Thursday, February 25, 2010

Palestinians Oppose Calling the Cave of Machpelah a Heritage Site

In a previous post, I reported that the Israeli government was planning to add the Cave of Machpelah and Rachel’s Tomb to the list of Israel’s Heritage Sites.

This decision of the Israeli government has drawn strong reaction from the Palestinians. The following is an excerpt from a news release reporting Palestinian opposition to adding the Cave of the Patriarchs to the list of Israel’s Heritage Sites. The article also describes Palestinian reaction to the recent discovery of Solomon’s Wall:

Palestinian protesters have clashed with Israeli police in Hebron after Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu announced Sunday that the two fiercely contested sites in the West Bank would be included in a $100 million plan to restore national heritage sites.

These are the Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron and Rachel's Tomb on the outskirts of Bethlehem, 12 miles north of Hebron.

The Hebron site has been a source of conflict for decades. Jews call it the Cave of the Patriarchs, where the Bible says the patriarchs Abraham, Issac and Jacob were buried with three of their wives. The site is also sacred to Muslims, who also revere Abraham. They call it the al-Ibrahimi Mosque.

In 1994, a hard-line Brooklyn-born Jewish settler, Baruch Goldstein, shot to death 29 Palestinian Muslim worshipers in the shrine. He was beaten to death by those who survived the slaughter but remains an iconic figure for Israel's far-right.

Hard-line settlements have grown up around the city, where a few hundred militant settlers maintain an enclave heavily protected by Israeli troops amid a Muslim population of 160,000. The settlers converted part of the al-Ibrahimi Mosque into a synagogue.

The tomb of the Jewish matriarch Rachel stands in an Israeli enclave in Bethlehem, revered by Christians as the birthplace of Jesus. It's surrounded by a 24-foot-high concrete wall.

"We strongly condemn this decision which yet again confirms the Israeli government's determination to impose facts on the ground," declared Saeb Erakat, the chief Palestinian negotiator.

Netanyahu said the sites must be preserved by the state because they show Israelis owned the land in ancient times, a key element in Israelis' claim that they have a legitimate and historical right to the West Bank, which they call by its biblical name of Judea and Samaria.
Read the news release in its entirety by clicking here.

Palestinian reaction to Israel's decision to add the Cave of the Patriarchs to its list of Heritage Sites was to be expected. The same thing was also to be expected with the declaration that the wall discovered in Jerusalem was dated to Solomon's time.

This controversy demonstrates how the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will be difficult to solve. The question is: who owns the land? Israel says that Abraham was the father of their country. But, the Palestinians also say that their ancestry goes back to Abraham.

Not even the wisdom of Solomon can solve this problem.


Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Solomon’s Wall - Again

Sci-Tech Today has published an article giving details about the wall found in Jerusalem that may be dated to the time of Solomon.

The following is an excerpt from the article:

An excavated wall in Jerusalem may hold proof of the Bible's account that the Hebrew kings David and Solomon ruled from Jerusalem around that time, a point of dispute among scholars. The fortifications are located just outside the present-day walls of Jerusalem's Old City, next to the holy compound known to Jews as the Temple Mount.

An Israeli archaeologist said Monday that ancient fortifications recently excavated in Jerusalem date back 3,000 years to the time of King Solomon and support the biblical narrative about the era.

If the age of the wall is correct, the finding would be an indication that Jerusalem was home to a strong central government that had the resources and manpower needed to build massive fortifications in the 10th century B.C.

That's a key point of dispute among scholars, because it would match the Bible's account that the Hebrew kings David and Solomon ruled from Jerusalem around that time.

While some Holy Land archaeologists support that version of history -- including the archaeologist behind the dig, Eilat Mazar -- others posit that David's monarchy was largely mythical and that there was no strong government to speak of in that era.

Speaking to reporters at the site Monday, Mazar, from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, called her find "the most significant construction we have from First Temple days in Israel."
You may read the article in its entirety by clicking here.

You can also read my original post (with photos) dealing with the discovery by clicking here.


Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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The Dead Sea Scroll Controversy

Inside Higher Ed is reporting that the case of Raphael Golb has taken a strange turn. As you remember, Raphael Golb impersonated several individuals to promote his father’s view on the Dead Sea Scrolls.

As I wrote in a previous post:

According to a news release put out by the New York County District Attorney’s office, Raphael Haim Golb was arrested today on charges of identity theft, criminal impersonation, and aggravated harassment. Gold is the son of Norman Golb, a professor at the University of Chicago and a specialist in the study of the Dead Sea Scrolls.

According to the news release, Manhattan District Attorney Robert M. Morgenthau announced that Golb was arrested for creating multiple aliases in order to engage in a campaign of impersonation and harassment against scholars who opposed his father’s views on the Dead Sea Scrolls.
According to the article in Inside Higher Ed, “court documents point to evidence suggesting that Norman Golb, his wife, Ruth, and their other son, Joel, were aware of the alias-based campaign and may have assisted in carrying it out.”

The following is an excerpt from the article:

In the latest twist of a curious legal case involving allegations of identity theft, cyber-bullying, and two-millennia-old religious artifacts, a well-known University of Chicago professor has been implicated in a complex, Internet-based scheme to smear opponents of his work. Norman Golb, a professor of Jewish history and civilization at Chicago, has been mostly a sideline figure since his son, Raphael, was arrested last March after allegedly creating dozens of Web aliases and using them to harass and discredit scholars who disagree with his father’s theories about the origins of the Dead Sea Scrolls. But new court documents point to evidence suggesting that Norman Golb, his wife, Ruth, and their other son, Joel, were aware of the alias-based campaign and may have assisted in carrying it out. Raphael Golb stands accused of harassing various scholars who do not believe that the Dead Sea Scrolls originated in Jerusalem — a theory Norman Golb advocated in a 1995 book. The new documents, released last month, purport to show transcripts of e-mails exchanges among members of the Golb family indicating coordinated efforts to advance Norman Golb’s theories though Web aliases. They also include sharp criticisms of Schiffman, which the prosecution is trying to use as evidence of motive and intent for the identity theft — the only felony charge against Raphael Golb. The evidence was released to the court after the defense moved to suppress it. Norman Golb could not be reached for comment.

Read the article in Inside Higher Ed in its entirety for the links to the relevant court documents.

HT: Jim Davila

Read also: The Dead Sea Scroll Controversy and Me


Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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A False Prophecy: The Future of the Internet

This was written only 15 years ago (on February 27, 1995):

After two decades online, I'm perplexed. It's not that I haven't had a gas of a good time on the Internet. I've met great people and even caught a hacker or two. But today, I'm uneasy about this most trendy and oversold community. Visionaries see a future of telecommuting workers, interactive libraries and multimedia classrooms. They speak of electronic town meetings and virtual communities. Commerce and business will shift from offices and malls to networks and modems. And the freedom of digital networks will make government more democratic.

Baloney. Do our computer pundits lack all common sense? The truth in no online database will replace your daily newspaper, no CD-ROM can take the place of a competent teacher and no computer network will change the way government works.

Consider today's online world. The Usenet, a worldwide bulletin board, allows anyone to post messages across the nation. Your word gets out, leapfrogging editors and publishers. Every voice can be heard cheaply and instantly. The result? Every voice is heard. The cacophany more closely resembles citizens band radio, complete with handles, harrasment, and anonymous threats. When most everyone shouts, few listen. How about electronic publishing? Try reading a book on disc. At best, it's an unpleasant chore: the myopic glow of a clunky computer replaces the friendly pages of a book. And you can't tote that laptop to the beach. Yet Nicholas Negroponte, director of the MIT Media Lab, predicts that we'll soon buy books and newspapers straight over the Intenet. Uh, sure.

What the Internet hucksters won't tell you is tht the Internet is one big ocean of unedited data, without any pretense of completeness. Lacking editors, reviewers or critics, the Internet has become a wasteland of unfiltered data. You don't know what to ignore and what's worth reading. Logged onto the World Wide Web, I hunt for the date of the Battle of Trafalgar. Hundreds of files show up, and it takes 15 minutes to unravel them--one's a biography written by an eighth grader, the second is a computer game that doesn't work and the third is an image of a London monument. None answers my question, and my search is periodically interrupted by messages like, "Too many connectios, try again later."

Won't the Internet be useful in governing? Internet addicts clamor for government reports. But when Andy Spano ran for county executive in Westchester County, N.Y., he put every press release and position paper onto a bulletin board. In that affluent county, with plenty of computer companies, how many voters logged in? Fewer than 30. Not a good omen.

Point and click:

Then there are those pushing computers into schools. We're told that multimedia will make schoolwork easy and fun. Students will happily learn from animated characters while taught by expertly tailored software.Who needs teachers when you've got computer-aided education? Bah. These expensive toys are difficult to use in classrooms and require extensive teacher training. Sure, kids love videogames--but think of your own experience: can you recall even one educational filmstrip of decades past? I'll bet you remember the two or three great teachers who made a difference in your life.

Then there's cyberbusiness. We're promised instant catalog shopping--just point and click for great deals. We'll order airline tickets over the network, make restaurant reservations and negotiate sales contracts. Stores will become obselete. So how come my local mall does more business in an afternoon than the entire Internet handles in a month? Even if there were a trustworthy way to send money over the Internet--which there isn't--the network is missing a most essential ingredient of capitalism: salespeople.

What's missing from this electronic wonderland? Human contact. Discount the fawning techno-burble about virtual communities. Computers and networks isolate us from one another. A network chat line is a limp substitute for meeting friends over coffee. No interactive multimedia display comes close to the excitement of a live concert. And who'd prefer cybersex to the real thing? While the Internet beckons brightly, seductively flashing an icon of knowledge-as-power, this nonplace lures us to surrender our time on earth. A poor substitute it is, this virtual reality where frustration is legion and where--in the holy names of Education and Progress--important aspects of human interactions are relentlessly devalued.

I wonder what the author of this article would say about the Internet today.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Tuesday, February 23, 2010

The Brady Lecture


Northern Seminary has released the following press release about the forthcoming Brady Lecture:

The 2010, William W. Brady Lecture will feature Dr. David Coffey, President of the Baptist World Alliance. To be held on April 16, the lecture entitled “Evangelical Unity: Mission Impossible?” will begin at 9:00 a.m. A discussion forum will follow the lecture at 11:00 a.m.

Registration for the event is free. Northern Seminary is pleased to offer this special lecture as a gift to all who would like to attend.

Dr. Alistair Brown, President of Northern Seminary, remarked, "I have known David Coffey for over 20 years, worked alongside him and traveled with him. He is a man with a heart for God. He has exceptional communication and leadership gifts, and he is great at taking vision through to reality. He's a true world leader among evangelicals. You should meet and hear him."

Description of Lecture Topic

Evangelicals, all one in Christ Jesus. True. No dispute. But not how it seems to most of the world, and when we’re honest it’s not how we feel either. We’re one, but live as if we’re divided.

So is unity ‘mission impossible’ for evangelicals? Dr. David Coffey will address issues inside local churches and the broader evangelical landscape. He’ll highlight fruitful partnerships and warn of dangers that arise when relating to other Christians.

Dr. Coffey will discuss the importance of mending broken bridges, healing relationships, accountability and church discipline, and the urgency of greater unity in mission and evangelism in a broken world

Please join us on April 16. Register by calling 630.620.2112 or clicking here. For more information about the event click here.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Excavating at Tel Burna

How do archaeologists decide where to gig? In an interesting article published in the Biblical Archaeology Review, Joe Uziel and Itzick Shai discuss how they selected the site for their excavation this summer. Joe Uziel and Itzick Shai are codirectors of the Tel Burna excavations in Israel. They are also longtime staff members of the Tell es-Safi/Gath excavations, and both hold lab positions at the Institute of Archaeology at Bar-Ilan University.

The following is an excerpt from the article:

In 2009, we made a tentative choice of a site: Tel Burna. We proceeded to survey the entire area. With the help of friends, archaeology students, local kibbutz members with an interest in archaeology, and people from all over Israel who heard about the project and wanted to get a taste of fieldwork, we walked around the site for days upon days, collecting artifacts—mostly pottery, but also some flint tools and stone vessels—and mapping different features on the ground, such as burial caves, agricultural installations and architectural features. This fieldwork confirmed our original hypothesis that the site was intensively settled from the Early Bronze Age through Iron Age IIB, which ended with the Babylonian destruction in 586 B.C.E.

***

We’re not sure what Tel Burna’s name was in ancient times. One of Israel’s leading historical geographers, Anson Rainey, contends that it was Libnah. In the Bible, Libnah was a Canaanite town conquered by Joshua; he allotted it to the tribe of Judah (Joshua 10:29–30, 15:42). Libnah was also chosen as one of the Levitical cities of refuge (Joshua 21:13), which points to its role as a border site. According to 2 Kings 8:22, in the ninth century B.C.E., Libnah was involved in a rebellion against Jehoram, the king of Judah. In the seventh century another Judahite king, Josiah, married Hamutal from Libnah (2 Kings 23:31–32, 24:17–18). This may suggest the importance of the site along the border and the attempt by Josiah to create a bond through marriage between his capital in Jerusalem and its frontier. There are plenty of questions but few answers at this point.

Read the article in its entirety by visiting Biblical Archaeology Review online.

Are you interested in being part of a dig in Israel? You can join Joe Uziel and Itzick Shai and join the excavation at Tel Burna this summer. If you want to excavate at Tel Burna, the season will be from June 13 to July 1.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Monday, February 22, 2010

King Solomon’s Wall?


Image: Eilat Mazar and the ancient wall of Jerusalem




Hebrew University has announced that archaeologist Eilat Mazar has excavated a section of an ancient city wall of Jerusalem that probably was built in the tenth century B.C.E. According to Mazar, the wall was probably built by King Solomon.

Below are a few excerpts from the press release:

A section of an ancient city wall of Jerusalem from the tenth century B.C.E. - possibly built by King Solomon - has been revealed in archaeological excavations directed by Dr. Eilat Mazar and conducted under the auspices of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

The section of the city wall revealed, 70 meters long and six meters high, is located in the area known as the Ophel, between the City of David and the southern wall of the Temple Mount.

Uncovered in the city wall complex are: an inner gatehouse for access into the royal quarter of the city, a royal structure adjacent to the gatehouse, and a corner tower that overlooks a substantial section of the adjacent Kidron valley.

***

"The city wall that has been uncovered testifies to a ruling presence. Its strength and form of construction indicate a high level of engineering," Mazar said. The city wall is at the eastern end of the Ophel area in a high, strategic location atop the western slop of the Kidron valley. "A comparison of this latest finding with city walls and gates from the period of the First Temple, as well as pottery found at the site, enable us to postulate with a great degree of assurance that the wall that has been revealed is that which was built by King Solomon in Jerusalem in the latter part of the tenth century B.C.E.," said Mazar.

"This is the first time that a structure from that time has been found that may correlate with written descriptions of Solomon's building in Jerusalem," she added. "The Bible tells us that Solomon built - with the assistance of the Phoenicians, who were outstanding builders - the Temple and his new palace and surrounded them with a city, most probably connected to the more ancient wall of the City of David." Mazar specifically cites the third chapter of the First Books of Kings where it refers to "until he (Solomon) had made an end of building his own house, and the house of the Lord, and the wall of Jerusalem round about."

***

In addition to the pottery shards, cult figurines were also found in the area, as were seal impressions on jar handles with the word "to the king," testifying to their usage within the monarchy. Also found were seal impressions (bullae) with Hebrew names, also indicating the royal nature of the structure.






Image: Handles of jars inscribed with 'to the king' (LMLK) that were found at the excavation site.

Photo: Sasson Tiram







If this discovery confirms that the wall was built by Solomon, or, if the wall is dated to the time of Solomon, then this finding will again confirm that Jerusalem was more than just a small city in the tenth century.

Those scholars who take a minimalist approach to interpreting the reigns of David and Solomon continue to affirm that the monarchy of David and Solomon did not exist as the Bible describes it. However, evidence continues to appear that dispute the minimalist view of Jerusalem in the tenth century. Archaeologists have already found a stela mentioning the name of David. Will a discovery of a monument with the name of Solomon be next?


Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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King Tut’s Family Album

Andy at Egyptology News has posted several pictures showing the members of King Tut’s family. Tutankhamun’s family album is based on an article published in the Journal of the American Medical Association which studies King Tut’s life and death.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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King Tut’s Illness: The Video

Here is a video describing King Tut’s problem with malaria.





HT: Egyptology News

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Sunday, February 21, 2010

Israel’s Heritage Sites

Israel National News is reporting that the Israeli government will add Rachel’s Tomb and the Cave of Machpelah to the list of Israel’s Heritage Sites. The following is an excerpt from the news release:

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has added the sites where the Patriarchs and Matriarchs of Israel are buried -- the Cave of Machpelah in Hevron and Rachel's Tomb in Bethlehem -- to the list of heritage sites in which the government intends to invest. The decision appears to be the result of last-minute pressure exerted on Netanyahu from nationalists who could not understand why he left out the very important Biblical Jewish holy sites, while including many Christian sites in the heritage list.

I have visited both places during my trips to Israel and I really enjoyed my visit to the Cave of Machpelah. The decision of the Israeli government to add these sites to the national list is significant because these two places are part of the Jewish national history and should be preserved and be opened to people who visit the land of Israel.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Book Reviews

The Society of Biblical Literature has published the latest edition of the Review of Biblical Literature. The Review of Biblical Literature presents a review of books in Biblical studies and related areas. Below are some of the reviews of interest to students of the Old Testament and related areas.

Ellen F. Davis
Scripture, Culture, and Agriculture: An Agrarian Reading of the Bible
Reviewed by Robin Gallaher Branch

Description: This book examines the theology and ethics of land use, especially the practices of modern industrialized agriculture, in light of critical biblical exegesis. Nine interrelated essays explore the biblical writers' pervasive concern for the care of arable land against the background of the geography, social structures, and religious thought of ancient Israel. This approach consistently brings out neglected aspects of texts, both poetry and prose, that are central to Jewish and Christian traditions. Rather than seeking solutions from the past, Davis creates a conversation between ancient texts and contemporary agrarian writers; thus she provides a fresh perspective from which to view the destructive practices and assumptions that now dominate the global food economy. The biblical exegesis is wide-ranging and sophisticated; the language is literate and accessible to a broad audience.

Luke Gärtner-Brereton
The Ontology of Space in Biblical Hebrew Narrative: The Determinate Function of Narrative 'Space' within the Biblical Hebrew Aesthetic
Reviewed by Frank H. Polak

Description: The central premise of this book is that biblical Hebrew narrative, in terms of its structure, tends to operate under similar mechanical constraints to those of a stage-play; wherein space is central, characters are fluid, and objects within the narrative tend to take on a deep internal significance. The smaller episodic narrative units within the Hebrew aesthetic tend to grant primacy to space, both ideologically and at the mechanical level of the text itself. However space, as a determinate structural category, has been all but overlooked in the field of biblical studies to date; reflecting perhaps our own inability, as modern readers, to see beyond the dominant cinematic aesthetic of our times. The book is divided into two major sections, each beginning with a more theoretical approach to the function of narrative space, and ending with a practical application of the previous discussion; using Genesis 28.10-22 (the Bethel narrative) and the book of Ruth respectively, as test cases.

Michael Fox
Proverbs 10-31: A New Translation with Introduction and Commentary
Reviewed by Bruce K. Waltke

Description: This volume completes Bible scholar Michael V. Fox’s comprehensive commentary on the book of Proverbs. As in his previous volume on the early chapters of Proverbs, the author here translates and explains in accessible language the meaning and literary qualities of the sayings and poems that comprise the final chapters. He gives special attention to comparable sayings in other wisdom books, particularly from Egypt, and makes extensive use of medieval Hebrew commentaries, which have received scant attention in previous Proverb commentaries. In separate sections set in smaller type, the author addresses technical issues of text and language for interested scholars. The author’s essays at the end of the commentary view the book of Proverbs in its entirety and investigate its ideas of wisdom, ethics, revelation, and knowledge. Out of Proverbs’ great variety of sayings from different times, Fox shows, there emerges a unified vision of life, its obligations, and its potentials.

John Van Seters
The Biblical Saga of King David
Reviewed by Walter Dietrich

Description: The biblical story of King David has been interpreted in many different ways, arising from the variety of methods used in and the intended objectives of the studies: Does the narrative contain insight into and information about the early history of the Judean monarchy, or is it merely a legendary tale about a distant past? Can we identify the story’s literary genre, it sociohistorical setting, and the intention of its author(s)? Is an appreciation for the wonderful literary qualities of the story compatible with a literary-critical investigation of the narrative’s compositional and text-critical history? Van Seters reviews past scholarship on the David story and in the course of doing so unravels the history of these questions and then presents an extended appraisal of the debate about the social and historical context of the biblical story. From this critical foundation, Van Seters proceeds to offering a detailed literary analysis of the story of David from his rise to power under Saul to his ultimate succession by Solomon. As can be expected from someone known for his original thinking on a variety of topics, Van Seters articulately argues that the biblical story of David is a saga composed in the late Persian period, a beautifully crafted and highly realistic portrayal of a typical Near Eastern monarch of that time. Its author took up, as his basic source, an earlier version of the David story in which the Deuteronomistic Historian presents a completely idealized David as the king and founder of a unified state of the people of Israel. By expanding this version with his own invented episodes, the saga writer radically undercuts Dtr’s ideology by revealing David and all his offspring, including Solomon, to be quite unfit for rule and the cause of the state’s ultimate demise. The David Saga is antimessianic in its understanding of the future destiny of the state of Israel and opposed to the popular notion in his time, namely, that of a single, unified and racially pure people of Israel to the exclusion of all the other people of the land of Palestine.

Norman Whybray
Job
Reviewed by F. Rachel Magdalene

Description: This commentary on the book of Job is a non-technical commentary but it is full of Whybray's most mature reflections on the book. The Introduction deals with the nature and purpose of the book, its specific and distinctive theology, its themes and its various parts and their mutual relationship. Thereafter, Norman Whybray, who is renowned for his insightful commentaries, usually comments on small sections of the text, and verse-by-verse in some especially difficult passages. As a whole, his commentary is illustrative of the fact that the book of Job is more concerned with the nature of God than with the problem of suffering. This is a reprint of the original edition in 1998.

Marguerite Yon
The City of Ugarit at Tell Ras Shamra
Reviewed by Dirk Paul Mielke

Description: In 1929, a farmer accidentally discovered a tomb near the Mediterranean coast of Syria, about 12 km north of the modern seaport of Latakia. Initial excavations at the tell of Ras Shamra by René Dussaud and Claude Schaeffer brought to light impressive architectural remains, numerous artifacts, and tablets written in cuneiform (both alphabetic and syllabic), and the excavators soon were able to identify the site as the ancient city of Ugarit. Much of the material remains came to be dated to the end of the Late Bronze Age, from the 14th century through the 12th century b.c.e., and the religious, economic, and mythological texts from that era have had a major effect on our understanding of the history of the late 2nd millennium. However, by that time the site had already seen more than 6,000 years of occupation, and the data from Ras Shamra–Ugarit thus have become important as a reference point for the early history of the Near East along the Levantine coast and the eastern Mediterranean. In this volume, Marguerite Yon, the principal investigator since the early 1970s on behalf of the French archaeological team, brings us up to date on the 70-year-long excavation of the site. During the past 25 years, much of our understanding of the site itself has changed, due to new excavations, reexcavation, and reinterpretation of prior excavations. This volume is the authoritative latest word on the data from the site and their meaning for our understanding of the importance of ancient Ugarit.

The Review of Biblical Literature is a publication of the Society of Biblical Literature.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Saturday, February 20, 2010

The Ark of the Covenant Has Been Found - Again

A wooden object which some people claimed to be a replica of the Ark of the Covenant was found in Zimbabwe. This replica of the Ark of the Covenant belongs to the Lemba people, black Africans who believe they are descendants of the Lost Tribes of Israel.

According to a news report published by the BBC News, the replica of the Ark of the Covenant was built almost 700 years ago from the remains of the original Ark.

You have to read the story to believe it.

I have to confess: I have lost count of how many Arks of the Covenant have been found in the last decade.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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King Tut the Warrior

Recently, several articles on King Tut have been published, showing that popular interest in Boy King’s life and reign has not diminished.

In the current issue of Archaeology Magazine (March/April 2010), W. Raymond Johnson, director of the Epigraphic Survey, Oriental Institute, University of Chicago has an article in which he said that sculptures from Luxor prove the King Tut was the scourge of Egypt’s foes.

Below is an excerpt from the article:

Little was known about Tutankhamun when his tomb was discovered in 1922. He ruled sometime after the heretic pharaoh Akhenaten--who abandoned the traditional Egyptian pantheon headed by the god Amun in favor of Aten, a solar deity--and presumably died young after an insignificant reign. Since then, the "boy king" tag has colored our understanding of the young king. But new discoveries contradict that early assessment. Recent CT scanning of his mummy shows that Tut was no boy at death, but was a grown man by the standards of the time and may have been 20 years old. And his 9- to 10-year reign toward the end of the 14th century B.C. was one of the greatest periods of restoration in the history of Egypt. Under Tut, the damage caused by Akhenaten's iconoclastic fury against the state god Amun, which tore the country's social, political, and economic fabric asunder, was repaired and Amun's cult restored.

The rich array of objects found in Tutankhamun's tomb speak to the opulence of the Egyptian court and the young king's pampered life. But other items, including numerous throwsticks (sort of non-returning boomerangs), spears, bows and arrows, and chariots--many inscribed with his name and clearly used--attest his athleticism and youthful energy. Today, new evidence of Tutankhamun's reign has emerged that shows he was much more active than was thought, and may have led military campaigns against the Syrians and Nubians before he died.

*****
Two sets of battle-themed carvings from Tut's mortuary temple survive, one depicting a Nubian campaign, and one larger group that shows several episodes of Tutankhamun in a chariot leading the Egyptian forces against a Syrian-style citadel. Other blocks depict the king receiving prisoners, booty, and the severed hands of the enemy dead, as is traditional, though in this case the hands have been strung on spears like shish kabobs, a detail that is unique in Egyptian art. The second set shows a royal flotilla returning up the Nile, with a manacled Syrian prisoner hanging in a cage from the sailyard of the king's barge. Pieces of a concluding scene show the king offering prisoners and booty to the divine family of Amun, his wife Mut, and son Khonsu. Before now, we thought that Sety I of the 19th Dynasty invented this genre of battle narrative, but it is now clear that the tradition goes back at least to Tutankhamun and the late 18th Dynasty, and probably earlier.

Archaeology Magazine has made the full text of Johnson’s article available free online. The article also contains several images of King Tut, one showing him fighting Nubians and Syrians and another showing him as a sphinx, trampling Egypt’s enemies.

Read this interesting article by visiting Archaeology Magazine online.


Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Friday, February 19, 2010

Benny Hinn’s Wife Files for Divorce

The Washington Post is reporting that the wife of televangelist Benny Hinn has filed for divorce. The following is an excerpt from the article published by The Washington Post:

ORANGE, Calif. -- The wife of televangelist Benny Hinn has filed for divorce from the high-profile pastor, whose reputation as an advocate of prosperity gospel has attracted millions of followers and criticism from lawmakers and watchdog groups over his lavish lifestyle.

Suzanne Hinn filed the papers in Orange County Superior Court on Feb. 1, citing irreconcilable differences, after more than 30 years of marriage. The papers note the two separated on Jan. 26 and that Hinn has been living in Dana Point, a wealthy coastal community in southern Orange County.

"Pastor Benny Hinn and his immediate family were shocked and saddened to learn of this news without any previous notice," Benny Hinn Ministries said Thursday in a statement. "Although Pastor Hinn has faithfully endeavored to bring healing to their relationship, those efforts failed and were met with the petition for divorce that was filed without notice."

Read the article in its entirety here.

The news report does not provide a reason for the divorce. The divorce of Benny Hinn is very sad because thousands of people have supported his ministry over the years. Benny Hinn’s divorce and the embarrassing situation caused by Ted Haggard in 2006 bring a lot of shame to Christianity and to the cause of Christ around the world.

This is a sad time for the church. As someone once said, "at times, Christ’s worse enemies are his own friends."

UPDATE:

Read Benny Hinn’s letter about his divorce here.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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The Boat Beneath the Pyramid





Image: Khufu’s Boat

Photo by Guy Flaneur.



Vincent Brown at Talking Pyramids has an excellent post on Khufu’s boat at Giza. His post also contain several photos of the boat. Vincent also provides a link to PDF book, The Boat Beneath the Pyramid: King Cheops Royal Ship by Nancy Jenkins. The book is available online and it is free.

Below is blurb that appears on the jacket of the book:

“More than a quarter of a century ago a young Egyptian archaeologist, clearing a site just south of the Great Pyramid at Giza, broke through a massive slab of limestone to reveal a vault beneath his feet. For the first time in 4,500 years the sun’s rays were shining down on the timbers of a great papyriform ship, built for a king and then dismantled and buried here at the height of the Egyptian Old Kingdom. Astonishingly well preserved, it was by far the most ancient vessel ever to come to light.

Nancy Jenkins is the first to tell the full story of this Royal Ship — its discovery, excavation and reconstruction. She tells also who built it and why, how it has survived intact for so long, and what connection it may have had with the age-old Egyptian myth of the Sun-god, eternally journeying cross the heavens in his Reed Float. But this is also a story of modern Egypt and of one man in particular, Ahmed Youssef Moustafa, Chief Restorer of the Department of Antiquities, who almost single-handedly put back together the 1,223 pieces of .the ship. Working with a giant jigsaw puzzle—though a puzzle without a picture on the box—Ahmed Youssef devoted fourteen years to the immense task of reconstruction.

The triumphant result is not only an aesthetic masterpiece to rival the Great Pyramid but also a vital source of information about the design and construction of ancient ships and a tribute to one of the greatest periods in the history of civilization.”




HT: Vincent Brown at Talking Pyramids.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Thursday, February 18, 2010

The Name of God: Jehovah

A few days ago, a reader of this blog and a former student asked me to explain the origin of the name Jehovah. I always welcome questions from readers and when a question is of general interest, I try to write a post and provide an answer that will benefit the general public.

First, let me remind readers that I have already written several posts on the divine name. The following posts deal with the name of God:

Pronouncing the Divine Name - Part 1

Pronouncing the Divine Name - Part 2

Pronouncing the Divine Name - Part 3

Pronouncing the Divine Name: An Explanation

The name Jehovah is not the real name of God. Let me explain. The word Jehovah, a popular English name used by Christians to identify the God of the Old Testament, was not used until after 1278 A.D.

In the Hebrew Bible, the name of God is expressed by four consonants: YHWH. These four consonants are also known in academic circles as the Tetragrammaton. The name of God was revealed to Moses on Mount Sinai:

13 Then Moses said to God, “If I come to the people of Israel and say to them, ‘The God of your fathers has sent me to you,’ and they ask me, ‘What is his name?’ what shall I say to them?”

14 God said to Moses, “I AM WHO I AM.” And he said, “Say this to the people of Israel, ‘I AM has sent me to you.’”

15 God also said to Moses, “Say this to the people of Israel, ‘The LORD, the God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, has sent me to you’: this is my name for ever, and thus I am to be remembered throughout all generations” (Exodus 3:13-15 RSV).

When God sent Moses back to Egypt to bring the people out of their oppression, God told Moses: “Say this to the people of Israel, ‘The LORD has sent me to you’: this is my name for ever, and thus I am to be remembered throughout all generations” (Exodus 3:15). In Hebrew the name “the LORD” is YHWH.

Over the centuries, the Jewish community has avoided using or pronouncing the divine name in public. Thus, when reading the name of God in Hebrew, the Masoretes wrote the four consonants YHWH and inserted the vowels of the Hebrew word Adonai, a word that means “the Lord.”

The name Jehovah is a hybrid name. The name was formed by the use of the Tetragrammaton YHWH with the vowels of Adonai and the result was YeHoWaH. This hybrid name became the basis for the Latinized name Jehovah.

The name Jehovah was not known until sometime after 1278 when a Dominican monk by the name of Raymundus Martini, a Spaniard, first used it in his book Pugeo Fidei. The name Jehovah appeared in English when William Tyndale translated the book of Moses in 1530. Thus, the name Jehovah is an artificial creation that was not used until the Middle Ages. It does not reflect an accurate rendering of the divine name in the Hebrew Bible and its use should be avoided.

Most Christian Bibles today follow the example of the Septuagint, the Greek translation of the Old Testament, and of the Vulgate, the Latin translation of the Bible by Jerome. The Septuagint translated the Tetragrammaton YHWH by Kurios, “Lord” and the Vulgate rendered the divine name as Dominus, “Lord.”

The name Jehovah appears in the King James Bible in four places: Exodus 6:3; Psalm 83:18; Isaiah 12:2; and Isaiah 26:4. The poetic form of the name, Yah (or Jah in the KJV) appears in Psalm 68:4. The divine name appears in several passages in the Bible compound with other words: “Jehovahjireh” (Genesis 22:14 KJV), “Jehovahnissi” (Exodus 17:15 KJV), and “Jehovahshalom” (Judges 6:24 KJV).

Most modern English translations follow orthodox Jewish tradition and avoid using the divine name. Instead, these translations substitute the word “the LORD” for the name Yahweh. The following are the usages of the divine name in most English Bibles:

1. The word “God” translates the Hebrew name Elohim.

2. The word “GOD” translates the divine name Yahweh.

3. The word “Lord” translates the Hebrew word Adonai.

4. The Word “LORD” translates the divine name Yahweh.

I respect my Jewish readers who refrain from using the divine name as a way of honoring God. This reluctance to use the divine name reflects their love and reverence for God and a recognition of the holiness of God’s name. Instead of using the divine name, they use “Adonai,” and “Hashem,” a Hebrew word meaning “The Name.”

As a Christian, however, I believe that this reluctance to pronounce the divine name goes contrary to God’s own wishes. God said to Moses:

“Say this to the Israelites: Yahweh, the God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, has sent me to you. This is My name forever; this is how I am to be remembered in every generation (Exodus 3:15 HCSB).

God clearly tells Moses that he wants to be remembered forever by his name. However, if we do not call God by his name, how can people know him by his name?

The Psalmist wrote: “Sing to God! Sing praises to His name. His name is Yahweh.” (Psalm 68:4 HCSB).

The Psalmist also wrote: “Proclaim with me the greatness of Yahweh, let us acclaim his name together (Psalm 34:3 NJB).

To sing praises to God’s name and to acclaim his name requires the worshiper to know God’s name and to use it and pronounce his name aloud.

The prophet Joel wrote: “Everyone who calls on the name of Yahweh will be saved” (Joel 2:32 HCSB). However, how can people call upon the name of God when the name of God is not used?

Christians should avoid using the name Jehovah because it does not provide an accurate translation of the Hebrew name for God. And, although I am going against the majority of Biblical scholars on this issue, I believe we should take seriously God’s desire that he wants to be remembered forever by his name.

If Christians and Jews are to use the divine name, it must be done so with reverence, for we must remember God’s own admonition: “You shall not misuse the name of Yahweh your God, for Yahweh will not leave unpunished anyone who misuses his name” (Exodus 20:7 NJB).

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Biblical Fonts

Most bloggers who write on Biblical themes, at one time or another will use Hebrew and Greek words in their study of texts from the Old and New Testaments. Also, at times it becomes necessary to use transliteration of Hebrew and Greek words in order to explain the text in words that people can understand.

Most bibliobloggers use Hebrew and Greek fonts to write Hebrew and Greek words in their posts. They also use another type of font to show transliterated Hebrew and Greek and even other Near Eastern languages.

Most people outside of academia do not have access to these fonts. Thus, when readers encounter Hebrew, Greek, or transliterated words in posts, the result is that they see only gibberish or boxes on their screens. The reason is because they do not have those fonts installed on their computers, thus, they are unable to see the original languages as they read these posts.

If you are one of those persons who sees gibberish when you read blogs and if you do not have these fonts installed on your computer, I would like to suggest that you install these fonts. These fonts are free and they are easy to install.

You may say: “But I don’t know Hebrew or Greek.” Or you may say: “But, I will never use these languages.” That may be true, but if you install them, you don’t have to use them. However, any time you read a post that contains either Hebrew or Greek or if you read a post that contains transliterated material, you will be able to see them on your screen.

New fonts will not take much space on your computer. They will be installed automatically with your other fonts and you will not even notice the difference. I can assure you that by installing these fonts you will add an important resource to your computer that will help you to be able to see the Biblical languages whenever you encounter them in posts using Hebrew and Greek.

Don’t hesitate. Download and install all three fonts below
now.

Hebrew Fonts.

Greek Fonts.

Charis SIL Font.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Wednesday, February 17, 2010

King Tut and His Medical Problems



Image
: King Tut





A recent DNS study performed on the mummy of King Tut, one of the most famous pharaohs of ancient Egypt, reveals that King Tut was a sick young man who had problems with malaria and a bone disorder that probably forced him to walk with a cane.

According to a report published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, some of King Tut’s health problem was due to his incestuous origins. Archaeologists have concluded that King Tut’s mother and father were brother and sister. This kind of biological relationship compromise the immune system of children born of incestuous relationships and increase the chances these children will be born with physical malformations.

Read more about King Tut, the results of the DNA study, and some facts about King Tut’s life, family, and reign by clicking here.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Professor Donald Wiseman

Professor Donald Wiseman, a great archaeologist and Assyriologist, died on February 2, 2010 at the age of 91. Wiseman was an evangelical Christian who made several attempts at demonstrating the connection between archaeological discoveries and Old Testament stories.

Wiseman was better known for his involvement in the translation of the New International Version of the Bible (NIV) and for his excellent commentaries on the Old Testament.

The Telegraph of London has a lengthy obituary describing aspects of his life as an archaeologist and his many contributions to Biblical studies. Below is a brief excerpt from the article:

During his lunch breaks, meanwhile, Wiseman gave talks to Christian Unions on the connections between the Bible and archaeology. He wrote Illustrations from Biblical Archaeology (1958) and also appeared on BBC programmes on the subject. His paper Archaeological Confirmation of the Old Testament (1958) coolly examined the archaeological evidence for the great flood and the tower of Babel, drawing particular attention to the Babylonian Epic of Gilgamesh. "As the story unfolds it is impossible not to be struck by the resemblances with Genesis 6-9," Wiseman noted. "As with the creation story, it may also be argued that this 'myth' also reflects an historic fact."

May his contribution to archaeology and Biblical studies continue to influence students of the Bible for years to come.

R.I.P.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Tuesday, February 16, 2010

“Black and Beautiful” or “Black but Beautiful”?

Last week it was my time to organize the chapel services for the seminary community. Once a year a faculty member is responsible for planning and leading the chapel program. This time, I decided to do something different. I decided to arrange the Song of Songs as a play and perform it in chapel.

Song of Songs is mostly unfamiliar to Christians because they do not read it very often. When they do, they wrongly call it “The Song of Solomon” believing that Solomon wrote this beautiful song. In Hebrew, the title of the book is a superlative. The book should be translated “The song of all songs” or “The greatest song.”

Many Christians follow Jewish tradition by ascribing the authorship of the Songs to Solomon. In fact, a Jewish saying declares that when Solomon was young he wrote Proverbs, when he was in love he wrote Songs, and when he was old he wrote Ecclesiastes. None of these, of course, is true, but it serves to continue the idea that Solomon was the writer of these three Biblical books.

As for the canonicity of Song of Songs, the book had some problems in being accepted as part of the canon. The reason for this reluctance is because Song of Songs tells a story of love with graphic sexual language. Most people reading Song of Songs in English will not notice the sexual language because the writer used euphemisms to hide the sexuality of the dialogue between the woman and her lover.

Eventually, the book was accepted as canonical because it was interpreted allegorically. Under this interpretation, Song of Songs describes the love of God for Israel or the love of Christ for the church. However, when properly understood, Songs is a love story. The book describes in poetic form the love between a man and a woman.

Over the centuries, most readers of the book have struggled with the proper interpretation of this story of love. The traditional interpretation says that the book tells the story of two lovers: Solomon and the Shulammite. For the proper interpretation of the story, it is important not to confuse the Shulammite (Songs 6:13) with Abishag the Shunammite of 1 Kings 1:3-4. They were two different persons.

Under the traditional interpretation of the Songs, the book is telling the readers the story of Solomon’s love for the Shulammite. The traditional interpretation also implies that Solomon wrote Song of Songs in order to express his love for the Shulammite.

There is, however, a problem with the traditional interpretation. If the lover whom the woman loved was Solomon, then the reader must also assume that Solomon was a shepherd who took care of his flock. For this reason, it is very clear that Solomon was not the man the Shulammite loved.

A better interpretation of the Songs sees three lovers in the story: Solomon, the Shulammite, and the one she loved, the shepherd. Under this interpretation, Songs is a story about Solomon and not a story by Solomon.

This interpretation understands Song of Songs as a satire on Solomon. The story celebrates the victory of true love and tells of the occasion when Solomon’s desire to have another woman as a member of his harem was foiled by a peasant woman who refused to exchange the man she loved for the comfort of the palace.

Here was a man who already had “sixty queens and eighty concubines, and maidens without number” (Songs 6:8-9), but who wanted one more. But Solomon’s display of riches and might (Songs 3:6-11; 8:11) to gain the love of a peasant woman did not succeed. Solomon’s wealth and royal position could not convince the woman to accept the king’s advance and deny her love for the shepherd.

Song of Songs celebrates true love between a man and a woman, the kind of love that cannot be bought with money: “Many waters cannot quench love, neither can floods drown it. If a man offered for love all the wealth of his house, he would be utterly despised” (Songs 8:7).

Who was this remarkable woman, the Shulammite, who refused the wealth of Solomon and the enticement of royalty in order to remain true to her shepherd lover? The Bible has little to say about her. However, it is what she said about herself that has attracted the attention of many scholars.

She said about herself: שְׁחוֹרָ֤ה אֲנִי֙ וְֽנָאוָ֔ה
English translations differ on the interpretation of her words:

The New Revised Standard Version: “I am black and beautiful.”

The Douay-Rheims Bible: “I am black but beautiful.”

The English Standard Version: “I am very dark, but lovely.”

The Jewish Publication Society: “I am black, but comely.”

The Septuagint (LXX): “I am black, but beautiful.”

The Shulammite words are addressed to the women of Jerusalem. Although the women do not respond, it is apparent that the women are looking at the Shulammite with disdain because of her appearance. She refers to her color and compares it with the tents of Kedar and the curtains of Solomon.

“I am very dark, but comely, O daughters of Jerusalem, like the tents of Kedar, like the curtains of Solomon” (Songs 1:5 RSV).

She said that she had a dark complexion because she was exposed to the hot sun, since her brothers punished her by ordering her to take care of the vineyards:

“Do not gaze at me because I am swarthy, because the sun has scorched me. My mother's sons were angry with me, they made me keeper of the vineyards; but, my own vineyard I have not kept” (Songs 1:6 RSV).

The text does not say that her dark complexion was due to her racial background, that is, that she was an African woman. Her dark skin pigmentation was not a reference to a racial feature.

What the Shulammite was trying to say to the women of Jerusalem was that the exposure to the sun on her body made her to be darker than the women who lived in Jerusalem. She was dark because she did not protect her body from the intense heat of the sun.

The Shulammite’s words reflect the fact that peasant women who worked in the fields had dark skin because of the constant exposure to the sun, while the women who lived in luxurious houses of Jerusalem and those who lived in the palace were less dark and more white.

The woman explained her blackness by comparing it with the tents of Kedar and the curtains of Solomon. The tents of Kedar were bedouin tents made of black goat hair. Although the text does not clarify what was intended by “the curtains of Solomon,” they were probably curtains or wall hangings found in Solomon’s palace known by its beauty and artistic designs.

The reading of the Holman Christian Standard Bible tries to include both ideas in its translation, but in the process it diminishes what the Shulammite says about herself: “Daughters of Jerusalem, I am dark like the tents of Kedar, yet lovely like the curtains of Solomon.”

The reason for the punishment her brothers inflicted on her was because she did not keep her own vineyard. The symbolism behind the vineyard is probably a reference to her virginity, that is, that she gave herself sexually to her shepherd lover and as a result her brothers punished her for her indiscretion.

Thus, the Shulammite asked the women of Jerusalem not to pay attention to her black skin. In Hebrew the conjunction waw can be translated as “and” or “but.” Many people object to translating the Shulammite words as “black but beautiful” because such a translation may suggest that blackness is not beautiful. Critics complain that this translation may point to some kind of racial prejudice.

A careful look at the text reveals that the woman was explaining that although she had a dark complexion that she was beautiful. The reason she spoke about her dark skin was probably because it had become an issue in the minds of people who belonged to the upper class of Jerusalem.

So the questions must be asked: should we translate the waw as “and” or “but”?

A careful examination of the Shulammite words in light of her conversation with the women of Jerusalem reveals that the woman was defending her dark skin. In addition, verse 6 explains that her skin was dark because her brothers forced her to work in the vineyards and she was exposed to the hot sun. This is the reason she asks the women of Jerusalem not to look at her and her dark complexion with disdain.

The text has nothing to do with race, neither is the text saying that white skin is more attractive than dark skin. The problem is that society classifies people as either black, white, or brown. Since this woman was a Semitic woman, she probably had dark skin. She was not white. The Shulammite defended her dark skin not because she believed that it was ugly, but because her natural skin was not like that.

Thus, readers must conclude that the woman was unhappy about her dark skin because it was not her natural skin color but it was the result of being exposed to the sun for a long time. The proper translation of 1:5 should be: “I am black but beautiful.”

However, when we read the words of the Shulammite, we can say with assurance, that she was black and beautiful, for the woman herself speaks unashamedly about her beauty: “I am black and beautiful.”

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Wednesday, February 10, 2010

The Mission of Israel

In a previous post I discussed the election of Israel to be God’s special people. The election of Israel to be God’s special possession took place when he called Abraham to leave his country to go to a land that eventually would belong to him and to his descendants.

The election of Israel as God’s people was reaffirmed with the establishment of a covenant between God and Israel on Mount Sinai. It was at that time that Israel received instructions about its mission as the people of God.

The mission of Israel in the world is expressed succinctly in Exodus 19:5-6: “Now therefore, if you will obey my voice and keep my covenant, you shall be my own possession among all peoples; for all the earth is mine, and you shall be to me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.”

These words of God to Israel describe three different aspects of Israel’s mission. First, as the elect people of God, Israel has a special relationship with God because of their call and deliverance from Egypt. This relationship is expressed by the demands of the covenant. The covenant is a document that places the people of Israel under legal obligation to obey the demands which the covenant imposed upon them.

Second, as the special people of God, Israel was called to be a kingdom of priests. Third, as God’s special possession, Israel was called to be a paradigm to the other nations of the world.

The covenant between God and Israel was a suzerainty covenant, the type of covenant which required Israel to obey God’s demands. If Israel would obey God’s voice and keep his covenant, then Israel would become God’s special possession among all nations.

This requirement to obey the demands of the covenant came as a result of Israel’s decision to be God’s people and to carry out his mission in the world. The people responded to God’s demands with a commitment to obedience: “All that the LORD has spoken we will do" (Exodus 19:8). Israel’s decision to follow God was a response to his love and grace.

Thus, when the people of Israel agreed to obey God’s law, their decision was a response to what God had done by calling Abraham and by redeeming them from their slavery in Egypt. This commitment to obedience was the foundation of the election of Israel and the basis for their mission in the world.

Israel was called to be an obedient people. Israel’s mission and destiny as God’s people in the world required them to obey God’s laws. Israel was to be different from all the other nations because Israel was chosen by the Lord to receive the promises he had made to the patriarchs (Deuteronomy 7:6-9). God redeemed the people from their bondage in Egypt in order to bind Israel exclusively to himself so that the nation could carry out God’s work in the world.

In addition to its legal responsibility to obey the demands of the covenant, Israel was also called to be a kingdom of priests. The mission of Israel as a kingdom of priests was to teach and instruct the nations about the nature of the true God. The author of the book of Malachi describes the ministry of the priests as follows: “For the lips of a priest should preserve knowledge of sacred things, and people should seek instruction from him because he is the messenger of the LORD” (Malachi 2:7 NET).

In its mission to teach the nations, Israel had several religious distinctives that served as the basis for its message. First, Israel’s religion was to be focused on the worship of one God and one God only: “You shall have no other gods before me” (Exodus 20:3). However this commandment was understood, the worship of the God of Israel excluded the worship of other gods.

Second, the religion of Israel was to be aniconic: “You shall not make for yourself a graven image, or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth; you shall not bow down to them or serve them” (Exodus 20:4-5).

Aniconism made Israel’s religion different from the other religions of the Ancient Near East since most of them made graphic representations of their many gods, either as human beings, animals, or objects of nature.

Third, Israel should remember that God had entered its history to deliver them from Egyptian slavery. The memory of their deliverance became the basis for the treatment of the members of the covenant community (Deuteronomy 16:12).

Finally, Israel had a special history to tell the nations. Never before in the history of other nations had a God chosen to reveal himself in the way God revealed himself to Israel on Mount Sinai. This great act of salvation was also part of the message Israel was to teach to the nations.

Israel’s understanding of God, their religious practices, and their humane laws were to serve as a paradigm to the nations of the world. Just as the priests instructed the nation of their religious, legal, and moral responsibility to God, so Israel was to teach the nations.

The function of the priest in Israel was to be a minister of God and to lead the people in the worship of God. Thus, if Israel was to be a kingdom of priests, then the people as a whole were to serve God and minister to those nations around them and to all nations of the world.

As a people selected to be a special possession of God, Israel had a legal responsibility to respond in obedience to the demands of the covenant, a spiritual requirement to be a kingdom of priests, and an ethical responsibility to be a holy nation.

Israel, as a people of God, was called to be a holy nation: “And the LORD said to Moses,
‘Say to all the congregation of the people of Israel, You shall be holy; for I the LORD your God am holy’” (Leviticus 19:1). As the people of God, Israel was called to be a paradigm to the rest of the world in respect to ethical living.

Israel’s call to holiness required ethical living. The laws Israel received at Sinai could be enforced by various penalties. However, the spiritual element of Israel’s call, to be a kingdom of priests, could only be enforced by ethical living. The holiness to which Israel was called required total submission to the will of God and a participation in the very nature of God. Israel was to be more than a mere representative of God to the nations. They were to reflect the deepest spiritual and ethical qualities of God himself. Thus, as the people of God, Israel’s mission was threefold: legal in responsibility, spiritual in practice, and holy in nature.

The election of Israel to be God’s people and its mission to the nations made Israel a unique nation with a unique destiny. It is within the context of Israel’s election and mission that the work of the prophets and the religious contribution of Israel to the world must be understood.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Tuesday, February 09, 2010

Top 50 Biblical History Blogs

Accredited Online Bible Colleges has selected Dr. Claude Mariottini – Professor of Old Testament as one the top 50 Biblical History Blogs. My blog is listed under Old Testament Studies. I want to thank the organization for selecting my blog.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary


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James Henry Breasted

The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago has opened a new exhibit spotlighting the work of James Henry Breasted, the famous archaeologist who founded the Oriental Institute and brought back many Egyptian artifacts to Chicago.

The Oriental Institute has produced a 5 minute movie featuring some artifacts, photos, and letters documenting the archaeological work of James Breasted.

The movie is very informative. See the movie here.

You can also read an article here detailing the work of James Breasted.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary


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Slaves and Households in the Ancient Near East

The University of Chicago will be presenting The Sixth Annual University of Chicago Oriental Institute Seminar. The Seminar will take place on March 5 and 6. The following description of the Seminar was provided by the Oriental Institute:

Slavery is a reality of history that has been attested since the earliest cuneiform documents from Ancient Mesopotamia. This seminar engages new approaches to the study of slaves in the Near East and seeks to open new conversations about this ubiquitous yet complicated topic.

The Oriental Institute has also provided an overview and goals of the symposium. The following is an excerpt of the goals of the Seminar. The excerpt deals with slavery in Mesopotamia:

The Study Slavery in Mesopotamia and the Near East in Brief

Studies to emerge recently and over the course of the twentieth century have already provided a considerable and invaluable basis for undertaking new approaches. In ancient Near Eastern studies, scholars have long examined the economic function of slaves, with emphasis on value, sale, labor, and reinforcement of state structures (for example, see the venerable works of I.M. Diakonoff, I.J. Gelb, and successors). Criticism has been expressed, however, for models of slavery that fail to contextualize slaves in social, political, and cultural contexts. Even as early as the 1950's, some anthropologists renounced the economy-focused perspectives, declaring them materialist, functionalist, and positivistic, and it was argued that the extraction of slaves from social hierarchies impedes analysis (e.g., Siegel 1945, see also the overviews of Patterson [1970] and Kopytoff [1982]). Prolific legal studies on Mesopotamian and biblical slavery have produced an indispensable corpus on the legal nature of slaves and the terminology of function, status, sale, and legal rights, in ancient Israel and Mesopotamia, such as those undertaken by Mendelsohn (for example 1949) and Chirichigno (1993). A more inclusive comparison of slavery across ancient Mesopotamian states is still needed, but faces difficulty without a common focal point and without the benefits to be gained from comparison with other states that have yielded different types of data.

Recently, a number of important monographs have appeared on medieval and pre-modern Near Eastern slavery that introduce new case studies and approaches, including, to name but a few key examples Marmon (1999), Babaie et al. (2004), and Toledano (1993, 2007). Such contributions reflect a shift away from traditional issues in favor of dynamics and socio-political context. Because scholars of ancient and medieval Near Eastern states have different types of written sources at their disposal while dealing with similar complex states, fruitful analysis results from comparison.

For decades, scholars have been keenly aware of the enormous influence that the Greek, Roman, and New World systems of slavery (the salient monographs of which are too numerous to be listed here) have impressed upon studies of other ancient and pre-modern societies (e.g., Bakir 1951). While the Classical and New World systems shall no longer be considered paradigmatic, such external scholarship still aids in developing methodologies and conducting comparison. Some of the papers in this symposium build on the works of scholars who have explicitly adopted new approaches to slavery in these fields.

Read the overview of the symposium in its entirety by clicking here. The conference will cover three historical periods: The Early Mesopotamian States, The Second and First Millennium Empires, and The Islamic Near East.

For a list of the participants and the schedule as well as the references for the works cited in the excerpt above, visit the web page for the Oriental Institute by clicking here.

The seminar is open to the public. I am planning to attend this seminar and I invite you to be there too.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary


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