Raksha said:
Well, yes...it *IS* an argument of post hoc rationalization [...]and patriarchal cover-up. All I said was that the post hoc rationalization and and patriarchal cover-up was relatively thin at that point, making it fairly easy for me to reconstruct or re-vision what Deborah's actual position must have been.
ok, but you presumably concede that therefore, it's more a matter of competing opinions - we both hope we are right about what deborah's actual position was, but i don't think either of us can assert with any degree of certainty that it "must have been".
What you DON'T have the right to do is imply there is no historical basis for my preference when there is.
i guess i am starting from a place where i have to be given good reason to believe that she was anything other than how she is traditionally portrayed and that reason has to include compelling textual evidence or reasoning, not just circumstantial historical and archaeological interpretation. otherwise, it's just as much wishful thinking as neo-traditionalists thinking that moses wore a black hat. that is partly because i don't subscribe to the "paternalist cover-up" school of thought (and i am by no means ignorant of the basis for this theory, i just don't find it convincing) and partly because i don't mistrust the chain of transmission, whereas you do both, as is your right. i have every right to question your thinking if i wish, just as you have every right to question mine.
What I DON'T know yet is whether you read [dauer's] post [about abraham] and whether or not you responded and if so, how you responded.
i haven't got involved on that thread because it got too theologically abstruse for me and it wasn't especially a subject i found interesting. i do have a job to do, you know!
Of course, you could argue that since Abraham represents a much earlier period in Jewish history and Deborah a later one (although still very early and pre-patriarchal), that it's likely true for him but not her.
umph - if i were to comment on it, i would say that it is abraham's recognition of the truth of monotheism that is his defining feature of importance to the tradition - it is hard to see what the point of him would be otherwise. if you look at his story, what is depicted is a man coming to terms with the ultimate, underlying reality that has interrupted his otherwise unexceptional life as the son of a well-to-do merchant in ur. if he isn't the first monotheist, what's the point of the story?
Okay, now for my value judgment: I believe Deborah and Yael were priestesses of the war-goddess Astarte, an early forerunner of the Matronit.
ok, but what is that actually based on in the text? what do they do or say that suggests this? if your argument is merely "they were important, assertive women and there were a lot of priestesses of astarte around at the time, therefore they must have been priestesses of astarte" then that's about as logical as saying because you live in chicago, you must be a big fan of barack obama.
I think more highly of them for it...although that Yael WAS a bit excessive in her treatment of Sisera.
i'm looking at their reported actions, not their beliefs. and, to be honest, if you look at the war goddesses patai talks about in THG and then shy away from a tentpeg through the head, then that seems kind of fainthearted to me (which surprises me) - these goddesses were not milquetoast, new-agey hippified sort of deities, they valued war, sacrifice and bloody victory, not sharing circles and silver unicorns. if you've seen "kill bill" you'll understand the sort of thing i'm on about here.
HUH??? Apostate??? I don't know what you're talking about, but it has nothing to do with me.
well, if someone jewish says "i'm not jewish any more, i don't believe in that, i'm a wiccan" they're an apostate. if they say "i've combined jewish stuff and wiccan stuff into a new sort of composite religious system", then, technically, they're a heretic. either way, they're still jews. and, actually, i don't see a problem with someone being a jewish "witch" per se as long as they work solely with Divine energy and are mindful of the honour of Torah.
I pointed out to her that "all the gods are one God, and all the goddesses are one Goddess, and both are ONE." I'm quoting a mythic fantasy novel here, whose title and author I forget.
it's not a statement i actually have a problem with.
You can be a very bad Jew, or an apostate Jew, and you can even be called "a traitor to Judaism" by your nearest and dearest, but if you have a Jewish soul you can no more change that than you can change the color of your eyes.
i'm not an essentialist in the matter of soul-structure, but i do believe it is very difficult to stop being jewish!
I think the only way you could ever stop being Jewish would be by descent to the depths of murderous idolatry like that Rabbi Yitzhak Shapiro who was the subject of your polemic.
i don't think he has stopped being jewish, in fact, but if you ask me, he needs to do pretty major teshuvah, possibly involving more than one future soul-transmigration and probably forfeits his portion in the World-to-Come into the bargain if he doesn't.
I will never compare my pain with anyone else's or try to tell anyone I had it worse, not unless they are so insensitive as to start the one-upmanship games on their own.
i'm not comparing it or playing one-upmanship, i'm trying to empathise!!
I'm sorry, but I'm not familiar with either of those analogies. I don't understand them. If I'm being compared with something, I'd at least like to know what it is!
well,
Elisha ben Abuyah - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - a "zaken mamre" is known as a "rebellious elder", ie someone knowledgeable who dissents from the rulings of duly constituted authority - there is a lot of discussion about what to do about such people whether they should be punished - or applauded!
incidentally, with my moderator hat on, i think all of you ought to dial down the rhetoric about thomas - you may not agree with him, but he has considerable knowledge, great integrity and in my view does an excellent job of defending his points of view whether i agree with them or not. i don't think this level of hostility is warranted and i advise you to proceed with caution. in particular i am going to ask the other moderators if that personal remark made by saltmeister should be removed.
b'shalom
bananabrain