December 3, 2007

Colonizing a Metaphor
The Bible and Middle East History
By ERIC WALBERG

For more than a century, archaeologists and historians have attempted to 
confirm beliefs of both Christians and Jews about their common past using the 
Old Testament (OT) and New Testaments (NT) as starting points. Christians, 
while embracing the OT as a harmless precursor of the NT, insist that the 
combined texts prove the truth of Judaic monotheism, with its covenant with 
God, a covenant that was renewed with the resurrection of Jesus as the Christ. 
Jews, of course, stick with the basic OT texts, insisting they alone prove 
their role as God's Chosen People and their right to create a Jewish state, 
Israel, in the Holy Land. This Jewish state was first grudgingly accepted by 
the Christian West, and now is enthusiastically embraced by some Christians 
based on their own misreading of the Bible. The Bible supposedly predicts that 
the Jews will return to their supposed promised land, and the messiah will 
(re)appear, signalling either the end of the Earth or the reign of God.

So what are the "facts"? What do modern archaeology and other sciences have to 
say about the Bible? Does it help us resolve the question of the validity of 
Jesus as a legitimate messiah, one who would end Judaism and found a truly 
universal religion for all mankind? Does it allow Judaism a new lease on life, 
providing proof of the existence of a Greater Israel from the Nile to the 
Euphrates, with a spectacular and ancient history? And are we fated to die in a 
fiery apocalypse as predicted in Revelations?

While archaeologists cannot help us answer the latter question, it can tell us 
something about the past. Biblical archaeology has expanded rapidly in the past 
half-century as a new academic field in search of both justification and 
funding. Unlike Muslims, for whom the Biblical legends are accepted as the 
legacy of all mankind and require no shards or inscriptions to prove this, both 
Christians and Zionists have tapped them to fuel their respective 
politico-religious agendas and have produced mountains of studies. But it is 
now clear to the most respected Christian, Jewish, Muslim and/or secular 
archaeologists that this supposedly scholarly, rigorous and objective 
discipline, with its methodology of taking biblical passages and digging and 
poking away in likely places, looking for proof of what they say, has been a 
big failure, if not a hoax. While the financial benefits of tying the Bible to 
archaeology have increased, historical and intellectual benefits have just as 
rapidly diminished.

Two egregious flaws lie behind this. Firstly, it is somehow overlooked that 
both the Old and New Testaments were first written down only in the fourth c BC 
(mostly from the third c BC) to the first c AD by Hellenised Jews, i.e., over a 
relatively short historical period of approximately four centuries, the 
culmination of Hellenism as it flourished in the Middle East up to and 
including its manifestation under the Roman empire. The references to "old 
Israel" of the distant past are directed at the enlightenment of people living 
at that time, and have much more to do with events at that time than some 
distant, mythical history which was never recorded in stone, so to speak, but 
was rather passed down from generation to generation much like other peoples 
have passed down the legends of their origins -- orally, embellished by 
talented composers and poets. Furthermore, the OT and NT are closely integrated 
in structure, themes, and underlying philosophy, and to reject one part as 
heretical (as the Jews do the NT) or another part as a mere harmless 
introduction to the real text (as do the Christians concerning the OT) is not 
only unprofessional, but foolish and even subversive.

Secondly, the worldview of those recording the Biblical legends, stories, 
poems, philosophical essays, etc differs radically from ours. It was a product 
of Hellenism, where true reality is a Platonic ideal, recognising the ineffable 
quality of life, our overwhelming ignorance, and the fractured, shadowy nature 
of daily life as experienced by our senses. Our Aristotelian, materialist 
outlook, sees reality in hard, cold facts which we directly perceive and duly 
record, where the only truths are what can be physically demonstrated and/or 
refuted. This is quite alien to the mindset of the Biblical composers, writers 
and scribes. Taking the Bible literally, as a materialist recounting of 
"history" is a classic example of misplaced concreteness. To its credit, there 
is no word for history in ancient Hebrew, reflecting its origins in the pre- 
Aristotelian worldview.

To go a step further and assume that this bogus history is the "real" history 
of mankind, with the history of the thousands of other peoples taking a back 
seat, is just not on. The reality of the Bible is transcendent, universal, 
traditional, intuitive and emotional. To profit from it, we must rediscover 
this worldview, where myth is the "reality" and very essence of our lives, and 
the dunya is a lame, pale version of the sacred myths guiding us. Karen 
Armstrong, who has written widely on the monotheisms and the loss of myth as a 
vital part of our worldview, argues in The Bible: a biography (2007) that 
fundamentalist religion, be it Islamic, Christian or Jewish, is a response to 
and product of modern materialist culture, which undermines the role of myth as 
a vital element in the social matrix. Myth is reduced to its literal meaning, 
i.e., Jerusalem is a physical location at a fixed point in time, not a metaphor 
for the City of God, transcending the limitations of the physical world.


***
This concurs with the conclusions of the so-called minimalist school of Middle 
East archaeology, especially the works of Thomas Thompson, Israel Finkelstein 
and Neil Asher Silberman, who argue that the OT and NT say much more about the 
politics of the third c BC to the first c AD than about any distant, 
ahistorical past. Think of the 19th c Parisian Jewish composer Jacques 
Offenbach penning his operetta La Belle Helene, which refashions the Iliad to 
poke fun at the 19th c authoritarian regime of Louis-Napoleon Boneparte. The 
political battles of the time during which Alexandrian Jewish scribes penned 
the OT/NT similarly inspired the versions of the Biblical legends we inherit 
today. References in the Bible to the destruction of "the temple" and stories 
about past tyrants really refer to ongoing struggles and current tyrants. This 
is in sharp contrast to the general view of the Bible, which sees the process 
of composition culminating in the sixth c BC, with many legends recalling real 
events dating from possibly as far back as the 10th c BC.

Whatever the true origin of the Jews, the Bible talks of an "old Israel" -- a 
United Monarchy which supposedly flourished from 1000-600 BC in present-day 
Palestine, with Saul, David and Solomon as great kings of a magnificent empire, 
and a spectacular temple, built by Solomon, as the centre of worship of the 
Jewish god Yahweh. What do archaeologists tell us? A century of sifting, 
scrubbing, sorting and debate has produced no evidence of Jerusalem as a large 
city, let alone the centre of an empire. It was at most a minor trading and 
olive growing town. No doubt a small state existed in the ninth c BC, one of 
several -- Moab, Edom, Ammon, even one we could call Israel, with Samaria as a 
likely "capital", and with the revival of Phoenician shipping, Palestine indeed 
began to flourish for the first time, but on a modest scale, as an inter-empire 
outpost, the home of many Semitic and non-Semitic tribes.

Not surprisingly, all of these tribes had similar religions. Adopting ancestral 
gods was an Assyrian imperial policy intended to create religious ties between 
societies around regional and local deities. They combined this policy with 
legends about the return of the old forgotten gods, which assisted the imperial 
policy of forced mass population transfers and unwittingly contributed to the 
development of monotheism, as all these gods were understood to be merely 
expressions of a single concept representing the divine. From the Bronze Age 
on, El became the father of gods and creator of heaven and earth, with his 
consort Asherah or Astarte, the queen of Heaven. Ba'al was his chief executive 
accompanied by the same generic Asherah (theoretically his mother), mother of 
all living things and goddess of fertility and mourning. Hints of these gods 
can be found in Genesis.

The flourishing of Palestine supposedly ended with God's punishment of Israel 
and the destruction of Samaria. The goodness of the Judean kings, Hezekiah and 
Josiah, delayed Yahweh's anger and Jerusalem's destruction. But the day of 
wrath, so it goes, brought the Babylonian army to destroy Jerusalem, marking 
the end of old Israel in the sixth c BC. What do archaeologists tell us? Again, 
there is no historical evidence for this lovely story -- Palestine was all the 
time just a backwater, subject to division between Assyria, Mesopotamia and 
Egypt as their empires ebbed and flowed.

Yes, Assyria annexed Jezreel valley and Samaria. But in the Bible, this waxing 
of the Assyrian empire was dressed up as the destruction of the false (old) 
Israel by an angry, vengeful god. This however is a theological, not a 
historical statement -- even given likely population transfers, not everyone 
would have been deported, and Samaria continued to exist. Assyria slowly 
expanded its empire southward, yes, eventually taking Jerusalem, which it 
appears was a willing client city rather than a heroic, defiant remnant of some 
old Israel. Jerusalem actually began to grow and prosper as an economic and 
political centre under the Assyrians. It certainly was not destroyed. 
Eventually the Babylonian Nebuhadnezzar invades and (Assyrian) Jerusalem 
surrenders in 597 BC. But again, Jerusalem was not destroyed, as the prophet 
Jeremiah "states".

Never was there an ethnically coherent Israel, and according to Thomson, 
neither Jerusalem nor Judah ever shared an identity with Israel before the rule 
of the Hasmoneans in the Hellenistic period of the 3rd-1st cc BC, 
coincidentally, when the legends were first written down. Ironically, the 
Samaritans, scorned by Ezra's (and today's) Jews, are the most likely Semitic 
ancestors of the historical Israel.

Palestine and Syria were first formed into a province under Alexander the Great 
in fourth c BC with Samaria as capital, and began to develop true cities for 
the first time. Alexander founded Alexandria as his intellectual and political 
centre of east Mediterranean territories. Continuing imperial policies of 
deportation, he transported a portion of Samaria's population to form the 
nucleus of what later came to be known as an important Jewish centre of 
learning, whose scribes would soon begin their work of fashioning their legends 
into a politically motivated saga of exile and return.

After Alexander died, Palestine reverted to its old role of land- bridge 
between Egypt and Asia, disputed territory between the Egyptian Ptolemies and 
the Asian Seleucids. The Romans defeated the Seleucids in 190 BC, prompting the 
Maccabees to revolt against the harsh Seleucids to assert the political 
independence of Jerusalem (supported by the Ptolemies and Romans). This revolt 
came to be identified as the rebirth of Israel (celebrated today as Hanukah), 
though, again, there was no nation or Maccabean control of Palestine even then, 
since the Jews were dependent on Rome's patronage, though this revolt against 
the Seleucids became the inspiration behind the legends being recorded.

Prior to this Maccabean revolt against the Seleucids in 167 BC, religious 
tolerance was widespread. The Jews were never persecuted because of their 
religion -- rather because of their political aspirations, or because they were 
in the path of conflicting empires. Their periods of exile are typical of the 
experience of countless other populations, the fallout of imperial policies. 
Their traditions, even their monotheism, are derived from the great mix of 
cultures in the Middle East at the time, and are close to Egyptian, later 
Hellenised, traditions. Interestingly, the Jewish practices of circumcision and 
Sabbath derive from Egypt, and even Freud argues that Moses was Egyptian, 
giving added ammunition to the hypothesis that the Jews are actually the Hyksos.

This turbulent period of the 3rd-1st cc BC is the historical environment in 
which II Kings portrays Jeroboam and Ahab as evil kings, an allegory of the 
Seleucids' rejection of the true successors of Alexander -- Egypt's Ptolemies 
(not surprisingly, since the texts are recorded by Jewish scribes in 
Alexandria). Antiochus IV of Syria is the model for Ahab, bringing false gods 
to Israel, redeemed by the rededication of Jerusalem's temple in 164 BC. This 
is the turning point of Chronicles' story of renewal via the ancient Persian 
king Cyrus. These national epics of Samuel, Kings and Chronicles were clearly 
inspired by the events swirling around the second c BC OT Jewish authors, 
dressed up in the literary tradition of national, ancient epos.

The Jews of Jerusalem, Alexandria, Antioch and Babylon were thoroughly 
Hellenised and were among the leaders of the intellectual life there. The Bible 
itself is recorded definitively in this Hellenised environment in Greek and 
Hebrew, systematically structured along the classical imperial form of a 
universal chronology, ordering tradition in the form of universal history from 
the beginning of time to the present, with systems of commentaries and 
discussion, achieving a moral and philosophical quality akin to Homer and 
Plato. The Jewish culture that had developed was an Asiatic form of Hellenism, 
a culture which ranged from Babylon to Rome and which had developed from the 
imperial world-views of the Babylonian and Persian periods.


***
It is impossible in the confines of an article to trace the transformation of 
post-Christian Talmudic Judaism, which is very different than pre-Christian 
variant. Though Jews continued to live in Palestine, Diaspora became its 
defining feature along with the ritual prayer to "return", though 
post-Christian Jews have no more right to immigrate and live there than anyone 
else. Christians also continued to live there happily until the Catholic pope 
decided they must be liberated in the 10th-12th cc and raised a European army 
to invade Palestine not once but four times. But after that fiasco, Christians 
learned their lesson and have left Palestine in relative peace, satisfying 
their spiritual urges by living quietly as monks in desolate caves, making 
pilgrimages, and collecting souvenir bones and bits of wood which they 
cherished as holy relics -- again guilty of misplaced concreteness, but usually 
harmlessly so. This blessed peaceful period in Palestine only changed with the 
ascendancy of the Jews in the 19th c, who all this time had been nurturing 
their tribal Yahweh and their dream of concretising the metaphorical promises 
he supposedly made millennia ago, a misplaced concreteness far from harmless, 
as they set about invading and colonising a metaphor.

With the eclipse of the Socratic worldview and of myth as central to society, 
and the ascendancy of Judaism after the reformation, the myth of "returning to 
the promised land" took on a new concrete meaning. The actual prospect by a 
wealthy cosmopolitican Jewish elite of engineering a physical takeover of 
Palestine and populating it with Jews became an Aristotelian reality. Today, 
with Rome (the Catholic Church) now in disarray, a rebuilt Third Temple could 
become the chief shrine, not only for Jews but for Christians too, the icing on 
the Zionist victory cake, confirming irrevocably the cultural shift in the 
Western world as a whole from Hellenism to Hebraism, as argued by SGF Brandon 
in The Fall of Jerusalem and the Christian Church (1951). Pope John Paul II 
reconciled the Church with Judaism and Israel, and Christian Zionists welcome 
the Jewish colonisation of Palestine .

The Zionists reconvened the ancient Jewish supreme court, the Sanhedrin (which 
condemned Jesus), in 2005 for the first time since 425 AD, and have been 
plotting virtually since the creation of Israel to blow up the Al-Aqsa Mosque 
and rebuild a replica of Solomon's temple there. Just recently, Israeli 
archaeologists "found" remains of a temple under the mosque, yet another 
astounding victory for this bogus science. Reconstruction plans are in place 
for the mythical and no doubt magnificent temple of Solomon, a temple that 
never existed except in the imaginations of dreamy-eyed Jewish scribes in third 
c BC Alexandria. Truly a breathtaking prospect, however mad. But nonetheless 
the logical culmination of the Zionist project, eagerly fuelled by the official 
Israeli archaeological establishment.

Then there's the notorious Protocols of the Elders of Zion, which sets out just 
such a programme in albeit an overtly grotesque form and is solemnly disowned 
by Zionists as a forgery, though a forgery of what is never made clear.

What is behind the Bible is not simply a record of historical facts or of even 
doctrines, but ultimately, the presence of God. There is much self-reference of 
symbols within the Bible for which the only "proof" that, say, the gospel story 
is true is that it fulfils the prophecies of the OT, and the only "proof" that 
the prophecies of the OT are true is that they are fulfilled by the gospel. 
This has absolutely nothing to do with digging up shards to establish some 
self-referential "event" in one of the Bible's many tales. There is no temple 
out there (or under there, where "there" happens to be the very real Al-Aqsa 
Mosque). The real temple exists in one's heart, though it is very unlikely that 
one can find it in the scheming Zionist's inflamed and secular heart. And by 
murdering and tormenting peaceful natives in order to scrounge some bits of a 
previous building and call it God's temple is unspeakable in its evil. The 
Naturei Karta heart has the temple in it, but for such a Jew, physical Israel 
itself is an abomination, and should be dismantled forthwith, or to borrow a 
particularly colourful metaphor of recent vintage, wiped off the map.

It is not possible here to delve into the fascinating Biblical myths and 
metaphors themselves -- the many rival siblings (Cain vs Abel, Isaac vs 
Ishmael, Jacob vs Esau), the tower of Babel (door of God), the trials of Job, 
the many miraculous births culminating in Jesus, which continue to inspire, 
even in our age of disbelief. The God of Job, Ecclesiastes, Jonah, Saul, the 
flood, etc is unknowable -- he decrees both salvation and destruction for 
Israel, not for justice's sake, but for his own good, for his own unknowable 
reasons, consistent with the philosophy of scepticism as propounded by 
Diogenes, popular at the time: we must recognise that our beliefs about reality 
are not necessarily valid to achieve peace of mind. The great epic of Job is 
inspired by Hellenistic stoicism: we achieve happiness by attuning our lives 
and character to the Logos or universal reason which orders all things. Freedom 
is to live in conformity with God's will. Ironically, the minimalists end up 
maximising the power of these legends by liberating them from the here and now.

The overriding metaphor of the Bible is the contrast of the old Israel of angry 
rejection (i.e., the past) vs the new Israel of hope and renewal (i.e., the 
present and future), ahistorical concepts, relating to the ever-shifting 
present of the epic writer's point of view. They are universally valid, whether 
sung or recited 5,000 or 2,000 years ago or today. We all must leave behind the 
mistakes of the past and greet tomorrow with hope. There is absolutely no need 
or justification for taking "old" and "new" literally to refer to some 
purportedly historical event. Every day is the first day of your life.

And if there is any doubt left at this point that the Bible is the "gospel 
truth", to be taken literally, consider one of many such "instructions" from 
Yahweh to his "chosen people":

  When the Lord your God brings you into the land you are entering to possess 
and drives out before you many nations and when the Lord your God has delivered 
them over to you and you have defeated them, then you must destroy them 
totally. Make no treaty with them, and show them no mercy. Do not intermarry 
with them. Do not give your daughters to their sons or take their daughters for 
your sons, for they will turn your sons away from following me to serve other 
gods, and the Lord's anger will burn against you and will quickly destroy you. 
In the cities of the nations the Lord your God is giving you as an inheritance, 
do not leave alive anything that breathes. Completely destroy them. 
(Deuteronomy 7 and 20).

Is this the God of mercy and compassion that Bishop Tutu referred to in his 
appeal in Boston? Or is this the template of an ideological monster dreamed up 
by a scribe sitting in the Alexandrian Library, and eagerly adopted by bigoted 
fanatics applying it verbatim to the land of Palestine today?

Eric Walberg writes for Al-Ahram Weekly in Cairo. You can contact him at 
www.geocities.com/walberg2002



http://www.counterpunch.org/walberg12032007.html





mediacare
http://www.mediacare.biz


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke