Former Harvard divinity student, Chris Hedges, tackles biblical inerrancy head-on in his excellent book, American Fascists. In it, Hedges points out a gaggle of contradictions and inconsistencies in scripture which Christian extremists proclaim the Word of God.
Now a pair of Israeli archaeologists have released a report showing that the Bible is not really anchored in the Old Testament past and is full of details that are just plain wrong. The 'camel' is a dead giveaway.
The Hebrew Bible’s oldest chapters– Genesis, Exodus, and even Judges purport to discuss events thousands of years ago. The custom in Western biblical scholarship is to date Abraham to e.g. 2000 B.C. This dating is based on nothing more than counting generations (“begats”) backward and assigning an arbitrary number of years to each generation. In fact, Genesis is replete with myths and assertions of people living hundreds of years, and was only historicized in this way by 19th century positivists.
But here is proof that the Bible was written late and projects later developments into the distant past: it alleges that people had domesticated camels four millennia ago in what is now Israel. And that assertion, folks, is simply not true. That is the finding of Sapir-Hen and Ben-Yosef.
E.g. Genesis 24: 64 says, “Rebekah lifted up her eyes, and when she saw Isaac she dismounted from the camel.” If this encounter happened circa 2026 BC, it was happening a thousand years before anyone was riding camels.
The archeologists’ digs near the Jordanian border find evidence of domesticated camels sort of 930-900 BC. But they don’t find that evidence in any settlements older than 930 BC. There is a pretty clear dividing line between the pre-domestic camel and post- domestic camel settlements.
Although it was likely based on previous oral tales, the Bible probably wasn’t written down in something like its present form until the Babylonian exile, 586-539 B.C. When those scribes reworked the folk tales of the Canaanites, they projected sixth-century BC realities back into the past.
Thus, they had characters riding camels before they were domesticated. Riding a camel was taken for granted in 580 BC.
The archeological evidence shows that not only weren’t people riding camels in the Levant when the Bible says they were, David and Solomon didn’t have a huge palace in Jerusalem in the 1000s and 900s BC. The Assyrians, the gossips of the ancient world, wrote down everything on their clay tablets. They knew events in the whole Middle East. They did not know anything about a glorious kingdom of David and Solomon at Jerusalem. Indeed, in the 1000s when David is alleged to have lived, Jerusalem seems to have been largely uninhabited, according to the digs that have been done. Jerusalem was not in any case founded by Jews, but by Canaanites in honor of the god Shalem, thousands of years ago. There is no reason to think anyone but Canaanites lived in the area of Jerusalem in the 1000s or 900s BC. Likely some Canaanites became devoted to Y*H*W*H in a monotheistic way during the Babylonian exile when they began inventing Judaism and becoming “Jews” and projecting it back into the distant past.
In short, those far right wing Israelis who use the bible stories as a basis for kicking Palestinians out of their homes in East Jerusalem are making many mistakes, including historical ones, as well as human rights mistakes.
And now a few insights from Biblical scholar, Lewis Black:
It always astounds me, Mound, how the fundamentalist's mind works. I was watching the local news tonight about an area barn that burned down. Fortunately, all of the livestock were spared. The farmer whose barn burned said something to the effect, "I'm sure God has a purpose in this."
ReplyDeleteNext, his wife spoke, saying, "God has been good to us. He didn't take any of the livestock."
While I do in fact believe in a transcendent reality, Mound, the fact that people in this day and age can think of God in such primitive and paternalistic ways frankly amazes me.
Fascinating article Mound and the video gave me many chuckles.
ReplyDeleteThe most frustrating aspect of trying to form an objective opinion on the Middle East and particularly the Israeli / Palestinian issues is the sheer volume of revisionist history decoys that are out there.
There are times when I come across information that runs so contrary to what has been regularly promoted in recent decades, it's hard to square it all.
In particular, the co-mingled history of the Lehi group, aka the Stern gang and Irgun. Still trying to absorb some of things I read about them recently.
As the two State issues continue to drag on, more people are becoming aware of things that I would think are not in the best interests of Israel for them to know.
God works in mysterious ways, Lorne, especially when He pulls off a 43-8 Super Bowl. I don't know if I even have a religious belief of any sort. I'm really not sure that mankind is adequately enlightened or remotely intelligent enough to wrestle with that question. On a galactic scale, Lorne, we might be just a couple of notches up from an amoeba.
ReplyDelete@ Anon. Have you read David Hirst's "The Gun and the Olive Branch"? I've always thought it one of the definitive treatments of 19th century Zionism and the forging of the state of Israel.
You are completely right that it's a subject that has been cloaked in so much myth as to blind most westerners.
God works in mysterious ways, Lorne, especially when He pulls off a 43-8 Super Bowl. I don't know if I even have a religious belief of any sort. I'm really not sure that mankind is adequately enlightened or remotely intelligent enough to wrestle with that question. On a galactic scale, Lorne, we might be just a couple of notches up from an amoeba.
ReplyDelete@ Anon. Have you read David Hirst's "The Gun and the Olive Branch"? I've always thought it one of the definitive treatments of 19th century Zionism and the forging of the state of Israel.
You are completely right that it's a subject that has been cloaked in so much myth as to blind most westerners.
I haven't read it Mound but found this from 2003 at the Guardian.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.theguardian.com/world/2003/sep/21/israelandthepalestinians.bookextracts
Will pick up a copy.
He was clearly smiting the Godless Coloradians.
ReplyDeleteWhen you were looking for medieval shortsightedness, why did you not add Bishop Ussher's creation date of October 23, 4004BC.
ReplyDeleteA little research into the Biblical texts comes up with the oldest text not being Genesis, Exodus or Judges, but Job.
In the first half of the 20th century the favorite game of the skeptics was to say the Bible was wrong because this city, that city or the other historical happening referred to in the Bible did not exist or happen. Usually after few more years an archeological dig or textual research found this city, that city and the other happening had existed or happened.
The Bible as we know it, was the result of a Church Council in about 400AD that perused all the know texts and decided some were in, some were out and some were debatable. The Apocrypha are the debatable ones. They are included in the standard Catholic version of the Bible and left out of the standard versions of the Protestant Bibles.
I have not paid much attention to the timelines in the Bible for 30 or 40 years, but many versions are available with timelines noted in them for each book's authorship and historical happenings. None that I remember put Abraham or Abram as old as 2000BC.
Hi, Anon. Thanks for the link. I was struck by Hirst's prediction that, eventually, America will find propping up Israel too much to bear and when that happens:
ReplyDelete"America would very likely discover something else: that the friend and ally it has succoured all these years is not only a colonial state, not only extremist by temperament, racist in practice, and increasingly fundamentalist in the ideology that drives it, it is also eminently capable of becoming an 'irrational' state at America's expense as well as its own."
@ Steve. Biblical scholarship is not my forte. I'll have to pass.