A Cup Of Tea
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I'm wondering about the Facts we shouldn't ignore.
I notice that this law is conditionally for the special case where one husband has children by two different women. It does not explain what should happen if he has two sons by the same wife. A law like this seems foremost to protect women and children from abuse and also men indirectly. That is generally what laws pertaining to women are for in the various chapters of Deuteronomy (I think).JaneQ said:The laws found in the Book of Deuteronomy were formulated (and likely one section was written down) during a later period of puritan reform, the realm of King Josiah of Judah (641-609 BCE). Took a quick scan. And I located one reference:If a man has two wives, one loved and the other hated,
and they each bear him sons, with the firstborn being from the hated wife,
then on the day when the man wills his legacy to his children . . .
he must nevertheless acknowledge as firstborn the son of the wife who is hated,
and give to this firstborn a double portion of all that he has . . .
since the right of the firstborn is his.
--Deuteronomy 21:15-17.
Its unclear exactly what happens. Central to the story of the rivalry between Joseph and Judah was the fact that Jacob loved Rebekah but married Leah first. The law (Deut 15 you mentioned) is meant to be read as a commentary on this very situation. Judah is the most eligible son of Leah that has not spoiled his birthright through bad behavior (except for his behavior towards Joseph son of the rival wife). Joseph son of Rachel who was thought to be dead 'comes back to life', and his brother Judah has wronged him making the birthright questionable. The way the Biblical authors/editors would have it the birthright should have gone to Judah, but this was before Moses judgments on these kinds of issues supposedly. It is a quandary is it not? Who should get the birthright in your opinion? The story incites you to ponder who it should be, and the Law hints at what you (as a Jew) ought to conclude ultimately -- that the situation was totally screwed up and never should have happened. It is a harmonious story regardless of whether the term Yahweh or El is used, the books Deuteronomy and Genesis working together as a unit."Giving of the blessing" in the Book of Genesis?
Yeah. It appears a father once had more latitude:
The Yahwist author has Jacob give his blessing to his fourth son, Judah.
The Elohist author has Jacob give the blessing instead to Joseph, the eleventh son.
Joseph's two sons were adopted by Jacob. This may not be the same thing as making Joseph the firstborn, though it could be similar. Joseph's sons had an Egyptian mother. Judah's sons had an Adullamite mother, Tamar who was also Judah's own stepdaughter! This happened because Judah's firstborn sons were so evil that the LORD struck them both dead for refusing to produce an heir. Judah's sons/grandsons Perez and Zerah were born out of order while Josephs were blessed out of order. The two stories worked closely together to yield the result that it was not who one's parents were that determined value, aka that slavery was wrong. In light of this it seems highly unlikely that we are talking about an Elohist author pasted to a Yawehist author.When the lands of Canaan were divvied up between Jacob's sons, it was Joseph (via his two sons, Ephraim and Manasseh) who received a "double portion" birthright of territories (the two richest territories, Ephraim and Manasseh).
there's no stable theory to explain exactly when and what.
All the various theories that he recounts have one thing in common: A Redactor. That there are often two threads and two copies of everything I agree, but combination of two or three other authors is not the only explanation for that. The redactor knows all, and we know nothing.Bobx said:My own private theory is that R is Ezekiel, from the “two sticks” prophecy (Ezek. xxxvii:15-28) where he writes “for Judah” on one stick and “for Joseph” on another, and joins them into one stick, as a sign that the two peoples will be re-united; I take the “sticks” to be J and E respectively.
I do agree with you that evolution leads to perfection.I like Bobx and note what he says here:
All the various theories that he recounts have one thing in common: A Redactor. That there are often two threads and two copies of everything I agree, but combination of two or three other authors is not the only explanation for that. The redactor knows all, and we know nothing.
From its beginning it was assumed that the Documents Theory would grow through evolution toward perfection, but who is to say whether this evolution of theory has the same talent as natural evolution since there is no risk, no survival test for the theory. Regardless of the mutation it lives on, because it will never lose its funding. As soon as someone disproves an aspect of it, they alter that aspect. It can do no wrong, no matter how wrong it is. It merely becomes increasingly complex.
As for parallel stories there could be many reasons for that. The Torah redactor even comments that the redundancy in a dream is the assurance that it is important. (Genesis 41:32), suggesting that the stories are purposely altered and copied. I've no doubt that there were cults competing with Ezekiel's Judaism, but there's nothing to force the conclusion that two or three primary documents have been welded together. It remains an idea, not a fact. Theologically, too, I who am just a layman have already shown that there are potential reasons that the author or redactor may have had for purposely including parallel stories of various shades. I can see uses for it increasingly. Huge complex theories appear before me evolving even now as I pluck away at their weaknesses.
That isn't what I personally believe, and it isn't what I said. (feathers ruffled) Thanks for your response, however.donnan said:I do agree with you that evolution leads to perfection.
It is an enticing stream of thought, yet I cannot see Hosea as that original. As I said when I read the Law I don't see a strictly contractual arrangement. We can theorize that the Law has been edited after the fact to become compassionate, but that isn't the same as knowing that it happened. Instead it appears that the Law was compassionate but that people ignored it until the prophets reminded them.Jane-Q said:In Aramaic, Jesus is quoting Hosea. Translated in Greek as "mercy," this could mean here, something like the "forgiveness of a debt" (canceling the debt). As opposed to the "satisfaction of a debt" (full payoff, correct sacrifice). But Hosea, above, is clearly reaching toward a new kind of non-mercenary, non-contractual relationship with God. A "charismatic" relationship. As was Jesus.
I don't think that Hillel is inventing moral ideas (or that Jesus is saying anything new). Hillel is drawing from the laws compounded by his personal knowledge of human behavior and from his sense of compassion & morality. The laws as I mentioned were celebrated, much as people in the US today will celebrate the US constitution. For us laws about interstate trade aren't just about money, because they have an idealistic dimension about freedom. The constitution is spiritual in other words. The Laws in Israel seem like they were like that only more so.There is something incredibly lovely about this endeavor of Isaiah and Hosea, of Hillel and Jesus. Don't you think?
Thank you very much for pointing these things out. I agree that the Documents theory has a lot of value having taught you so much. There's no clear demarcation telling us who wrote what with finality, however. We can have a theoretical author P if we like and it can be helpful in our studies. On the other hand it will also limit what we can learn if that help is taken as a kind of 'Seal of truth', keeping us from observing other possibilities.Dream. I personally would never have noticed such Scriptural connections, like the above, if I weren't on the lookout for the internal disputations going on, rampantly, within the Hebrew Bible. The Documentary Hypothesis is just one of many tools (this particular method being a very good tool, from my experience) for locating and making sense of these embedded theological arguments being made about what "genuine" Jewish Monotheism constitutes.
I think that charlatans who are in no short supply have made the Hebrew Bible seem overwhelming and infuriating. I've been overwhelmed and infuriated. The distinctions you mention are one way to study, and they can be helpful. There are other ways, too; and different things can be learned by different methods. I only wish to stress that the morality of the legal code is much better than is reputed in the Documents Hypothesis sector, and that could cause misunderstandings about when such & such developed or was added. It could be a very important oversight.But the Hebrew Bible is no more than an overwhelming (and sometimes infuriating) nest of contradictions if a person doesn't begin to make these kinds of distinctions.
Some examples of good intentions in the law: 1. concern for orphans 2. for single women 3. concern for the reputation of women 4. laws protecting privacy 5. laws upholding equality 6. laws to curb monopolyJane-Q said:explain that one to me with specific examples.
I should mention that you have based your model of Caananite priests upon your interpretation of Levitical priests and then in turn used your derived model of Canaanite priest to justify your view of Levitical priests. Isn't it possible that Hebrew laws pleased and naturalized the Canaanite peoples eventually uniting them into one? It seems a perfectly good explanation of things to me and would match certain symbolisms in the story of Israel's exit from Egypt, such as the way Moses serpent swallowed the serpents of the Pharoah's magicians. All I'm pointing out is that the extremely moral and progressive nature of the Levitical law could have been enough to create one people from several groups. I can't presume that Leviticus was immoral but that other Canaanite people adopted it anyway. I also just cannot see this particular set of laws coming from people who would slaughter all of their neighbors.What little scholars do know about polytheistic Temple rituals, is that priests were required to follow excruciatingly specific formulas in carrying out their rites. (Each polytheistic deity was pretty anal that way, in what he or she adamantly required of their "house servants," their Temple's priests.) .... It's just that Leviticus is virtually the only such document that scholars have in their possession to ponder over, i.e. its very existence as a written document being the only thing about it that makes Leviticus objectively all that valuable to scholars.
I'm actually jaded, and I'm being factual. It could have been a clan thing, but if so why do the laws of this clan naturalize other clans? I don't see this being added after the Babylonian exile, because it goes against the grain of Ezra and Nehemiah. Additionally the fact that Hebrews consider themselves to be slaves is very important. Slavery is very weak if you don't have different classes of people. You must think that some people are better than others, or your slaves won't stay enslaved. To say 'We are all slaves' is a bit anti-slavery I think. When do you suppose the story of their flight from Egypt become so widespread? Whenever that was, whenever the first pesach (passover) was, that is when most of the laws were probably written.Regarding "all people having value"? That's a clan thing. Don't be fooled by it, Dream.
There are scores of examples to the opposite. "When a foreigner resides among you in your land, do not mistreat them. The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself, for you were foreigners in Egypt. I am the LORD your God." (Leviticus 19:33) In what way is this impersonal?Even when its language seems to have a fuzzy-wuzzy quality to it, there is nothing about the Torah's legalisms that says "person to person"
Sorry about that confusion. I was referring to commodities and real estate laws. There are laws that prevent too much accumulation of land (laws of Jubilee and of inheritance limits). There are laws about tithing, where the tithe is used for priests but also to reduce poverty, and there are the laws about allowing strangers to pass through your field and eat along the way. There are laws about helping an escaped slave, and there are additional compassionate laws. The idea of limiting the accumulation of land is similar to our modern anti-trust laws.In Hezekiah's day there was no coin-money in the region. Coin-money first appeared in the Persian period, but was not commonplace till the Greek and Roman periods. A "shekel" was originally a weight of silver (56.8 grams), but could also refer to the weight of grain or the size of a herd animal.