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05-20-2003, 09:00 PM | #11 | |
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But to say that "The Persian empire essentially wrote the Bible in the form that we have it today" is to make an extraordinary claim, for which I now require you to present the corresponding extraordinary evidence. You do have some, right? Right? |
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05-20-2003, 09:09 PM | #12 | |
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05-20-2003, 09:37 PM | #13 |
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I think that there are some things original about the Bible and the Abrahamic religions, or at least things independently invented.
Exclusive monotheism The oldest example on record is Akhanaton (Amenhotep IV) (1369-1332 BCE) and his worship of the sun god Aton. But it was vigorously suppressed by his successors, who chiseled out his name and called him "The Great Criminal." This was some centuries before the emergence of the YHWH-only movement in ancient Israel, and it's doubtful that there was much influence, although Psalm 104 seems similar to Akhanton's Hymn to the Sun. More contemporary is Zoroastrianism, the official religion of the Persian Empire, but there was not much chance of influence before that empire's conquest of the Middle East. This may be distinguished from non-exclusive forms of monotheism, like Stoicism (other deities are lesser beings) and Hinduism (other deities are aspects of the single big one). Opposition to idolatry Idolatry is a very wicked sin in the Abrahamic religions; the writers of the Bible and the Koran never tire of denouncing it, though some sects are known for abundant idolatry under some other name. The closest thing I can think of is Herodotus mentioning that Zoroastrians tend to consider it silly to make statues of deities. Resting every seventh day For the writers of the Bible, doing so became very important after the Babylonian exile, and this was even projected onto the origin of the Universe. The wickedness of eating pork |
05-20-2003, 09:38 PM | #14 | |
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By the way a recent PBS show supported the view that Ezra was the first to present the pentatuch to the jewish people. Since he is clearly a persian agent, it follows that perians essentially composed the pentatuch as we have it today. |
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05-20-2003, 09:43 PM | #15 |
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This may be distinguished from non-exclusive forms of monotheism, like Stoicism (other deities are lesser beings) and Hinduism (other deities are aspects of the single big one).
That last bit sounds similar to the Christian Trinity concept. |
05-20-2003, 09:58 PM | #16 | ||||||||||
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"For all we know"? This is blatant speculation. It also ignores the clear lineage of Ezra, which is spelled out in the early verses of Ezra 7. Meanwhile, let's get back to that letter of Artaxerxes:
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If you have some evidence to support it, now would be the ideal time to present that evidence. |
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05-21-2003, 10:31 AM | #17 |
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How can it be demonstrated that any of the correspondences referred to in the books of Ezra and Nehemiah (oral or written) are authentic? Did Ezra even exist? Why doesn't Ben Sirach mention him in his review of heroes of the people?
The redactional and source criticism of these books hinges on pretty flimsy evidence as far as I can tell. It stands to reason that the Persians would have kept an eye on their administrators in Jerusalem. But this does not mean that they mandated everything that elite did. The interests of the Jerusalem elite should not be seen as identical to the interests of the emperor. The question to my mind is not whether Persia write Torah, but rather of an elite class of priests, administrator and scribes in Jerusalem negotiating their way through imperial obligations, influence (perhaps even unconscious influence) from 'foreign' religious ideas, the elite's own claim to status within Judean society, a counter to rival claims from Samaria about being the centre of Yahwistic religion, and their own desire for independence from Persia. Thus, in their texts, the Persian king does god's will for God's 'special' people. Ezra and Nehemiah could well be fictional heroes, representing for the late Persian or Hellenistic Jews the 'legitimate' start for a 'post-exilic' society. Even as much as the Jerusalem elite had to 'toe the line' with the empire, one might expect their texts to express a certain undercurrent of resistance to empire, and a firm statement that they were not created to be vassals, but free. I'm not so sure the empire would have always been paranoid about this, so long as the military and economic situation was stable and no-one in Judah, or elsewhere, got too ambitious, stopped paying taxes or whatever. There is a book some of you might want to read somtime on this subject: James W. Watts (editor), Persia and Torah, The Theory of Imperial Authorization of the Pentateuch, (SBL Symposium, 17; Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2001) I have it but I've been too busy to go through it completely. Lots of different views are expressed from some very notable scholars. I cannot find an online review, but here is the blurb from from publisher's website. "Persia and Torah provides the first thorough evaluation in English of the theory that the Persian Empire authorized and influenced the formation of the Pentateuch, the first five books of the Jewish and Christian bibles. The contributors to this volume address the role of written texts in ancient politics, religion, and law; the political and social contexts behind the literary formation of the Torah; the social forces that motivated the acceptance of the first Bible; and the experiences of Judeans in the Persian period in comparison with other Persian subjects, especially Egyptians and Greeks. Along with the translated work of Peter Frei, the leading proponent of this theory about imperial influence on local law in the Persian period, the volume presents evaluations of the theory and its application to the Bible by six experts on the period and its literature: Joseph Blenkinsopp, Lisbeth S. Fried, Lester L. Grabbe, Gary N. Knoppers, Donald B. Redford, and Jean Louis Ska. Contents: Introduction, James W. Watts; Persian Imperial Authorization: A Summary, Peter Frei; Was the Pentateuch the Civic and Religious Constitution of the Jewish Ethnos in the Persian Period?, Joseph Blenkinsopp; "You Shall Appoint Judges": Ezra's Mission and the Rescript of Artaxerxes, Lisbeth S. Fried; The Law of Moses in the Ezra Tradition: More Virtual Than Real?, Lester L. Grabbe; An Achaemenid Imperial Authorization of Torah in Yehud?, Gary N. Knoppers; The So-Called "Codificiation" of Egyptian Law under Darius I, Donald B. Redford; "Persian Imperial Authorization": Some Question Marks, Jean Louis Ska Symposium Series Code: 060717 240 pages, 2001 Paper: $39.95 ISBN: 1-58983-015-6" http://www.sbl-site.org/Publications...589830156.html |
05-21-2003, 11:02 AM | #18 | ||||
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05-22-2003, 10:28 AM | #19 |
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Greg 2003,
I wonder about your characterizing the Mosaic legislation as 'pro-Persian'? I have trouble finding unambiguous legitimization in Torah for a foreign imperial rule over the 'promised land' and the 'chosen people'. I'm not sure the emperor would have thought much of texts granting the ancestors of a province divine control over everything from Egypt to the Euphrates and a charter to massacre loads of taxpayers, and to have no law but YHWH's law (which, in Torah, does not mention any Persian royal mediation). I would fully agree that there is potentially considerable influence from Persian thought on the production of the HB a lot of rhetoric designed to keep the peace in Persian Judah for the elite. Yet I suspect there is a heck of a lot more too. I'm more inclinded to see at least some of the writers feeling a little 'betwixt and between' the growing sense of post-exilic Judean identity and Imperial obligations. Perhaps I am over-cautious about reducing it all to 'propaganda' (and I don't mean to imply that you do). I think we can find within the HB evidence of a complex discourses which spanned centuries that involved multiple re-interpretation of the past, multiple sets of laws, contemporary political debates, questions of religious and ethnic identity, and speculation about the meaning of life. Ezra and Nehemiah are one set of those voices, but I'm not completely convinced that their ideologies should be read into the production of a lot of the rest. If we could know how much control the Persians themselves had over Judean textual production, I may withdraw my reservations, but some of the writers in the Watts collection I mentioned earlier cast some doubt on the idea that they excercised direct censorship. One of the dangers of delegated rule, especially if you give your delegates the opportunity to develop their own 'national' identity is that the plan just might work too well! |
05-22-2003, 10:52 AM | #20 |
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Hi all,
Having just finished Blenkinsopp's The Pentateuch, I found his conclusion very intriguing. We know of the Persian strategy of delegation and decentralised control through local authorities, which resulted in of course, a much greater liberty for the people in their empire. In fact the Persian rulers went out of their way to restore the local cults of their subjects. A codification of laws under the pax Persica (but left to be decided locally) was underway in many of their lands, including, we might conclude, Jerusalem. Hence, he argues that the Pentateuch was a constitutional document, and its multiple sources explained by the fact that there was a compromise in varying traditions of the Jewish elites returning from Babylon. Blenkinsopp writes:
Joel |
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