Job and the Bible’s Theo-Political Divide
Abstract
:Only the people sacrificed in high places, because there was no house built to the name of the Lord, until those days. And Solomon loved the Lord, walking in the statutes of David his father: only he sacrificed and burnt incense in high places. And the king went to Gibeon to sacrifice there; for that was the great high place: a thousand burnt offerings did Solomon offer upon that altar.
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | This is the general understanding of the book’s message implied by the lengthy passage devoted to it in the Babylonian Talmud (Tractate Bava Batra 15a–16b), that not only attributes these positions to Job and the friends, but remains divided on who of them is right! According to one major voice, that was the issue disputed by God and Satan, with the latter rooting for the submissive Abraham of the Aqedah as opposed to God, who preferred Job’s confrontational approach. According to another, in “railing against God” in response to “a little suffering” Job is deemed to have failed the test he was put to, while the submissive friends are hailed the true heroes of the book! |
2 | See, for example, the latter part of (Fisch 2013), and in greater detail in (Fisch 2019, chps. 2 and 6). |
3 | See n. 1 above. |
4 | I use the term well aware that the very term ‘religion’ has come under attack of late in this very respect. See (Boyarin 2018). I use it here as shorthand for the covenantal community comprising the descendants of the twelve tribes of Israel established with the reception of the Law at Sinai (as opposed to the ‘national collective’ of sovereign Israel, to risk another anachronism, as envisaged by the five books of Moses, and described in the books that follow). |
5 | |
6 | As with respect to Job, my concern in what follows is primarily theological, and has hence less to do with the concerns of biblical scholarship per se. It focuses on the biblical story as it has reached us and on understanding it from the perspective of those who prudently read it as binding. I shall hence be far less concerned with questions of dating, authorship, and historical context, or more generally, in questions pertaining to the story’s composition, than with assessing the meaning of its final version. Thus, to take for example the point with which the paper ends, I shall not at all be interested in explaining why the Kings’ and Chronicles’ accounts of Solomon’s reign and its aftermath are so radically different (as is, for instance, the ultimate aim of Sara Japhet’s authoritative 1989), but in exposing their very different political theologies as attesting to a foundational inner-biblical dispute. For another example, see n. 19 below. |
7 | Joshua, 2:1–24. |
8 | Cf. Deuteronomy 31:23; Joshua 1:5–9, 3:7, and 4:14. |
9 | Several Christian and especially Jewish translations take the biblical “ger” (as opposed to the rabbinic rendition of the term as convert to Judaism, a category unknown to the Bible) to denote a temporary resident, a sojourner rather than a resident. (See for example the King James, JPS and the Jerusalem Bible’s renditions of Leviticus 19:33–34, and compare (Douglas 1994)) I think this is a mistake (if not in some cases, a deliberate one), that serves (if not designed) to obscure (if not to hide) the notion, of which the biblical narrative is rife, of their existing gentile Israelis, that is to say, gentile bona fide members of Israel’s national collective. Joseph’s father, and brothers may have initially intended to merely sojourn in Egypt until the famine lifted, but by the time the new Pharaoh arose who identified “the children of Israel” as a “people” (Exodus 1:8), they had settled in permanently as an Egyptian minority, and would have remained there had they not been enslaved and miraculously taken out. And the same goes for the very many members of other nations—including the seven Canaanite nations that were never fully eradicated (See Joshua 15:63, 17:12–13, and Judges 1:21–33)—of whom several rose to positions of significant military and civil authority in the Kingdoms of both David and Solomon. For succinct discussions of the biblical ger see Milgrom (1982) and Hayes (2002, chp. 2), and especially Kidd’s comprehensive 1999. |
10 | |
11 | See (Nicholson 2014, chp. 6) for a similar, if differently motivated reading. |
12 | See n. 9 above. |
13 | (Davis 2008). |
14 | If the Torah’s reason for eliminating all Canaanites, young and old, is “that they teach you not to do after all their abominations, which they have done unto their gods…”, then the actual conduct of any particular Canaanite is irrelevant to their gruesome fate. Such collectivist punishment can have nothing to do with individual guilt. From such a perspective, what counts is not what any Canaanites does, but what he or she represents. It is in this respect that Joshua’s decision regarding Rahab was inherently antinomian. |
15 | This is not to say that divine Pentateuchal law does not itself develop, and even correct itself in response to new circumstances, as detailed recently in (Hayes 2015, chp. 1). If and how divine biblical law responds to historical circumstance is an issue categorically different from that of political antinomianism. Joshua, like to other cases we shall examine, was acting in defiance of the law, not in attempt to correct it. |
16 | Martin Buber (1967, chp. 2) famously divides the book into an anti-political first 12 chapters that avidly advocate what he termed “direct theocracy”, and (skipping the Samson legend) a shorter second part keenly opposed to it. See (Amit 1999, especially chp. 5; and Lorberbaum 2008, chp. 1). |
17 | And not to “sojourn” as the King James and the Jerusalem Bible have it. |
18 | The text firmly implies that had the menfolk not died, there would have been no reason for them to leave Moab. For it is quite evident from the narrative that considerable time had passed since they had left Bethlehem, and that, by the time Naomi was forced to return, the famine had long been over. This further strengthens my contention that in biblical Hebrew the noun form “ger” and the related verb “lagur” and adjective “megurai”, carry no connotations of temporary residence. On this point, I disagree with Kidd (1999), who insists that only the noun form connotes “immigrant”. |
19 | The reading of the Ruth story proposed in this paper (as in Fisch forthcoming, chp. 2) steers close to Siquans (2009), except for the relation it bears to the firm prohibition Deuteronomy 23. Siquans alludes to the prohibition in passing, but brushes it aside as irrelevant to the Ruth story because although “the Moabites did not meet Israel with bread and water … now they actually do” (447). Reading the biblical text solely as a developing and changing narrative seriously conflates the difference and the tension between narrative and law, and with it much of the drama of Ruth. Contrary to the subtitle of Siquans’s paper, the way in which Ruth was integrated into Israel was not legal, but owed to an antinomian stand against Pentateuchal law! |
20 | See Fewelland Gunn’s (1988) insightful. |
21 | Sara Japhet differentiates convincingly between the direct theocracy (as Buber termed it) implied by Gideon’s refusal that God is Israel’s only ruler (Judges 8:23), and the type of divine kingship, implied by biblical descriptions of past and future Davidic kings (e.g., Psalms 2:7, Isaiah 9:5), of whom, in the biblical narrative (as opposed to the Prophets and the Psalms), Solomon is paradigmatic—described as the son of God (II Samuel 7:14; I Chronicles 17:13), and as sitting on God’s throne (I Chronicles 29:23). The difference between direct and indirect rule of God, she rightly notes, resides in the extensive authority granted to the king in the latter, with respect to all aspects of human life: political, ritual, legal, economic, military, and administrative (Japhet 1989, p. 402 ff). However, the crucial difference between the two insisted on here, Japhet fails to stress, namely, the inherently antinomian nature of such authority, that renders the difference between the anti-politics of Gideon’s speech, the politics of Solomon’s reign categorical rather than one of degree. |
22 | And yet, the fact that the princess’s palace was indeed to function as an Egyptian temple is all but explicitly stated by the second part of the verse: “And Solomon became allied by marriage with Pharaoh king of Egypt, and took Pharaoh’s daughter, and brought her into the city of David, until he had made an end of building his own house, and the house of the Lord, and the wall of Jerusalem round about” (3:1). There would have been no reason for her place of residence to be moved outside the city walls once the Temple was built and functioning, and the boundaries of the city set, unless there was something religiously objectionable about it. The verse clearly implies that Solomon was aware of this from the start. |
23 | Cf. Green (2014, pp. 155–56). |
24 | The firm prohibition against the very presence of idolatrous worship within the boundaries of sovereign Israel is most resolutely stated in Deuteronomy 12:2–3. I, therefore, disagree with Brindle’s contention that had Solomon’s diplomatic wives “become Jewish proselytes or converts, perhaps the story would have been different” (the story, of course, being that of I Kings) (Brindle 1984, p. 232). |
25 | Stated, again, repeatedly and most resolutely in the immediate continuation of the same opening passage of Deuteronomy 12! |
26 | |
27 | Solomon employed two large bodies of non-landed gentile workers. The first comprised able-handed Canaanites, descendants of the survivors of the great war of conquest, whose servitude was considered a royal corvée (I Kings 9:20–22). The second consisted of one hundred and fifty-three thousand and six hundred gerim, that is to say gentile Israeli paid laborers (I Kings 5:29–30, II Chronicles 2:16–17). In addition, a third group of ten thousand skilled Israelite landed workers needed in Lebanon at all times were employed on a generous three-month rotation of two months at home for every month in Lebanon (I Kings 5:27–28). Supplying the everyday needs of the administration’s large body of military and civil “government workers” was a significant undertaking in itself (5:2–5). To this end, Solomon re-divided the kingdom into twelve “districts”, presumably of comparable means of production, who were each made responsible for providing a month’s worth of supplies each year. Many read this (in retrospect through the lens of Jeroboam’s provocative demand (12:4) that Rehoboam lift his father’s heavy yoke) as proof of Solomon’s heavy, oppressive, and exploitive hand. See, for instance, Brindle (1984), and Walzer (2012, p. 56). I disagree. Because the people are repeatedly described as happy, at peace and as prosperous under Solomon (cf. 4:20, 5:5, and 8:66), and the state economy as extremely thriving, it makes far better sense to read the mass employment and especially the rotation of suppliers not as a just shouldering, of the court’s expenses, but as a just sharing of its enormous earnings! |
28 | See (Fisch forthcoming, chp. 3). |
29 | II Kings 23:25–26. |
30 | II Chronicles 33:12–17. |
31 | In the closing verses of his book, Nehemiah explicitly justifies their “cleansing” of the community from all “foreign wives” (Nehemiah 13:27, 30) by pointing to the Solomon of I Kings 11 whose “foreign wives cause[d] even him to sin” (26). And the Book of Esther describes Mordecai as having “been exiled from Jerusalem with the captivity which had been carried away with Jeconiah king of Judah” (Esther 2:6), an exile only mentioned in the Kings version: II Kings 24:14–16). |
32 | The longstanding near-consensus among Bible scholars that in view of their linguistic and ideological affinity, Chronicles and Ezra-Nehemiah should be read as works sufficiently similar to be the work of a single author, has been effectively refuted by Sara Japhet (Their supposed linguistic similarities in Japhet (1968), and their supposed theological and ideological affinities, in Japhet (1989)). Here, however, as noted at the outset, I have been less concerned with questions of biblical authorship, than with questions to do, as in Job, with the Bible’s inner disagreements. In that regard, Chronicles and Kings tell very different stories of post Solomonic Judea—the former keenly political, the latter avidly anti-political. And from that perspective both Ezra-Nehemiah and the Book of Esther demand to be read as knowingly responding to the latter. |
33 | Despite the fact that sovereignty (to the extent that it can be granted in an imperial setting) was handed to Ezra and Nehemiah on a silver platter, as it were. Nehemiah reports to have been appointed governor of the Land of Judah (Nehemiah 5:14), and Ezra, to have received supreme legal authority (with extensive license to enforce even capital punishment) over “all the people that are beyond the river” (Ezra 7:25–28; Nehemiah 5:14). Neither, however, exercised the authority they were granted beyond the confines of the Jewish community proper. |
34 | By the time the doomsday scenario of Haman’s rise to power and his genocidal plot is set in motion, Mordecai and Esther, with great political insight, have cleverly positioned themselves in the royal palace and the royal court. With Esther, the beloved queen, and Mordecai the faithful courtier firmly in place, Haman, one could say, never stood a chance… |
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Fisch, M. Job and the Bible’s Theo-Political Divide. Religions 2019, 10, 33. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10010033
Fisch M. Job and the Bible’s Theo-Political Divide. Religions. 2019; 10(1):33. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10010033
Chicago/Turabian StyleFisch, Menachem. 2019. "Job and the Bible’s Theo-Political Divide" Religions 10, no. 1: 33. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10010033