[The following is Episode 5 of my 16-part documentary series entitled Larger than Life, about the role that beliefs play in shaping the events of our civilization.]
Long
ago, when Agamemnon and his armies fought against the powerful city of Troy , the exploits of the
Greek warriors were preserved in verses that were memorized and recited to
later generations, among peoples who had no other connection to this ancient
time. To these later peoples, the tales
provided a context for their lives, a history, a connection to the gods, and a
common heritage. The tales found
expression in poetry, and song, and in a new medium unlike anything the world
had seen before, the theater, in the plays of Aeschylus, Euripides, and
Sophocles. But before the walls of Troy fell, another great conflict, playing itself out in
the land of Egypt , would be immortalized in the
writings, songs, and verses of distant generations, centuries removed. The outcome of this drama would also create
a context for living, a heritage, and a connection to one, special god, who
would assume a role in our civilization unlike any before or since. The drama was a slave revolt, the outcome,
freedom, and its hero, a man named Moses.
In the first four episodes of this
series, “Larger than Life”, we have looked at the earliest civilizations, in Sumer , Egypt ,
Crete, and Greece ,
and at some of the myths that gave their peoples a sense of meaning and common
destiny in their lives. It was easy to
listen to these with amusement, fascination, and even a little condescension,
but now, in Episode 5, as we turn our attention to the Hebrews, we are crossing
the threshold into what might be a little less comfortable territory. It will not be as easy to be so detached, or
so impartial, or so bemused, as we listen to some of the stories that many of
us still teach to our children for religious inspiration, or as we talk about
that God of the Hebrews which is the same one that many if not most in our
society pray to today. Like the
legendary ether that physicists once believed surrounded us, an invisible
substance that serves as a medium for light waves to travel through, the
religious traditions of the Bible permeate our culture, and we are
immersed in them. It is difficult – it
might even be impossible – for us to step out of them and examine them with an
impartial eye. Even those who claim to
be free of our religious traditions often demonstrate by their ill-disguised
hostility toward anything religious that they are not really free of them at
all. As we discovered at the end of the
last episode, it is true that many of our ideas about reality, about truth, and
about morality have been passed down to us by the ancient Greeks. But people tend to be much more sensitive
talking about their religious views than their philosophical ones. That’s what makes this a touchy subject, but
also a fascinating one, and an important one, if we wish to learn how our
beliefs shape our destiny. Who is this
God of the ancient Hebrews that holds such power over our lives, how did we
find Him, or, perhaps it should be asked, how did He find us?
The story of the Hebrew God
is preserved for us in a collection of books that comprise the Jewish Tanakh, and Christian Old Testament. This Bible, as we know it, offers us a
complete history of our existence, from the time that its god created the
world, through its own version of the flood legend, and on through the rise and
fall of many empires. Now as a history
of the world, it presents us problems even in the opening chapters. As Clarence Darrow, in the famous Scopes
Monkey Trial, pointed out, the biblical account of the beginnings of
humanity runs into difficulties almost immediately, with the story of Cain, the
first child of Adam and Eve, who leaves his family, settles in the land of Nod , and takes a wife. One is compelled to ask, as Clarence Darrow
did: if Adam and Eve were the first human beings, and Cain was the firstborn of
this first family, then how could he find people in a distant land and among
them a woman to marry? But nevertheless,
in our civilization, the Bible has long been accepted as the history of
humanity, just as the ancient Greeks had accepted Homer’s epics as a record of
the history of their own ancestors. It
has only been since the age of Charles Darwin, about one hundred and fifty
years ago, that the historical accuracy of our Bible has been questioned by the
population at large.
But let’s look at the Bible from another perspective. How does it
differ from the accounts of creation that we have encountered in the
civilizations of the Sumerians, the Egyptians, and the Greeks? And how does its god differ from the gods of
those other lands?
The first thing that impresses us is
that the act of creation in this Bible is a purposeful event. The God of the Hebrews creates His universe
through design, and intention, not through accident or chance. There is no account of a conflict between
gods, or of the creation of the universe as an accidental consequence of this
conflict, or of humanity as the result of an unintended or arbitrary act. The Hebrew god creates the universe, and the
earth, methodically, by design, and the creation of humanity is a culmination,
or at least a final act, of this design.
This God is like an artisan, or architect, framing the universe
according to a preconceived plan.
It’s any wonder, then, that in such
a clockwork universe anything could go wrong, but it does, and man is responsible. And what is this terrible thing that man
does, that upsets the divine order of things?
He crosses a boundary that has been set upon him by his god – he tastes
of a fruit that has been forbidden to him.
And what is it about this seemingly harmless act that brings down divine
anger? According to the Bible, God says:
“Behold,
the man is become as one of us, to know good and evil. . .”
and
it adds that, to prevent man from gaining even more power, by eating of the
tree of life and gaining immortality, God casts him and his descendants out of
the Garden of Eden forever. But this is
only God’s final curse on Adam and his descendants for his transgression, for
earlier we are told that from this time forward women will bring forth their
children in sorrow, and men must work the ground, fighting thorns and thistles,
to make their bread.
Three times in the book of Genesis –
the book that tells the story of mankind’s earliest days – God curses the human
race by bringing new hardships or difficulties to its members. The second such curse comes upon Cain, after
he murders his brother Abel. God asks
Cain, “Where is thy brother?” and Cain replies, “I know not: Am I my brother’s
keeper?” Upon charging Cain with his
crime, God punishes him by saying:
“And
now art thou cursed upon the earth, which hath opened her mouth to receive thy
brother’s blood from thy hand; when thou tillest the ground, it shall not
henceforth yield unto thee her strength; a fugitive and a vagabond shalt thou
be in the earth.”
The third curse falls on mankind
when it attempts to build the famous Babel
tower, whose pinnacle would reach unto heaven.
God prevents its completion by confounding the languages of mankind,
causing the peoples to disperse. The
reason for this interference is explained when the Bible quotes God as saying:
“Behold,
the people is one, and they have all one language; and this they begin to do:
and now nothing will be restrained from them, which they have imagined to do.”
In all three instances: Adam and
Eve’s eating of the forbidden fruit, Cain’s murder of his brother Abel, and the
building of the Babel tower, man’s transgression appears to be that he was
moving too close to God, gaining or usurping powers that God reserved for
himself. By eating the forbidden fruit,
Adam and Eve were gaining access to knowledge that had been God’s exclusively,
and had he not stopped them, they would have gained the gift of immortality as
well. When Cain murdered his brother
Abel, he usurped God’s power of life and death over mankind. And by building the Babel tower, mankind was demonstrating its
intent to transcend and overcome any limits imposed upon it, by reaching heaven
itself, God’s private domain. And in
each of these three instances God’s response was to make life a little more
difficult for man, by making the environment more hostile, or by saddling him
with more extreme physical limitations.
Now on the surface, these divine acts seem to suggest a very petty God,
even a petulant one. Is the Hebrew God
different from the gods of the Sumerians, Egyptians, and Greeks only because of
his extreme jealousy and intolerance - of the rival power of men and other gods
alike? If we take a closer look, we will
find some much more profound differences.
But before examining this god of the Hebrews more closely, it would be
helpful to take a look at the Hebrews themselves.
Their origins are
obscure. In the Bible, we are
told that Abraham came from the city of Ur , in
the land of the Sumerians, and migrated with a band of family and followers
westward to Palestine ,
where his grandson Jacob eventually settled and established himself as the
patriarch of a new people, the Israelites.
But tales of Abraham, his son Isaac, and grandson Jacob were not only
passed on among the Israelites – the names appear in the mythology of the
Midianites, and the Amorites: two other ancient nomadic peoples who lived in
the region of Palestine . Among these and other tribes who lived in the
land, a number of gods were worshipped, in many different forms: the dragon,
the sun, the moon, and the sphinx. One
tribe worshipped the image of a bull, a practice that may have been passed on
from distant ancestors or relatives from the kingdom
of Minos on Crete . Another worshipped Nehushtan, the serpent
god, while yet another was loyal to a very powerful and jealous god of high and
remote places who was the enemy of Nehushtan.
It was this god of the desert and the mountains who would be remembered
as forming a covenant with Abraham and his descendants, while the serpent, like
the Egyptian god Osiris’s enemy Set, would survive as a demonic entity, the
first enemy of the Hebrew God mentioned in the Bible.
While it is difficult to untangle
the earliest history of the Hebrews from other nomadic tribes that lived in the
region of Palestine , there is evidence that a
people calling themselves the Israelites were definitely living in the region
around 1220 B.C., at about the time that the combined armies of Greece were at war with Troy .
Earlier in the century, two waves of invasions had occurred in that part
of the world. From the northwest, a
horde that the Egyptians called the “sea peoples”, some of whom would later be
called by other peoples the Philistines, moved through the east coast of the
Mediterranean Sea, until they were stopped at Egypt. And from the desert in the southeast,
semi-nomadic tribes migrated into Palestine , Syria , northern Mesopotamia, Assyria, and Babylon , overwhelming the
native inhabitants with innovative weapons that they had acquired from other
peoples: iron from the Hittites, and horses and chariots from the
Egyptians. It was from among this second
group of invaders that the people calling themselves the Israelites
appeared. They were a confederation of
tribes, claiming a common ancestry, and a shared history, which included a
remarkable tale about a man named Moses.
Who Moses actually was, we may never
know for sure, but there is no reason to doubt that he really existed. Was he, as the Bible tells us, born
to Hebrew slaves, spared from the pharaoh’s decree of death to all infant male
children of the slaves when his sister hid him in a reed basket? According to this account, Moses was
discovered by the pharaoh’s daughter, raised in the Egyptian royal household,
and could have continued to live a privileged existence, until a random but
violent act of sympathy for his own people forced him to renounce his adopted
birthright and flee from Egypt. While in
exile, he is said to have encountered that mysterious mountain and desert god
of the Hebrews, who entrusted him with a very special mission and calling:
nothing less than to win the complete liberation of his enslaved people from
the Egyptians.
Moses Leading the Exodus |
The name, “Moses”, is
actually Egyptian, not Hebrew, and it is interesting to note that many members
of the tribe that he was supposed to belong to, the Levites, also had Egyptian
names. This may have been what prompted
no less a scholar than Sigmund Freud to suggest that Moses actually was an Egyptian, a nobleman raised in
the household of Akhenaton: that pharaoh who unsuccessfully tried to get his
people to worship one god above all others.
According to Freud’s account, Moses left Egypt after Akhenaton’s untimely
death, taking with him followers from among the Semitic tribes that lived in
the kingdom so that he could continue the late pharaoh’s religious practices in
some other land. After a time, Freud
suggests, these tribes revolted against Moses, substituting one of their own
principal gods for the Egyptian one that Moses tried to impose upon them. But most scholars believe that a slave revolt
against the Egyptians is a much more likely scenario, and that, whatever his
ties to the Egyptian people and their royal household, Moses was the leader of this
revolt. We then must ask, when did it
happen, and who was the pharaoh who actually played the role of arch-villain in
this great drama? Suggested dates for
the exodus from Egypt
have ranged from 1491 B.C. to 1290 B.C, with 1320 having a high likelihood of
being the correct one. If the exodus did
happen in 1320 B.C., then Ramesses II was the oppressor of the Hebrews, and the
revolt occurred under the reign of his son, Merneptah. Ramesses II certainly fits the profile of the
pharaoh described in the biblical book of Exodus.
He had a passion for building that rivaled that of the Egyptian kings
who built the massive pyramids more than a thousand years before, but Ramesses
II’s passion was directed toward the construction of a great palace, statues,
and temples. To supply the labor that he
required, Ramesses used slaves, which by now had become a fixture in Egypt , but he
used more slaves than any other pharaoh before him. And he had no scruples about where to get
them – whether they be war captives, neighboring tribes, slaves purchased in
foreign auction markets, or even Egyptians driven into bondage because they
couldn’t pay their debts. Ramesses
didn’t care – he had to build.
Ironically, if it was posterity that he was hoping for, he got it, but
not in the way that he desired or expected, because he and his son may very
well have been responsible for one of the greatest revolts in human history.
Ramesses II |
(It should be mentioned that those
who subscribe to a more literal interpretation of durations and ages presented in
the Bible place the exodus from Egypt much earlier, in the 15th
century BCE, during the reign of Thutmose II and/or his son, Thutmose III.)
But Moses did more than lead his
people to freedom. He led them to, or
led them back to, their God, and established a code of conduct and special
relationship with the creator that would define them as a people forever
more. The ancient land
of Palestine was resettled, or rather
re-conquered, as the Hebrews came into conflict with the native Canaanites, and
another people, the Philistines, who may very well have been distant relatives
of the people of Crete, from the land
of King Minos . And while King Minos punished his enemies
with the Minotaur, the Philistines held the Hebrews in check with their own
brand of monster, a giant named Goliath.
We know from the Bible that Goliath’s slayer was destined to become the land of Israel ’s greatest king, David, whose
fame would only be rivaled by his son, Solomon.
Israel
had by now become more than a people and a nation, it had become a kingdom,
with all of the glories, and the pitfalls, that kingdoms face. For with power comes the temptation to abuse
it, to become haughty, and to become irreverent or even forgetful of the things
that one once held sacred. Many of Israel ’s kings succumbed to this temptation, as
did many of their subjects, and out of the midst of this heresy came a new
figure that would loom large in the history of Israel : the prophet.
While Moses had established a
priestly line that began with his brother Aaron, the true spiritual descendants
of Moses were the prophets. Like him,
they received their calling directly from God, rather than from a hereditary
birthright, or special training. They
were often simple men, poor, not from the privileged ranks of society. Unlike the high priests in Egypt , who were
part of an aristocratic caste that often exercised great control over the king,
the prophets shunned lives of luxury and had to shout to be heard, and they
cried out on behalf of the poor and the oppressed, often denouncing their
king. Three of the greatest of these
prophets who lived during Israel ’s
golden but decadent age were Elijah, Amos, and Hosea. For Elijah, the sins that offended God were
the iniquity of King Ahab and his queen Jezebel, and the idolatrous worship of
other gods that was being practiced in the temples during their reign. Amos and Hosea railed against King Jeroboam
II, and his abuse of the poor and downtrodden.
When the kingdom later fell to the Assyrians, Hosea declared that this
was nothing less than a manifestation of divine punishment for its sinful
practices. And like Elijah, Hosea
identified idolatry as one of Israel ’s
most grievous sins, comparing the nation and its relation to God with that of
an unfaithful wife to her husband.
By Hosea’s time Israel was
actually two kingdoms, not one, because after the reign of King Solomon the
northern part of the nation had broken away and, with the help of the
Egyptians, declared its independence.
This northern kingdom continued to call itself Israel , while
the southern kingdom, which the Bible tells us consisted mainly of the tribes
of Judah and Benjamin, adopted Judah as its name. But around 720 B.C. Israel suffered a devastating downfall as
Assyrian invaders conquered the land, deported many of its inhabitants, and
repopulated it with immigrants from Mesopotamia . Here began the legend of the “lost ten tribes
of Israel ”,
those unfortunate victims of the Assyrian invasion, forced to give up their
national identity and live in a strange land, never to return. Judah also surrendered to the
Assyrian conquerors, but was allowed to retain its independence. And it was now in the land of the Judeans
where the prophets would continue to raise their angry voices, beginning with
the greatest of them all, Isaiah.
The Prophet Isaiah |
Isaiah was actually born
into an aristocratic family, but like the prophets that came before him, he
expressed God’s indignation against mistreatment of the poor. “Woe unto them that decree unrighteous
decrees, and that write grievousness which they have prescribed;” he said, “To
turn aside the needy from judgment, and to take away the right from the poor of
my people, that widows may be their prey, and that they may rob the
fatherless!” Isaiah also echoed the
warnings against idolatry made by the other prophets, convincing his king to
drag the images of idols out of the temple at Jerusalem .
And if there was ever any doubt before his time, Isaiah makes it clear
to his people that their god is not only supreme, he is the only god – there are no others to
compete with him for worship or adoration.
Through the prophet’s voice, the creator declares: “Is there a God
beside me? yea, there is no God; I know not
any.” Isaiah’s message was reinforced by
the later prophets - Habakkuk and Jeremiah principal among them. And Habakkuk and Jeremiah also made it clear
that the god of the Jews was not confined to a temple, or a place – His
presence is universal. But through
Jeremiah’s prophecies it is stressed that while this God transcends borders and
boundaries He is still a personal God, and while His power is supreme, so is
His capacity for mercy, as in these lines:
“. . . I will put my law in their
inward parts, and write it in their hearts; and will be their God, and they
shall be my people. And they shall teach
no more every man his neighbor, and every man his brother, saying, Know the
Lord: for they shall all know me, from the least of them unto the greatest of
them, saith the Lord: for I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember
their sin no more.”
But even the remnant of God’s
followers in Judah
could not escape divine judgment, as warned by the prophets. The rural inhabitants of that land continued
to worship other gods, including a mother goddess, Ashoreh, a divine consort
who held an equal place in the hearts of many to the reigning god of their
ancestors. In 640 B.C. their king,
Josiah, who feared that his subjects could not fend off the Assyrian,
Babylonian, and Egyptian nations that threatened their independence, took a
radical step. With the aid of his
priests, he set about to rally his people behind the worship of a single
god. In 622 B.C. some of these priests
claimed to make a momentous discovery, a lost scroll hidden away in the temple
at Jerusalem . We know that scroll today as the book of
Deuteronomy, a retelling of the story of Moses, complete with a code of laws
that banned the worship of other gods in the hilltops and other remote regions
of Judah . Josiah sent troops to these pagan temples,
where the temples were destroyed, and its priests killed. It was now that monotheism would gain its
strongest foothold in Judah .
But Josiah’s hopes that a
unified people under one God would prove victorious over their enemies was
dashed in 609 B.C., after a bold attack led by the king against the
Egyptian-Assyrian alliance was repelled, and the king himself was killed in the
battle. Like Akhenaton of Egypt,
Josiah’s death seemed to portend a failure of this noble experiment, as the
kings who followed him restored the worship of Ashorah and the other tribal
gods. It was now left to the prophets to
warn of the consequences of their actions.
Jeremiah declared that the Judean people’s idolatry would be punished by
exile, and his prophecy was soon fulfilled by the Babylonians. Under their king, Nebuchadnezzar, they
invaded Jerusalem ,
plundering the temple and the palace treasures.
And just as the Assyrians had done to the inhabitants of Israel , the Babylonians carried off the people
of Jerusalem
and resettled them in a distant land. It
seemed that the destruction of the Hebrews was complete, their culture and
history doomed to extinction, a fate common to many peoples of that age who had
fallen to the sword of invasion. But
here the story takes a strange and remarkable turn.
In Babylon , the Judean exiles found solace in
the writings that they had taken with them, the stories of their past, and of
their relationship with their God. The
tale of their bondage in Egypt
took on special significance, as did the assurances by God that repentance for
their sins, and return to the old ways of worship, would bring divine mercy,
protection, and liberation. In this,
their darkest hour of despair, was formed the beginnings of a faith that would
forever define them as a people, and in this faith was the stirrings of a new
religion, Judaism.
When the Persians, under King Cyrus,
conquered the Babylonians in 538 B.C., the Judean captives were freed and
allowed to return to their homeland. But
after decades of exile, the land to which they returned was not a hospitable
one. The repatriated Jews set about
rebuilding the temple in Jerusalem
until conflicts between them and the new inhabitants of the surrounding
countryside brought the work to a standstill.
And then, eighty years after their return, a Jewish scribe named Ezra
was sent by the Persian king Ataxerxes to restore order to Jerusalem .
Ezra was accompanied by other Jewish scribes from Babylon who carried with them a document that
would change the history of the world.
It was the first edition of the Bible.
Ezra read what we now know as the first five books of the Bible, or Pentateuch, to the people of Jerusalem ,
the book that would become their Torah.
It contained the account of creation, of Noah and the flood, of
Abraham’s covenant with God, of Moses and the deliverance of the Israelites
from Egypt ,
and a codification of the laws that were established by God for his
people. After reading the entire work,
Ezra asked the people to sign a contract, binding them to live by the laws of
the Torah. It was a landmark event for
the history of Judaism, and for religion.
The laws and precepts of God were made manifest to all who encountered
the Torah, and they were binding upon all who chose to live by them. There were no hidden mysteries, or elite
priesthoods to whom only certain knowledge or divine secrets were
accessible. The wisdom of the Torah was
available to any who sought it, whether they be king, priest, laborer, or
slave.
Ezra Reading the Torah |
The people of Judah would lose their political independence to
other conquerors and foreign powers in the centuries to come, beginning with
the Macedonians under Alexander the Great, followed by their successors the
Seleucids, and then the Roman Empire . And while their attempts to regain political
independence were marred by violent reprisals and tragedies, their identify as
a people, cemented by their special relation with the Hebrew god, endured and
solidified as the empires to which they were subject rose and fell.
And so we come back to God. What is really so special about this God of
the Hebrews, this God of the Jews, this God who is now worshiped by the
majority of our Western civilization? To
understand Him a little better, it might help to take a closer look at the
characters of the Bible who served Him.
Because here we find heroes very different from those of the Sumerians,
Egyptians, and Greeks. These heroes were
not simply brave, or strong, or bold, like a Gilgamesh or Achilles. They were compassionate, and often challenged
their God on behalf of their fellow human beings. When God announced to Abraham his plan to
destroy the city of Sodom
for the iniquity of its people, Abraham pleaded for mercy, extracting a promise
that if only ten righteous persons could be found inside of it, then the city
would be saved. Similarly, when God
threatened to destroy the Israelites for making an idol of a golden calf, Moses
interceded for them, arguing that it was in the Creator’s own best interest to
forgive them, so that He would not be remembered as delivering them out of Egypt in
vain. Finally, Moses offered his own
life, saying, “Yet now, if thou wilt forgive their sin - ; and if not, blot me,
I pray thee, out of the book which thou hast written.” And centuries later, King David would make a
similar plea, when an angel was prepared to destroy the city of Jerusalem , as punishment
for David’s sin of carrying out a census against God’s will. “Let thy hand, I pray thee, Oh Lord my God,
be on me, and on my father’s house;” cried David, “but not on thy people, that
they should be plagued.” The appeals of
these men are a far cry from the utterance of Cain that so offended the
Creator: “Am I my brother’s keeper?” for clearly, the heroes of the Bible were their brothers’ keepers.
In many ways, Moses was the
archetype of the biblical hero. He
was called by God to perform a great service, although, as Moses himself
protested, there seemed to be others better suited to the task at hand. But just as with Jonah, another prophet who
was initially reluctant to answer the call, God insisted upon His choice. For Moses, as for the people that he was
destined to lead, the call was an invitation, or rather a command, to find a
new freedom. Many centuries after Moses
lived, in faraway Greece ,
the philosopher Socrates told a parable about prisoners in a cave. Having been bound inside of this cave for
their entire lives, with only a fire providing light for them to see, the only
images that played before their eyes were shadows that were cast by the flame
upon objects outside of their field of vision.
One day, a prisoner freed himself from the cave, and stumbled out onto
the bright world beyond. After
eventually adjusting his eyes to the new world in front of him, he returned to
the cave and attempted to describe what he had seen to the fellow
prisoners. But they took him to be a
madman, because they were incapable of understanding what he described to them,
and his own disorientation as he attempted to readjust himself from the world
of light back to the darkness of the cave only confirmed their suspicions. In many ways prophets such as Moses are like
this man. Having been shown a new vision
of the future, they struggle to share it with their people, and lead them out
of the cave of their prior existence out into the freedom of a richer
life. But God’s calling, and the
invitation to freedom that he expresses through his prophets, is wrought with
real and imagined dangers and pitfalls.
There is safety, and security, in slavery and in darkness. Many times, during their journey through the
desert, the Israelites yearned for their previous life in Egypt , where,
in spite of the indignities suffered, at least there was a steady food supply
and a familiar existence. They
questioned if this new life of freedom was worth the struggle and the
uncertainty. One can understand their
confusion, and their frustration, because this revolution was unlike any other
that had ever been recorded in history.
It was not a revolution from, but a revolution for. The bonds of an external taskmaster were cast
aside, but in their place, a personal commitment was made to a new code of laws
and principles that were based upon a special relationship with God. The freedom that had been fought for and won
was not the reckless freedom of a child who has broken away from his parents,
but rather the demanding independence of one who has attained adulthood. The Israelites’ fight for freedom, and the
new challenges that accompanied it, is an allegory for any person who casts off
the shackles of a comfortable and smothering existence to answer a calling that
will lead them to their true identity.
And so how is this God of
the Jews different from the gods and goddesses of Sumer ,
and Egypt , and Greece ? Perhaps at first there was no difference,
with the exception that this curious god of the desert and high places had
little tolerance for rivals. But this
exception would become very important, as the concept took shape in the minds
of the Hebrews that there was only one god, one creator. Certainly any god that was willing to share
his or her place on the altar with others could not become this supreme
deity. Only the jealous god could fit
this role. But even then, the way that
this supreme being was perceived among his followers changed and evolved over
time. Like the gods of other cultures,
it seemed that he could be fickle, vindictive, and prone to fits of anger. His followers prayed to him for victory over
enemies, although at times it was hard to see how the cause of one side was
more or less just than the other. But by
the time of the prophets, if not much earlier, it was clear that this was a
moral god, one who did not tolerate iniquity, injustice, or lack of compassion
toward others. This could not be any
clearer than in the book of Job. When
Job, a righteous man, appears to have suffered from divine punishment, a bitter
debate ensues among him and his comrades.
Clearly God is the only being in the universe that is above the law, and
is not bound by it. And yet, it is
inconceivable to them that God would ever be anything but righteous. Unable to resolve this paradox, Job’s friends
are forced to conclude that Job must have done something to be responsible for
his punishment. Only in the Bible could such a profound debate and wrenching conflict regarding the
motives of God be possible. Had this
been a Sumerian, or Greek, or even Egyptian myth, it would not have been at all
unusual for a mortal man to suffer from the arbitrary wrath of a divine
being. Nevertheless, other cultures have
had moral gods as well, including ones such as Osiris who reward righteous
behavior and punish evildoing. There is
one final, profound development in the character of the Hebrew god that would
set him apart from being a mere national divinity, one who looks out for his
people and answers their prayers. At
first, of course, this is exactly the way that most of his followers perceived
him. In their times of trouble, either
individually or as a nation, their hope was that their God would deliver them,
at some future time. But this view
underwent a subtle change. Eventually,
it was not the mission of God to create a better world for his people, but the
mission of his people to bring about God’s holy kingdom. In the pages of Genesis, man had been cursed
for trying to become too much like God by usurping His powers. But elsewhere in the Tanakh (Christian Old Testament), man is
instructed on how he can properly move closer to his God, become more like Him,
and even approach the gates of Heaven.
It is by answering God’s call to a new and sometimes terrifying freedom,
obeying the divine commandments, practicing compassion, and becoming your
brother’s keeper.
Job |
After Alexander the Great’s armies
conquered Judea , the Jews encountered the
philosophies and religions of the Greeks.
The new ideas intrigued, inspired, and sometimes tempted them, as the
people of Judea found themselves exposed on a
daily basis to the culture of Hellenism.
Similarly, the Greeks were fascinated by the religion of the Jews and how
it starkly contrasted with their own.
These worlds would continue to co-exist and occasionally intermingle
until being thrown together even more forcibly as a new rising power conquered
them both. That power was Rome , and in the wake of
its conquests, a new religion, born out of the clash of cultures between the
Jews and the Greeks, would be born.
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