http://www.faithfreedom.org/Articles/sina/samaritans.htm   Samaritans and
Moses?

By Ali Sina  <http://www.faithfreedom.org/Author/Sina.htm>
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In the Bible (Exodus 32) there is a story about Israelites worshiping a calf
when Moses went to Mount Sinai to receive the Ten Commandments from God.
When he returned he was angered and ordered "everyone to put on his sword
and kill his brothers, his friends, and his neighbors" (Ex.32:27). In this
story the culprits are the Israelites and Aaron the brother of Moses who let
himself to be influenced by them. This incident is reported in the Quran in
following verse.

He [Allah] said, "We have tempted thy people since thou didst leave them.
The *Samaritan* (in Arabic Samiri) has led them into error." Then Moses
returned ... ... and we cast them [(gold) ornaments], as *the
Samaritan*also threw them, into the fire." (Then he brought out for
them a Calf, a
mere body that lowed; and they said, "This is your god, and the god of
Moses, whom he has forgotten.") ... Moses said, "And thou, *Samaritan*, what
was thy business?" ...
– Quran 20:85-88, 95

In the Quranic version the culprit is the Samaritan who mislead the Jews
into worshiping the bull. But in the original story of the Bible there is no
mention of any Samaritan. Muslims claim that the Bible is corrupted. But the
fact is that when Moses was alive, there were no Samaritans at all.
According to 1 King 16:24 Samaria was a hill belonging to Shemer that was
purchased by King Omri where he founded the city of Samaria about 870 B.C.
The Samaritans as a distinct people only emerged after the exile of the
Northern Kingdom of Israel and the resettlement of the area under king
Sargon II after 722 B.C.

Moses lived 1400 years B.C.  That is five to seven century before anyone
could be called Samaritan (Sameri). Therefore the explanation of the Quran
that Samaritans led the Jews to worship a calf cannot be correct. At the
time of Moses Samaria did not exist and no one could be the citizen of a
city that did not exist.

One wonders where Muhammad got the idea of Samaritans leading Israelites to
idolatry? The answer to this confusion can be found in another similar story
of calf-worshiping narrated in the (1 King 12:26-33). This episode happened
during the time of Jeroboam. This was a time when the Jews were split into
two kingdoms, the Northern Kingdom of Israel and the Southern kingdom of the
Judah; Jerusalem being the major center of the worship for all the Jews was
in Judah. Holy towns attract pilgrims, promote commerce and generate income.
Jeroboam who was the king of the Israel, thought that not having a holy
place of worship in his kingdom is weakening his position. So he decided to
build a temple in Samaria, the seat of the Northern Kingdom, adorning it
with the statutes of two golden calves to rival Jerusalem as the center of
worship.

Biblical Scholars like Richard Elliot Friedman believe that the first story
of the Jews worshiping the golden calf during the time of Moses to which
Quran is alluding, actually did never happen. They believe that this story
was fabricated by the writers of the Bible who were the high priests and the
custodians of the temple of God in Jerusalem, to discredit Jerobeam and his
temple in the Northern Kingdom. They invented the story of Moses and the
golden calf, claiming that it provoked the wrath and punishment of God
during the time of Moses. This did certainly send a strong message to the
Jews that the temple erected by Jerobeam is unacceptable by God. Most
probably the calves adorning the temple of Israel were symbolic and were not
intended to be worshiped. Yet the story of the calf-worshiping-Jews,
provoking the wrath of God, in the time of Moses had its intended effect.
Emergence of a new temple in the North would not have only undermined the
importance of Jerusalem as the sole religious center for all the Jews, but
it would have also separated religiously a nation already split
politically.

Hosea echoed his disapproval of the northern temple in the following terms.

Throw out your calf-idol, O Samaria! My anger burns against them. How long
will they be incapable of purity? They are from Israel! This calf - a
craftsman has made it; it is not God. It will be broken in pieces, that calf
of Samaria. -- Hosea 8:5-6

This is a warning to the Jews of 700 B.C. living in Samaria. It has nothing
to do with the story of Moses and the Golden calf. Muhammad must have heard
these two stories. But he confused the two and placed the Samaritans in a
wrong context. Quran further continues:

"Moses said: "Get thee gone! but thy (punishment) in this life will be that
thou wilt say, 'touch me not'; and moreover (for a future penalty) thou hast
a promise that will not fail: Now look at thy god, of whom thou hast become
a devoted worshipper: We will certainly (melt) it in a blazing fire and
scatter it broadcast" (Qur'an 20:97)

It is interesting to note that in this verse the Quran alludes to the fact
that the Samaritans were regarded as untouchables (thou wilt say, 'touch me
not') by the Jews. In fact the Israelites looked down at Samarians and
considered them "untouchable" (Najis) because of their idolatry. But this
stigma was not placed on the Samaritans by Moses. There were no Samaritans
in the time of Moses. They earned this designation by the Jews centuries
later.

Ali Sina
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