I find your response rather incredible, Karl. I've pointed to documentation and 
yet you insist I haven't shown documentation and need to produce it. There's so 
much more I could point to, but I only picked a handful of examples for my 
previous post. There's no need for me to reproduce the texts of the Ancient 
Near East across the millennia. I'll refer you to the standard reference works, 
like Ancient Near Eastern Texts and Context of Scripture. This will show you 
the ubiquity of henotheistic thinking across the Ancient Near East prior to the 
Persian Era. Your proposal sees Salem during the lifetime of Abraham as the one 
exception. This would make Melchizedek a kind of Akhenaton figure, though using 
a well established deity, El Elyon (who everywhere else was seen as president 
of the gods), and talking about him in classic henotheistic terms, rather than 
making up a new deity from scratch (which is what Akhenaton did). I don't think 
I need to find specific documentation signed 
 by Melchizedek to support my view. I think, rather, that you need find that 
documentation to prove yours. Your request for documentation in this case is 
extremely minimalistic in that it resembles the same standard that some 
scholars demand to demonstrate that there actually was a David or Solomon. I 
somehow doubt that you apply the same standard to them, in which case you need 
to rethink your entire evidential methodology.

The other problem I have with your comments on this is that you seem to be 
committing a reading fallacy, which conflates the world of a person mentioned 
in a text with the world of the author and assumes that the two are one and the 
same. This has to be proved. Yes, in the context of Gen 1, I can see how one 
reads Genesis monotheistically. No argument there. But Genesis seems to come 
from a Persian milieu, or a monarchic milieu at the earliest stretch. This is 
much later than the supposed lifetime of Abraham. Even if, as I think you are, 
going for an early Exodus and Mosaic authorship, this is still much later than 
Abraham. So how does the Salemite understanding of El Elyon as a universal 
deity, yet who is spoken of in terms that are consistent with the classic 
henotheism of the Ancient Near East across many, many centuries, continue from 
the Abrahamic era to the era of the author of Genesis (whenever that is)? Or is 
there a cessation of this worldview after Salem, only to be
  taken up again in the time of the author? How does this fit into the mindset 
of people and the world of ideas in the Ancient Near East? I'm not sure that 
you can actually hold these two things together. You're fighting an uphill 
battle with the evidence on this one, Karl.

All in all, I would say the onus is on you to show that (1) Abrahamic Salem was 
the exception to the rule of henotheism, which would also make it largely out 
of step with things even in the monarchic era of Israel and Judah, and (2) the 
worldview of the author of Genesis (esp. Gen 1) was the same as that of Salem 
in the Abrahamic era (whenever that was). These two points that you are going 
for are in contradistinction with what we know from the Ancient Near East, and 
therefore the case for it has to be made.



GEORGE ATHAS
Director of Postgraduate Studies,
Moore Theological College (moore.edu.au)
Sydney, Australia


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