
Genesis bother to explain why God created the universe. Rather, the
fact of creation is a given, the ultimate tribute to God's awesome
powers. Nor does Genesis offer the slightest hint that in creating
the universe, God worked indirectly, through the forces of nature
(some writers have used this line of argument in attempting to
reconcile the biblical account of creation with modern scientific
discoveries in biology and astronomy). Creation is direct, through
God's own word and spirit. Indeed, directness is the key to God's
actions throughout the Pentateuch. God speaks directly to Adam and
Eve, to Noah, to Abraham, and to Moses. The Ten Commandments (Exodus
20) are dictated directly by God to Moses and then delivered by Moses
to the people of Israel.
OLD TESTAMENT: CHANGING CONCEPTS OF GOD
In the later books of the Old Testament, however, you should see a
different pattern beginning to emerge. Only rarely in these later
books does God intervene directly in human affairs. God's presence
is still felt in the Law of Moses, in the covenant with Abraham, in
the divine mission of the people of Israel, in the inspiration of the
prophets. But when the people of Israel turn away from God, their
punishment comes not directly from the Lord but through the agency of
warlike nations. When the people of Israel turn back to holiness,
their reward is not some new miracle but brave leaders and a
prosperous economy.
In these later writings, God appears not so much as an agent in
history as an interpretation of history. You can see this difference
between these two ways of thinking about God and history if you
imagine a terrible automobile accident at an intersection where the
traffic light is not working. In trying to find some reason for the
car crash, you might, if you consider God to be an agent in the
accident, say, "The hand of God must have reached down from heaven
and switched off the light." Alternatively, you might treat God as an
explanation for or interpretation of the accident by shaking your
head sadly and saying, "It all must be part of God's plan." (Of
course, you might not mention God at all, but might instead complain
loudly to city authorities about poor maintenance of traffic control
equipment!)
Many modern writers on the Old Testament and Israelite history
believe that the ancient Hebrews' ideas about God changed in another
important way. The appearance of God before Abraham and His
agreement to protect the patriarch's descendants as long as they
would follow His laws is consistent with the view of the God of
Israel as a tribal god--in other words, as one god among many.
Exodus 15:11 ("Who is like unto Thee, O Lord, among the gods?") and
Exodus 20:3 ("Thou shalt have no other gods before Me") can both be
read as statements that other gods did exist, though none was so
powerful as Yahweh. However, other parts of the Bible show a much
broader conception. This can be seen in the opening of Genesis,
where God appears not just as the defender of a particular clan or
people but as the creator of the entire universe. Notice as you read
the words of the prophets how the God of Israel is shown to be the
God of all peoples, even those that do not know or accept Him.
Of course, you will have many occasions to consider the nature and
powers of God as you read the Old Testament and the notes in this
guide on each book of the Hebrew Bible. But there is one thing you
should be aware of from the beginning. Although the Bible uses male
words in referring to God--King, Father, He, His, Him--religious
writers have long been troubled by the idea that to consider God as a
male is to make him too manlike (or humanlike) and therefore to limit
or diminish His powers. The use of exclusively male language also is
a stumbling block for women who reject a society and theology based
on patriarchy and female subordination. Several recent translations
for purposes of worship have experimented with substituting
"Sovereign" for "Lord," "Ruler" for "King," and "Parent" for
"Father." This whole question is very controversial and will surely
remain so for a long time to come.
OLD TESTAMENT: PERSONALITIES
If God is the hero of the Old Testament, what about the hundreds of
other men and women who give the Hebrew Bible its epic scope? One
way to recognize how influential these biblical personalities are is
to recall how many Adams, Davids, Ruths, Rebeccas, and Rachels you
have known and grown up with. Such names have remained popular over
the centuries at least in part because their biblical namesakes were
regarded as heroes and heroines, as worthy models of behavior.
OLD TESTAMENT: HEROISM WITHOUT HERO WORSHIP
Perhaps you have heard of something called hero worship. You are a
hero worshiper if you are so excited by a person's strengths that you
cannot see his or her weaknesses. Today the objects of hero worship
are usually popular music, film, and sports stars, but in ancient
times they tended to be kings, conquerors, and tribal leaders. It
was common among ancient peoples to regard the ruler as a kind of
god, and many hymns were composed to honor the Mesopotamian kings and
Egyptian pharaohs.
The writers of the Old Testament were very much aware of the dangers
of hero worship. Since the religion of the Hebrews was based on
monotheism, or belief in one God, there could be only one fit object
of worship: God Himself. Viewed in this light, the tendency to
worship earthly kings, even worthy ancestors, left the way open to
polytheism and idolatry. Thus, in the Old Testament, only God is
faultless. Every human personality--even the greatest of the
Israelites--is shown to have human failings. Moreover, the greater
the leader, the stricter the standards applied.
OLD TESTAMENT: STRENGTHS AND WEAKNESSES
Consider a few examples you will encounter in your reading. Adam and
Eve, regarded by the Bible as our first parents, are created by God
in His own image, but their disobedience leads to their expulsion
from the Garden of Eden and to a curse on all humankind. Notice how
Noah is called "a just man and perfect in his generations" (Genesis
6:9) when God chooses him to build the ark that will protect a
remnant of God's creation from the coming flood. Later, however,
when the flood waters have subsided, Noah will become a wine maker,
and his sons will find him lying naked and drunk. The magnificent
Moses, chosen by God to bring freedom and law to the children of
Israel, is not permitted to enter the Promised Land because he
disobeys a divine command in one of his typical displays of anger
(Numbers 20:7-13).
You will not find any biblical character more remarkable than David,
the shepherd, poet, warrior, rebel, and king. For many centuries in
Western Europe, writers on politics cited David and his son Solomon
as the supreme models of good government. But if you read carefully,
you will see that neither man is free from blemish. The prophet
Nathan bitterly denounces King David for lusting after the beautiful
Bathsheba and arranging to have her husband murdered (2 Samuel
12:1--15). As for Solomon, although the Hebrew Bible praises him as
a wise king and judge, it also makes clear that his use of forced
labor in building splendid royal cities paved the way for the period
of divisiveness and rebellion that followed his death.
As you read about each of these biblical personalities, you should
attempt to weigh the hero's weaknesses and strengths to arrive at a
balanced judgment. Generally, the Old Testament presents each
character as worthy to the extent that he follows the ways of God,
and as flawed to the extent that he substitutes his own desires for
the divine will. In assessing how each biblical figure achieves
heroic stature or goes astray, you should also ask yourself what each
episode reveals about the nature of the Old Testament God and the
kind of obedience He demands.
OLD TESTAMENT: SETTING
Imagine the money a clever tour promoter could make with a
well-publicized trip through Old Testament lands. The pilgrims would
start with a picnic lunch in the Garden of Eden; spend the night on
Mount Ararat, where Noah's ark came to rest; cross the Red Sea at the
precise point where the Israelites crossed it; and ascend Mount
Sinai, following in the footsteps of Moses. If you think you'd like
to take or organize such a tour, better think again: after years of
intensive research, scholars have not been able to establish the
exact location of any of these places.
OLD TESTAMENT: PROBLEMS IN BIBLICAL HISTORY
Eden, which means "delight" in Hebrew, probably stems from the
Sumerian word Edinn, a general name for the fertile plain of Babylon.
There is a mountain called Ararat in eastern Turkey, but no reputable
scholar has been able to prove that Noah's ark stopped there; more
likely, the Old Testament means the Armenian mountains that belonged
to an empire the ancients knew as Urartu. As for the Red Sea, which
separates Egypt from the Arabian Peninsula, most experts now say the
correct translation of the Hebrew yam suf is "Sea of Reeds," location
unknown. Nor has the exact route of the Exodus been established.
Although, by tradition, a peak in the Sinai Peninsula called Jabal
Musa (Arabic for "Mountain of Moses") is thought to be the site where
Moses received the Ten Commandments, there is no proof, and modern
opinion remains divided. An interesting mixed case is the town of
Jericho, one of the world's most ancient fortified cities. At
Jericho, archaeologists have found mud-brick dwellings and public
buildings that are nearly 9000 years old; but no trace of the walls
supposedly destroyed by Joshua around 1200 B.C. has ever been
discovered.
OLD TESTAMENT: ARCHAEOLOGICAL FINDINGS
If you want to argue that much of the Old Testament is merely legend,
not fact, all this evidence is grist for your mill. But you should
also be aware of the many biblical sites that archaeologists have
confirmed since the nineteenth century. The settlement called "Ur of
the Chaldees" in Genesis 11 has been identified as an ancient
Mesopotamian city near the right bank of the Euphrates River; it is
known that Ur fell to nomadic invaders around 2000 B.C., about the
same time that, according to the biblical narrative, Abraham and his
family set out for the Promised Land. Remains of an Israelite
fortress have been found at Kadesh-barnea, an oasis in the northern
Sinai Desert that the Bible mentions as a gathering place for the
Hebrews after they left Egypt. Some of the most important finds have
been made at Hazor and Megiddo, two cities in northern Israel that
were built by King Solomon during the tenth century B.C. And, of
course, there is no doubt about the location of Jerusalem, which King
David chose as his royal capital. This city, holy to Jews,
Christians, and Muslims alike, has long been studied by
archaeologists, and today Jerusalem is once again the capital of a
Jewish state.
OLD TESTAMENT: THE WORLD OF THE OLD TESTAMENT
The Old Testament contains many dozens of place-names, and it would
be foolish to try to memorize them all. But as you read, you should
try to fix in your mind a rough geography of the biblical world. At
the center of the biblical world, physically as well as spiritually,
is the land of Israel. Israel's political boundaries have shifted
over the centuries, but you won't go far wrong if you think of the
land as bounded by the Great or Upper Sea (now the Mediterranean Sea)
to the west, the Jordan River to the east, Lebanon to the north, and
the Sinai Desert and Red Sea to the south. As you may have noticed
already, this land has many names: Canaan, the Promised Land,
Israel, Judah and Israel (in the time of the divided kingdom), Judea
and Samaria, Palestine (from Roman times until the establishment of
the State of Israel in 1948), and the Holy Land.
Why is so much of the Old Testament taken up with war and conquest?
One reason is that Israel was at the very center of the economy of
the Middle East. Copper was mined in the Sinai, and wheat, barley,
dates, and fruit trees flourished. The ancient Hebrews were a
pastoral people, and if you recall that David was originally a
shepherd, you will not be surprised to hear that sheep-raising also
played a major role in the economy. Passing through the land of
Israel was a route now known by the Latin name Via Maris ("way of the
sea"), the main trade route linking Egypt in the southwest with
Assyria in the northeast and with the Fertile Crescent of Mesopotamia
in the east, extending along the Tigris and Euphrates rivers to the
Lower Sea (now the Persian or Arabian Gulf). This means that Israel
was buffeted by cultural influences from each of these great
civilizations, even as it fell prey to each empire's program of
military and economic expansion. Because the Via Maris was a route
for people as well as commerce, Israel was also a target of migrating
tribes who had left their own lands because of exhaustion of grazing
lands, natural disaster, or military defeat. All these economic,
political, and cultural factors combined to enhance the importance of
what was otherwise a rather small and insignificant land.
OLD TESTAMENT: PEOPLES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT
The Old Testament records many warnings to the Hebrews not to
intermarry with neighboring peoples, in order to avoid polluting the
worship of Yahweh with alien cult practices. The fact is, however,
that the ancient Hebrews not only intermarried with but also learned
from their neighbors, and the history of the ancient Hebrews cannot
be understood apart from the history of other Near Eastern peoples.
Interaction with the Egyptians began as early as the time of Abraham
and was most intense during the centuries between Joseph and Moses.
This rich civilization, which developed more than 5000 years ago, was
based on cultivation of the Nile Delta. The enduring monuments of
that civilization are the pyramids, built by the Egyptian kings
(pharaohs)--who were believed to descend from the sun-god Ra--as
their own huge tombs. Traditionally, Egyptian religion was
polytheistic. However, one pharaoh, Akhnaten, did try to stamp out
polytheism and impose on Egypt the uniform worship of a single solar
deity. One fascinating aspect of this period for students of the Old
Testament is that Akhnaten reigned during the fourteenth century
B.C., at a time when the children of Israel may already have become
slaves.
Contact with the peoples of Mesopotamia likewise began as early as
Abraham. Notable among the many peoples who inhabited the Fertile
Crescent were the Sumerians, whose empire collapsed around 2000 B.C.,
and the Babylonians, whose first and greatest ruler (during the
eighteenth century B.C.) was Hammurabi. The Chaldeans dominated the
Mesopotamian region from the ninth to the sixth centuries B.C.,
warring with the Assyrians to the northwest. From the Chaldean
dynasty arose the new Babylonian empire, under Nebuchadnezzar, that
ravaged Jerusalem and forced the Hebrews into exile. Having
conquered Assyria and Judah, the new Babylonian rulers were
themselves conquered in the sixth century B.C. by the Persians. The
Persian era, which lasted for a little more than 200 years, was
brought to an abrupt halt by Alexander the Great, who spread the
civilization of the Greeks throughout the Near East.
Other biblical peoples you should know include the Philistines, "Sea
Peoples" who settled the coastal region as the Hebrews were
penetrating the interior of Canaan, and who were among the
Israelites' fiercest rivals; the Philistines figure prominently in
the stories of Samson, Saul, and David. The Phoenicians (called
Sidonians in the Old Testament), who lived to the north, along the
coast of what is now Lebanon, were renowned as sea traders; their
impact on the culture of the Near East included development of the
alphabet, the invention of glass, the making of dyes (including the
prized Tyrian purple) and the worship of Baal and Astarte. Related
to the Phoenicians were the Canaanites (worshipers of Baal and
Ashtoreth), whom the Israelites conquered and absorbed. From the
Arameans, who first settled in the area now known as Syria, came the
Aramaic language, in which some passages of the Old Testament are
written.
OLD TESTAMENT: MAJOR THEMES
The Old Testament is an epic work, from which many morals and
historical lessons may be drawn. This chapter can't possibly list
them all. As you read the Old Testament, you should be sensitive to
the many persistent major themes:
-Relations between men and women (Adam and Eve, Samson and Delilah,
Ruth and Boaz, David and Bathsheba, Esther and Ahasuerus)
-Relations between parents and children (Abraham and Isaac, Isaac and
Jacob, Jacob and Joseph, David and Absalom)
-Relations between siblings (Cain and Abel, Esau and Jacob, Joseph
and his brothers, Moses and Aaron)
-The favored destiny of a younger or youngest child (Isaac, Jacob,
Joseph, David)
-The significance of name changes as indications of a change in
personality and destiny (Abram-Abraham, Sarai-Sarah, Jacob-Israel,
Oshea-Joshua)
-God as a miracle worker (Sarah's pregnancy, the Exodus story, Joshua
at Jericho, Elijah)
-The bond between the people of Israel and the land of Israel
(covenant of Abraham, settlement of Canaan, Babylonian Exile, decree
of Cyrus)
-The burdens of the prophet (Moses, Jeremiah, Jonah)
These themes are all essential to an understanding of the Old
Testament as a work of literature; you should try to remember them
when reading the assigned passages, reviewing for an exam, or
choosing a term paper topic. But it is also important to keep in
mind a few basic ideas that underlie the Old Testament as a work of
religious thought.
1. THE OLD TESTAMENT TELLS THE STORY OF THE HEBREW PEOPLE
Central to the Hebrew Bible is the story of how the ancient Hebrews
come to see themselves as a chosen people, become slaves and then
escape from Egypt, receive their code of law through Moses, establish
themselves in the Promised Land, and defend themselves against their
enemies. Coupled with this outer political history of the Hebrews is
an inner spiritual history, embracing the idea of a covenant with
God, a growing belief in the ideals of peace and social justice and
in the coming of a Messiah, and a persistent conflict between those
few who speak for God--the prophets--and the masses of people whose
faith wavers and falters.
2. GOD HAS A SPECIAL RELATIONSHIP WITH THE HEBREW PEOPLE
The book of Genesis makes clear the Hebrew belief that the very same
all-powerful and all-knowing God who created the universe revealed
Himself to the Hebrew patriarchs. To the Hebrew people Yahweh makes
these gifts: the Promised Land and the covenant relationship, as
expressed through Divine Law, or Torah. From the Hebrew people
Yahweh expects one thing: absolute obedience. (Keep this
requirement in mind as you read about Abraham and Isaac at Genesis
22.) God also reigns over other peoples and expects their actions to
be righteous and just, but the special blessings given to the Hebrews
impose on them special obligations (notably male circumcision) from
which other peoples are exempt.
3. GOD IN THE OLD TESTAMENT IS A LAWGIVER WHO PUNISHES DISOBEDIENCE
BUT REWARDS OBEDIENCE AND REPENTANCE
The theme of disobedience and punishment appears from the outset, in
the story of Adam and Eve. Much of the Pentateuch consists of a long
list of commandments conveyed through Moses to the Hebrew people.
The belief that God will greet repentance with mercy runs throughout
the prophetic books (look, for example, at the Book of Hosea).
4. GOD VALUES RIGHT ACTION MORE THAN EMPTY RITUAL
Many laws in the Pentateuch deal with work, rest, sex, hygiene, and
social responsibilities. These, basically, are the obligations of
righteousness and respect you owe to yourself and to your family,
friends, and other people. But many other laws in the Torah concern
specific religious obligations to God. Among the Hebrews, these laws
were the responsibility of a priestly caste, which maintained the
Temple in Jerusalem and supervised the animal sacrifices made there.
A powerful theme in the prophetic books is that ritual without
righteousness is an insult to God (see, for example, Isaiah 3).
5. A MESSIAH WILL RESTORE THE KINGDOM OF ISRAEL AND BRING PEACE ON EARTH
The word Messiah comes from the Hebrew word maschiach, which means
"anointed one." In Old Testament times, anointment was the ritual in
which a king was touched with a drop of holy oil as a sign that he
enjoyed God's blessing. (The word "ointment" in English comes from
the same root.) Several important passages in the books of Isaiah,
Jeremiah, and Ezekiel point to a time when an "anointed one"--a
descendant of the House of David--will end the period of exile and
bring about an age of universal peace and justice.
It is at this point that Jewish and Christian interpretations
diverge. Jewish tradition has usually seen the Messiah as an earthly
king who, through conquest or some special act of righteousness,
would restore Jewish rule in Israel and bring peace on earth.
Christian tradition, on the other hand, maintains that Jesus of
Nazareth fulfilled all the messianic prophecies of the Hebrew Bible.
Much Christian interpretation views the Old Testament mainly as a
preparation for the coming of Christ.
OLD TESTAMENT: POINT OF VIEW
It's easy to see that the prophetic books of the Old Testament have a
point of view. In a narrow sense, the viewpoint represented in each
prophetic book is that of the prophet himself. But in a broader
sense, in each of these books you can hear a prophet, speaking for
God, tell the people that God has punished or will punish them for
their wickedness and will redeem them if they repent. The central
message is that there is an unbreakable connection between the evil
that people do and the misfortunes that befall them, and between the
good things that people do and the rewards they receive. An even
broader message is that the events of history are not just random
happenings: they follow a pattern, they convey a meaning, they
reveal God's will.
OLD TESTAMENT: CONFLICTING VIEWPOINTS
But what is the meaning of history? On this question, the writers of
the Bible do not seem to have shared the same point of view. For
example, a critical question in the history of the ancient Hebrews
was whether Israel should have a king. Throughout most of the
twelfth and eleventh centuries B.C., the Hebrews were a loose
confederation of tribes ruled by "judges," who were not jurists but
charismatic leaders. The main argument against having an earthly
king was that Israel was already under the protection of the
Almighty. When Samuel, a judge and prophet, tells the Lord that the
people are demanding a king of their own, he receives this answer:
Hearken unto the voice of the people in all that they say unto thee:
for they have not rejected thee, but they have rejected Me, that I
should not reign over them. (1 Samuel 8:7)
By the time of David, however, the monarchy had become so strong that
the king was regarded by many as the embodiment of God's will. Thus,
those who supported David and his successors wrote of the period of
the Judges, when Israel had no king, as a time of anarchy and
disorder. On the other hand, those who, echoing the views of the
prophets, denounced the later rulers as corrupt and faithless tended
to yearn for the time when Yahweh, fittingly, was Israel's true king.
Both these strands run through the historical books, and the conflict
between the positive and negative views of kingship underlies the
treatment of heroes like David and Solomon as great but seriously
flawed men.
On other questions, too, the Old Testament does not speak with a
single voice. The Deuteronomic belief that obedience to God will
invariably be rewarded is challenged in the books of Job and
Ecclesiastes. The message of such writings as Ezra and Nehemiah is
that the Hebrews must take pains to separate themselves from all
foreign influences. The books of Ruth and Jonah, on the other hand,
suggest that Jews can learn from non-Jews and that the lives of all
people are precious to God.
OLD TESTAMENT: THE CRITICAL RESPONSE
The nineteenth-century German critics of the Old Testament seized on
conflicts such as these as evidence that parts of the Hebrew Bible
were written by different hands at different times. The conflicting
points of view, they held, reflected Israel's changing view of itself
over the centuries. You might say they regarded the Old Testament as
a kind of diary of the Jewish people. If you have ever kept a diary,
you know how your outlook can change from day to day with a change in
the weather, the swing of a grade, a family argument, the making or
breaking of a friendship. As you read the Old Testament, observe
carefully how the Bible's view of the Hebrew kings, priests, and
people changes as Israel rides the roller coaster of history from
slavery to empire, from exile to redemption.
OLD TESTAMENT: LITERARY FORMS, STYLES AND TECHNIQUES
Trying to describe the writing style of the Old Testament is like
trying to describe the contents of your local library--the style
varies from book to book, sometimes even from chapter to chapter and
verse to verse. In fact, the Hebrew Bible has been compared to a
library, consisting as it does of writings by different hands in
different forms at different times.
OLD TESTAMENT: NARRATIVE STYLES
One biblical form that should be very familiar to you is that of the
chronicle, written in a kind of "and this happened... and that
happened..." style. In the following example from the book of Joshua
(3:1-3), each AND has been capitalized to emphasize the repetitive
pattern:
AND Joshua rose early in the morning; AND they removed from Shittim,
AND came to Jordan, he AND all the children of Israel, AND lodged
there before they passed over. AND it came to pass after three days,
that the officers went through the host; AND they commanded the
people,...
The books of Joshua, 1 and 2 Samuel, and 1 and 2 Kings are written
entirely in this historical style, but the same kind of chronicle
shows up in many other places. An extreme case can be found in the
long lists of generations between Adam and Noah and between Noah and
Abraham (Genesis 5, 10, 11). If you've ever told or heard someone
else telling a long and oft-repeated story by saying "and then I did
this... and then I did that...," you'll understand why scholars see
in this repetitive style the signs of a long oral tradition. Such
genealogies and chronicles were passed down orally from parents to
children for centuries before the Hebrews had a written language.
(Remember that while Abraham probably lived about 2000 B.C. and the
Exodus took place before 1200 B.C., the oldest known Hebrew
inscription dates from the tenth century B.C.)
The chronicle is only one of many kinds of writing in the Old
Testament. A common style in the Pentateuch is the law code,
recognizable in the King James Version by "thou shalt... thou shalt
not..." and in more modern translations by "you shall... you shall
not...." Interwoven with the historical and legal materials of the
Pentateuch are beautiful descriptions of natural creation, realistic
depictions of family quarrels, dramatic encounters among the
patriarchs and between individual patriarchs and their God, and
poetry of rare joy and triumph.
OLD TESTAMENT: THE BOOKS AND THEIR FORMS
The Book of Isaiah combines moral sermonizing with inspirational
poetry of the highest order, and the Book of Jeremiah mixes
historical narrative and political commentary with poetry that is at
times anguished and introspective. One book of the Old Testament,
the Book of Psalms, consists wholly of poems directed to God. The
Song of Solomon (also called Song of Songs) is an anthology of exotic
love poetry, lush and sensuous in its imagery (2:1-4):
I am the rose of Sharon, and the lily of the valleys.
As the lily among thorns, so is my love among the daughters.
As the apple tree among the trees of the wood, so is my beloved among
the sons. I sat down under his shadow with great delight, and his
fruit was sweet to my taste.
He brought me to the banqueting house, and his banner over me was love.
The Book of Lamentations, on the other hand, consists of songs of
grief and mourning. The Book of Proverbs, an example of the Bible's
"wisdom literature," is a collection of essays and sayings probably
used as a kind of textbook of good behavior. As you read these
sayings, some of which should already be familiar to you, notice how
the many different kinds of parallelism in the prose carry the
meaning forward.
Remarkable, too, are the books of Esther, Job, and Jonah, tightly
organized works that can be read almost like a novel or short story.
Consider, for example, in Jonah, the way the character of the prophet
(who is chosen by God but tries to flee his mission) contrasts with
the people of Nineveh (who are condemned by God but quickly embrace
repentance and salvation). Just as the phrase "the presence of the
Lord" recurs at key points in Jonah as a signal in following the
story, so the phrase "and the Lord was with..." appears in the
historical books whenever the Old Testament wishes to foreshadow a
character's success.
Because of the variety of forms and styles, there is no single way to
read the Bible. Different books must be read in different ways,
using different tools of literary analysis.
OLD TESTAMENT: TRANSLATIONS AND EDITIONS
In all human history, no book has been so widely read as the Bible.
By the mid-1980s, the Bible had been translated, in whole or in part,
into about 1800 languages and dialects. Books of the Bible have
appeared in some 300 different English-language versions, ranging
from the most scholarly translations to condensed or simplified texts
and popular paraphrases.
OLD TESTAMENT: THE KING JAMES VERSION
Of all the translations of the entire Bible into English, none has
had greater impact than the King James Version, which was published
in the early seventeenth century, in the age of Shakespeare. Under
the sponsorship of the English king James I, a team of 54 scholars,
working in separate groups at Cambridge, Oxford, and Westminster,
drew on Hebrew as well as Greek and Latin sources in order to produce
a translation that would convey in English the rhythm and power of
the Old Testament original. Upon publication, the King James text
became the "Authorized" version, to be read in Anglican churches.
Many editions of the King James translation have been printed,
including the notorious "Wicked Bible" (1631), from which the word
not in "Thou shalt not commit adultery" (Exodus 20:14) was mistakenly
omitted; the error cost the printers a L300 fine.
OLD TESTAMENT: OTHER ENGLISH TRANSLATIONS
The King James Version was not the first Bible in English. The
earliest complete English translation, the Lollard Bible, appeared in
the fourteenth century; another reformist translation was produced in
the 1530s by William Tyndale, a follower of Martin Luther.
Subsequent translations in the sixteenth and early seventeenth
centuries reflected the splintering of Christendom as a result of the
Reformation. A Calvinist version, the Geneva Bible, appeared in
1560; an Anglican translation, the Bishops' Bible, in 1568; and the
Douay version, a translation prepared by English Catholic emigre's,
in 1609.
The language of the King James Version was old-fashioned even in its
own time, and although its influence on the development of English
literature has been profound, its use in worship services has
steadily diminished. Our own century has brought a tremendous new
burst of biblical translation. There are several reasons for this.
First, the English language has changed--a change you become very
much aware of when trying to understand King Lear and Macbeth, both
written while the King James translation was under way. Second,
biblical criticism and archaeology (including the discovery in 1947
of the Dead Sea Scrolls) have offered translators new tools for
understanding the original texts. Third, a new spirit of cooperation
between Christians and Jews and among the various branches of
Christendom has inspired scholars of different faiths to work with
and learn from each other. Appearing in recent decades have been the
Revised Standard Version (1946-52), based on the American Standard
Version (1901) and the King James; the Jerusalem Bible (1966),
representing an English translation of the French Dominican version;
the New American Bible (1970), another Roman Catholic translation;
the interfaith Anchor Bible, a multivolume translation and commentary
whose publication began in 1964; and a three-volume translation of
the Holy Scriptures sponsored by the Jewish Publication Society of
America (1962-82).
OLD TESTAMENT: TRANSLATION AS INTERPRETATION
Even when it includes no specific commentary, each translation is an
interpretation. The translator's choice of one word over another can
have an important effect on the meaning of a passage. Consider, for
example, the sixth of the Ten Commandments (Exodus 20:13), translated
in the King James Version of 1611 as "Thou shalt not kill." This
commandment has been cited at various times as an argument against
capital punishment--the death penalty--and in support of pacifism, or
the refusal to take life under any circumstances. A more recent
edition, called the New King James Version and published in 1982,
renders the same text in a different way: "You shall not murder." A
look at any good English dictionary will show you that while killing
can mean the taking of any life for any reason, the word murder
specifically means the unlawful killing of a human being. Now, you
might still want to use Exodus 20:13 in arguing against the death
penalty or in favor of pacifism, but the newer translation (which has
much scholarly support) makes your task considerably more difficult.
OLD TESTAMENT: VERSIONS OF THE TWENTY-THIRD PSALM
No passage in the Old Testament is more familiar than the
Twenty-third Psalm, which in the King James Version begins, "The Lord
is my shepherd." As you read the translations that follow--only a few
of many different versions that could have been cited--ask yourself
how the translators' choice of form and diction affects your
impression of the passage:
Psalms of Sir Philip Sidney and the Countess of Pembroke (c. 1599):
The Lord, the Lord my shepherd is,
And so can never I
Taste misery.
He rests me in green pasture his:
By waters still, and sweet
He guides my feet.
He me revives: leads me the way,
Which righteousness doth take,
For his name's sake.
Douay Bible (1609):
The Lord ruleth me: and I shall want nothing.
He hath set me in a place of pasture.
He hath brought me up, on the water of refreshment:
he hath converted my soul.
He hath led me on the paths of justice, for his own name's sake.
King James Version (1611):
The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.
He maketh me to lie down in green pastures:
he leadeth me beside the still waters.
He restoreth my soul: he leadeth me in the paths
of righteousness for his name's sake.
Bay Psalm Book (1620):
The Lord to me a shepherd is,
want therefore shall not I,
He in the folds of tender grass,
doth cause me down to lie:
To waters calm me gently leads,
restore my soul doth he:
He doth in paths of righteousness:
for his name's sake lead me.
Revised Standard Version (1952):
The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want;
he makes me lie down in green pastures.
He leads me beside still waters;
he restores my soul.
He leads me in paths of righteousness
for his name's sake.
Jerusalem Bible (1966):
Yahweh is my shepherd,
I lack nothing.
To the waters of repose he leads me:
there he revives my soul.
He guides me by paths of virtue
for the sake of his name.
Anchor Bible (1966):
Yahweh is my shepherd,
I shall not lack.
In green meadows he will make me lie down:
Near tranquil waters he will guide me,
to refresh my being,
He will lead me into luxuriant pastures,
as befits his name.
OLD TESTAMENT: SUBSEQUENT INFLUENCE
What if the Old Testament had never been written?
Suppose all record of the life and thought of the Hebrew people were
suddenly to disappear. You travel to Italy to savor the masterworks
of Michelangelo, but his magnificent sculptures of Moses and David
are absent, and there are spaces in the Sistine Chapel frescoes where
Adam and the Hebrew prophets were shown. In London, scheduled
performances of Handel's Messiah and Israel in Egypt have been
abruptly canceled. In Washington, D.C., at the Library of Congress,
dozens of shelves are now empty, for not only have all the Bibles in
all their translations vanished, but so have all editions of Milton's
Paradise Lost and Samson Agonistes, Racine's Esther and Athalie, and
Mann's Joseph and His Brothers.
OLD TESTAMENT: THE OLD TESTAMENT AND WESTERN CULTURE
To measure the influence of the Old Testament, however, you need more
than a brief listing of works of art, music, and literature on
biblical themes. The plain truth is that the influence of the Old
Testament in Western culture is incalculably vast. For a thousand
years of European history, no one who could read at all was
unfamiliar with the Bible in church Latin. During the fifteenth and
sixteenth centuries, as printing technology developed, translations
of the Bible into English, French, German, and other languages spread
both literacy and new religious ideas.
No book has had such a distinguished international roster of
translators. By far the most important German translator was the
great Protestant reformer Martin Luther, whose edition (1522-34)
influenced the development of the German language as profoundly as
the King James Version shaped the growth of English. The King James
translators were among the finest scholars of their age. Outstanding
Jewish translators of the Old Testament have included Moses
Mendelssohn, a major figure of the eighteenth-century German
enlightenment, and the twentieth-century German philosophers Martin
Buber and Franz Rosenzweig.
OLD TESTAMENT: THE OLD TESTAMENT OUTLOOK
In dwelling on the history of the Old Testament as a book, we barely
hint at how it has shaped our way of thinking. Without this record
of the ancient Hebrew thought, there could be no Judaism; without
Judaism (and its messianic beliefs), there could be no Christianity;
without Judaism and Christianity, there could be no Islam. Without
the Old Testament, the lives and beliefs of today's more than 1
billion Christians, 550 million Muslims, and 14 million Jews would be
profoundly different. Nor would the difference be confined to
religion, for religion has a profound influence on culture. The
Sabbath in the Old Testament has become part of our weekend. The
prophetic ideals of righteousness, justice, and peace find expression
in our charitable agencies, court system, and the United Nations.
The Old Testament's uncompromising insistence on the supremacy of one
God, one law, and one truth continues to shape our way of thinking
about the world, even about science. (If you doubt this, ask
yourself how advanced the science of meteorology would be if weather
forecasting focused on the caprices of the sun-god, the rain-god, and
Thor the thunder-maker.) Today, few scientists regard the Bible as an
infallible guide to natural science; even so, the search for unified
theories in cosmology, particle physics, biology, and other branches
of science draws power from the ancient Hebrew conviction that the
universe follows a clear and consistent pattern that people were
meant to understand. As Albert Einstein, the father of relativity
theory, said, "I shall never believe that God plays dice with the
world."
OLD TESTAMENT:GENESIS-OVERVIEW
"Genesis" comes from a Greek word meaning "origin" or "source"; the
same root underlies the word "genetics," the science that probes the
chemical origins of life. The book's name in Hebrew is Bereshit (the
first word of the Genesis narrative), which means "In the beginning."
Traditionalists regard Genesis, the first book of the Pentateuch, as
having been given directly by God to Moses at Mount Sinai. Biblical
critics, on the other hand, hold that Genesis consists of a series of
separate documents set down by the J, E, and P writers and woven
together by an editor or editors around 400 B.C. (For an
introduction to the critical theory and an indication of what the
letters J, E, and P stand for, see "The Development of the Canon" in
The Old Testament Background section.)
According to calculations made in the seventeenth century by the
Irish archbishop James Ussher (and still included in many editions of
the King James Bible), Genesis extends from the year 4004 B.C., when
God created the world, to the death of Joseph in Egypt 2315 years
later. Today, few commentators are as certain as Ussher was of the
precision of biblical chronology. Most astronomers maintain that the
universe is not thousands but billions of years old, and
archaeological evidence indicates that humanlike creatures have
roamed the earth for millions of years. Numerous attempts have been
made, both in our own time and in preceding centuries, to harmonize
the biblical account of Creation with scientific theories and
discoveries. In recent decades, Christian fundamentalists have based
a "creation science" on acceptance of the truth of the Bible as a
scientific document. Many of the believing Christians and Jews who
dispute the fundamentalist view regard the truths of the Bible not
necessarily as scientific or historical truths but as truths of
faith, basic to the Judeo-Christian view of life as an extension of
God's creative power.
Not in dispute is the literary majesty of Genesis. In this one book
are found accounts of God's awesome creative and destructive powers,
the origins of the universe, the fashioning of the first man and the
first woman, the beginnings of good and evil, the first followers of
Yahweh, and the covenant between God and humankind. No book is more
central to the development in Western culture of the meaning of good
and evil and a sense of humanity's place in the world.
OLD TESTAMENT: CREATION AND DESTRUCTION (GENESIS 1:1-11:9)
In only a few pages, the Book of Genesis attempts to answer the most
profound questions anyone can ask. Is there an order to the
universe? Is there any power greater than ourselves? Where did
humankind come from, and what is the purpose of life on earth? How
did evil and suffering originate?
NOTE: A distinctive feature of Creation in the Book of Genesis is
that it is ex nihilo--a Latin expression meaning "out of nothing."
Before Creation, says Genesis 1:2, "the earth was without form, and
void." Nothing is said of God's existence prior to Creation, nor is
any reason given for this act.
The opening chapters of Genesis offer a blueprint for Creation, as
God--here called Elohim--molds a formless and watery world into the
environment familiar to our senses. (Mesopotamian myths also
associate water with primeval chaos.) God's initial task is to create
light and separate it from darkness, thereby making the first day.
On the second day, God makes Heaven (also translated as the heavens,
or sky); on the third day, Earth (or dry land), seas, and plants; on
the fourth day, stars, sun, and moon; on the fifth day, creatures of
the sea and sky; on the sixth day, creatures of the land, including
man "in His own image." You may have noticed that after each of the
first five days God examines His Creation and pronounces it "good,"
but on the sixth day--the day on which man and woman emerge--God
calls His handiwork "very good" (1:31). The message, stated
explicitly in 1:28-30, is that humanity represents the fulfillment of
the creative design. Just as God has no rival as the shaping and
controlling force in the universe, so humanity has no rival as ruler
of the natural world. In Genesis 2:1-3, after six days of "making,"
God ceases His labors and sanctifies the seventh day as a day of
rest.
NOTE: The English word "Sabbath," or seventh day, comes from the
Hebrew "Shabbat," which itself stems from shavat, or "rest." The
concept of a special day of refreshment or celebration may have its
origin in the Babylonian shapattu, a once-a-month celebration of the
full moon. However, the idea of a weekly day of rest--a day,
moreover, that is as sacred as any of the days of active
creation--seems wholly without precedent. Remembrance of the Sabbath
is the only ritual specified in the Ten Commandments (Exodus
20:8-11).
Genesis 2:4 takes you right back to the beginning. Why does the
Bible repeat the Creation story? As you read 2:4-25, try to keep
clearly in mind the first version of Creation. Notice, for example,
that in the first narrative, animals are created before human beings,
but in the second version the animals are created for and named by
man. In the first version, male and female are created together; in
the second, the woman is fashioned from the man, to serve as a helper
for him.
What do these differences mean? If you accept the idea that the
Bible has several authors, this passage offers powerful support. God
is referred to not as Elohim but as Yahweh Elohim (the Lord God) or
Yahweh. The documentary hypothesis holds that the change of names
and new order of Creation reflect a different tradition and a
different author. According to this theory, the editor of the
finished text, regarding the writings of both authors as sacred,
simply placed them side by side, without attempting to harmonize
their contradictions. Traditionalists answer this argument by
maintaining that the two versions of Creation reflect different
emphases. The first version, they say, reflects the nature of the
world as it ought to be. The second--including the subordination of
woman to man, the disobedience of Adam and Eve, and the expulsion
from paradise--reflect the world as it is.
NOTE: "Adam" and "Eve" look like personal names, and they are common
as first names today, but they have hidden Hebrew meanings. "Adam"
in the Hebrew original means "man" and is related to the word for
"earth" or "dust" (see God's curse on Adam at 3:19). The name "Eve"
comes from the Hebrew chavah, which means "mother of all living
things."
The story of Adam and Eve's temptation and fall (2:15-3:24) is
deceptively simple. God places Adam in the Garden of Eden and tells
him that he is free to eat the fruit of every tree in the garden
except one--the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. God warns
him that the penalty for eating the fruit is death. One day a
serpent appears before Eve, who has been told of God's warning. The
serpent persuades Eve to taste the fruit, and she gives some of it to
Adam. Adam and Eve then try to hide from God, but He finds them and,
confirming their wrongdoing, punishes them and the serpent.
On the simplest level, this is a story of an angry parent punishing
his disobedient children--a scene you have perhaps lived through when
you sampled the cake that was reserved for guests, puffed on a
forbidden cigarette, or stayed out too late on a date. But if you
read this story really closely, you will find many problems--the same
kinds of problems that have troubled commentators for more than 2000
years.
1. Why, was it wrong to eat from the tree of the knowledge of good
and evil? One possible answer is that it was wrong simply because
God said so. The fruit itself was not evil--only the eating of it in
defiance of God's warning. Another explanation is that before eating
the fruit, humanity was incapable of sinning. Once the fruit was
eaten, however, people were for the first time aware of the
difference between right and wrong, and thus capable of choosing
evil; no longer innocent, Adam and Eve could no longer remain in
paradise. A third answer is that God will accept no rivals. The
serpent promises Eve that if she and Adam taste the fruit they "will
be as gods, knowing good and evil." Eating the fruit means that Adam
and Eve no longer wish to serve God but to be gods. (Remember this
interpretation when you come to the Tower of Babel episode at
11:1-9.) A fourth possible answer connects the tasting of the fruit
with the discovery of sexuality; evidence for this explanation is
that Adam and Eve's first feelings after eating the fruit are
nakedness and shame. After girls and boys become women and men, they
cannot remain in the state of innocence the Garden of Eden
represents.
2. What are the consequences of Adam and Eve's disobedience? God's
curses are explicit: the serpent will crawl on his belly and live in
the dust; Eve will feel pain in childbirth and be ruled by her
husband; Adam will have to work hard for a living until the day he
dies; and Adam and Eve will be forever barred from the Garden of
Eden. But what of the broader implications of this fall from grace?
Christian doctrine holds that because of the first fall, all human
beings are tarnished with original sin. Only with the coming of
Jesus Christ and through faith in the Redeemer can this stain be
removed from one's soul. Judaism, on the other hand, denies that
humanity is inherently stained. Instead, it emphasizes the
importance of doing good deeds, of fulfilling the biblical
commandments and avoiding evil impulses.
3. If God is omniscient, or all-knowing, then He must have known
that Eve and Adam were going to eat the fruit. If so, why did He
plant the forbidden tree in the garden? Moreover, why were Adam and
Eve punished for a crime that was foreknown and foreordained--a crime
that, seemingly, they had no choice but to commit? Such questions
point to the central dilemma of reconciling the Old Testament concept
of an omniscient and omnipotent (all-powerful) God with our strongly
held belief in our own free will. Attempts to resolve this dilemma
still play a vital role in Christian and Jewish writings on theology.
NOTE: Two symbols in the Eden story have also been variously
interpreted. Many ancient Near Eastern myths portray serpents as
opposing the will of the gods; late Hebrew and Christian writings
identify the serpent with Satan, a devil figure. Grapes, figs, and
citrons--products of the Mediterranean world--have all served in
Jewish tradition as "fruits" of the tree of the knowledge of good and
evil. Many Christian writers have regarded the forbidden fruit as an
apple, in part because the Latin word for apple (malus) also means
"bad."
The Bible offers a grim portrait of life between the expulsion from
Eden and the coming of the patriarchs.
Adam and Eve have two sons: Cain, a farmer, and Abel, a shepherd.
In time, each offers a sacrifice to the Lord, but Cain's sacrifice of
crops is rejected, while Abel's offering of his choicest lambs is
accepted. The text does not say exactly why God accepts one offering
and not the other. Perhaps the fact that Abel offers the
"firstlings" of his flock (4:4) is meant to show that his devotion to
God is more sincere than Cain's. Or perhaps a bias toward animal
sacrifice is the kind of favoritism a shepherd people (and many
scholars believe the ancient Hebrews began as shepherds) would expect
of their tribal deity. A third interpretation holds that God's
reasons are often unfathomable, and that Cain is a tragic figure
because he knows he has been rejected by God but cannot comprehend
the reason for the rejection.
Enraged and jealous at the favored treatment his brother has
received, Cain lures Abel out into a field and kills him. When the
Lord asks Cain where Abel is, Cain answers, "Am I my brother's
keeper?" (4:9). But God already knows what has happened. Notice
that Cain's punishment for this first murder is like that of Adam and
Eve for their first disobedience--banishment and a lifetime of shame
and struggle.
NOTE: Favoritism shown to a younger son and the bitterness that
results from such favoritism are themes that recur often in Genesis.
Watch for these themes as you read of Ishmael and Isaac, Esau and
Jacob, and Joseph and his brothers.
The line of Adam extends not through Cain but through a later son,
Seth. After many generations and many centuries, humanity has become
completely corrupt. God regrets having made mankind and resolves to
destroy his Creation. Only Noah, "a just man and perfect in his
generations" (6:9), will be allowed to survive the coming flood and,
by building a great ark, preserve a remnant of animal life. This
great vessel, about 450 feet long and 45 feet high (assuming that 1
cubit = 18 inches), takes Noah about 100 years to build, and he is
600 years old when the deluge begins. The rains last 40 days, but
the flood itself lasts almost a year. When, at last, the flood
waters have completely receded, Noah makes a sacrifice to God, who
pledges never again to destroy the world because of human wickedness.
There are many levels to the Noah story. On a simple level, you can
find in the Noah story an ancient attempt to explain why floods and
rainbows happen. The fact that flood stories appear in several
Mesopotamian documents, notably the Gilgamesh Epic, has encouraged
some critics to view this story as little more than a Hebrew version
of an old Near Eastern myth. Some traditionalists, on the other
hand, look to the appearance of similar stories in other sources as
confirmation of the historical truth of the biblical narrative. Many
commentators focus on the differences between the Gilgamesh and Noah
accounts. While the Near Eastern myths dwell on the role of gods and
heroes, the Old Testament makes no attempt to glorify or deify Noah;
he is a good man of his time, but no god. Moreover, the coming of
the flood and the agreement made by God with Noah after the deluge
have a moral dimension wholly lacking in the Mesopotamian tales.
Polytheists often thought of natural disasters as the results of
quarrels among the gods; the monotheistic Hebrews thought of such
calamities as God's punishment for human wrongdoing.
NOTE: Have you begun to mark your text for basic themes and
concepts? If so, be sure to mark Noah as a prophet, because he acts
on God's behalf. Be sure also to note the pledge God makes to Noah
as one of a series of covenants between God and His people.
The theme of divine punishment for human wrongdoing makes another
appearance in the story of the Tower of Babel (11:1-9), which also
represents an attempt to explain the dispersion of peoples and
profusion of languages in the world. There is general agreement
among scholars that the tower that threatened to "reach unto heaven"
is a Babylonian ziggurat, perhaps the Temple of Marduk in Babylon;
the word Babel is itself linked both to Babylon and to the resultant
"babble" of languages that God created to confound the tower
builders' aspirations. Interpreters differ on the question of
whether the builders are punished because of their aspirations to
godhood and unlimited pride in human endeavor, or because a jealous
God feared that the tower would be used to launch a physical assault
on heaven, or because the ancient Hebrews saw this ancient story as a
way to show their God's supremacy to the gods of Babylon.
OLD TESTAMENT: THE COVENANTS OF ABRAHAM (GENESIS, 11:10-22:24)
The first ten chapters of Genesis deal with the early history of all
humanity. With the appearance of Abraham in chapter 11, however, the
Bible begins to concern itself primarily with the history of the
Hebrew people. After listing the ancestors of Abraham (at first
called Abram, "the father is exalted"), the Bible announces the first
of God's great commandments and promises to the Hebrew patriarch
(12:1-3):
Get thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and from thy
father's house, unto a land that I will shew thee:
And I will make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee, and
make thy name great; and thou shalt be a blessing.
Why did God choose Abraham and not someone else? Genesis,
remarkably, is silent on this question, offering no special praise
for Abraham at the outset. Some commentators take this silence to
mean that Abraham is chosen through no merit of his own but rather
through God's grace, to fulfill the divine purpose. Others hold that
elsewhere in Genesis, Abraham shows the special qualities that led
God to single him out. Within the Jewish tradition, many folktales
attest to Abraham's early rejection of idolatry and adherence to the
one God. An attempt to join the two interpretations leads to the
idea that God chose Abraham, but that Abraham also chose God by
consenting to obey God's commands.
At the age of seventy-five, Abraham leaves the land of his ancestors
in Mesopotamia and journeys with his wife Sarah (at first called
Sarai, a dialectal version of the Hebrew word for "princess"), his
nephew Lot, and all the rest of their household to the land of
Canaan, which God then identifies as His gift to Abraham and his
descendants--the Promised Land. After a brief sojourn in Egypt, they
return to Canaan, where Lot and Abraham go their separate ways. Lot
settles in the east, in the plain of the Jordan River, but Abraham
remains in Canaan. There God renews his covenant with Abraham,
promising the old man--who is still childless--that his seed, his
descendants, will be as numberless as the dust of the earth and that
they will have their own land to live in (13:14-18).
Several years later, Abraham finally begets his first child, Ishmael,
traditionally regarded as the patriarch of the Arab people. The
mother of this child is not Sarah but Hagar, an Egyptian servant.
Later, after Sarah bears Abraham a son of her own (Isaac), Hagar and
Ishmael will be cast out at Sarah's insistence. Before Sarah
conceives, however, she and Abraham are visited by God, who restates
His earlier pledges to the patriarch and, as a sign of the covenant
between them, commands Abraham, all the males of his household, and
all his male descendants to be circumcised (17:10-14).
NOTE: Circumcision--surgical removal of the foreskin covering the
head of the penis--is the sign of the Abrahamic covenant, just as the
rainbow is the sign of God's covenant with Noah. The Hebrews did not
invent circumcision, which was widely practiced in the Near East in
biblical times. What the Hebrews did was to change the practice from
a rite of sexual initiation, performed at puberty, to a ritual of
religious commitment, performed when a boy is eight days old.
Of all God's promises to Abraham, the one the patriarch and his wife
find most difficult to believe is the pledge that Abraham, now
ninety-nine years of age, and Sarah, at age ninety, will conceive a
son, Isaac ("he laughs"), with whom God will renew His covenant.
Genesis tells us that both Abraham and Sarah laugh at this prophecy,
prompting God to rebuke them, asking, "Is any thing too hard for the
Lord?" (18:14). This idea that the Lord can overcome all obstacles
is a recurrent theme in the Old Testament; look for it, for example,
when you read Numbers 13-14 and the Book of Judges.
Notice that Genesis does not portray Abraham and Sarah as the passive
instruments of the divine will. They show very human weaknesses and
doubts, and an evident willingness to question--even quarrel
with--God. When God reveals to Abraham His intention to destroy the
wicked cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, the patriarch questions God
closely, pleading with Him to change His plans for the sake of the
few righteous people who might live there (18:23-32). This dialogue,
which reveals both God's mercy and Abraham's integrity, gives no help
at all to the unsalvageable Sodom and Gomorrah, which are consumed by
"brimstone and fire" (19:24), with Lot and his two daughters the lone
survivors. Lot's wife, also given the chance to escape, hesitates
and is turned into a "pillar of salt" (19:26).
The image of the pillar of salt, which surely belongs to the world of
folklore and legend, forever defines Lot's wife, whose name is never
given in the Bible. But even much more familiar characters, with
well-known names, tend to be defined in the popular imagination by
simple words and concepts. If you are at all familiar with the Old
Testament, you probably associate law with Moses, wisdom with
Solomon, a slingshot with David. Abraham, on the other hand, issues
no law codes, tries no cases, commands no armies. He too is a hero,
but a hero of faith.
Just what it means to be a hero of faith Genesis 21-22 now makes
clear. If you have not already read these chapters, do so now. No
summary or commentary can hope to convey the disturbing power of
Genesis 22:1-19, and if you do not read what the Bible says of
Abraham and his son Isaac, you cheat yourself of a story that lies at
the heart of Old Testament ethics and spirituality.
A brief review of the narrative. Isaac is born, as God foretold.
His circumcision, followed by Ishmael's banishment, makes Isaac
Abraham's true heir. Suddenly, however, God commands Abraham to
ascend one of the mountains of Moriah, there to offer Isaac as a
sacrifice to the Lord. Abraham, making no protest, does as he is
told. He binds Isaac, places him upon an altar, and is about to slay
him when, just as suddenly, an angel of the Lord orders him to stop.
A ram found caught in a nearby thicket is offered as a substitute
sacrifice, and father and son descend the mountain and head back
home.
NOTE: Responding to Abraham's show of steadfast faith, God reaffirms
the covenant, this time in terms even more expansive than before.
Compare the images of stars and sand at 22:17 with those of the stars
at 15:5 and the "dust of the earth" at 13:16.
Looked at closely, the Akedah--the Hebrew term for the binding of
Isaac--raises some very profound questions.
1. What do you learn about God from what He says and does in this
story? Why does God need to test Abraham's faith, and what kind of
God asks a righteous man for this kind of sacrifice? Does an
all-knowing God test Abraham only because He is sure the patriarch
will pass the test? Or is the test designed to show Abraham that
just as God can do anything, even the "impossible" (remember how old
Isaac's parents are when the child is born!), so He is prepared to
ask humanity to do the impossible in His service?
2. What does the test reveal about the character of Abraham? Why
does Abraham dispute with God about the fate of Sodom and Gomorrah
but not about the command to sacrifice his own son? One possible
answer to this second question is that when God announces the cities'
planned destruction, He is sharing a confidence with Abraham, not
making a commandment; plans can be discussed and revised, but a
divine order cannot be. Christianity has laid great stress on the
binding of Isaac both because it shows Abraham's justification by
faith (and not just good deeds) and because the offering of Isaac
prefigures in the New Testament the crucifixion of Jesus, God's only
begotten son.
3. What does the story say about the society of the time? Notice
that Sarah, the boy's mother, barely figures in this story, nor does
Isaac raise any protest. In the patriarchal world of the Old
Testament, Abraham's power as head of the household is unquestioned.
(Compare's Lot's offer to protect his guests by offering up his
daughters at 19:8.) In this world, also, the gods were thought to
demand human sacrifice; the fact that in the Akedah story the
sacrifice is commanded but not carried out can be seen as the
Hebrews' rejection of the practice.
4. What lessons does the binding of Isaac hold for faith and ethics?
In Fear and Trembling, the nineteenth-century Danish philosopher
Soren Kierkegaard asked his readers to consider what would happen if
some dutiful churchgoer, after hearing his pastor preach the virtues
of Abraham, went home and sacrificed his own child at the urging of
some heavenly voice? Imagine, said Kierkegaard, the outrage the
preacher and community would heap on this person for doing what we so
comfortably praise Abraham for doing--following without hesitation
the dictates of his faith. Is the kind of faith that Abraham shows
appropriate only to an age of miracles? How, in our modern world,
can we distinguish the calling of genuine faith from a murderous
lunacy?
OLD TESTAMENT: FROM JACOB TO JOSEPH (GENESIS 23:1-50:26)
Chapters 23-25 mark the passing of generations. Sarah dies, and a
marriage with a non-Canaanite, Rebekah, is arranged for Isaac. At
25:7-8 comes the death of Abraham himself, at the ripe age of 175,
but not before he takes another wife, Keturah, and has six more
children. The genealogies at 25:2-4 are the Bible's way of
accounting for the manifold tribes of the ancient Near East. As for
the exceptionally long lifetimes of the patriarchs and their biblical
forerunners, some commentators have attempted to second-guess the
biblical chronology, speculating, for example, that one of our years
might count for two in Genesis (thus Abraham would die at the age of
87 1/2 rather than 175). Other writers accept the legendary
qualities of the narrative, already suggested at 6:4, "There were
giants in the earth in those days." Probably the ancient Israelites
who did not believe in life after death, thought of long life and
prosperity as expressions of the Lord's blessings.
Although God appears before Isaac to reaffirm the Abrahamic covenant,
Isaac plays a much less significant role in Genesis than does his
father. Attention soon shifts to Isaac and Rebekah's twin sons, the
hairy Esau (ancestor of the Edomites) and the smooth-skinned Jacob.
Although Esau is the first to emerge from the womb, all signs
indicate that Jacob will inherit the birthright that is customarily
the firstborn's due. One day, when Esau comes home famished, Jacob
seizes the advantage by exacting from Esau a pledge to give up his
birthright--that is, his inheritance--in exchange for a bowl of
lentil soup. The rivalry between the two sons splits the family down
the middle, with Isaac taking Esau's part and Rebekah favoring Jacob.
This saga of jealousy and domestic intrigue reaches a climax when
Isaac, old and nearly blind, calls for Esau, a hunter, to make him a
dish of his favorite meat stew and so receive Isaac's deathbed
blessing. While Esau is out hunting venison for the stew, Rebekah
connives to make her own stew, dresses Jacob in animal skins to make
him seem hairy, and sends Jacob in to his father to receive the
blessing under false pretenses. The ruse works, but Esau, furious at
being cheated, swears to kill Jacob once Isaac has died and the
period of mourning is over. Rebekah then warns Jacob, who, before
fleeing the household, again receives a blessing from his father.
Notice that this time the blessing is given by Isaac knowingly and is
therefore untainted by deception.
NOTE: Does Esau get a raw deal? Commentators have long assumed that
Esau, who so readily gives up his birthright, thereby proves himself
unworthy of it. On the other hand, Jacob's evident ambition for the
birthright is no virtue, nor does the Bible commend the deceit by
which he gets it. (This is the old question of whether the ends
justify the means.) Many writers have focused on Esau's uncivilized
qualities and on the animal appetites he feeds in Isaac.
The story of Jacob in exile mingles the most miraculous visions with
another round of domestic entanglements. On the way toward Laban's
house at Haran, Jacob has a dream in which he sees angels of God
ascending and descending a ladder or stairway that stretches from
earth all the way to heaven; this vision is the occasion for yet
another renewal and extension of the Abrahamic covenant (28:13-15).
At Haran, Jacob takes not one wife but two--first the unwanted Leah,
through the trickery of Jacob's uncle Laban, then Rachel, Leah's
younger sister and Jacob's true love. Much of Jacob's stay with
Laban can be seen as an essay in theft and deception, extending the
theme introduced with Isaac's falsely procured blessing. Laban
repeatedly cheats Jacob, and when after twenty years Jacob flees
Haran with Leah and Rachel and all their children, Rachel secretly
takes Laban's household idols with her and then, through another
deception, prevents her father from discovering the theft. Why does
Rachel take the idols? Perhaps as good-luck objects, or as a sign
that Laban no longer has any power over Jacob's household.
Unquestionably, she is disloyal to her father, and Jacob's oath at
31:32--that whoever stole the idols shall not live--bears bitter
fruit when Rachel dies in childbirth several years later. (For
another example of a rash oath with tragic consequences, see the
story of Jephthah and his daughter at Judges 11:30-40.)
In the interim, Jacob has a second visionary experience (32:22-32).
While on his way from Laban's toward an uncertain reunion with Esau,
Jacob is met at the ford of the river Jabbok by a mysterious figure.
The two wrestle until daybreak, with the wounded Jacob refusing to
let go until the stranger gives him a blessing. Not only does the
stranger bless Jacob, but he also gives him a new name, Israel,
meaning (according to various commentators) "one who strives with
God" or "may God rule." From this episode come the terms Israelite,
children of Israel (that is, the descendants of Jacob), land of
Israel, and State of Israel.
Who is this mysterious stranger who wrestles with Jacob? A river
demon? An angel of heaven? God Himself? Jacob's guilty conscience
at having cheated Esau? The darker side of his own nature? Whatever
your opinion, you can be sure the arguments over the precise identity
of Jacob's adversary will not soon be resolved. There is, however, a
general agreement that the struggle serves to purify Jacob/Israel,
making possible at long last the reconciliation with Esau (33:1-17).
You might think that freedom from Laban and resolution of the quarrel
with Esau would usher in a period of tranquility in Jacob's life.
But that is not what happens. Like Adam, Abraham, and Isaac before
him, Jacob must now endure the consequences of jealousy, rivalry, and
deceit within his own household. Chapter 34 opens with the rape of
Jacob's daughter Dinah by Shechem, the son of Hamor the Hivite.
Shechem and Hamor then come to Jacob and his sons, offering to pay
any bride-price so long as Dinah can become Shechem's wife. Jacob's
sons tell Hamor and Shechem that there can be no intermarriage unless
Shechem and his people allow themselves to be circumcised. Shechem
gladly accepts the offer, but on the third day after the mass
circumcision, before the wounds have had a chance to heal, Dinah's
brothers Simeon and Levi treacherously kill the men and seize all
their wealth, wives, and children.
NOTE: Genesis does not excuse the rape of Dinah, nor does it deny
the right of Dinah's family to seek vengeance. But when Jacob's sons
induce the men of Shechem to circumcise themselves, they are
wrongfully using the sign of God's covenant with Abraham as a tactic
to gain blood revenge.
Chapter 35 brings the deaths of Rachel and Isaac, and chapter 36
lists the descendants of Esau (that is, the ancestors of the
Edomites). In chapter 37, the tale of family conflict resumes, with
the familiar story of Joseph and his brothers. Genesis offers many
reasons why the other brothers are jealous of him: he is the child
of Jacob's old age, his father's favorite; Jacob has given him a
"coat of many colours" (in one modern translation, an "ornamented
tunic"); he tattles on his brothers' misdeeds; and he has dreams in
which, symbolically, his father and brothers bow down to him. The
brothers seize the boy Joseph, strip off his coat, cast him into a
pit, and for twenty pieces of silver sell him into slavery in Egypt.
Then they dip the coat in goat blood and bring it to Jacob, who
concludes that an evil beast has eaten his beloved son.
"And the Lord was with Joseph," says Genesis 39:2, introducing the
remarkable series of events that raise Joseph, now a mature man, from
slavery to vast political and economic power. (The phrase "And the
Lord was with..." recurs in the Old Testament in connection with such
important figures as Moses, Joshua, and David. It's a literary
device--a sign that good things are in store for this character and,
if the character is a leader, that good things are in store for his
people.) Falsely accused of adultery with the wife of Potiphar, his
master, Joseph is cast into prison. There he is treated kindly and
earns a reputation as an interpreter of dreams. When Pharaoh, the
ruler of Egypt, has two dreams that none of his wise men can
interpret, Joseph is called from prison. He tells Pharaoh that both
dreams--one of cattle, the other of corn--signify that seven years of
bountiful harvests will be followed by seven years of famine. The
devastating effects of famine can be avoided, says Joseph, only if
Pharaoh appoints someone to see that the surpluses from the good
years are safely stockpiled and then distributed during the lean
years that follow. Impressed by this wisdom, which Joseph attributes
to Yahweh, Pharaoh appoints Joseph, then only thirty years old, to
oversee all Egyptian agriculture. He executes his office so well
that when famine does arrive, Egypt has enough grain to feed its
people and sell at a profit to other afflicted lands. Meanwhile, in
famine-stricken Canaan, Jacob sends ten of his remaining sons--all
except Benjamin--to Egypt to buy grain. When they come to Joseph, he
recognizes them but they do not recognize him.
Why don't Joseph's brothers know who he is? One answer is that two
decades have passed, during which Joseph has passed from adolescence
to mature manhood. A second answer is that when his brothers last
saw him, he was on his way into slavery. How could they have
imagined that this young Hebrew would rise to a position of power in
Egypt second only to that of Pharaoh himself? Moreover, by the time
the brothers go down to Egypt, Joseph has become fully assimilated.
He speaks like an Egyptian, dresses like an Egyptian, and has an
Egyptian wife and an Egyptian name.
NOTE: Joseph's new name, Zaphenath-paneah, can be translated as
"revealer of secret things." Notice how, in the chapters that follow,
Joseph's boyhood dreams are fulfilled, just as all the dreams he
interprets in Egypt have already come to pass. In its treatment of
dreams as revelations of the future, the Bible adheres to prevailing
sentiment in ancient Egypt and elsewhere.
Joseph's brothers appear before him at 42:6, but Joseph keeps his
true identity secret from them until 45:3. The intervening chapters
detail an elaborate plot through which Joseph, by testing and
humiliating his former tormentors, seeks to work out his simultaneous
desires for revenge and reconciliation. The key event of Joseph's
scheme is the false imprisonment of Benjamin, Jacob's new favorite,
on charges that recall Rachel's crime. Not until Judah offers
himself as a slave instead of Benjamin--an offer that shows the
brothers' growing love for their father and for each other--can the
test end and Joseph reveal himself. In time, Jacob himself moves
down to Egypt, and at 46:29 father and son have a tearful reunion.
The Book of Genesis ends with Jacob's blessing two of Joseph's sons,
Ephraim and Manasseh; with the testament of Jacob, embodying his
judgments on all his sons (a passage attributed by modern scholars to
the period of the Judges, around the eleventh century B.C.); and with
the deaths of Jacob and Joseph in Egypt.
OLD TESTAMENT: EXODUS-OVERVIEW
Exodus--a Greek word for "going out"--is the second book of the Old
Testament. (In Hebrew the book is called Shemot, or "Names," from
verse 1:1, "Now these are the names....") Orthodox Jews and
fundamentalist Christians believe that Exodus, like Genesis and the
other three books of the Pentateuch, was given by God directly to
Moses on Mount Sinai. Some critics regard Exodus as an intricate
amalgam of texts from the J, E, and P writers. According to this
view, the E writer, or Elohist, is solely or primarily responsible
for chapters 20-23, including the Ten Commandments. To P, the
priestly writer, belongs sole or primary credit for chapters 25-31
and 35-40, which deal with the building of the Tabernacle, the
tent-sanctuary in which the presence of God was to abide among the
people.
The Book of Exodus falls into two main sections. Chapters 1-18 are
in the narrative style of Genesis and describe the Hebrews'
enslavement in and liberation from Egypt. Chapters 19-40 record the
giving of the Law to Moses at Sinai. Except for the episode of the
golden calf (chapters 32-34), this second section is cast in the
legal style that dominates the remainder of the Pentateuch.
OLD TESTAMENT: EXODUS-FROM SLAVERY TO SINAI (1:1-18:27)
The Bible traces with swift strokes the descent of the Hebrews from
power and prosperity under Joseph to bondage under Pharaoh (1:8):
Now there arose up a new king over Egypt, which knew not Joseph.
Pharaoh's fear, according to Exodus, is that the Hebrews have grown
so powerful and so numerous that they pose a threat to the integrity
and stability of the state. To suppress this threat, Pharaoh reduces
the Israelites to bondage, makes their work conditions intolerable,
and then orders that every Hebrew male child be killed at birth.
When the courageous midwives refuse to perform this act of cruelty,
the king decrees that every Hebrew male infant be drowned in the
Nile.
This biblical account of the persecution of the Israelites has not
been confirmed, but scholars have long known that the period from
about 1750 to 1500 B.C. was a time of great upheaval in Egypt.
During most of this period, Egypt was ruled by the Hyksos, invaders
from Palestine. Historians caution against making any simple
equation between Hyksos and Hebrews. Nevertheless, it is surely
consistent with the biblical account to assume that the fall of the
Hyksos around 1500 B.C. was in some way connected with the drastic
decline in the fortunes of the Hebrews, who were, like the Hyksos,
Semites from Canaan. These dates are consistent with a biblical
chronology that places Joseph's rise to power at around 1700 B.C.
and the departure from Egypt at between 1250 B.C. and 1200 B.C.,
during the reign of the pharaoh Raamses II. (Some history books
spell this name Ramses, Rameses, or Ramesses.)
At Exodus 2:1 attention shifts to Moses, a Levite infant saved from
death in the Nile when his mother sets him adrift in a basket of
bulrushes and he is discovered and raised by Pharaoh's own daughter.
Critics of the Bible have noted that infanticide was alien to
Egyptian but not to Mesopotamian tradition. They point to the
Akkadian legend of King Sargon as the main source of the story of
Moses' birth:
My priestly mother conceived me, in secret she bore me.
She set me in a basket of rushes, with bitumen she sealed my lid.
She cast me into the river which rose not over me.
The river bore me up and carried me to Akki, the drawer of water.
Raised in the royal household, Moses becomes an outlaw when he kills
an Egyptian overseer he sees mistreating a Hebrew slave. Moses flees
to the land of the Midianites and marries Zipporah, the daughter of
Jethro, a Midianite priest. While Moses is tending Jethro's flocks,
he comes to Mount Horeb, where God, speaking from a burning bush,
calls upon Moses to serve as His messenger in setting the children of
Israel free. As you read this important scene (3:1-4:18), you should
watch for at least three things. The first is the theme of the
reluctant prophet, who cannot understand why God has chosen him and
who regards his calling as at least as much a burden as an honor
(compare Jeremiah and Jonah). The second is the theme of the flawed
hero, which appears here as a lack of eloquence or a speech defect
(4:10) that makes Moses doubt his ability to lead his people. The
third theme is heralded by Moses' fear that the Israelites will not
believe he was chosen by God. God's answer is that He will provide
Moses with a series of signs--gestures of miraculous power or, some
might say, magic tricks--that will convince the people that the Lord
is with him. In a broader sense, Moses' question raises the problem
that recurs throughout the remainder of the Pentateuch: how can a
people so scarred by slavery learn to embrace freedom and its own
divine mission?
NOTE: Were you puzzled in the burning bush episode by God's answer
(3:14) to Moses' question of what God's name is?
And God said unto Moses, I AM THAT I AM: and He said, Thus shalt
thou say unto the children of Israel, I AM hath sent me unto you.
The Hebrew for this reply is Ehyeh-Asher-Ehyeh, which has also been
translated as "I will be what I will be" or "I will be whatever I
want to be." Some commentators contend that Ehyeh is a variant of
Yahweh, making God's answer "I am Ehyeh, whom you know as Yahweh."
Chapters 5-12 depict the efforts of Moses and his brother Aaron,
speaking for God, to compel Pharaoh to allow the Israelites to leave
Egypt. These efforts begin with a series of contests between Moses
and Aaron and Pharaoh's magicians, testing which group can produce
the most impressive miracle. At Exodus 7:20 comes the first of the
famous ten plagues, blood pollution of the Nile River. Eight more
plagues follow in rapid succession, each one more troublesome than
the last: frogs, lice, swarms of insects, cattle disease, boils, a
devastating hail-storm, locusts, and--building toward the
climax--three days of impenetrable darkness.
Were these truly miracles? Or were they a series of natural
disasters strung together by later writers as evidences of God's
judgment on Egypt? These are questions you must decide for yourself.
As you decide, however, you should bear in mind that from the
viewpoint of the Bible, the issue is almost irrelevant. Neither the
Hebrews nor the Egyptians would have seen such calamities in
isolation. Whatever our opinions might be now, both Egyptians and
Hebrews would have agreed that such natural disasters were sure signs
that someone's God (or gods) had been mightily offended.
NOTE: Why, instead of this series of afflictions, doesn't God free
the Israelites with a single stroke? The answer seems to be that a
gradual plan gives God the opportunity more fully to reveal His
greatness (11:9):
And the Lord said unto Moses, Pharaoh shall not hearken unto you;
that My wonders may be multiplied in the land of Egypt.
This protracted testing leaves no doubt that the Egyptians deserve
their ultimate punishment and allows the Israelites to appreciate the
wonder of their deliverance.
At 11:4-5, Moses announces the last and most catastrophic of the ten
plagues, the killing of all the firstborn; this judgment recalls the
brutality of the murder of the Israelite infants (1:22). Lines
12:1-20 prescribe rituals for the observance of Passover, a festival
celebrated by Jews to this day.
Initially, the killing of the firstborn so terrifies the Egyptians
that they allow the Israelites to leave. But God having once again
"hardened the heart of Pharaoh" (14:8), the Egyptian army, equipped
with chariots and horsemen, soon overtakes the Israelites, who have
made camp by the edge of the sea. Blaming Moses for their
predicament, the terrified Israelites show their willingness to
surrender the joys of freedom for the false security of bondage
(14:12):
Is not this the word that we did tell thee in Egypt, saying, Let us
alone, that we may serve the Egyptians? [See 5:21.] For it had been
better for us to serve the Egyptians, than that we should die in the
wilderness.
Moses reassures the people by telling them that the Lord is still
with them. In one of the most famous scenes in all world literature
(14:21-28), Moses stretches out his hand and the waters divide,
allowing the Israelites to escape; but their pursuers get bogged down
and the waters close over them, drowning the entire Egyptian army.
The Israelites then celebrate their deliverance with a magnificent
hymn of thanksgiving (15:20-21):
And Miriam the prophetess, the sister of Aaron, took a timbrel in her
hand; and all the women went out after her with timbrels and with
dances.
And Miriam answered them, Sing ye to the Lord, for He hath triumphed
gloriously; the horse and his rider hath he thrown into the sea.
NOTE: You should be aware of some of the historical problems the
Book of Exodus raises. At 12:37 the number of Hebrew men taking part
in the Exodus is given as 600,000, a number equal to perhaps 20
percent of the total population of Egypt at that time. On the other
hand, the only notice taken of the Israelites in Egyptian documents
of the period is an inscription reading, "Israel lies desolate; its
seed is no more." Is it possible that such a mass movement could have
been entirely overlooked by Egyptian historians? Scholars who answer
no to that question have attempted to revise the biblical figure down
by a factor of 100, to about 6000. But if this revision is correct,
what are we to make of the passage early in Exodus (1:7-12) that
links the persecution of the Israelites with their rapid population
growth?
Freed of the external threat from the Egyptians, the Israelites now
face the dangers of fear, doubt, and dissension. The wilderness
through which they wander is spiritual as well as physical: the
source of their rebelliousness is not only physical hardship but also
the lack of a fully developed sense of law, order, and community to
replace their clearly defined life in Egypt. For the people's
physical needs the Lord provides sweet water, manna, and quail; for
their spiritual needs, God will provide at Mount Sinai a new covenant
and a code of commandments that will change the face of civilization
forever.
OLD TESTAMENT: EXODUS-COVENANT AND COMMANDMENTS (19:1-40:38)
At Mount Sinai, God commands Moses to tell the children of Israel
(19:4-6) as follows:
Ye have seen what I did unto the Egyptians, and how I bare you on
eagles' wings, and brought you unto Myself.
Now therefore, if ye will obey My voice indeed, and keep My covenant,
then ye shall be a peculiar treasure unto Me above all people: for
all the earth is Mine:
And Ye shall be unto Me a kingdom of priests, and an holy nation....
What kind of covenant is this? When you agree to help a friend with
her history homework if she'll help you with your math, the two of
you are making a covenant. If several nations agree to a treaty
banning nuclear weapons, that too is a covenant--but, like your
homework assignment, a covenant between equals. Commentators have
long recognized that the biblical agreements between God and the
people of Israel do not fit this description. Rather, they are
covenants between unequals. In that sense they resemble the treaties
drawn up by another Near Eastern people, the Hittites, to define the
relationship between Hittite rulers and the kings of subject peoples.
In such treaties, the sovereign promises to protect his subjects, but
only if they follow his laws and remain loyal to him. If the
subjects disobey him--if (in terms of the Sinai covenant) they break
his commandments--they no longer enjoy the sovereign's protection.
The qualities that distinguish the Sinai covenant from such Hittite
treaties are, first, that the two parties to it are God and an entire
people, the people of Israel; and, second, that the God of all
peoples has chosen to make this special agreement with one people
only. This is the doctrine of the "chosen people." Such "chosenness"
has sometimes been thought to confer on the Israelites some special
privilege or source of pride, but it can also be seen as burdening
them with an awesome responsibility. The prophets dwell insistently
on the terrible punishments awaiting a people that takes such an
obligation lightly.
After the Israelites at Sinai have agreed to accept the covenant and
have prepared themselves for the giving of the law, God descends to
the mountaintop, where Moses joins Him to receive the Ten
Commandments, or Decalogue (20:1-17). Like so much else about the
Old Testament, the Decalogue is shrouded in religious controversy.
Although there is little doubt about the ethical importance of the
Decalogue, different faiths number the Ten Commandments in different
ways.
The great code that constitutes most of the remainder of the
Pentateuch is of enormous importance for students of religion,
ethics, and law. Orthodox Jews regard it as God's supreme
self-revelation and gift to humanity. According to Jewish mystics,
the Torah existed even before Creation. Most modern scholars, on the
other hand, do not regard the Torah as unprecedented. They point out
that at least 500 years before the codification of the Torah, the
eighteenth-century Babylonian ruler Hammurabi caused to be compiled
the famous law code that bears his name. As in the Bible, the law is
credited to a divine being--in Hammurabi's case, to the sun-god
Shamash. Nor was Hammurabi's code the first. Indeed, from a
historical point of view, the Pentateuchal code is only the grand
climax to a Near Eastern legal tradition that extends back over 4000
years.
NOTE: The differences between the Pentateuch and its precursors are
at least as important as the similarities. Nothing in the Hammurabi
Code, for example, quite resembles the monotheism and universalism
the Ten Commandments embody. In the Decalogue all the commandments
stem from the first--"I am the Lord your God"--and each of the ten is
presented as applicable regardless of nationality, wealth, or social
status.
From a literary perspective, two episodes in the remaining chapters
of Exodus are especially interesting. The first comes in chapter 24,
when after Moses tells the people the words of the Lord, the people
again answer "with one voice," saying, "All the words which the Lord
hath said we will do" (24:3). After the sacrifices and ceremonies
that seal the covenant, Moses once again ascends Mount Sinai, and he
remains there for forty days and forty nights (compare the Noah story
at Genesis 7:4).
In the second interesting episode, Moses is hidden on the
cloud-covered mountaintop, and the people--denied not only a visible
God but a visible leader--grow restless and confused. They confront
Aaron with their demands (32:1):
Up, make us gods, which shall go before us; for as for this Moses,
the man that brought us up out of the land of Egypt, we wot [know]
not what is become of him.
In reading 32:2-5, you have a basic choice to make: how do you
assess the character of Aaron? How could Aaron not know that in
fashioning a "molten" or golden calf he was violating a commandment
conveyed explicitly from God through his brother Moses? Do you see
him as an unwise or ineffectual leader, yielding to the people's
shortsighted demands rather than holding the people to their
covenant? Or do you see in his words, "To morrow is a feast to the
Lord," an attempt both to postpone the idolatrous ritual and to cast
it in the best possible light? How convincing do you find Aaron's
explanation to Moses at 32:22-24?
Moses descends from the mountaintop and, furious at the sound and
sight of a drunken orgy, smashes the stone tablets of the law. The
Lord keeps His word to Moses not to destroy the children of Israel,
but He does send a plague to punish the people. As for the stone
tablets, God orders Moses to make new ones, which God Himself will
inscribe anew. The covenant, though shattered by the faithlessness
of the people, will now be restored, as Moses ascends Mount Sinai for
another forty days and forty nights. When he returns, the people
will know Moses' ever-growing closeness with the Lord by the radiance
of his face (34:29-30), as if Moses were the moon and Yahweh the most
glorious of the ancient sun-gods.
THE TEN COMMANDMENTS: THREE DIFFERENT VERSIONS
ROMAN CATHOLIC PREVAILING PROTESTANT
PREVAILING JEWISH AND LUTHERAN AND ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN
1 I am the Lord your I am the Lord your I am the Lord your
God, who brought you God. You shall God. You shall
out of Egypt. have no other gods have no other gods
before Me. You before Me.
shall make no idols
[graven images].
2 You shall have no You shall not swear You shall make no
other Gods before Me. falsely [take the idols.
You shall make no name of the Lord in
idols. vain].
3 You shall not swear Remember the You shall not swear
falsely. Sabbath day. falsely.
4 Remember the Honor your father Remember the
Sabbath day. and mother. Sabbath day.
5 Honor your father You shall not Honor your father
and mother. murder [kill]. and mother.
6 You shall not You shall not You shall not
murder. commit adultery. murder.
7 You shall not You shall not You shall not
commit adultery. steal. commit adultery.
8 You shall not You shall not You shall not
steal. bear false witness. steal.
9 You shall not You shall not covet You shall not
bear false witness. your neighbor's bear false witness.
wife.
10 You shall not covet You shall not covet You shall not covet
your neighbor's your neighbor's your neighbor's
house, wife, etc. house, etc. house, wife, etc.
OLD TESTAMENT: LEVITICUS-OVERVIEW
Orthodox Jews and fundamentalist Christians agree that Leviticus, the
third book of the Pentateuch, was given by God to Moses at Mount
Sinai. However, most modern scholars believe that Leviticus was
compiled by P, the priestly writer, during the fifth century B.C. It
is safer to say "compiled" rather than "composed" because defenders
of the documentary theory concede that several parts of Leviticus
were written earlier and may be based on ancient oral tradition. One
of these older sections is the so-called Holiness Code, chapters
17-26; among its distinctive features is the frequent repetition of
variations on the phrase "I am the Lord."
The English title of the book is based on the name Levi, one of the
twelve sons of Jacob. You may remember from Genesis 34 that Levi and
Simeon avenge the rape of Dinah by massacring the newly circumcised
men of Shechem; Jewish tradition regards the subsequent landlessness
of the Levites as punishment for this treacherous action. If you
have read the episode of the golden calf (Exodus 32), you may recall
that the tribe of Levi is no less zealous in executing God's
vengeance at Moses' behest. While the Israelites wander through the
wilderness, the Levites are responsible for maintaining the
Tabernacle. After the Hebrew conquest of Canaan, the Levites become
the Temple priests; they are faithful supporters of the monarchy,
upon which their livelihood depends. The association of the Levites
with the priesthood underlies the content of Leviticus, for which the
title "Priests' Manual" would be equally appropriate. In Hebrew, the
title of the book is Vayikra ("And He called"), the first word in the
Hebrew text.
OLD TESTAMENT: LEVITICUS-THEMES AND STYLE
Leviticus has undoubted value as a document of social and religious
history, especially in relation to the development of the idea of
holiness. For some believers, Leviticus also remains a guide to
personal conduct. As literature, however, its interest is extremely
limited. The narrative thread of Genesis and Exodus is suspended in
Leviticus, which is almost entirely legal in content. Prescribed in
this book are the laws of ritual sacrifice, other religious
observances, the ordination of priests, permitted and forbidden
foods, and pure and impure health and sexual practices. Today, only
orthodox Jews make an effort to adhere fully to the letter of the
law. Even the orthodox recognize that the destruction of the Second
Temple, the abolition of the priesthood, and the ending of ritual
sacrifice in Judaism mean that many of the commandments of Leviticus
cannot be fulfilled--at least not until the Messiah comes and the
Temple is restored. Christians, believing that the Messiah has
already come, interpret the laws of ritual sacrifice as prefiguring
the crucifixion of Jesus. On sexual matters, the influence of the
Bible--especially some attitudes toward women and the condemnations
of homosexuality at 18:22 and 20:13--is still widely felt.
NOTE: Many people believe that the "Golden Rule" originated with
Christianity. In fact, the Golden Rule makes its first recorded
appearance in the Old Testament, at Leviticus 19:18: "thou shalt
love thy neighbour as thyself." The Golden Rule is cited by Jesus at
Matthew 19:19 and repeated elsewhere in the New Testament.
OLD TESTAMENT: NUMBERS-OVERVIEW
The Book of Numbers derives its title from the census that God
commands Moses to make in chapter 1. In many ways, however, the
Hebrew title Bemidbar, meaning "In the Wilderness," offers a more
accurate description of the contents. The book begins about a year
after the Exodus from Egypt and then leaps forward to the fortieth
year of wandering, when the Israelites are on the verge of entering
the Promised Land. Narrative and legislative passages are joined in
a way that defies easy analysis.
Numbers is the fourth book of the Pentateuch and, as such, is seen by
traditionalists as coming directly from God through Moses. Most
biblical critics assign much of the book to P, the priestly writer.
The consensus of the critics is that Numbers was compiled after the
Babylonian Exile, but that many of its parts are centuries older.
Demonstrating exactly which parts come from which period has proved
difficult and controversial.
OLD TESTAMENT: NUMBERS-THE COVENANT AND THE PEOPLE
The first ten chapters of Numbers dwell on the census, the special
regulations for Levites, the obligations of Nazarites (for more on
this topic see the discussion of Samson in the Book of Judges), the
construction of the Tabernacle, and various other matters. Finally,
at 10:11, the Israelites depart from Sinai. A search party is sent
into the land of Canaan, but the majority report is so pessimistic
and the response of the people so fainthearted that the Israelites
are condemned to another thirty-eight years of wandering. By chapter
21 the narrative has jumped ahead to the fortieth year in the
wilderness, and much of the remainder of Numbers describes the
beginnings of the long war to conquer the Promised Land.
Let's stop for a moment and think about the extraordinary way that
Numbers portrays the children of Israel. Suppose someone asked you
to write--or film--the Epic of America. Your task is to show to all
Americans, now and in the future, how their ancestors fled oppression
in Europe, braved the stormy Atlantic, and crossed the North American
continent, subduing and settling the wild frontier. Would you cast
these pioneers as faithless cowards and complainers, delayed in
conquering the continent not by the danger of the mission but by the
anger of their God? Probably not.
And yet that is very much the picture the Bible gives us of the
Israelites in the wilderness between Egypt and Canaan. In chapter 11
the Israelites grumble about their boring diet of manna, demanding
the fish and flesh they had in Egypt. In chapter 12, Miriam and
Aaron vent their jealousy of Moses; she is punished with leprosy, and
Aaron receives a divine rebuke. When most of the search party
reports that giants inhabit the land of Canaan, the people are ready
to give up their mission (14:1-2, 4):
And all the congregation lifted up their voice, and cried; and the
people wept that night.
And all the children of Israel murmured against Moses and against
Aaron: and the whole congregation said unto them, Would God that we
had died in the land of Egypt! or would God we had died in this
wilderness!...
And they said one to another, Let us make a captain, and let us
return into Egypt.
Two of the scouts, Caleb and Joshua, attempt to reassure the
Israelites that if the Lord is with them, they cannot fail--a message
the people are in no mood to hear. Again, as in Exodus 32, Yahweh
threatens to destroy the children of Israel, and again Moses
intercedes. But God can barely contain His anger and disappointment
(14:22-23):
Because all those men which have seen My glory, and My miracles,
which I did in Egypt and in the wilderness, and have tempted Me now
these ten times, and have not hearkened to My voice; Surely they
shall not see the land which I sware unto their fathers, neither
shall any of them that provoked Me see it:
Thus, except for Caleb and Joshua, an entire generation of
Israelites--including all those who came of age in Egyptian
bondage--is condemned to die in the wilderness, never having reached
the Promised Land.
Why does the Old Testament, the Hebrew scripture, portray the Hebrews
in such an unfavorable light? One answer is a reminder that, from
the biblical standpoint, not Moses, not Joshua, not Caleb, not any of
the Israelites, but God Himself is the hero of the Hebrew Bible. A
second answer is that the Bible, always realistic about human nature,
insists on showing the scars that slavery left on this particular
generation. In short, it portrays the Hebrews as they were, not as
(under the covenant) they could be. A third way of looking at the
text is as a portrait of ordinary people reacting in ordinary ways to
a situation that demands more of them than they are capable of
giving. Of course they fall far short of heroism, but do you feel
that if you were in their shoes you would do any better? The
important thing is that although a generation has been punished, God
has left the covenant open--which means that an ideal of human
behavior is still within view.
Moses, too, falls short of the divine standard. That is the
significance of the episode at the water of Meribah (chapter 20),
when because of his moment of anger and disobedience, Moses is
forbidden by God to enter the Promised Land. The deaths of Miriam
and Aaron are noted in the same chapter. At 27:15-23, Joshua is
solemnly appointed as Moses' successor.
NOTE: One striking episode in Numbers deserves special mention: the
tale of Balak, Balaam, and the talking ass (chapters 22-24), a
folklike story recounted in a mixture of poetry and prose. By this
point, the Israelites, taking their roundabout route to the Promised
Land, have already conquered the Amorite king Sihon and are
threatening Balak, king of Moab. Alarmed, Balak hires Balaam to put
a curse on the invaders. Balak's plan is repeatedly thwarted by the
Lord, who converts each curse into a blessing. As for the ass, her
speech--which is also the work of the Lord--comes as a poignant plea
to Balaam to stop beating her, after their progress is halted by an
angel whom Balaam at first cannot see. Commentators have focused not
only on the miracle of the animal's speaking but also on the irony
that this presumably dull-witted animal sees what the rider cannot.
OLD TESTAMENT: DEUTERONOMY-OVERVIEW
Deuteronomy is the fifth and final book of the Pentateuch. Tradition
assigns this book to Moses' last days, when the Israelites camped in
the land of Moab (present-day Jordan) and prepared to enter Canaan.
According to Numbers 20:14-21, the Israelites had asked permission of
the king of Edom to pass through his territory but had been refused.
Thus they were forced to take the roundabout route from Kadesh-barnea
southeastward to the Gulf of Aqaba and northward toward Mount Nebo.
It is from the summit of Mount Nebo, across the Jordon River from
Jericho, that Moses is permitted to view the Promised Land.
The name "Deuteronomy" derives from the Septuagint and means "second
law." (The Hebrew title is Devarim, meaning "Words," from 1:1, "These
be the words which Moses spake....") Organized for the most part as
an extended farewell address by Moses, Deuteronomy repeats and
amplifies the laws given in the three previous books. A major
concern of Deuteronomy not found earlier is the centralization of
worship. Although the text does not mention Jerusalem, which did not
become the capital of the Israelite kingdom until the reign of David
about two centuries later, Deuteronomy does make several references
to "the place which the Lord thy God shall choose to place His name
in" (16:6) as a site for pilgrimage and worship. Suppression of
satellite cults and support for the Temple were key issues while the
Kingdom of Judah survived, and most modern commentators attribute
Deuteronomy to this period--and particularly to the reign of the
seventh-century king Josiah--rather than to the time of Moses.
NOTE: Prominent in Deuteronomy is the theme that if people disobey
God's word they will be punished, but if they are obedient they will
be rewarded. Watch for this theme as you read not only Deuteronomy
but also the histories from Joshua to 2 Kings.
OLD TESTAMENT: DEUTERONOMY-STRUCTURE
The first three chapters of Deuteronomy summarize what has happened
to the Israelites since the first revelation at Sinai. Moses then
goes on to outline the responsibilities the covenant imposes on the
people of Israel. Notice how the account of Moses' own failure at
Deuteronomy 4:21 differs from that in Numbers 20:7-13. In a second
speech, beginning at 5:1, Moses recites the Ten Commandments: among
the significant differences between this version and that at Exodus
20 are the mention of deliverance from Egypt and rest for one's
workers as reasons for honoring the Sabbath day (5:14-15) and the
reversed order of the bans on coveting a neighbor's wife and house
(compare Deuteronomy 5:21 with Exodus 20:17). As his second speech
draws to a conclusion (chapters 9-10), Moses denounces the
faithlessness and rebelliousness of the people and recounts his role
in preventing God from destroying them because of the golden calf.
NOTE: Deuteronomy 6:4 brings the central tenet of Judaism, known as
the Shema. Various translations of the Shema have been offered. The
King James Version gives "The Lord our God is one Lord"; a modern
Jewish translation provides "The Lord is our God, the Lord alone."
But what does this line really mean? Does it mean "Yahweh is our
God, and Yahweh only"? Or does it mean that Yahweh is unique and
indivisible? Does it imply, as the medieval commentator Rashi
thought, that "He is 'our God' now, and not yet the God of all
nations, but in the future He will be 'the Lord alone'"? All these
interpretations may be correct, and you may have another of your own.
For more on the development of Hebrew monotheism, see the section
"God in the Old Testament" in this Barron's Book Notes volume.
Moses' third and longest farewell speech extends from chapters 12
through 25 and is the final law code in the Torah. Chapters 27 and
28 comprise a long series of blessings and curses, while the next two
chapters reemphasize the importance to Israel of loyalty to God and
to the covenant. Chapter 31 confirms the passing of the mantle of
leadership to Joshua and the transmission of God's law to the
Levites, who are to read it in public assembly once every seven years
(31:10-13). The predominantly oratorical style of Deuteronomy is
interrupted in Chapter 32 by the "Song of Moses," a hymn of praise.
Chapter 34 records not only the death of Moses but the passing of an
era in Israel's patriarchal history (34:10):
And there arose not a prophet since in Israel like unto Moses, whom
the Lord knew face to face.
The last eight verses of Deuteronomy, which deal with Moses' death
and mourning, pose no problem for documentary theorists, who deny
that Moses (or God) is in any literal sense the author of the
Pentateuch. But these lines do pose a dilemma for traditionalists,
who must explain how Moses can have written a description of his own
death. Some rabbinical commentators have insisted that God dictated
these words to Moses; others attribute them to Joshua or acknowledge
the possibility that even later writers made additions to the basic
text.
OLD TESTAMENT: JOSHUA-OVERVIEW
The Book of Joshua is classified as the first of the prophetic books
(Nevi'im) in the Hebrew Bible and the first of the historical books
in both the Protestant and the Roman Catholic versions. Ancient
Jewish tradition credits Joshua with writing his own book, except for
a few passages describing his own death and passages of Eleazar, the
priestly son of Aaron. Most critics since the nineteenth century
have regarded the Book of Joshua as a compilation, like the
Pentateuch, from various sources. There is, however, no consensus as
to which sources these are or which periods they represent.
In Exodus, Joshua is Moses' faithful attendant, accompanying him up
and down Mount Sinai. In Numbers, Joshua and Caleb are the only
members of the search party to give a favorable report of Canaan, and
thus are the only ones of their generation permitted to enter the
Promised Land. The Book of Joshua portrays Moses' successor as both
a military leader and a prophet, to whom God speaks directly and
through whom God addresses the people of Israel.
NOTE: According to Numbers 13:16, Joshua was born Oshea (or Hosea),
son of Nun, of the tribe of Ephraim; he is given the name Jehoshua
(or Joshua), meaning "Yahweh is salvation," by Moses. This name
change recalls Genesis 17:5-15, where God gives Abram and Sarai the
new names Abraham and Sarah, and Genesis 32:28, where the angel with
whom Jacob wrestles gives him the new name Israel. Such name changes
in the Old Testament indicate an important change in someone's
character or destiny.
OLD TESTAMENT: JOSHUA-THE CONQUEST OF CANAAN, (JOSHUA 1:1-12:24)
The first half of the Book of Joshua portrays Joshua's commission by
Yahweh, the crossing of the Jordan River, and the rout of the
Canaanites by the Israelite invaders. It is now generally thought
that the infiltration and settlement of Canaan by the various
Israelite tribes took place during the twelfth century B.C. Although
the Bible depicts Joshua as a central figure in this campaign of
conquest, many modern commentators believe that the historical Joshua
played a much more limited role. At 10:36-37, for example, Joshua
and the whole people of Israel are credited with capturing Hebron.
At Judges 1:10, however, the defeat of Hebron is ascribed to Judah.
The conquest of Ai (chapters 7-8 of Joshua) is especially
problematical because archaeologists have shown that the fortified
city of Ai (which means "ruin") was destroyed in the twenty-fourth
century B.C. and was only briefly an Israelite village in the time
of Joshua, some 1200 years later.
Surely the best-known section of the Book of Joshua is chapter 6,
describing the conquest of Jericho. (For a brief discussion of
archaeological problems related to Jericho, see the "Setting" section
in The Old Testament Background.) The military tactics employed are
extraordinary--indeed, miraculous. Speaking through Joshua, the Lord
commands the Israelites, bearing the Ark of the Covenant, to circle
the city once each day for six days. On the seventh day, the
Israelites, including seven priests blowing seven trumpets of rams'
horns, make seven circles round Jericho, shouting for the Lord on the
last pass around the city. (If you've forgotten why seven is such a
significant number in the Old Testament, review Genesis 2:2-3 and
Exodus 20:8-11.) In the words of the famous black spiritual:
Joshua fit the battle of Jericho,
And the walls come tumbling down.
NOTE: Those of you who have seen the fantasy-adventure film Raiders
of the Lost Ark should be well familiar with the Ark of the Covenant
and the magical properties attributed to it. As described in Exodus
25, the ark was an acacia ("shittim") wood chest, decorated with
gold, in which the tablets of the law were placed. During the period
from Moses to David, the ark was carried from place to place and
frequently accompanied the Israelites into battle. After Solomon
built the First Temple in Jerusalem, the ark was placed in its
innermost sanctuary, the Holy of Holies. Nothing is known of its
subsequent history, and it apparently was no longer in the Temple by
the time of the Babylonian conquest. The Hebrew term for the ark,
Aron ha-Kodesh, today signifies the part of the synagogue where the
Torah scrolls are kept.
OLD TESTAMENT: JOSHUA-THE TRIBES AND THEIR LANDS (13:1-24:33)
The second half of the Book of Joshua offers a detailed description
of which parts of Canaan the Israelites did and did not subdue, and
of the boundaries between the various tribal landholdings. Roughly
speaking, the area of Israelite control during the twelfth century
B.C. extended a maximum of 30 miles east and 40 miles west of the
Jordan River and the Dead Sea. At this time, the Israelites were
organized into 12 tribes, or clans, which claimed descent from the
sons and grandsons of Jacob. Only the tribe of Manasseh held any
land along the Mediterranean coast, which was dominated by the
Sidonians (Phoenicians) in the north and the Philistines in the
south. In the southeast, Moab and Edom were outside the limits of
Israelite control. In addition, several fortified cities remained as
Canaanite strongholds, separating the Israelite domains.
There is some confusion as to precisely where, in terms of modern
geography, the various tribes settled, but it appears that the
northernmost tribes were Dan (after the migration described in Judges
17-18), Asher, Naphtali, Zebulun, and Issachar. Occupying a central
position were Manasseh, the largest single landholder, and Ephraim.
Farther south were Judah and Simeon (probably absorbed by Judah at an
early date), all west of the Jordan and the Dead Sea; and Gad and
Reuben, which lay to the east. The Levites, who were landless,
received portions of cities from the other tribes (Joshua 21). All
these tribes survived as a loose confederation until the
establishment of the monarchy late in the eleventh century B.C.
NOTE: Chapters 23 and 24 present Joshua's last words to the
Israelites; the farewell addresses of Moses and David, at Deuteronomy
31 and 2 Samuel 23, respectively, are other excellent examples of the
form. In the Old Testament, the farewell address, or valedictory,
enables the hero to recall the past and survey the future of his
people.
The death of Joshua at the age of 110 is recorded at Joshua 24:29.
Joshua's death is also mentioned in Judges 1:1. Similarly, the
passing of Moses and the succession of Joshua are mentioned both in
the last verses of Deuteronomy and the opening chapter of the Book of
Joshua. Modern critics believe these apparent transitions reflect
the efforts of an editor to turn these separate documents into a
continuous historical narrative.
OLD TESTAMENT: JUDGES-OVERVIEW
When you hear the word judge, you probably think of a black-robed
figure listening to lawyers argue a case in a courtroom. When you
come to read the Book of Judges, however, this image can be very
misleading. The biblical judges (known as shoftim in Hebrew) were
not legal professionals. Instead, these charismatic figures were
prophets and warriors. None of the judges ruled over all Israel.
But when members of one or more tribes were in peril, these heroes
saved them through moral and military leadership.
Rabbinical tradition attributes the whole of Judges to Samuel.
Modern critics regard the book as a collection of materials, some of
which--notably the Song of Deborah and Barak (chapter 5)--are quite
ancient. The bulk of Judges, according to some scholars, was
compiled during the seventh and sixth centuries B.C.
OLD TESTAMENT: JUDGES-APPROACHES TO JUDGES
Judges not only continues but actually overlaps with Joshua. The
slow process of settling in Canaan did not end with that earlier
volume, and many of the episodes in Judges--Deborah and Barak against
Hazor, Gideon versus the Midianites, Samson and the Philistines--form
part of an ongoing history of contact and conflict between the
Israelite tribes and neighboring peoples during the twelfth and
eleventh centuries B.C. For this reason, whatever its folkloric and
legendary qualities, the Book of Judges is a very important
historical document.
You can read the entire Book of Judges as the working out of a
cyclical view of history. When the people turn away from God, the
Lord first sends an enemy, to punish them. Then the oppressed people
cry out to God, who sends a leader (or prophet) to deliver them.
Once rescued, the people pledge their loyalty to the leader and to
God, for whom he speaks. But prosperity brings forgetfulness and
corruption, and the cycle is repeated all over again.
NOTE: Judges is blunt about the particular sin for which Israel is
punished: "they went a whoring after other gods, and bowed
themselves unto them" (2:17). Especially seductive were the
fertility gods and goddesses of Canaan. From the biblical point of
view, worshiping fertility idols was a direct violation of the Ten
Commandments, hence of Israel's covenant with Yahweh; the practices
of the fertility cults, involving sexual rites with temple
prostitutes, were also objectionable on purely moral grounds. Why,
then, were the Israelites so easily swayed? Intermarriage with
foreign tribes surely played some role, as did simple human weakness.
A third answer can be found in the recognition that, as a herding
people, the Israelites had no practical experience of settled
agriculture until they entered Canaan. In learning agriculture from
their neighbors, the children of Israel were also learning the
worship of Canaan's fertility gods--to their own God's extreme
displeasure.
In probing the historical and moral dimensions of the Book of Judges,
you should not lose sight of the fact that this volume has some of
the Old Testament's most colorful characters and exciting stories.
There is Deborah (chapters 4-5), the only woman among the judges and
the only woman portrayed in the Bible as an important military
leader. In the same chapters appears Jael, the wife of Heber the
Kenite, who resourcefully murders the captain of Hazor after
pretending to give him sanctuary. In chapter 6 you meet Gideon, who
subdues the Midianites by equipping his army with trumpets, pitchers,
and lamps. (The master strategist of this surprise attack is, of
course, the Lord.)
Chapter 11 presents the tragedy of Jephthah and his daughter.
Jephthah, a mighty warrior, rashly pledges that if God will allow him
to defeat the Ammonites, he will offer as a sacrifice "whatsoever
cometh forth of the doors" of his house to meet him on his return.
When Jephthah arrives home victorious, who should come out to greet
him but his only and beloved daughter! You might wish to contrast
this story with that of the binding of Isaac. In Genesis 22, the
commandment to sacrifice the son was made by God, and hence could be
revoked by Him. In the Jephthah story, on the other hand, the vow is
made freely--though foolishly--by Jephthah himself, and hence cannot
be revoked.
Chapters 13-16 bring the most colorful character of all: Samson.
When you read of Samson ripping apart a young lion with his bare
hands, binding foxes' tails together with torches, and killing a
thousand Philistines with the jawbone of an ass, you may be tempted
to see him as a kind of Paul Bunyan or Incredible Hulk. This is an
entirely legitimate way of thinking about Samson, who seems to be
more brawn than brain. Nevertheless, you should pay close attention
to the miraculous circumstances of Samson's conception. Customarily,
the vows to serve Yahweh, avoid strong drink, abstain from all
unclean things, and never cut one's hair were made by a Nazarite in
adulthood, often for a limited period of time. (Regulations for
Nazarites, a devout sect, are listed at Numbers 6:1-21.) But Samson,
his mother learns from an angel, is to be a "Nazarite unto God from
the womb" (13:5). Thus Samson's great strength comes from the Lord,
and all his legendary deeds are said to be the Lord's doing. A
Freudian sees Delilah's betrayal of Samson as a kind of symbolic
castration. Within the context of the Bible, however, the shearing
of Samson's seven locks cripples him because it cuts to the heart of
his Nazarite power. Renewed growth of his hair (16:22) and renewed
faith in God (16:28) are jointly responsible for Samson's fulfillment
of his mission, his act of self-sacrifice that brings down the
Philistines' temple.
OLD TESTAMENT: RUTH-OVERVIEW
The placement of the Book of Ruth represents a major difference
between the Hebrew canon, on the one hand, and the Roman Catholic and
Protestant canons, on the other. In the Hebrew Bible, Ruth appears
among the Ketuvim, sandwiched between the Song of Songs and
Lamentations; the book is classified as one of the five scrolls
(Megillot) and is traditionally read on the holiday of Shavuot, a
spring harvest festival. Catholic and Protestant Bibles (including
the King James Version) make Ruth the third of the historical books,
between Judges and 1 Samuel.
The opening verse establishes the time link between Ruth and Judges:
"Now it came to pass in the days when the judges ruled...." The
historical connection with 1 Samuel, in which David makes his first
appearance, is reinforced by Ruth 4:17-22, which traces the descent
from Ruth and Boaz to David. Biblical commentators have long
recognized that the attempt to provide an ancestry for David was a
main purpose for writing the book.
Controversy continues over when the Book of Ruth was written.
Certain distinct features of the book's use of Hebrew have been taken
as evidence for the influence of Aramaic, hence to a relatively late
date of composition--perhaps as recent as 250 B.C. Other scholars,
regarding the same expressions as signs of an ancient Northern Hebrew
dialect, argue for the ninth century B.C. Still others place the
book in the fifth century B.C.., after the return from Babylonian
Exile; these writers contend that in a period when Ezra and Nehemiah
were vehemently preaching against intermarriage, the author of Ruth
was making a plea for toleration by pointing out that a non-Jew may
be a model for Jews of fidelity to the Lord. The story makes clear
that the great King David was the product of the marriage of a Jew
and a convert to Judaism.
OLD TESTAMENT: RUTH-THE STORY
In itself, the story of Ruth and Naomi is touching in its simplicity.
To escape famine, Elimelech of Bethlehem (in Judah), his wife Naomi,
and their two sons migrate to the land of Moab. There the two sons
take Moabite wives, Ruth and Orpah. In time, Elimelech and his two
sons die, leaving the three women on their own. After the famine
ends, Naomi decides to go back to Judah, telling Orpah and Ruth to
remain in Moab with their own mothers. Orpah reluctantly agrees, but
Ruth insists on going with her mother-in-law (1:16):
And Ruth said, Intreat me not to leave thee, or to return from
following after thee: for whither thou goest, I will go; and where
thou lodgest, I will lodge: thy people shall be my people, and thy
God my God.
Ruth and Naomi return to Judah, where Ruth gleans--that is, gathers
leftover grain--in a field owned by Boaz, a prosperous farmer from
the same family as Elimelech. Impressed with the daughter-in-law's
devotion to Naomi, Boaz shows Ruth special kindness. Eventually, she
marries Boaz, who takes claim to the land left by Elimelech.
NOTE: Gleaning was a way for the poor to support themselves. Every
landowner had an obligation at harvesttime not to pick the fields
clean but to leave some of the crop for "the poor and stranger" to
gather. See, for example, Leviticus 19:9-10.
The story is full of charming details that establish a distance
between the time of the telling and the time described; notice
especially 4:7, in which Boaz puts on his kinsman's shoe to seal a
bargain. Underlying this custom is the institution of levirate
marriage, according to which a childless widow was required to marry
her late husband's closest kinsman, so that her husband's line could
be passed on and his inheritance kept within the family. Since Boaz
was not the closest relative, he had to ask his kinsman's permission
before he had the legal right to marry Ruth and reclaim Elimelech's
estate.
OLD TESTAMENT: 1 AND 2 SAMUEL-OVERVIEW
The two books of Samuel and the two books of Kings may originally
have been a single four-part narrative, 1-4 Kingdoms. Tradition
credits Samuel himself with authorship of those parts of 1 Samuel
that describe the events of his own lifetime; this attribution,
however, is viewed skeptically by modern scholars. It is now widely
assumed that 1 and 2 Samuel and 1 and 2 Kings were compiled in the
sixth century B.C., but that the compiler drew on documents as much
as 400 years older. According to the critical view, the four books'
inconsistent treatment of the idea of kingship reflects the shifting
fortunes of the monarchy during the period when the source documents
were written. (For a more detailed discussion of attitudes toward
kingship, see the section "Points of View" in The Old Testament
Background.) It is also possible that the basic history was written
at an early date but amplified by later chroniclers with differing
viewpoints.
The two books of Samuel treat Israel at a pivotal point in its
development. The text of 1 Samuel opens where Judges leaves off, in
the middle of the eleventh century. Israel has no centralized
state--indeed, virtually no formal government. Agriculture and urban
life are still primitive, and at this time the Israelites may not
even have had a written language. Less than 100 years elapse between
the beginning of the first book and the close of the second, but in
that time Israel becomes a monarchy under David, with a new central
capital at Jerusalem. To administer such an empire requires a
complex system of record keeping, and a new class of literate
bureaucrats to maintain it. Almost overnight, it seems, the
Israelites transform themselves from a disorganized group of
quarrelsome tribes into a powerful empire to which the kings of Edom,
Moab, and Ammon pay tribute. For this period of Israelite history,
the two books of Samuel are the indispensable source.
Inevitably, discussion of 1 and 2 Samuel focuses on the three
personalities who dominate it: Samuel, the last of the judges; the
tragically flawed Saul; and David, the shepherd, musician, warrior,
rebel, poet, and king. (For more on David as a poet, see the
discussion of the Book of Psalms.)
OLD TESTAMENT: SAMUEL
Chapter 1 marks Samuel, like Samson, as a Nazarite, dedicated to a
life of service to Yahweh. His mother, Hannah, like Sarah and
several other Old Testament women, is barren until God intervenes--a
sign of the greatness that Samuel will attain. Hannah sends Samuel
to live at Shiloh with Eli, an aged priest, and his corrupt sons.
One night the Lord appears before Samuel, telling the boy that He
will bring judgment on Eli's family because of the wickedness of
Eli's two offspring.
NOTE: Chapter 3 begins quite strikingly with the acknowledgment,
according to the Revised Standard Version, that "the word of the Lord
was rare in those days; there was no frequent vision." This serves to
indicate that Samuel, to whom the Lord does speak directly, was rare
in his own time. It is also a sign of a change in the way the people
of the Bible viewed God's role in history. In the later books of the
Bible, Israel's political leaders do not speak with God directly but
instead hear the word of the Lord through the prophets. You may
already have noticed in the Book of Ruth that although a divine plan
is fulfilled--Ruth marries Boaz so that she may bear the line from
which David springs--God Himself has no direct part in the action.
After a description of the evils that befall the Philistines when
they capture the Ark of the Covenant (chapters 4-7), the text returns
to Samuel, who has become a prophet, priest, and judge. By chapter
8, Samuel has grown old and has made his sons judges. But, like Eli,
Samuel is not blessed in his children (8:3):
And his sons walked not in his ways, but turned aside after lucre
[money], and took bribes, and perverted judgment.
The aging of Samuel and the corruption of his sons pose a crisis for
the tribal leaders, who, fearing anarchy, demand that Samuel choose a
king. What Samuel, speaking for God, tells the people is as powerful
an indictment of arbitrary power as has ever been written (8:11-18).
OLD TESTAMENT: SAUL
Saul is introduced in 1 Samuel 9:2 as "a choice young man," taller
than any of his fellows. Nowhere does the Bible deny that he is a
man of virtue and valor, and it is clear from 9:17 that he is God's
own choice to govern Israel. Why, then, is Saul such a tragic
figure? The immediate cause of Saul's downfall is related in chapter
15. Although Samuel has formally given up the office of judge, he
continues to convey to Saul the will of Yahweh. Samuel tells Saul
that God wishes him to wipe out the Amalekites completely, "man and
woman, infant and suckling, ox and sheep, camel and ass" (15:3). The
battle goes splendidly, but instead of annihilating the Amalekites,
Saul spares their king, Agag, and the best of their animals--the
latter, he tells the furious Samuel, so that his troops could make a
sacrifice to the Lord at Gilgal. Samuel, unmoved, curses Saul and
kills Agag himself. All that happens to Saul thereafter--his fits of
madness, the jealousy that so torments him, his death by his own
sword in battle against the Philistines (1 Samuel 31:4)--can be
traced to this act of disobedience, which is not Saul's first but is
surely his most grievous.
NOTE: The argument between Samuel and Saul contains one of the most
powerful pieces of symbolism in the Bible. As Samuel turns away from
Saul, the king grabs a corner of the prophet's robe, ripping the
fabric. You can imagine Saul standing guiltily, pathetically, a
shred of cloth in his hand, as Samuel angrily tells him, "The Lord
hath rent [torn] the kingdom of Israel from thee this day" (15:28).
The same symbolism underlies the passage in 1 Kings 11 that
foreshadows the division of Solomon's kingdom.
OLD TESTAMENT: DAVID
The Bible introduces David to his royal destiny not once but twice.
At 1 Samuel 16:1, in the wake of Samuel's rejection of Saul, the Lord
sends the prophet to Jesse of Bethlehem to choose Jesse's son David,
a shepherd, as Saul's anointed successor. (Notice that David is the
youngest of Jesse's eight sons, consistent with the biblical pattern
you have seen earlier in the Ishmael-Isaac and Esau-Jacob stories,
among others.) At 1 Samuel 16:17-18, to soothe his fits of
depression, Saul sends for David, whom a servant of the king
describes as "a mighty valiant man, and a man of war"; note that in
17:39, however, David is portrayed as a novice in warfare. More
puzzling still, after David slays Goliath with a slingshot, the text
at 17:55-58 gives the unmistakable impression that Saul is meeting
David for the first time, even though David has been identified as
Saul's armor bearer at 16:21. Most modern commentators are content
to explain this apparent contradiction as the product of two distinct
traditions that the biblical editor has placed side by side.
The story moves more swiftly and surely from chapter 18 on. Notice
the subtlety with which the relationship between Saul and David is
presented. Again and again the Bible tells us that the spirit of the
Lord has left Saul and lodged with David. But from Saul's
increasingly paranoid point of view, David is like a cancer eating
away at the royal household. He becomes the best friend of Saul's
son Jonathan. He marries Saul's daughter Michal. His popularity
increases with every new military exploit. And when Saul plots to
kill David, the younger man can count on Michal, Jonathan, and
Samuel, as well as the Spirit of God, to protect him. The
increasingly desperate king knows he is fighting a losing battle.
NOTE: You have probably heard the expression "divine right." This
phrase embodies the idea that the ruler represents God on earth and
derives from God his right to govern. European monarchs could point
to God's choice and protection of David as evidence that the Bible
gives sanction to the divine right of kings. So powerful is this
sanction that even a bad king like Saul enjoys it: David, who has
every reason to seek revenge, shrinks in horror from killing Saul
because the latter is "God's anointed." But if you look closely at 1
and 2 Samuel, you will see that a monarch keeps his divine right only
if he rules in accordance with the will of God as expressed by the
law and the prophets. Samuel not only anoints Israel's first king,
Saul, but also participates in his overthrow.
Once David leaves the royal household, he is both a fugitive from
Saul and the rebel leader of a band of outlaws, gathering up "every
one that was in distress, and every one that was in debt, and every
one that was discontented" (22:2). As you read the remaining
chapters of 1 Samuel, you should pay careful attention to what can
only be described as a breathtaking biblical balancing act. On the
one hand, David is in open rebellion against Saul and even enters the
service of the Philistines. On the other hand, David never attacks
any Israelite settlements, and although he has ample opportunity to
avenge himself on Saul, he is careful to avoid the moral stain of
killing the reigning monarch. In the end, the king's suicide is the
perfect solution to a delicate dilemma, sparing Saul the ultimate
shame of falling to Israel's uncircumcised enemy, and sparing David
the blood guilt of being responsible for his death.
NOTE: As the Philistines marshal their forces against him, the
desperate Saul disguises himself (1 Samuel 28), seeks out a witch,
and commands her to summon up the spirit of Samuel, whose death has
been recorded in chapter 25. Notice the ironies in this En-dor
episode. Saul had formerly banished all "those that have familiar
spirits, and the wizards" on pain of death. Moreover, the angry
Samuel not only refuses to help Saul but also heaps new curses upon
him.
The opening chapter of 2 Samuel marks a turning point in the history
of Israel. The age of the judges is over. The death of Saul means
that Israel no longer has two anointed kings but only one--David.
The anointing of David, conducted privately by Samuel in the first
book (16:13), is now repeated publicly, as David, no longer an
untried youth, returns to Judah in triumph (2 Samuel 2:4). In the
chapters that follow, David consolidates his reign over all Israel,
making Jerusalem his center of power. To this new capital he brings
the Ark of the Covenant, although his request to build for it a
permanent home, a holy temple, is denied by Yahweh, speaking through
the prophet Nathan.
Through a combination of diplomatic skill and military valor, David's
kingdom rapidly grows into an empire. But which of David's children
will inherit it when he dies? The problem of succession,
unprecedented in Israel's history, is complicated by David's sin in
arranging the death of Uriah so that David can freely marry
Bathsheba, Uriah's wife, who is already pregnant with David's child.
As punishment for this gross abuse of power, the child dies within a
week of birth (12:18).
But that is only the beginning of David's troubles. Nathan has
warned David at 12:10 that "the sword shall never depart from thine
house," and the pattern of family misfortunes thus foreshadowed
begins in the very next chapter. David's oldest son Amnon--the first
in line of succession--rapes his half-sister Tamar, and two years
later her brother Absalom has Amnon murdered. Forced to flee the
royal household, Absalom organizes a rebellion, proclaims himself
king at Hebron, forces David to flee Jerusalem, and takes possession
of the royal capital and the royal harem. At a climactic encounter
in the forest of Ephraim (chapter 18), the rebellion is crushed, and
Absalom--despite David's orders to the contrary--is slain in battle.
The Bible heart-rendingly portrays David's inconsolable grief at the
news of the death of his son (18:33):
And the king was much moved, and went up to the chamber over the
gate, and wept: and as he went, thus he said, O my son Absalom, my
son, my son Absalom! would God I had died for thee, O Absalom, my
son, my son!
NOTE: Have you already noticed how fitting it is that David, a rebel
against Saul, should be punished by having his own son lead a
rebellion against him? You might also recall the family quarrels in
some other Old Testament households--those of Adam and Eve, Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob. It is important to remember that in the biblical
scheme of things, these are not just family feuds. Isaac and
Ishmael, Esau and Jacob, and Jacob's twelve sons are not only
brothers but the founders of whole nations and clans.
The quarrel within David's household (which fulfills Nathan's
prophecy at 2 Samuel 12:7-12, after David's adulterous affair with
Bathsheba) has important political results. Absalom's rebellion
reveals and exploits some of the resentments stirred up by the
expansion of David's kingship. And, of course, the deaths of Amnon
and then Absalom leave open the succession question, which is not
decided until the third part of the Book of Kingdoms, which has come
down to us as 1 Kings.
OLD TESTAMENT: 1 AND 2 KINGS-OVERVIEW
The dividing point between 2 Samuel and 1 Kings is the death of David
and the enthronement of Solomon. In political terms, 1 and 2 Samuel
show the rise of the United Kingdom of Israel, while 1 and 2 Kings
show its division and consequent decline. The pivotal figure in this
reversal of fortunes is Solomon himself, whose reign is portrayed in
1 Kings 1-11:43.
Rabbinical authorities attributed to the prophet Jeremiah the
authorship of 1 and 2 Kings, which are placed among the Nevi'im in
the Hebrew Bible. In Roman Catholic and Protestant editions, 1 and 2
Kings are the sixth and seventh of the historical books. The
prevailing scholarly view is that the two books of Kings were
compiled from various sources in the time of King Josiah (whose reign
is described in 2 Kings 22:1-23:30), but that additions were made in
the middle of the sixth century B.C., after Jerusalem had fallen.
OLD TESTAMENT: SOLOMON (1 KINGS 1-11:43)
The Solomon of folklore makes his appearance at chapter 3, when, in
response to the new king's prayers, the Lord grants him "a wise and
an understanding heart" (3:12). Almost immediately, the Bible
presents an example of Solomon's fabled wisdom, the judgment between
the two prostitutes, each of whom claims to be the mother of the same
child. Solomon's solution--to cut the child in two!--appalls the
true mother, who declares that keeping half a dead baby is in no way
preferable to letting her rival have all of a living child. Hearing
her expression of selfless love, Solomon justly awards her the
infant. Such insight into human nature profoundly impresses the
king's subjects (3:28):
And they feared the king: for they saw that the wisdom of God was in
him, to do judgment.
If Solomon's statecraft had equaled his understanding, Israel might
have retained its unity and prosperity far longer. The Bible marvels
at the magnificence of the Temple built for Yahweh, at the
unparalleled splendor of the royal household, at the spectacular
alliance with Sheba (probably Saba, in southwestern Arabia). But as
chapters 9 and 11 make clear, all this luxury has its price.
Solomon's ambitious building projects depend on forced labor and
heavy taxes; when royal revenues fall short, Solomon is forced to
sell some northern cities to the king of Tyre. Solomon's marriages
to foreigners and importation of foreign craftsmen involve a policy
of toleration for foreign cults. Today, living in a land where
different faiths flourish in a spirit of mutual respect, you might
think of this policy as one more tribute to Solomon's wisdom. But
the prophets and pietists among the Israelites didn't think this way
at all. They thought that allowing foreign cults to flourish in the
Promised Land was the root cause of all Israel's subsequent
misfortunes.
NOTE: The literary parallelism between 1 Kings 3:3 ("And Solomon
loved the Lord") and 11:1 ("But king Solomon loved many strange
[i.e., foreign] women") can be seen as an expression both of the
duality of Solomon's character and of the strength and weakness of
his reign.
OLD TESTAMENT: DIVISION AND DISINTEGRATION (1 KINGS 12:1 TO 2 KINGS 25:30)
Solomon's death at 1 Kings 11:43 caps a reign of more than four
decades. Even during Solomon's lifetime, a northerner, Jeroboam, had
plotted against him. When Solomon's son and successor Rehoboam
refuses to ease the disproportionate financial burdens of the
northern tribes, they split off from the southern kingdom (Judah) and
choose Jeroboam as their ruler. The remainder of 1 Kings and the
whole of 2 Kings trace the history of the Northern Kingdom to the
Assyrian conquest, and then the history of Judah to the Babylonian
Exile. (For more on this traumatic period in Israelite history, see
"The Old Testament and Its Times" in The Old Testament Background.)
In the prophetic view that dominates these two volumes, the collapse
of both kingdoms represents the failure of the children of Israel,
not the failure of Yahweh. Assyria and Babylonia are the instruments
of God, employed both to punish an errant people and to clear the way
for religious revival.
As you read these books, with their highly judgmental tales of royal
ambition and corruption, be on the lookout for certain episodes of
particular literary or historic interest. Notice especially the
contest of miracles in which Elijah, speaking for God, triumphs over
the prophets of Baal (1 Kings 18:17-41); the covetousness of King
Ahab and the treachery of the Baal-worshiping Queen Jezebel in the
episode of Naboth's vineyard (21:1-29); Elijah's ascent to heaven and
the passing of the mantle of prophecy to Elisha (2 Kings 2:1-13);
Assyria's triumph over the Northern Kingdom (17:1-6); the era of
reform in Judah under King Josiah (chapters 22-23); and the fall of
Judah to Nebuchadnezzar (chapters 24-25).
NOTE: THE BATTLE OF THE MIRACLES The Old Testament is not noted for
its humor, but the contest (1 Kings 18:1-41) between the zealous
Elijah and the false prophets of Baal has a sharp satirical edge.
The ninth-century setting is serious enough: God, who has punished
the Northern Kingdom for its Baal worship with three years of drought
and famine, urges Elijah to meet with Ahab to show the king the folly
of his ways. Elijah challenges the 450 prophets of Baal to prepare a
bull for ritual sacrifice and then--by prayer alone--to set it afire.
Throughout the morning the Baal worshipers chant and leap about,
calling on their god. Cry louder, Elijah taunts them; perhaps Baal
is talking, or taking a trip, or sleeping. As you read 18:27-29, you
should be able to hear the sarcasm in Elijah's voice and see the
mingled amusement and disgust on his face as these hundreds of
idolaters take even more grotesque but equally ineffective measures
to summon the absent Baal. Finally, Elijah, a lone prophet of the
Lord, with quiet dignity and calm assurance lays out the sacrificial
bull, has the wood beneath it soaked with barrels and barrels of
water, and then with a single prayer causes a fire to consume not
only the bull and the woodpile but all the stones and water below.
Amazed, the people offer their fervent (if temporary) allegiance to
the living God and are rewarded with a "great rain" (18:45). As for
the 450 unlucky prophets, Elijah has them killed, supremely confident
that Baal will not break his stony silence to save them.
OLD TESTAMENT: 1 AND 2 CHRONICLES-OVERVIEW
The two volumes of Chronicles hold the eighth and ninth positions
among the historical books in the Roman Catholic and Protestant
canons, preceding Ezra and Nehemiah. In the Masoretic text, on the
other hand, 1 and 2 Chronicles follow Ezra and Nehemiah as the last
books of the Ketuvim, and thus as the concluding works of the Hebrew
Bible. This placement reflects the books' late date of composition.
Although the events described in Chronicles extend back to the
generations of Adam, the text was written while Israel was under
Persian rule. The rabbis of the Talmud credited Chronicles to Ezra
and Nehemiah; most modern scholars place the date somewhat later, in
the fourth century B.C. It is generally believed that 1 and 2
Chronicles were originally one book; probably included in this single
volume were the books of Ezra and Nehemiah, which are similar to
Chronicles in style and outlook.
OLD TESTAMENT: CHRONICLES-SOURCES AND STRUCTURE
Little in Chronicles is of literary interest. The author of
Chronicles made use of the four books of Kingdoms--that is, 1 and 2
Samuel and 1 and 2 Kings--as well as other documents to retell the
history of Israel from Adam to Ezra. The Chronicler, writing from a
priestly perspective, is less concerned with political history than
with establishing a direct tie between God and the people of Israel,
the exclusive legitimacy of David's royal line, and the central role
of Temple worship. (The author shows no interest in the Northern
Kingdom.) The portrait of David is idealized: he plays a much more
important part in the establishment of the First Temple than he does
in 2 Samuel, and the embarrassing episodes of Bathsheba and Absalom
are not mentioned.
Chapters 1-9 of 1 Chronicles consist mainly of lists--genealogies,
census enumerations, the duties of the Levites. The reign of David
is described in chapters 11-29. The first nine chapters of 2
Chronicles portray the reign of Solomon, while chapters 10-36
summarize the subsequent history of the Kingdom of Judah, including
Jerusalem's fall to Babylon and Babylon's fall to Persia. The
mention at 2 Chronicles 36:22-23 of the decree of the Persian king
Cyrus is based on the opening chapters of Ezra and will be discussed
there.
One famous character who makes his first appearance in the King James
Version at 1 Chronicles 21:1 is Satan. At 2 Samuel 24:1, the command
to take a census of the Israelites appears to come from God Himself:
And again the anger of the Lord was kindled against Israel, and He
moved David against them to say, Go, number Israel and Judah.
By 2 Samuel 24:10, however, David is convinced that he has done
wrong, and that by conducting a census (perhaps for purposes of
taxation, forced labor, or a military draft) he has incurred the
wrath of the people and of the Lord. The Chronicler must have been
troubled by the idea of David's being punished by God for something
that God had commanded, so he smooths out the theology by having
Satan stand up against Israel and provoke David to conduct the
census.
NOTE: The name Satan is related to a Hebrew verb meaning "to oppose"
or "to obstruct." The term "the satan" appears in the Hebrew Bible
most often in the sense of an opponent, a tester of virtue, even a
prosecutor in a court of law. (For more on Satan as a tester of
virtue, see the discussion of the Book of Job.) The word "devil," in
the singular, never appears in the King James or Revised Standard
versions of the Old Testament.
OLD TESTAMENT: EZRA/NEHEMIAH-OVERVIEW
Ezra and Nehemiah, the third and fourth books of the Chronicler's
four-volume history of Israel, were probably written during the
fourth century B.C. In view of the fact that portions of both books
are written in the first person, it is possible that the Chronicler
made use of personal memoirs written by (or at least in the time of)
Ezra and Nehemiah, but no such documents have survived outside of the
Bible. Little in either book is of special literary interest. But
the two books are very important sources of information about Israel
after the return from exile and about the continuing evolution of the
Hebrew faith.
OLD TESTAMENT: EZRA
The starting point for the Book of Ezra is the remarkable decree by
King Cyrus of Persia allowing the Jews of Babylon to return to
Jerusalem. But first, here's a little historical background. Having
crushed the empire of Assyria and the Kingdom of Judah, the
Babylonians were themselves overrun by Persia in 539 B.C. It was the
common practice of Near Eastern conquerors not only to loot the lands
they defeated but also to take the local gods from their local
shrines and bring them to the imperial capital, as a clear sign that
the gods of the conquerors were more powerful than those of the
conquered. The Persians had a different idea. Within a year after
the conquest of Babylon, Cyrus of Persia issued a decree allowing the
gods taken captive by the Babylonians to be restored to their
shrines, and permitting all peoples--including the Jews--to follow
their own religious practices.
NOTE: The place of Cyrus in Hebrew tradition offers an important
insight into the Jewish concept of the Messiah. Isaiah 45:1
declares, "Thus saith the Lord to his anointed, to Cyrus...." The
word for anointed is maschiach, or messiah. This is the only time in
either the Old or the New Testament that the title Messiah or
anointed is given to someone not of Jewish birth. (Did you remember
that Jesus was Jewish?)
Ezra was a priest and scribe who, during the reign of King Artaxerxes
of Persia, headed a band of exiles returning from Babylon. Equipped
with broad authority to teach and administer Jewish law to the Jewish
community of Jerusalem and its environs, Ezra arrives to find the
people's faith diluted by ignorance and intermarriage. He issues an
absolute ban on mixed marriages and requires that those who wish to
remain within the community must immediately divorce their non-Jewish
wives (10:11-17).
The action by Ezra that had the most lasting value is described in
chapters 8-10 of the Book of Nehemiah. Ezra gathers the Israelites
together and reads to them the Hebrew scriptures, with a running
commentary in Aramaic, which by now has become the language of the
people. In a renewal of the covenant, the people bind themselves to
follow God's laws, and the Torah effectively becomes the written
constitution of the Jerusalem community.
OLD TESTAMENT: NEHEMIAH
In 445 B.C., Nehemiah, a Jew who holds a high position at the Persian
court, hears news from his brother that the Jewish community in Judah
is in desperate trouble. Appointed by the Persian king as governor
of Judah, he supervises the repair of Jerusalem's fortifications,
bans usury (the taking of interest on a debt), and orders that the
poor be given back the land and goods that have been unjustly taken
from them. Moreover, he is careful to set the best possible example
of honesty and frugality in public office (5:14-19). Upon returning
to Jerusalem after an absence of a year or two (chapter 13), he
campaigns for renewed support of the Levites and the Temple, strict
observance of the Sabbath, and (like Ezra) an end to intermarriage.
OLD TESTAMENT: ESTHER-OVERVIEW
It was with some reluctance that the rabbis admitted the Book of
Esther into the Hebrew canon. The form of the story is that of an
Oriental romance, the setting is Persian rather than Palestinian, and
there is not a single reference to God. Counting heavily in the
book's favor was the association of the story with the Jewish
festival of Purim, on which the Scroll (Megillah) of Esther was read
annually. We are fortunate that some justification was found for its
inclusion, for the Book of Esther is a literary gem, a well-told tale
of a bigot caught in his own trap.
NOTE: The word Purim means "lots," referring to the lots cast by
Haman to choose on which date to destroy the Jews (Esther 3:7). The
Scroll of Esther is still read in synagogue each year. Each time the
name of Haman is mentioned, members of the congregation razz him with
noisemakers, for reasons the story makes clear.
Like the books of Ezra and Nehemiah, the tale of Esther takes place
at a time when Israel is under Persian rule. The names of certain
characters in the story resemble those of the leaders of Persia in
the fifth century B.C. Ahasuerus is the Hebrew form of Xerxes, a
Persian king who reigned from 486 to 465 B.C.; one of his royal
officers was named Marduka, a possible model for Mordecai. However,
many plot details square neither with known Persian history nor with
Greek accounts of the same period. For these and other reasons, many
critics, regarding the story as a distillation of one or more folk
traditions, place the date of writing in the third or second century
B.C.
As you read the Book of Esther, notice how different it is in style
from any of the books of the Pentateuch, the Kingdoms narrative, or
the Chronicler's work. God is not appealed to, except indirectly
through fasting (chapter 4), nor does He intervene; instead, the
story stresses collective action against oppression. Esther has been
assimilated into Persian culture and is indistinguishable, except for
her great beauty, from the Persian women around her. The narrative
is tightly knit, the dialogue is realistic, the portrait of the
prideful Haman is psychologically accurate, and the plot reversals
are keenly ironic.
OLD TESTAMENT: ESTHER-THE STORY
King Ahasuerus, furious at Queen Vashti's refusal to display herself
before the guests at a banquet he is giving, holds a beauty contest
to find a new queen. The winner is Esther, who accepts the honor
without telling the king that she is Jewish. Somewhat later, the
king elevates one of his courtiers, Haman, to be chief among his
princes, and all the other members of the court are ordered to bow
down to him. When Esther's cousin Mordecai, who is known to be
Jewish, refuses to do this, Haman determines to exterminate not just
Mordecai but all the Jews of the kingdom. What Haman does not know
is that Queen Esther is also a Jew and that Mordecai has already been
recorded in the royal archives as having foiled a plot against the
king's life.
NOTE: Why does Mordecai not bow down to Haman? The answer is not
given in the text itself. Some commentators explain his action by
arguing that, as a Jew, Mordecai could bow down before God but not
before any mortal. Others, contending that Jews were indeed allowed
to show high civic officials proper reverence, refer to Haman's
Agagite origins (3:1). They point out that the Agagites, or
Amalekites, were traditional enemies of the Israelites, and they
claim that Mordecai, in snubbing Haman, was expressing an ancient
tribal hatred.
After convincing the king that the Jews are a threat to his kingdom
and reinforcing his arguments with a sizable bribe, Haman wins
permission to do as he pleases. But Mordecai hears of the plot and
persuades the reluctant Esther (who knows that to come unbidden to
the king is a crime punishable by death) to help him. The story
unfolds with considerable suspense as, in chapters 5-7, Haman's plot
unravels. After a banquet given by Esther, the sleepless Ahasuerus
learns from the royal book of records how Mordecai saved him. The
next day the king asks Haman (without naming Mordecai) how such a
hero should be rewarded. When the puffed-up Haman (thinking the king
means him) suggests a grand parade, the king orders that Mordecai be
so honored. That night, at a second banquet, Esther reveals her true
origins and courageously accuses Haman of plotting against her
people. Haman is hanged on the gallows he had prepared for Mordecai,
who takes his place as the king's chief adviser. By Persian custom,
Haman's original decree ordering death to all the Jews of the kingdom
cannot be revoked, but the king grants the Jews free rein to defend
themselves against attack. The story ends on a nationalistic note,
with the Jews rejoicing at the bloody slaughter of their would-be
oppressors.
OLD TESTAMENT: JOB-OVERVIEW
Sabean cutthroats kill Job's herdsmen and cattle. A fire from heaven
burns up his shepherds and sheep. Chaldean raiders slaughter his
servants and camels. A great wind blows down his eldest son's house,
crushing all his children. He is covered with ugly, oozing, painful
sores. His wife mocks him. And what has Job done to deserve all
this?
Nothing, he insists. Nothing at all.
But I didn't do anything. Maybe you've said that when a parent told
you to stop teasing your younger sister, or when a teacher singled
you out for detention, or when a highway patrolman signaled you to
pull off the road. Perhaps you noticed the look of skepticism that
greeted your repeated denials.
But I didn't do anything. When you see a picture of someone dragged
into court and charged with a serious crime, a well-meaning voice
inside you may say: He's innocent until proven guilty. But another
voice inside you may also say: He must be guilty of something or he
wouldn't be in such serious trouble.
How do we know who is innocent and who is guilty? What--or who--is
the source of undeserved suffering? Is there a logic to life that
people can understand? Or must we be content to stand in awe of a
heavenly Father who can exalt us or crush us at His own choosing?
These are the questions the Book of Job asks. Whether its answers
inspire reverence or despair is a question only you can decide.
The Book of Job resembles nothing else that has come down to us from
the ancients, although its message bears similarities to
Ecclesiastes. Suggested dates for its composition range from the
sixth to the third centuries B.C., but there is an archaic feeling to
the story that suggests, in the opinion of some critics, a more
ancient origin. Other critics, looking at the same evidence, have
answered that the Book of Job is the work of a self-conscious and
highly skilled writer deliberately seeking to evoke the past.
OLD TESTAMENT: JOB-THE ETHICAL DILEMMA
The prologue (chapters 1-2) sets out with brilliant economy the
ethical problem of the work. Job, we are told, is "perfect and
upright" (1:1). Recognizing Job's virtues, God mentions him to
Satan, who--in his heavenly capacity as a tester of virtue--claims
that Job is pious only because he has much to be thankful for. If
his comforts are taken away, says Satan, then Job "will curse Thee to
Thy face" (1:11). God's permission to Satan to test Job's goodness
marks the beginning of Job's sufferings. Later, when the loss of his
wealth and children does not cause Job to lose his faith, Satan gains
God's permission to afflict his body. This torment Job also bears
without cursing God, but he refuses passively to accept his fate
without questioning the cause of his afflictions.
NOTE: What does this prologue really accomplish? After you read the
prologue, you know something Job and his friends do not know: you
know why Job suffers. He suffers because God consents to join Satan
in a cosmic bet. What you do not know--what the author never
explains--is why God joins Satan in making this bargain.
Ignorant of the drama that has gone on in heaven, the wretched Job
and his friends set about the task of puzzling out the Lord's
intentions. Chapters 3-37 present an extended philosophical dialogue
in which Job's friends suggest various approaches to the problem, and
Job finds all of them wanting. When Bildad contends that because God
is just, what has happened to Job must be just (chapter 8), Job
challenges God not merely to condemn him but to show him the reasons
for His anger (10:1-2). When Zophar tells Job that God's ways are
beyond human comprehension (chapter 11), Job, like a prisoner held on
unspecified charges, insists that God at least make out the case
against him (13:22-23). In effect, Job wants the chance to prove his
innocence to God, in which case God must be guilty of unjustly
punishing Job. To Bildad's accusation that the wicked person is
"cast into a net by his own feet" (18:8), Job demands that his
friends recognize that "God hath overthrown me, and hath compassed me
with His net" (19:6). The voices of the friends grow increasingly
shrill, and Eliphaz, convinced that Job simply cannot be innocent,
begins to list the sins of which Job might be guilty (22:5-7). In
reply, Job not only denies all his friends' accusations but also
imagines other sins that might have been committed and denies those,
too. Round and round the fruitless dialogue rolls, until the voice
that silences all voices, the voice of God, speaks from a whirlwind
(38:2-7):
Who is this that darkeneth counsel by words without knowledge? Gird
up now thy loins like a man; for I will demand of thee, and answer
thou me. Where was thou when I laid the foundations of the earth?
declare, if thou hast understanding. Who hath laid the measures
thereof, if thou knowest? or who hath stretched the line upon it?
Whereupon are the foundations thereof fastened? or who laid the
corner stone thereof: When the morning stars sang together, and all
the sons of God shouted for joy?
For three chapters the Lord's speech continues, in some of the
Bible's most glorious poetry. Briefly, what God tells Job is this:
When you can create a world and dominate a universe, then--and only
then--will you have the right to summon Me to account for My actions.
A repentant Job embraces this answer and, in the epilogue (42:7-17),
sees his friends chastised for their thoughtless and tactless
criticism. In compensation for his suffering, he receives double his
former wealth and lives out the remainder of his 140 years in peace
and happiness.
Job appears to be profoundly moved by God's answer, but are you? Do
you feel, as some critics have argued, that God never really
addresses Job's challenge? Or do you believe that the Lord's grace
in making His divine presence known to Job is the greatest answer and
reward He could offer? Are you comforted by the awesome revelation
of divine power? Or are you troubled by man's inability to
comprehend the purposes for which that power is used? Are you
delighted to find that Job does indeed reap his material and
spiritual rewards? Or are you disturbed to discover that we cannot
know--at least until the voice in the whirlwind speaks to us--who are
the innocent and who are the guilty? In short, is Job a work of
doubt or a work of faith? The problems are so difficult, the answers
so elusive, that a first reading of the Book of Job is only the bare
beginning of your journey.
OLD TESTAMENT: PSALMS-OVERVIEW
The Book of Psalms is an anthology of 150 poems grouped into five
volumes (1-41; 42-72; 73-89; 90-106; 107-150). The unmistakable
reference in Psalm 137 to the Babylonian Exile ("By the rivers of
Babylon, there we sat down") means that the book cannot have reached
its final form until the sixth century B.C. at the earliest.
Prevailing opinion during the nineteenth century was that the whole
Book of Psalms was a product of the Maccabean period. More recent
scholarship has tended to push back the date of composition. Many
individual Psalms could have been written as early as the period of
the Judges, and there is no reason why David himself cannot have
written many of the 73 Psalms that are labeled "A Psalm of David." If
you are hazy about some of these dates and periods, go back and look
at the time line in the section "The Old Testament and its Times."
The word Psalm comes from the Greek psalmos, meaning "a song sung to
the harp." The Hebrew title is Tehillim, or "songs of praise," a
phrase that describes many but by no means all of the poems. The
entire collection has been called "The Hymnbook of the Second
Temple," reflecting the use of the poems for public worship as well
as private study.
NOTE: The style and language of the Psalms in English cannot be
analyzed apart from the characteristics of a particular translation.
To see just how different translations project different moods and
meanings, see the comparison based on the Twenty-third Psalm in
"Translations and Editions."
OLD TESTAMENT: PSALMS-THEMES
To help you in understanding individual Psalms and in comparing two
Psalms or more, the following list shows some of the themes that come
up repeatedly throughout the volume. But first a warning: No
classification of themes can replace the experience of reading a
poem. A single Psalm can move from lamentation to petition to
thanksgiving when the prayer is answered. Each of the 150 Psalms
repays the closest study--which, to get the full flavor of the
poetry, should include reading aloud. If you spend your time
memorizing a list rather than reading poems, you are only cheating
yourself.
-Hymns of praise to the greatness and glory of God--e.g., 8, 19, 29,
33, 65, 66, 92, 100, 104, 113, 117, 135, 145-150. Included within
this group are a number of Psalms that dwell specifically on the role
of the Lord as King of the Universe--e.g., 47, 93, 96, 97, 99.
-Hymns of thanksgiving, both individual and communal--e.g., 18, 30,
34, 40, 66, 67, 111, 118, 136, 138.
-Hymns to Jerusalem and Zion--e.g., 46, 48, 76, 84, 87, 122.
-"Royal Psalms" concerned with the qualities, responsibilities, and
misfortunes of God's anointed king--e.g., 2, 18, 20, 21, 45, 72, 89,
110, 132, 144.
-Laments usually joined to pleas for God's help. Such laments may be
primarily national (44, 60, 74, 79, 80, 83, 89, 94) or personal (3,
6, 7, 9, 10, 13, 17, 22, 25-28, 31, 35, 36, 38, 39, 41, 42, 43, 51,
54-57, 59, 61, 64, 69, 71, 77, 86, 88, 102, 120, 123, 130, 140-143).
OLD TESTAMENT: PROVERBS-OVERVIEW
Although the opening verse of Proverbs (Mishle in Hebrew) appears to
credit King Solomon with authorship of the book, commentators have
long recognized that Proverbs is a composite work whose contents were
in flux until the dawn of the Christian era. In ancient times,
Proverbs probably served as a kind of school textbook, providing
materials for study, memorization, and writing practice. Similar
collections of wise sayings have been found in Mesopotamia and Egypt,
and some of Proverbs appears to have been based on an Egyptian model.
Through the King James Version, numerous maxims from the Book of
Proverbs have entered the common heritage of the English language:
He that troubleth his own house shall inherit the wind (11:29).
A soft answer turneth away wrath (15:1).
Pride goeth before... a fall (16:18).
A merry heart doeth good like a medicine (17:22).
A good name is rather to be chosen than great riches (22:1).
He that trusteth in his own heart is a fool (28:26).
He that giveth unto the poor shall not lack (28:27).
Where there is no vision, the people perish (29:18).
OLD TESTAMENT: PROVERBS-THEMES AND STRUCTURE
The first of Proverbs' four main sections, all of which are addressed
to a male audience, consists of an extended lecture about the ideal
man (1:1-9:18). As you read, try to form a mental picture of this
ideal man, what he avoids and what he seeks out. Try also to develop
a sense of the personality of the speaker. Is he more likely to be
old or young? Rich or poor?
The second section (10:1-22:16), generally thought to be the oldest,
consists of a diverse group of sayings, most of which show some kind
of parallel structure. Sometimes the parallelism is synonymous, with
the second line restating and reinforcing the first (19:5):
A false witness shall not be unpunished,
and he that speaketh lies shall not escape.
Also common is synthetic parallelism, in which the first line states
a theme and the second presents an analogy or elaboration (11:16):
A gracious woman retaineth honour:
and strong men retain riches.
Often the parallelism is antithetical--that is, the second line
reinforces the point of the first by stating a contrary example
(12:4):
A virtuous woman is a crown to her husband:
but she that maketh ashamed is as rottenness in his bones.
The third section (22:17-24:34) is the one most clearly based on an
Egyptian model, a collection of sayings attributed to Amenemope, who
lived in the eleventh century B.C. Compare, for example, these two
comments on money, the first from Amenemope, the second from Proverbs
23:5:
(1) If riches come to you by theft,
They will not stay the night with you....
They made themselves wings like geese,
And flew away to the sky.
(2) ...riches certainly make themselves wings;
they fly away as an eagle toward heaven.
The fourth section (25:1-31:31) consists for the most part of
additional proverbs of Solomon as recorded in the time of King
Hezekiah, who ruled Judah around 700 B.C. This section concludes
with a well-known poem of praise for the ideal wife (31:10-31),
beginning "Who can find a virtuous woman? for her price is far above
rubies." The original form of the poem is an acrostic, each of whose
twenty-two lines begins with a different letter of the Hebrew
alphabet.
NOTE: The "virtuous woman" poem has been used by social historians
to paint a word picture of a well-to-do household in ancient Israel.
How does this description of a woman's status and responsibilities
accord with the portraits of women given elsewhere in the Old
Testament--for example, in Genesis and in the historical books?
OLD TESTAMENT: ECCLESIASTES-OVERVIEW
Perhaps you have heard the modern French expression "Plus ca change,
plus c'est la meme chose," "the more things change, the more they
remain the same." This idea, which seems at odds with much else in
the Hebrew Bible, is a basic theme of Ecclesiastes (1:9):
The thing that hath been, it is that which shall be; and that which
is done is that which shall be done: and there is no new thing under
the sun.
Ecclesiastes announces itself as the wisdom of the "son of David,
king in Jerusalem"--in other words, Solomon--but this traditional
attribution is not taken seriously by recent scholars. The late
Hebrew (heavily influenced by Aramaic), the Greek-like spirit of
individualism and fatalism, the absence of reliance either on the
Temple or on religious commandments--all these argue for a date of
composition some 700 years after the time of Solomon.
NOTE: The King James Version holds some snares for careless readers.
In Ecclesiastes the term vanity, so obsessively repeated, does not
mean excessive pride or self-absorption but rather "worthlessness" or
"pointlessness"; the saying "all is vanity" means "nothing has any
meaning." The name Ecclesiastes itself is rather obscure. In Greek,
it means someone who belongs to, convokes, or addresses an assembly
or congregation (this same meaning is conveyed by Kohelet, the Hebrew
title). In modern English, "The Preacher" or even "The Teacher"
offers a clearer translation.
OLD TESTAMENT: ECCLESIASTES-OUTLOOK
Do you believe in progress? Do you feel that life is better now than
it was a hundred or a thousand years ago? Do you think the world
will improve in your lifetime, and do you expect to have a hand in
its improvement? Belief in the power of human action runs very
strongly through the Old Testament, especially the Pentateuch, but it
is important to recognize that not all of life can be controlled by
man. That is one way of reading the message of the Book of Job, and
the lesson applies equally to Ecclesiastes. So powerful are the
underlying cycles of life--the forces of nature, the annual turning
of the seasons, the alternating rhythms of day and night, seedtime
and harvest, birth and death--that human action barely makes a
difference, the Preacher says. Of course, wisdom is better than
foolishness, friendship is better than loneliness, obeying the
commandments is better than breaking them, and the joys of youth are
better than the frailties of age, but we should not delude ourselves
into thinking that by living a good life we will necessarily come to
a good end or even make the world any better. This is a minority
opinion in the Old Testament, but Ecclesiastes' view of life can be
found as early as a dark day in Eden (Genesis 3:19): "for dust thou
art, and unto dust shalt thou return."
NOTE: Ecclesiastes 3:1-8 is one of the most wonderful pieces of
poetry in the Bible. So enduring is the beauty of this passage that
a folk-rock arrangement of the lyrics ("Turn, Turn, Turn") became one
of the more popular songs of the 1960s.
OLD TESTAMENT: SONG OF SOLOMON-OVERVIEW
In the Roman Catholic canon, the Song of Solomon (or Song of Songs)
is one of the wisdom books, preceding Wisdom and Sirach, two works
regarded as noncanonical in Jewish and Protestant editions.
Protestant Bibles classify the Song as the last of the poetic books,
while Hebrew texts place it among the Ketuvim, between Job and Ruth
(with which it shares its themes of love and springtime).
The title "Song of Songs," found in many Bibles, is a literal
translation from the Hebrew Shir ha-Shirim. Most modern scholars
doubt that the book was actually written by Solomon, although some
parts of it may be ancient enough to qualify; as with Ecclesiastes,
Aramaic influences on the biblical Hebrew suggest that the book
appeared in its final form between 400 and 300 B.C.
OLD TESTAMENT: SONG OF SOLOMON-EROTIC AND SPIRITUAL LOVE
Reading about great love poetry in Barron's Book Notes is like trying
to savor a gourmet meal by staring at a menu. So, close this book
and, if you haven't done so already, read chapter 7 of the Song of
Solomon. Then reread it. After that, we'll talk.
If you didn't know it was in the Bible, where would you think this
passage came from? A book of Oriental love poems? A romantic comedy
by Shakespeare? A 2000-year-old copy of Playboy? All joking aside,
the distinctive mixture of the exotic and the erotic in the Song of
Solomon has posed severe problems for biblical commentators, and few
books of the Old Testament have received more varied interpretations.
NOTE: The belief that Solomon wrote Song of Songs, Proverbs, and
Ecclesiastes explains why they are described as wisdom literature.
One talmudic rabbi said, "When a man is young, he sings songs. When
he becomes an adult, he utters practical proverbs. When he becomes
old, he speaks of the vanity of things."
A literal interpretation views the Song as an extended celebration of
physical love, perhaps intended for use at wedding festivals. But
this alone would not have qualified the work for the biblical canon.
What did admit the Song to the Bible was a symbolic interpretation
that considered the Song's real meaning to be the love felt by God
(here cast as Solomon) for His people Israel. When the work was
adopted into the Christian canon, this symbolic interpretation was
modified to make Solomon a figure of Christ. Thus, Christian
commentators see Christ as the Bridegroom, and the Church as His
heavenly bride. Other interpreters have viewed the Song as a
two-character drama about a country girl who helps Solomon ascend
from mere infatuation to a higher kind of love; as a three-character
drama in which the king and a young shepherd compete for the young
girl's affections; and as an Israelite adaptation of an ancient pagan
fertility ritual.
In fashioning your own interpretation of this work, you need not say
that the Song is about either erotic or spiritual love; you might
want to say that it is about both. The opposition of flesh and
spirit is a powerful strain in both Judaism and Christianity, but an
equally powerful line of thought in the two religions holds both
flesh and spirit to be the dual aspects of a single Creation. In
seeking support for an interpretation that combines both erotic and
spiritual meanings, you might point to the first chapter of Genesis,
in which God creates the physical world, commands all His creatures
to "be fruitful, and multiply," and calls everything He has made
"very good."
OLD TESTAMENT: ISAIAH-OVERVIEW
Until relatively recently, the prevailing view among biblical
commentators was that the book of Isaiah was the work of a single
prophet, Isaiah the son of Amoz, who lived in Judah during the eighth
century B.C. As for the references in the Book of Isaiah to events
that cannot possibly have taken place within his own lifetime (for
example, the mention of Cyrus of Persia at 45:1), these were credited
to Isaiah's prophetic powers. During the last 200 years, the
traditional viewpoint has been almost totally abandoned. Chapters
1-39 are now seen as the work of the Isaiah identified in 1:1, but
chapters 40-66 are now attributed to an anonymous writer of the
postexilic period. To distinguish the two, the name First Isaiah is
usually applied to the author of chapters 1-39, and Second Isaiah (or
Deutero-Isaiah) to the author of chapters 40-66. Some scholars also
distinguish in the latter chapters the imprint of a Third Isaiah.
OLD TESTAMENT: FIRST ISAIAH (CHAPTERS 1-39)
While Hosea and Amos are preaching in the Northern Kingdom, Isaiah
and Micah prophesy in Judah. The central fact of life for Israel at
that time is the expansion of Assyrian power, which topples the
Northern Kingdom and comes within a hair's breadth of overrunning
Jerusalem. Like the other prophets of his time, Isaiah sees the
chariots of Assyria as God's instruments for punishing the
faithlessness of Israel (1:4,7):
Ah sinful nation, a people laden with iniquity, a seed of evildoers,
children that are corrupters: they have forsaken the Lord, they have
provoked the Holy One of Israel unto anger....
Your country is desolate, your cities are burned with fire: your
land, strangers devour it in your presence, and it is desolate, as
overthrown by strangers.
NOTE: The message of Isaiah was political as well as spiritual. As
the Assyrian threat grew, Judah was tempted to seek Egypt and
Ethiopia as allies. According to Isaiah 20:1-6, the prophet
demonstrated against such an alliance by walking naked and barefoot
for three years as a sign that the Egyptians and Ethiopians would be
conquered and taken naked as slaves by the armies of Assyria.
Isaiah's abiding power lies in his ability to see beyond Israel's
present trials. Sounding a theme heard increasingly among the Latter
Prophets, Isaiah, speaking for God, forecasts the coming of the "Day
of the Lord," a terrifying day of divine judgment (13:10-11):
For the stars of heaven and the constellations thereof shall not give
their light: the sun shall be darkened in his going forth, and the
moon shall not cause her light to shine.
And I will punish the world for their evil, and the wicked for their
iniquity; and I will cause the arrogancy of the proud to cease, and
will lay low the haughtiness of the terrible.
That ghastly prospect is tempered by Isaiah's vision of a messianic
age, an era of universal peace that still beckons to us (2:4):
And they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears
into pruninghooks: nation shall not lift up sword against nation,
neither shall they learn war any more.
Integral to this belief is the prophecy that a Redeemer will restore
Israel's former glory. The passage beginning "For unto us a child is
born, unto us a son is given" (9:6) has been taken by Jewish
commentators to mean that an earthly king from the royal house of
David will restore peace and prosperity in the Promised Land.
Christian interpreters see this passage as a prophecy of the coming
of Christ, the eternal Prince of Peace.
NOTE: One of the most famous of Isaiah's messianic prophecies appears at 7:14:
Therefore the Lord Himself shall give you a sign; Behold, a virgin
shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel.
The "virgin" is understood by Christians to mean the Virgin Mary, and
Immanuel--from the Hebrew for "with us is God"--is identified with
Jesus.
OLD TESTAMENT: SECOND ISAIAH (CHAPTERS 40-66)
Style and substance shift dramatically at the opening of chapter 40:
Comfort ye, comfort ye my people, saith your God.
Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem, and cry unto her, that her warfare
is accomplished, that her iniquity is pardoned: for she hath
received of the Lord's hand double for all her sins.
No longer do we hear the voice of Judah trembling at the onslaught of
Assyrian power. Now the Lord has chosen a new instrument--Cyrus,
king of Persia--to conquer the enemies of Israel and to allow the
Babylonian exiles to return to Jerusalem and rebuild their Temple.
But this message of consolation does not apply only to the Jews:
Second Isaiah's prophetic vision is one of universal relevance.
Among the many messianic prophecies of Second Isaiah, none was more
important in the development of Christian belief than the "suffering
servant" passage from 52:13 to 53:12. Who is this suffering servant
who "was wounded for our transgressions" and "is brought as a lamb to
the slaughter" (53:5,7)? Is he, as a few commentators have
suggested, a purely mythological figure, an echo of the "dying god"
motif that characterizes so many primitive religions? Is he some
historical king of the Davidic line or a martyr in a war against
foreign oppression? Is he, perhaps, merely a symbol for the people
of Israel itself? All these readings have been proposed by critics
who deny the validity of using the New Testament as a tool for
interpreting the Old. If, however, you regard much of the Old
Testament as a prophecy of the New, and the New as a fulfillment of
the Old, then the identity of the suffering servant is clearly Jesus.
OLD TESTAMENT: JEREMIAH-OVERVIEW
We are unusually fortunate not only in knowing a great deal about the
life of the prophet Jeremiah but also in knowing how his book--or at
least a major part of it--came to be written. Chapter 36 relates how
Jeremiah summoned a scribe named Baruch to copy Yahweh's revelations
to Jeremiah concerning the forthcoming destruction of Jerusalem. The
prophet then told Baruch to read the scroll aloud at the Temple.
When King Jehoiakim was informed of what Jeremiah had prophesied, he
had the scroll cut up and burned, and ordered Jeremiah and Baruch
arrested. Undaunted, Jeremiah began dictating a second scroll to
Baruch, who not only wrote down everything destroyed by King
Jehoiakim but added "unto them many like words" (36:32).
NOTE: The name Jeremiah comes from the Hebrew yerim-yahu ("may the
Lord exalt"). In literature, a jeremiad--a name derived from
Jeremiah--is a prolonged complaint or lament.
In its present form, the Book of Jeremiah reflects the interweaving
of several different kinds of materials. Of principal importance are
the poems of prophecy (oracles), thought to represent the authentic
voice of the historical Jeremiah. Autobiographical prose makes up
part of chapters 1-25; biographical prose, much of it by Baruch,
contributes to the remaining chapters.
OLD TESTAMENT: JEREMIAH-THE LIFE OF JEREMIAH
Born into a priestly family about the year 650 B.C., Jeremiah begins
his career of public prophecy in the thirteenth year of the reign of
King Josiah (627 B.C.). The reforms of King Josiah may have silenced
Jeremiah for a while, but his prophecies of a coming judgment on
Judah resume in 609, with the accession of Josiah's son Jehoiakim.
Just as the growth of Assyrian power is the central political fact in
the time of Isaiah, so the expansion of Babylonia (which had
conquered Assyria) dominates the politics of Jeremiah's time. Like
First Isaiah, Jeremiah sees the foreign conqueror as an instrument of
Yahweh's wrath--so much so that the prophet opposes all resistance.
For if the king of Babylon (whom Jeremiah portrays as the Lord's
servant) has been chosen to execute God's judgment, how can the
opposition to him succeed (27:8)?
And it shall come to pass, that the nation and kingdom which will not
serve... Nebuchadnezzar... that nation will I punish, saith the
Lord....
Because of such highly unpatriotic--even treasonous--prophecies,
Judah's political leaders have him arrested and imprisoned. He
remains in custody until the Babylonian conquest (586), after which
he finds a final refuge in Egypt.
OLD TESTAMENT: JEREMIAH-THE PROPHETIC MISSION
What is most remarkable about Jeremiah is not so much the nature of
his prophecies but his attitude toward his prophetic mission. Like
the Nazarites Samson and Samuel, Jeremiah is called from birth to the
service of Yahweh (1:5):
Before I formed thee in the belly I knew thee; and before thou camest
forth out of the womb I sanctified thee, and I ordained thee a
prophet unto the nations.
He does not marry nor does he have children, because, he tells us,
God has warned him that both parents and children shall die "grievous
deaths... as dung upon the face of the earth" (16:4).
In reading how Jeremiah's unpopular prophecies--and his denunciations
of false prophets lead to his imprisonment and isolation, you might
well have asked yourself: Why doesn't Jeremiah just keep quiet? Why
does he keep saying things that so few people want to hear and that
get him into so much trouble? Certainly it takes great courage to
tell your nation's ruler that he is wrong and the enemy is right.
But courage alone is not what drives Jeremiah onward (20:7-9):
O Lord, Thou hast deceived me,... Thou art stronger than I, and hast
prevailed: I am in derision daily, every one mocketh me....
Then I said, I will not make mention of Him, nor speak any more in
His name. But His word was in mine heart as a burning fire shut up
in my bones, and I was weary with forbearing, and I could not stay.
The only thing more painful to Jeremiah than the burden of prophecy
is the burden of keeping silent. Try to remember this unhappy,
God-obsessed man when you come to read of how another prophet, Jonah,
tries to evade his calling.
NOTE: Not all the prophecies of Jeremiah are those of gloom and
destruction. At 31:31-34, the prophet offers a vision of a "new
covenant with the house of Israel," written in the hearts of the
people. This passage, which provided sanction for the belief of the
early Christians that they were the bearers of a new covenant with
God, is quoted by St. Paul in his Epistle to the Hebrews (8:8-12).
OLD TESTAMENT: LAMENTATIONS-OVERVIEW
The Book of Lamentations is called in the Septuagint the Lamentations
of Jeremiah, but few scholars today have any confidence that Jeremiah
was actually the author. However, it seems likely that the five
poems that make up Lamentations were written close to the time when
Jerusalem and its First Temple were destroyed by Babylon.
OLD TESTAMENT: LAMENTATIONS-STRUCTURE
The first four chapters of Lamentations are acrostics, following a
Hebrew alphabetic pattern; the fifth, though not in acrostic form,
has twenty-two verses, matching the number of letters in the Hebrew
alphabet. The central image of the first poem portrays the whole of
Jerusalem as a lonely widow, weeping in the night; line 1:19
implicitly compares the ruined city to a forsaken adulteress (see
chapter 2 of Hosea). The second poem offers a more detailed
description of the devastation and explicitly casts Yahweh in the
role of destroyer. In 3:1-39, the poet meditates on the meaning of
suffering. The poet concludes that no calamity can happen unless God
wills it, but that the ultimate cause of the suffering is the
sufferer's own sins (3:39). Verses 40-47, written in the first
person plural, amount to a national confession of guilt, while the
concluding verses, which revert to the first person singular, express
the hope that the enemies of Israel will likewise be punished. In
the fourth poem, the emphasis passes to the individual sufferings of
those who were caught up in the Babylonian conquest. The fifth poem,
the final lament, gives voice to those who survived the battle and
remained amid the ruins.
NOTE: Who is the "I" in chapter 3? Tradition identified the
speaker, "the man that hath seen affliction" (3:1), with the prophet
Jeremiah. At least one commentator has suggested Zedekiah, the last
king of Judah. The chapter can also be seen as an exercise in
personification, with the "I" standing for Judah or Jerusalem itself.
OLD TESTAMENT: EZEKIEL-OVERVIEW
The prophetic career of Ezekiel (which means "may El strengthen")
begins about 593 B.C., four years after Jerusalem has come under the
sway of Babylon but seven years before its destruction at the hands
of Nebuchadnezzar. Generally speaking, chapters 1-24 prophesy
Israel's coming doom, while chapters 25-48, presumably written after
586 B.C., offer consolation to a generation of exiles. Living in
Babylon, Ezekiel, who may have been a priest, is a contemporary of
Jeremiah, with whom he may have been in contact.
There are many problems with the text, and assessments of which
passages are by the "real" Ezekiel are difficult. Most commentators
believe the book was written by Ezekiel and/or his followers during
the sixth century B.C., but a few critics place the writing or
editing of the book as much as 300 years later.
NOTE: No prophet--not even Moses at the burning bush--receives his
calling in more spectacular fashion than Ezekiel, to whom the Glory
of the Lord appears enthroned on a flaming chariot (chapter 1).
Ezekiel's flamboyant style seems to have made him something of a
popular entertainer among the exiles. At least, that is how some
commentators read the complaint in Ezekiel 33:32 that the prophet's
manner of prophecy has more effect on the crowds than the content of
his message.
OLD TESTAMENT: EZEKIEL-THE PROPHET AS VISIONARY
The Book of Ezekiel includes an extended prophecy of the doom of
Judah and Jerusalem (chapters 3-24), including in chapter 18 a call
to the exiles to repent for their misdeeds and the reassuring message
that the innocent will not be punished for the sins of the guilty;
predictions concerning the destruction awaiting Phoenicia, Egypt, and
the other nations (chapters 25-32); a forecast of Israel's
restoration (chapters 34-39); and a code governing the rebuilding of
the Temple, the reconstitution of the priesthood, and the
redistribution of the land. Amidst this wealth of material, among
the most striking passages are Ezekiel's visions of Jerusalem
corrupted and then renewed, and of the "valley of the dry bones."
-THE CORRUPTION OF JERUSALEM (8:1-11:25). Let's briefly take the
part of Ezekiel as he leads his listeners on a visionary tour of
Jerusalem, city of abominations. First the hand of God lifts you by
the hair and carries you from your home in Babylon to the Holy City.
You approach the Temple's outer courtyard and, finding a weakness in
the wall, break through it to find "every form of creeping things,
and abominable beasts, and all the idols of the house of Israel"
(8:10) being worshiped by seventy elders of the community. At the
gate of the inner courtyard you see women serving the fertility god
Tammuz, and in the inner court stand twenty-five men with their backs
to the Holy of Holies and their faces gazing worshipfully toward the
sun. Unable to contain His fury, the Lord lets loose six armed men
to wreak vengeance on Jerusalem, sparing only the few pious ones, a
small saving remnant of the house of Israel.
A horrifying vision of Judah dominated by foreign cults--but how true
is it? No such description of the profaned Temple can be found in
Jeremiah or Lamentations, and it is difficult to see how Ezekiel,
prophesying in Babylon in 592 B.C., could be a reliable observer.
Was Ezekiel then actually in Jerusalem, speaking as a ruthlessly
honest eyewitness? Or was he in Babylon, preaching to the exile
community, and exaggerating the truth to convey to his audience the
enormity of the sins for which Jerusalem had been and would be
punished?
NOTE: Paralleling Ezekiel's vision of Jerusalem destroyed is his
vision of Jerusalem restored. At 40:1-43:12, Ezekiel takes his
listeners on a prophetic tour of the rebuilt Temple, in the company
of an angel who holds a measuring stick in his hand. The Glory of
God, which departed the Temple at 10:18-11:1, returns to His house of
worship at 43:5, signifying the full restoration of the Kingdom of
Israel.
-THE VALLEY OF THE DRY BONES (37:1-14). Now you are inside the mind
of the prophet as the Lord sets you down in a valley that is full of
dry bones. Commanded to speak to these long-dead skeletons, you tell
them that God will fit them with living flesh. As the skeletons once
again become bodies, God orders you to call upon the wind to breathe
life into them. You see the spirit of life return to them, as they
stand "up upon their feet, an exceeding great army" (37:10).
Lines 11-14 explain that the "dry bones" are the whole house of
Israel, which shall rise from the grave through the grace of God and
the powers of the prophet. Jewish and Christian scholars have
generally interpreted this scene as an allegory of the return of the
Israelites from their countries of exile, and not as an allegory of
individual resurrection. Belief in the resurrection of the dead did
not come to full flower in the Old Testament until centuries later,
in the Book of Daniel.
NOTE: Ezekiel's messianic vision, like those of Isaiah and Jeremiah,
played an important part in shaping Jewish (and therefore Christian)
expectations of a Messiah (37:24):
And David my servant shall be king over them; and they all shall have
one shepherd....
For the influence of the Davidic prophecy on the New Testament, see
Luke 1:32 and Romans 1:3. The image of the Messiah as a shepherd
appears frequently among the Hebrew prophets and in the Christian
scriptures, most startlingly in the Revised Standard Version at
Revelation 7: 17, "For the Lamb in the midst of the throne will be
their shepherd."
OLD TESTAMENT: DANIEL-OVERVIEW
The book of Daniel consists of two main sections. The first part
(chapters 1-6) tells a series of stories about a character named
Daniel who is supposed to have lived in Babylon during the time of
exile. The second part (chapters 7-12) recounts, in the first
person, four revelations to this selfsame Daniel. Both the
rabbinical and the early Christian commentators accepted the stories
as historically true and regarded the prophecies as having been
written in Babylon in the middle of the sixth century B.C. This view
was challenged as early as the third century A.D. by a pagan
philosopher, later quoted by Saint Jerome:
[The Book of Daniel] was composed by someone who lived in Judea in
the reign of Antiochus who was surnamed Epiphanes, and he did not
predict coming events but narrated past ones. Consequently, what he
relates down to Antiochus embodies true history, but if he added any
surmises about the future, he just invented them, for he did not know
the future.
NOTE: Modern scholars agree that the second part of Daniel does
indeed date from the reign of Antiochus Epiphanes (175-164 B.C.), the
oppressive king whose attempt to wipe out Judaism sparked the
Maccabean rebellion. Even so, the first section may have been
written up to 140 years earlier. The portrait of Nebuchadnezzar in
the Book of Daniel is regarded by experts in Mesopotamian culture as
wholly legendary and without historical value.
Most of Daniel is written either in Aramaic or in Hebrew obviously
translated from Aramaic. A chronological listing of the books of the
Old Testament that are considered canonical by all faiths would place
Daniel last.
OLD TESTAMENT: DANIEL-THE STORIES
You may already be familiar with several of the stories in Daniel.
In chapters 1 and 2, Daniel and his companions Hananiah, Mishael, and
Azariah are brought from Judah to Babylon, educated for the king's
service, given Babylonian names (Belteshazzar, Shadrach, Meshach, and
Abed-nego, respectively), and, because of Daniel's skill at dream
interpretation, promoted to positions of influence in the royal
household. (Can you recall another biblical figure who, taken
against his will to an alien land, becomes an important royal
administrator? If, like the Pharaoh in Exodus 1:8, you "knew not
Joseph," you should review Genesis 40:1-41:44.)
Chapter 3 recounts the well-known tale of how Nebuchadnezzar sets up
a golden idol and orders all his officials to bow down to it. When
the king hears that Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego have not
followed his order, he has them cast into a "burning fiery furnace."
Miraculously, a fourth figure who looks like "the son of God" (a
phrase rendered in a modern Jewish translation as "a divine being")
appears in the midst of the flames, and the three Jews step out of
the blazing fire with not a hair singed or a thread of clothing
blackened.
In chapter 5 we meet Nebuchadnezzar's successor, Belshazzar, who
gives a great feast at which a mysterious hand writes a puzzling
message on the walls of the palace. The king's wise men are stumped,
but Daniel correctly interprets the punning message to mean that
Belshazzar will soon be overthrown.
In chapter 6 we are once again in familiar territory. Daniel has
become prominent in the government of Darius the Mede. Daniel's
rivals, knowing he prays daily to Yahweh, plot to trap Daniel by
having Darius issue a decree forbidding anyone for a thirty-day
period to address any request to any man or god except Darius
himself. Daniel, observed in prayer in violation of the decree, is
brought to the king, who is reluctant to punish him but is pressured
to do so by the jealous courtiers. Cast into a lions' den, Daniel is
saved by God. Not so fortunate are his accusers, who (along with
their wives and children) are condemned by Darius and torn apart by
the same lions they hoped would make a meal of Daniel.
OLD TESTAMENT: DANIEL-THE REVELATIONS
The last six chapters of Daniel are far more complex than the first
six. Through a series of visions, dreams, and revelations, Daniel
surveys the history of Israel from Darius to Antiochus and looks
ahead to a "time of trouble" (12:1) when the dead will be
resurrected, a final judgment will be made, and the mysteries of
heaven and earth will be unsealed. This kind of writing is called
apocalyptic, from a Greek word meaning "to uncover" or "to disclose."
The Book of Daniel is the only full-blown example of apocalyptic
writing to be found in the Old Testament, but the seeds of this view
of the world to come can be found in the idea of the "Day of the
Lord," or "Day of Yahweh." This is the day of judgment on which God
is to reward the just and punish the wicked.
Originally, the "Day of the Lord" referred to a judgment that took
place annually, coinciding with the celebration of the autumnal New
Year. Over time, however, the concept was applied to Yahweh's final
judgment, a day of terror out of which righteousness would triumph.
The Day of the Lord is mentioned prominently by Isaiah, Joel, Amos,
Obadiah, Zephaniah, and Malachi, as well as Ezekiel and Zechariah.
The idea of the coming Day of the Lord gradually evolved into the
apocalyptic belief, evident in Daniel and the Dead Sea Scrolls, that
a great struggle was under way between the forces of good (light) and
the forces of evil (darkness), and that the forces of good would not
triumph until Judgment Day.
NOTE: Of enormous importance in the formulation of Christian
theology are the references in both Daniel and Ezekiel to the "son of
man," most especially in this messianic passage (Daniel 7:13-14):
I saw in the night visions, and, behold, one like the Son of man came
with the clouds of heaven, and came to the Ancient of days, and they
brought Him near before Him.
And there was given Him dominion, and glory, and a kingdom, that all
people, nations, and languages, should serve Him: His dominion is an
everlasting dominion, which shall not pass away, and His kingdom that
which shall not be destroyed.
OLD TESTAMENT: THE TWELVE MINOR PROPHETS
Editions of the Old Testament often group twelve of the prophetic
books--Hosea, Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk,
Zephaniah, Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi. In commentaries on the
Masoretic text they are usually called "The Twelve" or the "Minor
Prophets." They are called minor prophets not because their teachings
are unimportant or unfamiliar (you probably already know some of the
Jonah story), but because all twelve books are quite short. For
example, the whole Book of Obadiah takes only a page or two.
The canon of the Minor Prophets was established sometime between the
fourth and second centuries B.C. A combination of factors determined
the order of books. The Book of Hosea was placed first because of
the phrase "The beginning of the word of the Lord" (translated in a
modern version as "When the Lord first spoke") in Hosea 1:2. In
general, however, the prophets are given in chronological order as
the editors of that time understood it.
OLD TESTAMENT: HOSEA
Hosea prophesied in the Northern Kingdom during the eighth century,
before the Assyrian onslaught; he lived at about the same time as
Amos, who also prophesied in the north, and Isaiah and Micah, who
prophesied to Judah. The text of Hosea has many difficult passages,
and scholars believe that some verses dealing with Judah were added
by a later scribe.
The book opens with a denunciation by Hosea of his faithless wife
Gomer. Whether the account of her faithlessness should be taken
literally is almost beside the point. The importance of the story is
the parallel Hosea draws between a loving husband and an adulterous
wife, on the one hand, and a loving God and an errant people, on the
other. Using vivid language rich in similes and metaphors, Hosea,
speaking for Yahweh, tells the Israelites that if they continue
whoring after false gods, Yahweh will punish them for it. If anyone
close to you has gone through a bitter divorce, you should be able to
feel in Hosea's words the anguish of Yahweh's having to choose
between continued love for His people and the desire to cut Himself
off from them completely.
NOTE: Hosea repeatedly calls Israel by the name "Ephraim." Ephraim,
the younger of Joseph's two sons, was the ancestor of the
Ephraimites, one of the most powerful of the original twelve tribes
of Israel. (Joshua and Samuel were both Ephraimites.) The tribe of
Ephraim led the revolt that split off the Northern Kingdom of Israel
from the Kingdom of Judah.
OLD TESTAMENT: JOEL
The only thing known for certain about the prophet Joel is his name,
which in Hebrew means "Yahweh is God." The date of the book cannot be
determined; some critics believe the text was written before the
Babylonian Exile (586 B.C.) and then rewritten after. The Book of
Joel begins with a graphic description of a plague of locusts brought
by the Lord as a punishment for the sins of Israel. As is usual in
the prophetic literature, the prophet follows with a promise of
plenty if the people repent. The book concludes with a more general
prophecy of the coming Day of the Lord, on which all the enemies of
Israel shall be vanquished (3:19-20):
Egypt shall be a desolation, and Edom shall be a desolate wilderness,
for the violence against the children of Judah, because they have
shed innocent blood in their land.
But Judah shall dwell for ever, and Jerusalem from generation to generation.
The Book of Joel gives you a good chance to see how one prophet
comments on another and how the New Testament makes use of the Old.
Notice, for example, the way Acts 2 makes use of the apocalyptic
verses that begin at Joel 2:28:
And it shall come to pass... that I will pour out my spirit upon all
flesh; and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men
shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions:...
Consider also the passage (3:10) in which Joel, describing the coming
war for the Lord, completely reverses the prophecy of peace at Isaiah
2:4. Now look at Jesus' instruction to his disciples at Matthew
10:34. To which prophet do the words of Jesus seem closer in spirit?
How do you reconcile the apparent differences between the messages of
the two prophets?
OLD TESTAMENT: AMOS
Do you know someone who wears all the right clothes, belongs to all
the right clubs, seems always to say the right thing at the right
time--but who is only out for his own gain, and turns his back on the
sufferings of others? If so, you know the kind of person the prophet
Amos means when, speaking for God, he says (5:12):
For I know your manifold transgressions, and your mighty sins: then,
afflict the just, they take a bribe, and they turn aside the poor in
the gate from their right.
Amos prophesied in the Northern Kingdom during the eighth century
B.C. The first chapter and part of the second foretell God's
vengeance against the enemies of Israel. The major portion of the
book, however, warns how God will punish Israel for its immoral
behavior, which Amos colorfully characterizes as selling "the
righteous for silver, and the poor for a pair of shoes" (2:6).
Chapter 7 narrates Amos's quarrel with the priest Amaziah, who
intrigues against the prophet by telling King Jeroboam that Amos is
plotting against the throne. Chapter 9 concludes with the comforting
prophecy that, after a period of captivity and destruction, the
people of Israel will be returned to their land and to God's grace.
(This chapter is thought by many scholars to be a later addition,
perhaps by a compiler who wished to soften the harshness of Amos's
earlier words.) Also mentioned in the book are a series of
extraordinary natural events--an earthquake, a famine, a locust
plague, a solar eclipse--which are taken as signs of divine
displeasure.
The Book of Amos is much more important than its size would indicate.
Remember that Amos was preaching to the worshipers of Yahweh, people
who were convinced that their covenant with God guaranteed their
safety. They reacted to Amos's prophecies with hostility or
disbelief. And yet, within a few decades, in 721 B.C., the Northern
Kingdom was swallowed up by the empire of Assyria, and all its ten
tribes vanished from the pages of history. As you read, ask yourself
how you would react if a new Amos, preaching a similar message,
suddenly appeared in the streets of your town or city. How seriously
would you take his warnings? What changes in your own behavior would
you make?
NOTE: Nowhere in the Bible is the theme that God values justice and
righteousness more than empty sacrifices stated more powerfully than
at Amos 5:21-24. After the destruction of the Jerusalem Temple in
A.D. 70, lines such as these would encourage the Jews in their
attempt to reconstruct their religion on the basis of rabbis,
prayers, and synagogues rather then priests, sacrifices, and Temple
altars.
OLD TESTAMENT: OBADIAH
The Book of Obadiah is the shortest in the Old Testament, and its
origins are among the most obscure. "Obadiah" means "servant of the
Lord," suggesting a pseudonym, but it might well have been a proper
name. Early Jewish commentators placed Obadiah in the reign of Ahab,
who ruled the Northern Kingdom during the ninth century B.C. Later
commentators have focused on verses 11-14 as a sign that the book was
written after the Babylonian conquest of 586 B.C.
Most of this brief book pronounces judgment on the Edomites,
traditional enemies of Israel who seem to have helped the Babylonians
sack Jerusalem. The concluding verses dwell on a common prophetic
theme: the coming Day of the Lord, when Israel shall be upraised,
its enemies cast down, and "the kingdom shall be the Lord's."
OLD TESTAMENT: JONAH
Probably you remember from your childhood the wonderful story of
Jonah and the whale. If you still think that Jonah is a tall tale
about a man who lives three days in the belly of a big fish, stop
right here and read the Old Testament Book of Jonah--all of it,
including chapters 3 and 4.
Now let's review the story--the whole story. The Lord calls upon
Jonah to go to Nineveh and warn the Ninevites that Yahweh knows of
their wickedness. Instead, Jonah tries to shirk his mission and
books passage on a ship to Tarshish. Then the Lord sends a great
storm, endangering the vessel. All the sailors come out on deck to
pray to their deities, but Jonah, still trying to run away from God,
hides down below. The shipmaster rouses Jonah from his slumber, and
it soon becomes clear that Jonah is the source of the evil that has
befallen them. Reluctantly, the sailors take Jonah's advice and
throw him into the sea. The storm subsides, and the sailors offer
thanks to God for their safety.
If Jonah's secret hope is to fall to the bottom of the sea and
forever vanish from God's presence, he is once again mistaken. The
Lord sends a great fish who swallows Jonah, holds him in his belly
for three days and three nights, and then (after Jonah prays for
deliverance) spits him up on dry land. God again insists that Jonah
go to Nineveh, and this time Jonah does as he is told. At Nineveh,
Jonah preaches that the kingdom will be destroyed within forty days.
Hearing this, the king of Nineveh orders the whole kingdom to repent,
so that the Lord may change His mind. And that, much to Jonah's
dismay, is exactly what happens. Why, demands Jonah, did he have to
go to all this trouble if God was going to forgive Nineveh anyway?
The sulking Jonah then moves to the outskirts of the city, where the
Lord provides a shady vine to protect him from the broiling sunshine.
The cooling shade improves Jonah's mood temporarily, but then God
withers the vine until, faint from the heat, Jonah wishes for death.
The parable concludes with God telling Jonah that just as the
withering of the vine was a bitter loss to the prophet, so to Him the
deaths of thousands of Ninevites would have been terribly painful.
That is why He was so willing to accept their repentance and spare
the city.
Supposed dates for the authorship of the Book of Jonah range from the
eighth to the third century B.C. Equally varied are the theories of
what the book is really about. You can see in Jonah the figure of
the reluctant prophet, unsuccessfully trying (like Moses and
Jeremiah) to avoid the terrible responsibility with which God has
burdened him. Or you can see the story as a parable about the
futility of trying to deny or hide from Yahweh, whom even the storms
and sea obey. (Consider what happens in Genesis when Adam and Eve
and, later, Cain try to avoid God's judgment.) A very positive
approach to the Jonah story is to see it as an attempt to demonstrate
God's willingness to show mercy to those who mend their ways. What
makes this approach especially poignant is that Jonah, a Hebrew, is
rebuked by Yahweh--the God of the Hebrews--for wanting to deny
thousands of non-Jews the chance to be saved. The Book of Jonah can
thus be seen as a major step in the universalizing of Yahweh as a God
of all peoples and in defining the mission of Judaism as concern for
all humanity and not merely for one sect or tribe. Considered as a
plea for toleration, the Book of Jonah bears comparison with another
short biblical tale, the Book of Ruth. For a brief discussion of
some of the literary techniques in the Book of Jonah, see the section
"Literary Forms, Styles, and Techniques" in The Old Testament
Background.
NOTE: In the New Testament, at Matthew 12:40, Jesus foretells His
own death and resurrection by saying:
For as Jonas [Jonah] was three days and three nights in the whale's
belly; so shall the Son of man be three days and three nights in the
heart of the earth.
Christian interpreters have thus seen Jonah as a Christ-figure, risen
from the dead and sent by God to bring salvation to the Gentiles.
OLD TESTAMENT: MICAH
Micah is often linked with Isaiah, and for good reason. Like Isaiah,
Micah lived in the eighth century B.C., but he was probably a few
decades younger. Both men prophesied in Judah, and both saw the fall
of the Northern Kingdom to Assyria as a warning that God's judgment
on the south would soon be at hand. There are numerous parallels
between the books of Isaiah and Micah; compare, for example, Micah
4:1-3 with Isaiah 2:2-4. This might imply direct influence, or it
might mean (taking the critical point of view) that the same
sentiments were attributed by an editor at a later date to both
prophets.
The Book of Micah opens with a pronouncement of judgment against the
northern and southern kingdoms, in part because of the oppression of
the poor by the rich. (This theme Micah shares with Amos.) The book
closes with a poem of praise to God, who, having punished the guilty,
will remember His covenant with the patriarchs and have mercy on
those who remain. Between these visions of condemnation and
consolation come two remarkable passages. The first is the messianic
prophecy that out of Bethlehem "shall He come forth unto Me that is
to be ruler in Israel" (5:2)--a passage that has direct bearing on
the assertions in the Gospels of Matthew, Luke, and John that Jesus
Christ was born in Bethlehem. (That town was likewise the home of
the family of David.) The second (6:7-8) is a magnificent restatement
of the ethical message earlier delivered by Amos:
Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams, or with ten
thousands of rivers of oil? shall I give my firstborn for my
transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?
He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the Lord
require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk
humbly with thy God?
OLD TESTAMENT: NAHUM
Little is known of Nahum, whose name stems from the Hebrew for
"Yahweh has comforted." Like the Book of Jonah, the Book of Nahum
involves Nineveh, the Assyrian capital. This great city was sacked
by the Babylonians and Medes in 612 B.C.; most modern critics assume
that Nahum lived around this time.
Chapter 1 consists of a poem in praise of Yahweh. Many scholars
regard this poem as a later (and corrupt) addition. The original
poem in Hebrew was probably in the form of an acrostic, with each
line beginning with a different letter of the Hebrew alphabet.
Chapters 2 and 3 retell the fall of Nineveh in stirring martial
verse. The prevailing attitude is not, as in Jonah, that all life is
precious; instead, Nahum glories in Nineveh's misfortune as Yahweh's
judgment on the enemies of Israel. In Jonah, the prophet is rebuked
for his lack of sympathy; in Nahum, on the other hand, the prophet
feels no mercy, nor does God show any.
NOTE: If, as some commentators believe, Nahum was alive in the year
612 B.C. and was reporting about events he knew firsthand, why is he
regarded as a prophet rather than a chronicler? If this question
puzzles you, remember that a prophet in the Old Testament sense is
not necessarily one who foretells the future but one who speaks for
God. There's no doubt from the very first line that Nahum meets this
biblical definition. You should know, however, that some
commentators have questioned whether Nahum belongs in the exalted
company of the other prophets, or even in the canon of the Old
Testament. They feel that although the book's poetry is powerful,
its outlook is vengeful and mean-spirited.
OLD TESTAMENT: HABAKKUK
In its three short chapters, the Book of Habakkuk meditates on the
same question raised by Jeremiah (12:1): "Wherefore doth the way of
the wicked prosper? wherefore are all they happy that deal very
treacherously?" In all likelihood, Habakkuk lived at about the same
time as Jeremiah, when Judah trembled at the expansion of Chaldean
(that is, Babylonian) power. A prophet such as Nahum might see the
hand of Yahweh behind Babylonia's sack of Nineveh, but how could the
Babylonian threat to--and later destruction of--Jerusalem be
explained? The usual prophetic answer is that God is using Babylon
as an instrument to punish the people of Judah for their wickedness.
But why, asks Habakkuk, has God chosen as his instrument a people far
worse than the Israelites had ever been (1:13)?
Thou art of purer eyes than to behold evil, and canst not look on
iniquity: wherefore lookest thou upon them that deal treacherously,
and holdest thy tongue when the wicked devoureth the man that is more
righteous than he?
With Job-like persistence, Habakkuk refuses to relent until Yahweh
answers his challenge (2:1):
I will stand upon my watch, and set me upon the tower, and will watch
to see what He will say unto me, and what I shall answer when I am
reproved.
God's answer, conveyed to and through Habakkuk, is that
Chaldea--greedy, covetous, cruel, and idolatrous--will ultimately
receive its judgment. Until then, all the prophet can do is strive
to maintain his faith as the world collapses around him (3:17-18):
Although the fig tree shall not blossom, neither shall fruit be in
the vines; the labour of the olive shall fail, and the fields shall
yield no meat; the flock shall be cut off from the fold, and there
shall be no herd in the stalls:
Yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation.
OLD TESTAMENT: ZEPHANIAH
The first verse of the first chapter of the Book of Zephaniah places
him in the reign of King Josiah (640-609 B.C.) and identifies the
prophet as a descendant of Hezekiah--perhaps the same Hezekiah who
was king of Judah around the beginning of the seventh century B.C.
Josiah's reign is portrayed in 2 Kings 22-23 as a time of religious
revival, and the abuses denounced by Zephaniah are similar to those
Josiah sought to stamp out. Those that "worship the host of heaven
upon the housetops" (Zephaniah 1:5) are practicing star worship, or
astrology; those who "are clothed with strange apparel" (1:8) have
slavishly adopted foreign clothes and customs.
Zephaniah--the name means "Yahweh has hidden" or "Yahweh has
treasured"--embroiders on themes familiar from other prophets. In a
famous passage at 1:14-17, Zephaniah heralds the coming Day of the
Lord, already trumpeted by Isaiah and Amos; echoes of Zephaniah's
words are found in the medieval hymn Dies irae ("Day of Wrath"),
which often forms part of the Roman Catholic mass for the dead. The
second chapter condemns Judah's neighbors and rivals, and the third
opens with a wrathful judgment on Jerusalem as well. The Book of
Zephaniah concludes, however, with a joyous hymn praising the power
of God and promising the ultimate deliverance of the children of
Israel.
OLD TESTAMENT: HAGGAI AND ZECHARIAH
The two books of Haggai and Zechariah are generally paired for
historical reasons. The two prophets make their appearance in the
postexilic period, at a time when Jews have been allowed by the
Persians to return to Jerusalem, but the Temple has not yet been
rebuilt.
NOTE: For more on this period, see 2 Chronicles 36:22-23 and the
books of Ezra and Nehemiah, as well as the appropriate sections of
this Barron's Book Notes volume.
HAGGAI. The Book of Haggai (the name means "born on a festival")
opens with a portrait of the Jerusalem community in the second year
of the reign of King Darius of Persia--that is, in 520 B.C. Those
Jews who accepted the Persians' offer to return to Jerusalem have not
fared well. The prophet speaks of a scarcity of food, drink, and
clothing, which can all be taken as signs of a deeper spiritual
unease and of God's displeasure with their enterprise. To the
argument that the community is not secure enough to rebuild the
Temple, Haggai answers that the community cannot prosper until the
house of God is fully restored. Responding to his plea, the
community, under the leadership of the governor Zerubbabel and the
high priest Joshua, resumes work on the Temple, and within five years
the great task is completed (see Ezra 6:15).
ZECHARIAH. Like Haggai, Zechariah--whose name means "whom Yahweh
hath remembered"--comes to spur on the people to complete the Temple.
But the Book of Zechariah is much longer than that of Haggai, and the
message is broader and more compelling. Chapters 1-6 embody a series
of eight poetic visions which have as their theme the forthcoming
restoration of the Temple and priesthood and, ultimately, the dawning
of a messianic age. In chapters 7-8, Zechariah responds to the
question of whether the returning exiles should continue to observe
the days of fasting connected with the fall of Jerusalem seven
decades earlier. His answer is a by now familiar prophetic
insistence on righteousness, mercy, and justice rather than ritual.
Most scholars assume that the messianic prophecies in Zechariah 9-14
were uttered by someone else. Opinion is divided as to whether the
passages should be traced to the period following the completion of
the Second Temple or of the First; most modern writers argue for the
later date, after the conquests of Alexander the Great. Zechariah's
mingling of messianism with a sense of impending political and
religious upheaval was extremely influential at the beginning of the
Christian era. In Matthew 21:1-11, Jesus explicitly reenacts the
prophecy of Zechariah 9:9:
Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion; shout, O daughter of Jerusalem:
behold, thy King cometh unto thee: he is just, and having salvation;
lowly, and riding upon an ass, and upon a colt the foal of an ass.
OLD TESTAMENT: MALACHI
Malachi is the last of the Twelve Minor Prophets, and the Book of
Malachi marks the conclusion of the Nevi'im in the Masoretic text and
of the entire Old Testament according to the Roman Catholic and
Protestant canons. Malachi, meaning "My messenger," is probably not
a personal name; some early Jewish and Christian commentators held
that the true author was Ezra the scribe, but the consensus of modern
opinion is that the book is effectively anonymous. (The Hebrew word
malachi actually appears in 3:1, "Behold, I will send my messenger.")
The book probably dates from the fifth century B.C., following the
return from Babylon but preceding the reforms of Nehemiah.
Malachi forcefully denounces the abuses of the priests, including the
sacrifice of blind, lame, and blemished animals; divorce, especially
the divorce of a Jewish wife in order to marry a foreign woman; and
nonpayment of taxes, or tithes, to support the worship of Yahweh.
The characteristic feature of Malachi's style--the repeated use of
questions--appears from the very first verses. The book ends with a
prophecy of the Day of the Lord, to be heralded by the coming of the
prophet Elijah.
OLD TESTAMENT: APOCRYPHA AND PSEUDEPIGRAPHA
Only the briefest mention can be made of the individual books of the
Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha. For a full discussion of what these
terms mean and what part they play in the structure of the Old
Testament canon, see "The Development of the Canon" in The Old
Testament Background.
Among the Protestant Apocrypha, the Book of TOBIT, classified as a
historical book in the Roman Catholic canon, is set in Assyria in the
eighth century B.C., although it was surely written much later. It
tells the miraculous story of Tobit, a righteous Israelite exiled to
Nineveh; of his kinswoman Sarah, destined to marry his son Tobias;
and of the angel Raphael, through whose services as a guide for
Tobias the blindness of Tobit is cured and Sarah is freed from a
demon's curse. JUDITH, also classified among the historical books,
recounts the tale of a beautiful young widow who saves her town from
siege by charming and then killing the enemy general Holofernes. The
book, which mistakenly identifies the Babylonian Nebuchadnezzar as
king of the Assyrians, was probably written around the second century
B.C. Also products of the Maccabean period are, obviously, 1 and 2
MACCABEES, which chronicle the Israelite rebellion led by Judah
Maccabee against the Seleucid king Antiochus Epiphanes--a campaign
whose success is celebrated in the Jewish holiday of Chanukah.
Another historical book, 3 ESDRAS, a retelling of the Ezra-Nehemiah
story, appears in the Protestant Apocrypha but is now accepted as
canonical only by the Eastern Orthodox Church.
Placed among the wisdom literature in the Roman Catholic canon is,
appropriately enough, WISDOM or WISDOM OF SOLOMON. This meditation
on the meaning of true wisdom and righteousness, supposedly written
by Solomon, reflects (in the opinion of most scholars) a fusion of
Hellenistic and Jewish thought. The scholarly view is that the book
was originally written in Greek, probably in the Egyptian city of
Alexandria in the second century B.C. The idea of writing a new work
(or making a new collection of sayings and poems) but ascribing it to
some past worthy was common in the ancient world. Even today, some
books still follow this practice: the Webster's dictionary on your
bookshelf or in your local library has many words the real Noah
Webster, who died in 1843, never dreamed of. Another wisdom book,
SIRACH or ECCLESIASTICUS, is a collection of proverbs compiled early
in the second century B.C. The basic purpose of the book was to
defend the traditional Hebraic outlook against Greek influence.
BARUCH, classified in Catholic Bibles as one of the prophetic books,
is attributed to the secretary of the prophet Jeremiah but was
probably written much later, in the two centuries preceding the
Christian era.
Included in the Protestant Apocrypha are certain additions to other
Old Testament books. As you might expect, these additions are
incorporated into Catholic Bibles but excluded from Jewish ones.
Among the best known of these additions are the passages in the Book
of Daniel dealing with Susanna, a virtuous wife unjustly accused of
adultery. In this early mystery story, Susanna is proved innocent,
and her accusers are executed instead.
Among the many Pseudepigrapha, three books should be mentioned. The
Book of ENOCH is a messianic work that embodies the idea of a
preexistent Messiah-that is, a savior whose existence predates the
creation of the world and who will preside over the Last Judgment.
It is close in spirit to the writings of the Dead Sea Scrolls and
marks an important transition from Judaism to Christianity. A second
book, JUBILEES, a retelling of many biblical events, teaches the
immortality of the soul and embraces the solar calendar (the
traditional Hebrew calendar is based on the phases of the moon.)
Finally, the TESTAMENTS OF THE TWELVE PATRIARCHS, containing the last
words of the twelve sons of Jacob to their descendants, has come down
to us as a Jewish work, originally written in Greek, with later
Christian additions. Like the books of Enoch and Jubilees, the
beliefs contained in the Twelve Patriarchs are similar to those held
by the Dead Sea sect and may have helped shape the teachings of
Jesus.
No work of Western literature has appeared in more editions or evoked
more comment than the Bible. Not only have a vast number of books
been written about the Bible, but virtually every important thinker
in the Western tradition has left some comment about the Bible and
its impact on his or her life and thought. The following quotations
are only the barest sampling of comments on the Old Testament. Some
of them may surprise, even shock you. All are intended to open the
discussion for you, not to end it.
OLD TESTAMENT: ANCIENT
Why was the Torah not given in the land of Israel? In order that the
nations of the world should not have an excuse and say: "Because it
was given in Israel's land, therefore we did not accept it."
-From the Midrash (Jewish traditions)
Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am
not come to destroy, but to fulfill.
For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one
tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled.
Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least commandments, and
shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of
heaven: but whosoever shall do and teach them, the same shall be
called great in the kingdom of heaven.
-From The Gospel According to St. Matthew 5:17-19,
quoted from the King James Version
Christ has obtained a ministry which is as much more excellent than
the old as the covenant he mediates is better, since it is enacted on
better promises. For if that first covenant [with Abraham and his
descendants] had been faultless, there would have been no occasion
for a second....
In speaking of a new covenant he [Christ] treats the first as
obsolete. And what is becoming obsolete and growing old is ready to
vanish away.
-From The Letter to the Hebrews 8:6-7, 13,
quoted from the Revised Standard Version
Whatever they can really demonstrate to be true of physical nature we
must show to be capable of reconciliation with our Scriptures; and
whatever they assert in their treatises which is contrary to these
Scriptures of ours, that is to the Catholic faith, we must either
prove it as well as we can to be entirely false, or at all events we
must, without the smallest hesitation, believe it to be so.
-St. Augustine, from De Genesi ad litteratum, 415
Why... did the Torah begin with the account of the Creation? In
order to illustrate that God the Creator owns the whole world. So,
if the peoples of the world shall say to Israel: "You are robbers in
conquering the territory of the seven Canaanite nations," Israel can
answer them: "All the earth belongs to God- he created it, so He can
give it to whomsoever He wills. When He wished He gave it to them,
then when He wished He took it from them and gave it to us."
-From Rashi's commentary on Genesis 1:1, 11th Century
Every Israelite is under an obligation to study Torah, whether he is
poor or rich, in sound health or ailing, in the vigor of youth or
very old and feeble. Even a man so poor that he is maintained by
charity or goes begging from door to door, as also a man with a wife
and children to support, is under the obligation to set aside a
definite period during the day and at night for the study of the
Torah....
-Maimonides, from the Mishneh Torah 1:8, 1170-1180
OLD TESTAMENT: MODERN
The English Bible is a book which, if everything else in our language
should perish, would alone suffice to show the whole extent of its
purity and power.
-Thomas Babington Macaulay, from the
Edinburgh Review, 1828
I had gradually, come, by this time, to see that the Old Testament
from its manifestly false history of the world and from its
attributing to God the feelings of a revengeful tyrant, was no more
to be trusted than the sacred books of the Hindoos, or the beliefs of
any barbarian. -Charles Darwin (1809-82), from his posthumously
published Autobiography
Throughout the history of the western world, the Scriptures... have
been the greatest instigators of revolt against the worst forms of
clerical and political despotism. The Bible has been the Magna
Charta of the poor and of the oppressed.
-Thomas Henry Huxley, from
Controverted Questions, 1892
Even those who do not believe that the Bible is the revelation of
God, will admit that it is the supreme revelation of man.
-William Lyon Phelps, from
Reading the Bible, 1919
In the Old Testament stories the peace of daily life in the house, in
the fields, and among the flocks, is undermined by jealousy over
election and the promise of a blessing.... [T]he perpetually
smouldering jealousy and the connection between the domestic and the
spiritual, between the paternal blessing and the divine blessing,
lead to daily life being permeated with the stuff of conflict, often
with poison. The sublime influence of God here reaches so deeply
into the everyday that the two realms of the sublime and the everyday
are not only actually unseparated but basically inseparable.
-Erich Auerbach, from Mimesis, 1946
All human history as described in the Bible may be summarized in one
phrase, God in Search of Man.
-Abraham Joshua Heschel, from
God in Search of Man, 1955
To regard the Tanak [Hebrew Bible] as sacred is reasonable, but its
sanctity ought to be impressed on us by study, rather than assumed
beforehand. Too easily the vocabulary of religion- words like
righteousness and sin- tends to become mere slogans, devoid of
meaning. To call the biblical writings Sacred Scripture is to put
over them a curtain which can conceal their form and meaning. Such
unthinking attribution of sanctity compounds the obscurity of the
Tanak. Any ancient library is hard to read and understand. Because
the contents of biblical life and thought are already blurred through
antiquity and distance, an unconsidered attitude [that] the writings
are "sacred" can move the onlooker even beyond haziness into
blindness itself.
-Samuel Sandmel, from The Hebrew Scriptures, 1963
The Bible is clearly a major element in our own imaginative
tradition, whatever we may think we believe about it. It insistently
raises the question: Why does this huge, sprawling, tactless book
sit there inscrutably in the middle of our cultural heritage
frustrating all our efforts to walk around it?
-Northrop Frye, from The Great Code, 1982
THE END