T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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636.1 | | PACKER::JULIUS | | Thu Feb 09 1989 08:58 | 8 |
| Harriet,
I think this is a perfect spot for Judaic Studies 101A.
Thank you for offering it and I'll look forward to your
communications.
Best Wishes,
Bernice
|
636.2 | Have fun looking! | DECSIM::GROSS | Wanted: inane comment to fill this slot | Thu Feb 09 1989 13:25 | 7 |
| Heck! One of the great themes in Judaism is finding the anachronisms and
inconsistencies in the Torah and extracting hidden meaning from them. I would
bet that anything you find has already been found and discussed at great
length in the Talmud. Personally, I think it's great fun when someone points one
of these out to me.
Dave
|
636.3 | Welcome to the debate | RABBIT::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Thu Feb 09 1989 18:03 | 18 |
| Finding apparent inconsistencies and contradictions has long been a
Jewish tradition. What has changed over the course of the last several
centuries (and especially in the twentieth century) is the way we
explain them.
For a period of perhaps two millenia, most Jews accepted the Torah as
the literal word of God, but since the enlightenment, as we have looked
more critically at the text, many Jews and non-Jews have come to
question that tradition. At this point, most Orthodox and some
Conservative Jews adhere to the literalist tradition, as do
Fundamentalist Christians. Since most Jews are not Orthodox and most
Christians are not Fundamentalist, I think it is fair to say that the
bulk of the people you are addressing will not take offense.
You might find it interesting to read Friedman, _Who Wrote the Bible?_,
which summarizes much of the scholarship in this area.
Aaron
|
636.4 | Answer | WFOOFF::MENEZES | | Thu Feb 09 1989 19:55 | 57 |
| Whew! That's a load off my mind. Thanks for the reponses. With comments
like that I better get an "A" in the course. I have
the class every Tuesday and Thursday from 9:30-11:00 a.m.
Only a few students could find examples of possible anachronisms.
It was a difficult assignment for me because one had to take into
account chronological comparisons. The Rabbinic theory infers that
the Torah was written by one author, Moses, during his lifetime
(the 13th century, b.c.e.). We were instructed to look at the Torah
as literature. Cohen professes that the entire Torah could not have
been comprised in its entirety in c. 13 b.c.e. since at least some
portions must have been comprised at a later date. Also, it could
not be comprised by one author because of the divergent and often
intentional contradictions that come from different schools of thought.
Anachronisms in Gen. (Whoops, I left the bible at home):
In the theory of creation first story: Man and woman are created
on the 6th day. In the second story - Man, everything else, and then
woman is created. [Notice the different uses of divine names also.
Why would they be different when Hebrew words for each offer a
different translation.]
Gen. 12.6 "Abram passed through the land as far as the site of Shechem.
A the [] of Moses. The Cannanites were then in the land."
The clue here is the word 'then'. Ibn Ezra was one of the first
men who noticed this verse. He said it's possible that Canaan (sp?)
conquered the land from another people; if not, there is a secret here. The
one who knows it should remain silent.
History states that the Canaanites were natives of Canaan.
In Gen. 24.14, references domesticated camels. According to present
archaeological finds camels were not known to be domesticated until
the 11th century b.c.e.
Deutronomy 34.5: Is it possible that Moses could have written of
his death? Verse 10 is also problematic - Never again would there
be a prophet like Moses. Would Moses, a humble man, state that
about himself?
There were a few more contradictions, but I didn't place all the
cites down (e.g. Flood story endings, and numbers of animals from
ark). I was the lucky one chosen to read allowed all the quotations
throughout the class [Socratic method] so wasn't able to take many
notes.
We've been learing about an E tradition and a J tradition. I haven't
yet grasped that concept enough to write about it. It seems that
Abu Ibu Ibrahim Ibn Yashush, a rabbi who lived in 11th century A.C.E.
has had something to say about anachronisms.
Well, sorry I can't be too specific. Must rush home and write a
paper. Our homework assignment is to read/study Exodus 20-23, and
Deut. 12-26.
|
636.5 | Chaim Cohen? | VAXWRK::ZAITCHIK | VAXworkers of the World Unite! | Thu Feb 09 1989 21:26 | 12 |
| > Our professor is C. Cohen, on loan from a university in Israel (the
> name escapes me at the moment).
Harriet:
If your professor is Chaim Cohen then you are lucky indeed!
Since he happens to be a friend of mine please say "Hi" to him
for me, ok?
-Alan Zaitchik
|
636.6 | | WFOOFF::MENEZES | | Fri Feb 10 1989 13:34 | 6 |
| Righto, It's Chaim Cohen (also goes by Harold), of Ben gurion
University of Negev.
I will say hi for you.
Harriet
|
636.7 | | WFOV11::MENEZES | | Fri Feb 10 1989 18:58 | 25 |
| I did, by the way, look up Friedman's book "Who Wrote the Bible?".
Unfortunately, someone else had signed it out. The good news is
that I noticed quite a few books on theological diversity,
criticism and analysis. The teaching assistant mentioned that it
was likely we would end up writing an exam essay on anachronisms.
So, I'm quite thankful for the reference. The professor is also
a stickler for dates (this is a student's nightmare). I have the
opportunity to relive the lecture by listening to tape recordings
of the classes.
The book "Jewish People, Jewish Thought", is thorough
and enjoyable (has pictures!). Seltzer is an "associate professor
of history at Hunter College of the City University of New York.
He holds degrees from Washington University, Yale University, the
Hebrew Union College Jewish Institute of Religion, and Columbia
University, and has studied at Harvard University and the Hebrew
University in Jerusalem."
A short apology is in order for my rough notes, cliffhangers,
and a few typos. I don't know how to use a spell check in NOTES.
I have not had Judaic Studies before (I'm a Legal Studies
undergraduate). I hope you will bear with me.
Regards until next week, Harriet.
|
636.8 | The traditional view | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Feb 13 1989 08:56 | 61 |
| re .4:
> The Rabbinic theory infers that
> the Torah was written by one author, Moses, during his lifetime
> (the 13th century, b.c.e.).
Not quite. The traditional view is that the Torah was dictated to
Moses by G-d.
> In the theory of creation first story: Man and woman are created
> on the 6th day. In the second story - Man, everything else, and then
> woman is created. [Notice the different uses of divine names also.
> Why would they be different when Hebrew words for each offer a
> different translation.]
Rashi explains that the reason for the second story is to expand
on the first (i.e. fill in the details). The reason the animals
are mentioned between man and woman is to introduce man's naming
of the animals (which he did before woman was created).
Each name of G-d represents a different aspect or quality. Elokim
represents justice. The Tetragrammaton represents mercy.
> Gen. 12.6 "Abram passed through the land as far as the site of Shechem.
> A the [] of Moses. The Cannanites were then in the land."
> The clue here is the word 'then'. Ibn Ezra was one of the first
> men who noticed this verse. He said it's possible that Canaan (sp?)
> conquered the land from another people; if not, there is a secret here. The
> one who knows it should remain silent.
> History states that the Canaanites were natives of Canaan.
I didn't understand this (I think that Moses should be Moreh, a place
name). Could you explain?
> In Gen. 24.14, references domesticated camels. According to present
> archaeological finds camels were not known to be domesticated until
> the 11th century b.c.e.
I can see how archaeology can determine when camels *were*
domesticated, but how can it determine when they *weren't*?
> Deutronomy 34.5: Is it possible that Moses could have written of
> his death? Verse 10 is also problematic - Never again would there
> be a prophet like Moses. Would Moses, a humble man, state that
> about himself?
There are two views on this. One is that G-d told Moses to write
about his death and the aftermath, and he did so in tears. The
other is that G-d had Joshua write down this section.
I'm curious as to whose translation of the Torah you're using.
The ones I'm familiar with are JPS, Hertz (I think this is JPS
with Hertz's commentary; BTW, he refutes many of the "Bible critics"
arguments), Soncino, S.R. Hirsch (translated from German into
English by Hirschler?), and Aryeh Kaplan's "The Living Torah."
|
636.9 | | WFOOFF::MENEZES | | Mon Feb 13 1989 19:01 | 53 |
| Gerald,
Thank you for your points (h'mn, is this badgering the student or
some way of trying to open my inquiring mind).
We were told about the Torah being dictated, but also written by
Moses. I'll have to ask the professor about this because we have
been comparing contradictions to things that happened in Moses'
life time. We did go over that Moses "received" the Torah from Sinai
(through some sort of mystical means - qbl) and delivered it to
Joshua, & Joshua to the elders, elders to prophets, prophets to men
of the great Synagogue, etc.
The professor has also mentioned Rashi. I don't want to bomb the
professor with too many questions, perhaps you would be kind enough
to tell me who Rashi was (at this stage I'm lost without my reference
books but could find out tomorrow when I reference the J.P.J.T book).
I haven't learned about "Moreh" yet. Another one for the professor.
I was sure I heard him reference 'Moses'. The theory upon "The
Cannanites were THEN in the land" infers that the Cannanites were
no longer in the land at the time the document was written. Then
again, the author could have been contrasting to a period earlier
than Abraham. Ibn Ezra alludes that this is evidence that this
could not have been written in 13th century b.c.e. The Cannanites
were indigenous to Cannan.
Okay, onto camels - you had pointed out that you could "see" how
archaeology can determine when camels were domesticated, but how
can it determine when they weren't. Archaeologically, one can
determine whether a camel was domesticated or wild because it's
horns change in shape (they become more elliptical as their species
evolves from domestication). I think that J. Thomas Meyers, in his
"Combined Theory of Agricultural Origins" would agree with this.
Of course, it is possible that camels may have been domesticated
as soon as their potential domesticators were familiar enough
with them to manipulate them. You can also tell a domesticated
animal by the remains of female/male ratios. Usually, disproportions
were made by breeding the animals. Then, again, I suppose we could
argue the 4 major groups that make up camels: Llamas, Apacas, Guanaco,
and Vicuna. Guanaco and Vicuna were usually hunted. But, REALLY,
the reference to camels in the Torah was probably the familiar
dromadary type.
Wouldn't you agree Gerald - that determining that a camel is
domesticated as above, clearly differentiates it from being wild.
I think I'm using the translation of the Torah by JPS but I can't
quite recall at the moment. I'll get back to that subject if
its not by JPS.
Well, I've got another paper to write, so I must depart.
Harriet
|
636.10 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Feb 14 1989 12:43 | 33 |
| Harriet:
My purpose isn't to badger, but to present (as best as I can) the
traditional viewpoint, since your professor doesn't seem to be
doing that. I was hoping that someone more knowledgeable than me
would take up the gauntlet, but no one did, so I'll do my best.
> We did go over that Moses "received" the Torah from Sinai
> (through some sort of mystical means - qbl) and delivered it to
> Joshua, & Joshua to the elders, elders to prophets, prophets to men
> of the great Synagogue, etc.
This refers to the Oral Law as well as the Written Law. This is
mentioned in Ethics of the Fathers (Pirkei Avot).
> The professor has also mentioned Rashi. I don't want to bomb the
> professor with too many questions, perhaps you would be kind enough
> to tell me who Rashi was (at this stage I'm lost without my reference
> books but could find out tomorrow when I reference the J.P.J.T book).
Rashi was Rabbeinu Shelomo ben Yitzchak. He lived in Troyes, France
in the 11th century. He is generally considered the greatest
commentator on the Bible and Talmud.
> Ibn Ezra alludes that this is evidence that this
> could not have been written in 13th century b.c.e.
I don't understand this. Ibn Ezra certainly believed in the
divine origin of the Torah.
> Okay, onto camels ...
Wow, you sure know a lot about camels! I'm out of my depth here.
|
636.11 | Correction | WFOOFF::MENEZES | | Tue Feb 14 1989 15:57 | 44 |
| Hello - thought I would respond in a quick note while taking
dinner break (I won't have time this evening because I have another
class).
Gerald, I meant to put a smiley face on my comments about badgering.
I have to stand up for my professor though - he is quite knowledgable.
Please don't put a total reflection of the professor through my
summaries. I'm the one who is negligent for not mentioning all his points.
Your points were all valid (er, except the camels).
I did have a transcription error in reference to "Moses" instead of
"Moreh". Ah ha - that brings me to a point in disputing the rabbinic
theory. Think of all the scribes that made errors like mine when
rewriting the Torah.
We had another baffiling but somewhat exciting lecture today.
We went over more contradictions in Exodus, Kings
II, and Deuteronomy (in particular to the laws of the Bible).
I did have a chance to finally ask, "If these contradictions
are true, then what did Moses receive at Mt. Sinai?".
I was rather confused because I thought we were 'suppose' to believe
that Moses was the one who wrote the Torah; then, why were we
questioning how many authors there were. The professor answered
that we don't have one complete document of evidence of what Moses
received at Sinai. And, as Gerald had pointed out, we should
understand that Moses received a written and oral Torah (as written
in the Talmud in the ethics of the fathers). The Torah
should be considered an anthology. Therefore, the oral parts
were transcribed into written parts, and retranscribed through time
so people could understand it.
I'll check my references on Ibn Ezra.
I'll have to relisten to my tapes and extract the evidence on
contradictions. Unfortunately, this week is a busy week for me.
I will be leaving for a Friday seminar on Thursday evening so
I am unable to write Thursday's class notes this week.
I am using the JPS translation of the Torah (copyright 1985, updated
in 1988). There isn't a personal commentary but an overall commentary.
The professor is going to give his theory to the solution of the
documentation hypothesis later this week.
Regards, Harriet.
|
636.12 | Ibn Ezra, closet sceptic? | RABBIT::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Tue Feb 14 1989 16:55 | 37 |
| RE: Note 636.10
>Ibn Ezra certainly believed in the divine origin of the Torah.
But not necessarily in the tradition that it is the literal word of God
written down by Moses. There are allusions in his writings to other
ways of interpreting it, but he seems to have been careful never to be
explicit about these ideas. In those days, herem meant something!
As later scholars followed up some of Ibn Ezra's ideas, they began to
suspect that he was sceptical of the tradition that the Humash was a
single document. Some of these scholars were Jewish and some were not.
One of the latter, Julius Wellhausen, was quite anti-Semitic, and his
distortions of his research findings tended to discredit critical
analysis in the eyes of most Jews. If you read Hertz's biblical
commentary you will find many passages in which Hertz attacks
Wellhausen's position. Refutation of Wellhausen's biases, however, is
not a refutation of critical analysis.
The problem is that where you end up depends on where you start out.
If you start with the belief that the Torah was dictated by God to
Moses (and possibly a little bit to Joshua), then analysis and
explanation must focus on the question of "What is it really telling
us?" Those apparent contradictions and conflicts cannot be mistakes in
the writing, but gaps in our understanding.
If, on the other hand, you start by not assuming a direct divine origin
or a single document, then the evidence of the text suggests a process
of accretion over quite a long period of time. The conflicts and
contradictions are exactly that and reflect different points of view
and different interpretations of history.
I submit that both of these approaches can be rewarding and provide a
valuable understanding of Judaism.
Aaron
|
636.13 | Culling what little I know... | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Feb 15 1989 12:50 | 26 |
| Anachronisms, eh?
In Genesis 2:10-14 is a description of four rivers, made confusing
for us because we think of "it divided" as something that only
happens in going from upstream to downstream. Not so the ancients.
The "Hiddekel" is the Tigris, and it never joined/divided from the
Euphrates until about the fifth century b.c.e., so that's an
anachronism.
The entire story of Adam, Eve, the Tree, the Fruit and the Serpent
is anachronistic. (Eh? you ask.) You see, this very colorful and
compelling story is mentioned nowhere else in the Old Testament;
it only shows up in the New. On the other hand, it might have been
doctrine that was ignored by most people, just as most Babylonians
held to Mammitu even when they were supposed to worship Marduk,
but this is less likely.
You did notice that Noah (sometimes) distinguished between kosher
and unclean animals, didn't you?
More suble is Moses' basket. It was made of bulrushes, caulked
with bitumen and pitch. However, bitumen was unknown in Egypt until
the second century b.c.e.. The story is actually cribbed from a
legend about Sargon of Agade (who started the Tower of Babel).
Ann B.
|
636.14 | Don't expect modern scientific precision | MINAR::BISHOP | | Wed Feb 15 1989 14:43 | 31 |
| I'd be very cautious about some of those dates.
1. As far as I know, even wild camels don't have horns.
Did you possibly mean sheep?
2. Because all domesticated camels currently have feature X,
it does not follow that early domesticated camels had feature
X. Further, if all wild camels had feature Y, the first
domesticated camel woulds also have had feature Y, and it
would take several generations to breed that trait out.
3. "Bitumen" is asphalt/crude oil, which in ancient times
was widely available at seeps on the surface in the Middle
East. But that's today's definition. I doubt we can rely
on a ancient text to carefully distinguish between imported
asphalt, imported resin, native resin and native wax-oil
mixes. "Sticky and waterproof" is about all we can
know about the "bitumen" of Moses' basket.
In Indo-European linguistics, there are long argument about
the exact meaning of tree and fish names. Some of them
presume that the Indo-Europeans were keener observers of
nature than current-day taxonomists, and that migrants did
not apply old terms to similar but not identical species in
the new lands (e.g. as English settlers in New England did
with "robin").
My doubts about the linguistic work lead me to doubt the
equally picky use of "bitumen" to date a document.
-John Bishop
|
636.15 | Historical and Theological considerations | TALLIS::LIU | morgman | Thu Feb 16 1989 13:26 | 30 |
| A question. If the Torah is considered to be a sometimes-flawed,
sometimes-self-inconsistent human document that evolved over centuries
over many authors and editors, then to what extent can we consider
the events recorded in them to be historical? I'm thinking of events
like: the "fall" of Adam and Eve, the Flood, the Exodus from Egypt,
with all the accompanying miracles, etc, etc.
This question is of more than historical interest. These events
recorded in the Torah have tremendous theological implications.
In fact, most events in the biblical narratives are included with
the intention of illustrating a point concerning G-d and His
relationship with man and His chosen people.
For example, the expulsion from Eden shows G-d's justice (and mercy
as well -- that's a topic for another day), as does the Flood story.
The entire Exodus recounts tremendous miraculous acts by G-d to
deliver His people. The purpose? To show the nations the power
and glory of G-d. (The exact verse references elude me). Whether
or not you believe this, these are the stated purposes in the text
of the narratives.
So the question is, if the accounts are flawed, then to what extent
is there still a basis for our knowledge of G-d Himself? What is
the source of our knowledge about the G-d of the Bible, then? Does
it come from our rational faculties only? Does that suffice?
I have tried to pose these questions as fairly as I can. I hope
the responses will be in the same spirit!
Morgan
|
636.16 | Good question, no good answers | MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Feb 16 1989 14:54 | 45 |
| re .15:
Paraphrased and made more general, the question is "if a holy
writing is produced and maintained by a flawed process (and
flawed people), how can it be believed?"
The usual answer is that the "flaws" are inspired as well as the
original writing.
I once knew a Christian Fundamentalist woman, who maintained that
the King James Bible was true and holy, despite being translated
from Latin and Greek, which themselves were often translations
of other languages. This did not bother her, as she believed that
both the original authors and the translators had been inspired.
This a perfectly consistent posture, but now you have exchanged
the problem of picking a scripture ("which one of these books
claiming to be true is actually the true one?") for the larger
problem of picking a set of authors and editors ("which historical
sequence of authors, translators and editors was inspired to
create the true book?"), and added the new problem of knowing
when the process is over ("How will we know when the book is done?
How do we know whether the next inspired translator still has to
come along?").
Theology is still trying to integrate textual analysis, and
I don't think there are a lot of definitive answers.
One other attempt at an answer is a more pragmatic one: if
your document says that there is a city at location A, go to
A and dig. If you find a city there, then you know something
about the date of the document, and you've also discovered that
the document is telling the truth in that area. The more such
confirmation you can get, the more trust you can place in the
document. This is a reason for much of the interest in
archaeology.
The Old Testament has been a good guide for archaeologists,
and much of its history and geography has been confirmed by
excavation and by reference to other documents written at
about the same time. Such confirmation of the more "everyday"
parts may make you happier about the more remarkable parts.
Or again, it may not.
-John Bishop
|
636.17 | No concept, no term. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Feb 17 1989 08:55 | 12 |
| John,
Whether the term means bitumen, tar, pitch, or asphalt does not
matter. Sticky-but-not-water-soluble-stuff-that-comes-out-of-the-
ground was entirely unknown in Egypt before the Ptolomys.
What was known was "Moses", which is an Egyptian word meaning "child",
and which is part of such pharaohs' names as Ra-moses and Thut-moses.
You should read the stories about Sargon of Agade someday.
Ann B.
|
636.18 | Some people myth the mark | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Room 101, Ministry of Love | Fri Feb 17 1989 12:10 | 18 |
| Re:.15
In the Jewish tradition (which of course may differ from those
religions which may have chosen to adopt certain text of Judaic
origin), literalness is not important. You don't have to understand
every detail to get the message! Every detail has a meaning, but
it doesn't mean that the meaning is clear to every reader, or for
that matter to any reader! Adam and Eve, for example, aren't
necessarily (or likely to be) historical people, but the story is
rife with meanings.
Of course, translations are taken with a grain of salt, too.
They're useful, but real scholarship takes place in the original
language.
I like to think of it as a perfectly valid mythology. (Of course,
the semantics of "myth" have gotten slurred, so people think of
other peoples' myths and insist that they don't have any, but I
use the concept to refer to a type of non-literal truth.)
|
636.19 | Down the bitumen rat-hole | MINAR::BISHOP | | Fri Feb 17 1989 12:13 | 47 |
| Re .17:
Ann, the leap of faith I'm objecting to is the "comes-out-of-the
ground" part. If you know that the "bitumen" referred to really
did come out of the ground, and you know that such substances did
not occurr in pre-Ptolemaic Egypt, then the Moses story cannot
be really about Moses.
A skeptic however would have to ask some questions.
How do you know that the stuff used wasn't a mixture of wax
and oil (like a stiff version of facial cream without the water),
or pine pitch?
Just the name "bitumen" alone is insufficient, as presumably
that part of the story was extracted from the servant who made
the basket, who might have spoken Egyptian, Nubian or some random
language (if a foreign slave). The story requires that it be
sticky and waterproof, but not that the stuff come out of the
ground.
How do you know that asphalt-type bitumen was not known during
the time of Moses? Archaeological evidence can only tell us
when something did exist, not when it did not (thus if you find
stone tools in Scotland in a layer ten thousand years old, you
know that there were people there ten thousand years ago. But
if you find no stone tools in Iowa in a layer ten thousand years
old, that does not prove that no people were there, only that
if there were people there, they did not drop stone tools in the
place you were looking).
On the other hand, if your proof of non-existence is some document
from Ptolemaic Egypt saying "Yesterday I saw some stuff called
'bitumen' which I have never heard of before," that does not
prove that it had not been know before that time to some Egyptians,
but the knowledge was lost or local.
Now, I suspect that the story parallels with Sargon of Akkad (I
assume "Agade" = "Akkad", and it's just a variant spelling) are
real. But if you're going to be skeptical of revealed scripture,
you should not respond by excessive veneration of the critics.
I don't wish to nit-pick about "bitumen" until all the readers are
asleep. I trust however it is an instructive example of some of the
troubles in using a document to date itself.
-John Bishop
|
636.20 | The Bible is important regardless of source | RABBIT::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Fri Feb 17 1989 12:23 | 62 |
| RE 636.15
>If the Torah is considered to be a...human document...then to what
>extent can we consider events recorded in them to be historical?
The answer is, we can't. They were not written down as history. They
were written (as stated in .15)
> with
>the intention of illustrating a point concerning G-d and His
>relationship with man and His chosen people.
For me, they represent the human search for the divine rather than
divine revelation to humanity. Specifically, the Tanach records part
of the search by the people of Israel--my people--to understand the
world and their place in it. Over time, as we learned more and became
more sophisticated, our ideas developed and changed, and we edited our
texts to reflect this changed understanding.
We invented a way of representing the divine that fulfilled our needs
at the time. As our needs changed, so did our concept. Even our
liturgy reflects this, for the traditional amidah (standing) prayer
starts with reference to the "God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the
God of Jacob," not "the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob." This was
the rabbinical recognition that each person can have a different
understanding of what God means.
Note: I am not asserting anything about the existence or
non-existence of God in this paragraph. I _am_ asserting that
our descriptions of God and God's attributes are human
inventions with which we try to deal with our understanding
of divinity.
Because of my concept of the origin and development of these documents,
I regard them as a sacred legacy of my people, containing much wisdom
and historical lore. Frankly, the fact that I don't believe in the
literalness of the creation story, in no way lessens my regard for the
moral/religious truth it teaches (e.g. that we should regard the saving
or destruction of one human being as equivalent to the saving or
destruction of the all of humanity). The fact that I may "know" more
about the world because the sum total of human knowledge has increased
over time does not mean that I regard my predecessors as stupid.
At the same time, because I do not regard these documents as being of
divine authorship, I do not feel that I am limited by them. Where
appropriate I feel that we can--indeed we are obligated by our
tradition--to build on them and develop further. In short, they are
not something to discard lightly, but neither are they necessarily the
repositories of unchanging truths. They are, if anything, approaches
to Truth.
Now, as far as historicity is concerned, the Tanach may tell
me more about the situation of the editors than about the ostensible
object of the story. For instance, as I study the texts, I find myself
increasingly skeptical that Abraham ever existed, but feeling that the
circumstances of the Judaism of the later monarchy and Babylonian exile
required the hypothesizing of an Abraham-type in order to "explain"
what was happening. (BTW, the same examination gives me the feeling
that Jacob was a real historical character, although not necessarily
the same person as Israel.) For me, these writings are an extremely
valuable part of my history and their study is important as a way of
identifying my place in that history.
Aaron
|
636.21 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Feb 17 1989 12:34 | 21 |
| re .20:
> Note: I am not asserting anything about the existence or
> non-existence of God in this paragraph. I _am_ asserting that
> our descriptions of God and God's attributes are human
> inventions with which we try to deal with our understanding
> of divinity.
For those who do accept the divine authorship of the Torah,
the parallel is that G-d is presented in anthropomorphic terms
for the same reason.
> For instance, as I study the texts, I find myself
> increasingly skeptical that Abraham ever existed, but feeling that the
> circumstances of the Judaism of the later monarchy and Babylonian exile
> required the hypothesizing of an Abraham-type in order to "explain"
> what was happening. (BTW, the same examination gives me the feeling
> that Jacob was a real historical character, although not necessarily
> the same person as Israel.)
Could you explain further?
|
636.22 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Feb 20 1989 09:20 | 11 |
| More on the bitumen rathole:
Ibn Ezra (and others) say the stuff was "red clay." The same word is
used in Genesis in the story the building of the Tower of Babel
(it was used as mortar), and in the story of the war with the
kings of Sodom and Gomorrah (they fell into pits of it while trying
to escape). Asphalt pits existed around the Dead Sea. The Romans
called it Mare Asphaltum.
Since I doubt that you'd use asphalt as mortar, my guess is that
it's a generic term for sticky stuff.
|
636.23 | Abraham, exile, and hope | RABBIT::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Mon Feb 20 1989 10:53 | 47 |
| re: 636.21
>For those who do accept the divine authorship of the Torah,
>the parallel is that G-d is presented in anthropomorphic terms
>for the same reason.
Yes. Even though we approach this from different sides, I think we
understand each other.
With respect to my comments on Abraham, let me try to give a thumbnail
response for now.
One of the things that I find striking in the Neviim (Prophets) and the
Ketuvim (Writings) is the frequent mention of Jacob and Israel and the
relative paucity of references to Abraham. Comparing the descriptions
of Abraham and Jacob/Israel in the Bible, I am struck by the
three-dimensionality of the latter compared to the former. The
outstanding characteristic of Abraham is his faith. Beyond a few minor
lapses, he is portrayed as virtually perfect.
In the later stages of the monarchy, and especially during the Exile,
there must have been serious questioning of Israel/Judah's position in
the world and whether it had any future. The signs, after all, pointed
to our being abandoned by "our" deity. In this context, two things
became important: universalizing our concept of God, which enabled us
to attribute our misfortune to "our" deity, since He controlled
everything (i.e. the universal God, not one or more of the Babylonian
deities, did this), and providing hope for the future by finding
promises in our past that guaranteed that, despite everything, we would
not be abandoned. Both of these were essential for our survival as a
people.
The Abraham stories provided both these elements, and reading them
repeatedly, I find myself wondering if they provide anything else. In
short, the more I examine them, the more they strike me as something
that may have started out as a kind of midrash specifically to account
for conditions in the exile, and only later have been incorporated
directly into the text. (Actually, it is more complicated than that,
since elements of the stories probably existed prior to the Exile, but
not in the form we have them now.)
I realize that this is a pretty superficial summary, but it's all I
have time for right now (and perhaps all anyone else wants to read :^) ).
If there is interest in discussing this further, I'll try to expand on
it.
Aaron
|
636.24 | THANK YOU HARRIET | STEREO::LEVINE | | Mon Feb 20 1989 20:52 | 21 |
| Harriet,
Thank you so much for starting this note...It has been years (many)
since I have been so priveleged to 'eaves-drop' on one of my favorite
topics of discussion.
THe people who have been responding have not been 'showing off',
but rather in the true tradition of my people discourse and discuss
[much as your legal training] to sharpen the mind and dig deeper
for the truth. What you did NOT realize was that you were really
creating anoather seminar [my personal thanks again] ina the truest
tradition of the course you were studying...And I bet you thought
you would get some answers to problems!
Please continue this note...MY education has been sadly neglected
for a very long time. [And no comments from the 'rabbinic gallery'!]
Keep up the good work.
Betty
|
636.25 | Thanks | WFOOFF::MENEZES | | Wed Feb 22 1989 15:34 | 15 |
| Thanks to everyone (Betty). It's all pretty interesting. I've been out for
the last couple of days. I have to rewrite and look over some more
notes. One great thing about being at UMASS is the exposure to
diverse professional people. I talked to an anthropologist this morning
and said I feared I made a mistake as to a ancient camel's physique.
He did reiterate that it was a camel's new boundary
other than wild environment, and gender ratio that could determine
whether the wild beasts were domesticated (and no, camel's don't
have horns of course).
So, if you really need this Bitumen discussion ended I could dig
up an archaelogist's opinion next Monday or Wednesday. I'm also taking
an Ancient Civilizations Course which helps me correlate some of
things I learn about in Judaic Studies.
|
636.26 | Welhausen Theory of Biblical Studies | WFOOFF::MENEZES | | Wed Feb 22 1989 21:48 | 86 |
| Okay - on to another lecture: Biblical Theory, Wellhausen, etc.
CLASSICAL CRITISM OF BIBLICAL SCHOLARSHIP, by J. Wellhausen
Religion is popular J&E 9-8 b.c.e
not repressive | no law against Bamot
| Canaanite influence
|
| 622/1 b.c.e. written under influence
| of Amos (1st monotheist). Just
Religion is more D as there is only 1 G-d, there's
formalistic & monotheistic | one place to worship - temple in
| Jerusalem
|
P
|
Christ
Wellhausen was a 19th century scholar from Germany. J&E traditions
were based on the use of divine names (YH-H would start off with
the J sound in German, hence the J tradition: Eloh-m - tradition E).
One school would date the Bible by stating divine name was used
at the very beginning of time, the other tradition
states it came into use only at the time of Moses. One author would
use the name consistently "L-rd" and the other "G-d". So, scholars
separated the verses into columns according to divine names and
called them documents J & E (this was before Welhausen - Spinoza
was the first one to notice contradictions in the divine names,
Astruc was the first who correlated and talked about 2 different
documents). Dewitt (1805) related the lost book of Deuteronomy to
the one written in II Kings 22,23. He called it "Document D". Dewitt
thought that someone in 7 b.c.e wrote the entire book of Deuteronomy.
[By the way scholars today use the words "traditions" or "sources" instead
of the word "document"]. So we now how 3 documents (J, E, D) of
the entire Torah.
In approx. 1853 Hupfeld took a look at the verses included in the
E document and said they had a different character. So he took a
subsection and called it "Document P", the priestly code. He contended
they had a priestly nature (e.g. laws, genealogy, etc).
Graf (1865) attempted to deal with historical questions of how he
could use the documents to determine the history of Israel (of events
and religion). Graft thought about dating the documents. He said
the order JEPD is wrong; and the order JEDP is right. Graft claimed
Doc. P had to be dated after the destruction of 1st Temple (after
587/6 b.c.e. in the beginning of the 2nd Temple 538. The first Temple
period is 621/622 b.c.e.).
O.K. we haven't reached Wellhausen yet. Wellhausen worked with the
theories of the other scholars. In the 19th and early 20th century
new disciplines had to have a major theory (e.g. Physics: Plutonium,
Evolution: Darwin). Biblical Scholarship did not have a theory so
was not recognized as a discipline. Wellhausen came up with a theory.
When we look at the timeline of Judaic religion we see that the
further back you go, the more liberal the religion was. As one
advances, the more repressive the religion became (e.g. based on
Hegel's application of Darwin's theory on through philosophy and
social sciences). Wellhausen used Hegel's approach in Biblical studies.
The historical value of the documents of the Torah is not with respect
to the period described in the document but rather only in respect
to the period of the author of the document. Wellhausen came up
with the supposition that Israel's history begins only in the period
of the Judges 1200 b.c.e.
The 2nd Temple was destroyed in 587/586 b.c.e. The religion survived
among the exiled. But it continued as a different religion. It is
here that Wellhausen adopts his hypothesis with respect to Document
P. Everything expressed in Document D was seen as wrong. When G-d
allowed the Babylonians to destroy the Temple then it must mean people
had sinned a great sin. They needed to find a new way - Document
P. The government state became a theocracy. Document P is laden
with guilt. Religion is repressive.
This is what gave the Church what it needed to replace Judaism with
Christianity. There had to be a new chosen people. [Wellhausen did
not like the church of the day. Wellhausen thought that only the
shipwreck of national pride (destruction of Temple) could have given
rise to individual retributions of the books of Job, Proverb...
etc.]
P.S. We will have another theory tomorrow that shoots down Wellhausen's.
|
636.27 | There were many competing traditions. | MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Feb 23 1989 11:34 | 17 |
| I assume your professors have mentioned to you the "competing"
temples? There was (for example) a temple on Elephatine Island
at Aswan, Egypt. The temple served a community of Jewish
mercenaries who manned the border guard there. At the time
(alas, I can't remember the date) the Jewish soldiers clearly
thought there could be more than one temple.
There were other temples in Palestine competing with the one
in Jerusalem. Samaria sticks in my mind in this connection,
but I'm fuzzy on the details.
Isaac Asimov has written _Isaac_Asimov's_Guide_to_the_Bible_
(or some similar title), which is a readable and clear presentation
of the current standard set of ideas about the history and
politics behind the texts.
-John Bishop
|
636.28 | Competing Traditions? | WFOV11::MENEZES | | Thu Feb 23 1989 20:22 | 17 |
| John, the professor did not mention "competing" temples. He alluded
to the destruction and rebuilding of the "Jewish" temples to clarify
other points (e.g. that all the temples were destroyed and later
one was rebuilt). When you mentioned the community in Egypt, perhaps
they were exiled from Israel at the time or you were referring to
a time before the destruction of the first temple. I don't have dates to
reference at the moment. I don't have an argument without references
to dates. I think it would be likely for competitive temples during
the period of the 12 tribes of Israel/Juda.
I was told that in 538 b.c.e. Syrus issued a proclamation that allowed
Judeans to return to Israel and rebuild temple (Chron. II, last
verse).
I need to read more history before I can comment effectively.
Harriet
|
636.29 | Competing Traditions | WFOOFF::MENEZES | | Mon Feb 27 1989 17:31 | 12 |
| John,
I managed to do some reading in Jewish People, Jewish Thought over
the weekend. The author states tht Jeroboam I built two shrines
to compete with the Jerusalem Temple, one at Dan in the far north
and one at Bethel in the south.
It's amazing that the Jewish religion survived through the time
periods when other national powers (e.g. Rome, Egypt...) were
pushing their religions on the Jewish people.
Harriet
|
636.30 | HISTORICAL AUTHENTICITY | WFOV11::MENEZES | | Wed Mar 15 1989 19:03 | 31 |
| Please excuse my absence. I have been studying for midterms.
I still intend to get back to theories of the authors of the
Bible, however we are now covering something else that sparks
an interest. We have been comparing the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament)
with other documents from the Ancient Near East. We are trying
to correlate and proove the Bible has some historic authenticity.
Thus far we have been comparing the Mesopotamian (?Akkadian) epics
of Enuma Elish and The Epic of Gilgamesh. I'm absolutely dumbfounded
over the similarities in Genesis. Enuma Elish is an epic which,
in part, describes the story of creation. The creation of the
world and gods. Gilgamesh, in part, tells the story of a flood
and a hero Utnapishtin who builds an ark, fills it with animals,
and later gets stuck on a mountain top. I can give you exact quotes
if you would like.
As an example, G-d said "let there be light". Marduk, of the epic
said "Let it appear" and the constellations appeared. That's not
a very good example. The concept is important - "Ex-nihilo creation"
which means creation from nothing. The authors had a logical
problem to describe nothing and existence from nothing.
The overall scope is to imagine that there are similar traits in
most of the Ancient Near East texts and to question how they
came about to be similar. Perhaps with so many similarities it
may be proof that some Biblical events did actually take place
and have divine intervention (for the skeptics out there).
Harriet
|
636.31 | it's hard to keep a good myth to yourself | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Room 101, Ministry of Love | Thu Mar 16 1989 11:51 | 19 |
| We talked about Gilgamesh in religious school classes when I was
a tyke. Indeed many Jewish legends have corresponding ones in other
traditions. Correlating these to history is an interesting exercise
for the historian or anthropologist. But it's not particularly
relevant to a Jewish analysis; Judaism is not fundamentalist.
Disregarding the Jewishness of it, you might find interesting "Joseph
Campbell and the Power of Myth", which has been running on public
TV (WGBH) this week. Last night, for instance, he discussed human
sacrifice around the world, which persisted in some places (New
Guinea comes to mind) into this century. (Of course it still persists
in many places, but that's getting into politics.) Cultures from
many places told the same myth in different ways, and Campbell drew
close analogies to Christian mythos as well. That's not to say
that the cocoanut tree _really_ came about from a water snake who
became a boy and asked the young woman to kill him and plant his
head (note the eyes on the cocoanut?), but human experiences tend
to have a lot in common worldwide, and similar stories do pop up
rather independently.
|