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6.1 Israelites

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Title: 6.1 Israelites


1
6.1 Israelites
  • BOT612 Old Testament Backgrounds

2
Introduction
  • "Politically speaking Israel played a minor role
    in the history of the ancient Near East. Its
    diminutive territory, no more than one hundred
    miles from north to south, and fifty miles form
    east to west, allowed it no great political
    ambition. But in the history of religion its
    contribution was unique. The Old Testament stands
    as a monument to the religious genius of this
    people, and remains the major source of
    information concerning the rise and fall of the
    Israelite nation." Schwantes, 156

3
Patriarchs
  • The 480 years of 1 Kgs 6.1 has its lower end
    fixed at the fourth year of the reign of Solomon,
    for which a date of 967 B.C. seems probable. This
    figure, and the 430 years of Ex 12.40, together
    places the descent into Egypt at about 1877 B.C.
    This date should not be considered exact, since
    some small leeway must be allowed for the dating
    of Solomons reign, and the figures of 430 and
    480 may themselves be round estimates. Bimson,
    J. J. "Archaelogical Data and the Dating of the
    Patriarchs," Essays on the Patriarchal
    Narratives, eds. D. J. Wiseman A.R.Millard, pp.
    85-6

4
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5
Patriarchs
  • This dating scheme places Abraham's life almost
    entirely before 200 B.C., and therefore in MB I
    part of Isaac's life, before his move form
    Beer-lahai-roi to Gerear (cf. 25.11 and 26.1), is
    also allowed to fall within MB I, before the
    depopulation of the Negeb. It is tempting to
    speculate that the famine which drove Isaac from
    the southern Negeb to Gerar was part of the
    change in conditions which led to the
    depopulation of the Negeb as a whole at the end
    of MB I. Jacob's life after his return from the
    household of Laban falls satisfactorily within MB
    II. Bimson, 86

6
Customs and the Patriarchal Age
  • 1. The practice of granting a birthright, that
    is, additional privileges to an eldest son, is
    mentioned several times in the patriarchal
    narratives (Gen 25.5-6 25.32-34 43.33 49.3-4
    cf. 48.13-20) and was widespread in the ANE . . .
    . The double portion, well known in texts from
    the Old Babylonian to the Neo-Babylonian period,
    is clearly found in the OT only in Deut
    21.15-17. Selman, M. J. "Comparative Customs
    and the Patriarchal Age," Essays on the
    Patriarchal Narratives, eds. Millard Wiseman,
    pp. 135

7
Customs and the Patriarchal Age
  • 2. In Gen 25.23, the Hebrew term for the eldest
    son is not the usual rekor but rab, which is
    used here only in this sense. The cognate
    Akkadian word, rabu, is also used by itself of
    the eldest son, but so far has turned up only in
    tablets of the mid-second millennium, from Nuzi,
    Alalah, Ugarit, and Middle Assyria. Since the
    texts from Babylonia and those of the
    Neo-Assyrian period use different terminology,
    such as aplu(m) rabu(m) (eldest heir) or
    maru(m) rabu(m) (eldest son), it appears that
    this biblical datum has some chronological
    significance. Selman, 135

8
Customs and the Patriarchal Age
  • 3. The alteration of a mans inheritance
    prospects was never subject to a father's
    arbitrary decision, whether it involved the loss
    of the birthright privilege or total
    disinheritance, but was brought about in every
    case by serious offences against ones own
    family. Thus Reubens sexual offences against his
    fathers concubine (Gen 35.22 49.3-4) can be
    linked with behaviour of similar gravity
    elsewhere, such as taking legal action against
    ones parents, the usurping of a fathers
    authority, or the despising of ones parents.
    Selman, 135-136

9
Customs and the Patriarchal Age
  • 4. A mans ability to sell inherited property is
    documented at different periods in the ANE,
    though at the present time no clear case is known
    of an eldest son who, like Esau, sold either his
    inheritance or his rights to an inheritance.
    Selman, 136
  • 5. While the inheritance relationship between
    Abraham and Eliezer may find its explanation in
    Prv 17.2, the examples of adoption of slaves, and
    the specific case of the OB letter from Larsa
    (where it is suggested that a man without sons
    could adopt his own slave), are also very
    apposite to this situation. it is precisely the
    custom of the adoption of ones slave that is
    found only in the Larsa letter and in Gen 15.
    Selman, 136

10
Customs and the Patriarchal Age
  • 6. The adoption of Ephraim and Manasseh by their
    grandfather (Gen 48.5) may be compared with a
    similar adoption of a grandson at Ugarit.
    Furthermore, the phrase, they are mine (Gen
    48.5) is almost identical to the usual ANE term
    adoption formulae, as found for instance in the
    Laws of Hammurapi para. 170. Selman, 136
  • 7. The custom of bearing upon the knees has
    frequently been interpreted as an adoption
    rite.... The practice is mentioned five times in
    the OT, of which three references occur in the
    patriarchal narratives Gen 30.3 48.12 50.23
    Job 3.11-12 Isa 66.12 A study of all these
    reveals no clear connection with adoption,
    however, an impression which is confirmed

11
Customs and the Patriarchal Age
  • by similar references in two Hurrian myths and
    several Neo-Assyrian blessings. Rather, both the
    biblical and extrabiblical passages have
    associations with birth, name-giving,
    breast-feeding, and fondling of a child, and seem
    to indicate some kind of recognized welcome or
    acceptance of a newborn child into the family
    which could be carried out by parents,
    grandparents, or great-grandparents. Selman,
    136-7
  • 8. The gift of a female slave as part of a
    dowry, a practice mentioned three times in the
    patriarchal narratives, is well known in the ANE
    at various periods. If the marriage proved to be
    infertile, the husband normally took matters into
    his own hands,

12
Customs and the Patriarchal Age
  • but on certain occasions, the wife was able to
    present one of her slavegirls, sometimes
    specially purchased, to her husband to produce
    children for their own marriage. The parallels to
    the biblical references (Gen 16.1-4 30.1-13) for
    this rare custom are found so far in the
    Hammurapi Laws, and in single instances from Nuzi
    and Nimrud. In each case, the authority over the
    children resulting from this union belonged not
    to the slavegirl who bore them but to the chief
    wife. Selman, 137

13
Customs and the Patriarchal Age
  • 9. A fathers prohibition forbidding his
    prospective son-in-law to take a second wife in
    place of his daughter is found regularly in
    marriage contracts, as well as in Labans
    covenant with his son-in-law Jacob (Gen 31.50).
    Selman, 138
  • 10. Since the function of Bethuel in the
    arrangement of his daughters marriage is rather
    ambiguous (Gen 24), one should not the several
    instances in the Old and Neo-Babylonian periods
    where a marriage was arranged by the brides
    brother, either by himself or together with their
    mother. Selman, 138

14
Customs and the Patriarchal Age
  • 11. The description of adultery as a great sin
    by the Philistine king Abimelek (Gen 20.9 cf.
    26.10) is known also at Ugarit and in Egyptian
    marriage contracts of the first millennium B.C.
    Selman, 138
  • 12. Certain oral statements were accompanied by
    recognized rituals and ceremonials which
    functioned as legal safeguards. These included
    the grasping or correct placing of the right
    hand, and actions of this kind may be seen as the
    legal background of Jacobs adoption and blessing
    of his grandson (Gen 48). Selman, 138

15
Customs and the Patriarchal Age
  • 13. The use of the phrase (a4kal kesep in the
    complaint of Labans daughters may be compared
    with the Akkadian equivalent (kaspa aka4lu),
    which is used five times in marriage contracts at
    Nuzi for the withholding of a dowry which was
    normally taken from the husband's marriage
    payment. Selman, 138

16
Patriarchal Age Critical Scholarship
  • 1. ...while the stories may reflect a rural and
    pastoral setting, they do not suggest a
    pre-settlement form of nomadic life. Van
    Seters, Patriarchs, IDBSup, 646
  • 2. The presence in the patriarchal stories of
    such features as camels and Philistines has been
    regarded in the past as an anachronism which
    updated the original stories. But these
    features would appear to be far more numerous
    than could be covered by such an explanation.
    They call into question the whole scholarly
    search for parallels with the second millennium
    and suggest instead that the traditions were
    largely molded by and for the social and
    religious community of a later date, including the

17
Patriarchal Age Critical Scholarship
  • period of the Exile. Van Seters, Patriarchs,
    IDBSup, 647

18
Dating the Exodus Period
  • 1. First half of 13th Century
  • 1.1 "Among Biblical scholars and archaeologist
    it is almost axiomatic that the Israelites
    entered Canaan about 1230-1220 B.C. In terms of
    archaeological periods, this would be towards the
    end of the Late Bronze Age, for which the GAD is
    1550-1200 B.C." Bimson Livingston, "Redating
    the Exodus," BAR, (Sept/Oct, 1987), 40
  • 1.2 "But while the exact dates can be set for
    neither events exodus/conquest, we may be
    fairly certain that the exodus took place no
    earlier than the thirteenth century....If

19
Dating the Exodus Period
  • Hebrews labored at Avaris, then they must have
    been in Egypt at least in the reign of Sethos I
    (ca. 1305-1290), and probably of Ramesses II (ca
    1290-1224), under whom the rebuilding of that
    city was accomplished. On the other hand, if the
    destruction of various Palestinian cities late in
    the thirteenth century is to be connected with
    the Israelites conquest, as many have believed,
    the exodus from Egypt must have taken place
    perhaps a generation before that." Bright, A
    History of Israel, 3rd ed., 123

20
Dating the Exodus Period
  • 2. Arguments for 13th Century
  • 2.1 The Israel stele of Merneptah indicates that
    Merneptah encountered Israel in Palestine in his
    fifth year, ca. 1220. La Sor Hubbard Bush,
    Old Testament Survey, 125-126
  • 2.2 Ex 1.11s store cities of Pithom and Raamses
    fit into Rameses IIs building program, therefore
    ca. 1300.
  • 2.3 Edom and Moab (Num 3-2014-21) did not exist
    until ca. 1300. Also the sites of Lachish,
    Bethel, Hazor, Tell Beit Mirsim and Tell
    el-Hesis destruction seems to call for a 1300
    date.

21
Dating the Exodus Period
  • 2.4 Egyptian documents of Merneptah and Rameses
    II period provide historical parallels, like
    Apiru as slave.
  • 2.5 Joseph setting then becomes the Hyksos
    period.

22
Dating the Exodus Period
  • 2.5 According to Gen 1513, the time spent in
    Egypt, viewed in prospect, would be 400 years, or
    according to Exod 12.40, in retrospect, 430
    years. Thus, if the Exodus occurred in the first
    half of the thirteenth century, the descent into
    Egypt would have taken place during the first
    half of the seventeenth century - in the Hyksos
    period. The principal objection on biblical
    grounds is that this date does not fit the 480
    years that 1 Kgs 6.1 gives between the Exodus and
    the foundation of Solomons temple ca. 970. This
    calculation would place the Exodus in the
    mid-fifteenth century. However, the OT, as an
    ancient Near Eastern book, does not necessarily

23
Dating the Exodus Period
  • use numbers in the same way as modern
    chronology. Thus, the 480 years can be understood
    as an aggregate or round number, probably
    based on the total of twelve generations of 40
    years each. La Sor Hubbard Bush, Old
    Testament Survey, 127

24
Dating the Exodus Period
  • 3. Chronology from within the Book of Exodus
  • 3.1 The latest event mentioned in the book is
    Exod 40.1, 7 where the tabernacle is erected in
    the wilderness. This was on "the new moon of the
    first month of the second year following the
    departure.
  • 3.2 "The other end of the chronological spectrum
    remains unclear. This is due to the book's
    silence about the interval between the death of
    Joseph and the accession of the tyrannical
    pharaoh, and about the duration of the slavery.
    On these points there are divergent traditions.

25
Dating the Exodus Period
  • A comprehensive figure of 430 years is given in
    MT Exod 12.40-41, but LXX and Sam. Pent. include
    in this number also the length of stay in Canaan.
    According to Gen 15.13, the predetermined period
    of slavery was to be 400 years, which is said to
    cover four generations (Gen 15.16). This last
    tradition coordinates with the genealogy of
    Moses, who was the great-grandson of Levi, son of
    Jacob (Exod 6.1, 16, 18, 20) and more or less
    agrees with the notice that Joseph's
    great-grandson Jair, together with his sons,
    participated in Joshua's wars of conquest and the
    settlement of Canaan (Gen 50.23 Num 32.39-41
    Deut 3.14 Josh 13.1

26
Dating the Exodus Period
  • 17.1). The genealogies, therefore, leave room
    for no more than about a century or so for the
    entire Egyptian episode." Sarna, "Exodus, Book
    of," ABD, II, 690
  • 3.3 "Moses himself must have been born, of
    course, after the onset of Egyptian oppression,
    and he was eighty years of age at the time of the
    Exodus (Exod 2.1 7.7 Deut 34.7). This means
    that the enslavement of Israel lasted that long
    at least. On the other hand, it would have
    required many more generations than two or three
    for a mere seventy souls and their families to
    have proliferated security of Egypt (Exod 1.5, 7,
    9-10). At any rate, 19.1 and 40.17

27
Dating the Exodus Period
  • show that the bulk of the book encompasses a
    period of just about one year." Sarna, "Exodus,
    Book of," ABD, II, 690-691
  • 4. The Bimson/Livingston Redating
  • 4.1 "Move the date of the conquest back about 200
    years, to shortly before 1400 B.C. Although this
    conflicts with the GAD for Israel's emergence in
    Canaan, it is in fact the date implied by the
    Bible itself. In 1 Kgs 6.1, we are told that
    Solomon began building the Temple in the fourth
    year of his reign and that this was 480 years
    after the Exodus. Solomon's reign can be dated
    with considerable confidence to

28
Dating the Exodus Period
  • about 971-931 B.C., so the fourth year of his
    reign would be 967 B.C. According to the Biblical
    chronology, this would place the Exodus 480 years
    earlier - about 1447 B.C., or say 1450 B.C. for
    convenience. If we allow 40 years for the desert
    wanderings before the Israelite conquest of
    Canaan, we arrive at a date of about 1410-1400
    B.C. for the Israelite entry into Canaan. This is
    almost 200 years earlier than the GAD of
    1230-1220 B.C." Bimson Livingston, "Redating
    the Exodus," BAR, (Sept/Oct, 1987), 42

29
Dating the Exodus Period
  • 4.2 "...the reference to "Pithom and Raamses" in
    Ex 1.11 cannot be used to date the Exodus to the
    13th century B.C. Rather, the archaeological
    evidence makes best sense if Exodus 1.11 refers
    to the beginning of the Israelites' enslavement
    (in about the 18th century B.C.), and not to the
    time of the Exodus." Bimson Livingston, 34
  • 4.3 "We would suggest a change in the date for
    the end of the period archaeologists designate
    Middle Bronze II (MBII). We would move the end of
    MBII down by over a century from 1550 B.C. to
    around 1420 B.C." Bimson Livingston, 45

30
Dating the Exodus Period
  • 5. K. A. Kitchen's Objection to Bimson
    Livingston's Redating
  • 5.1 However, this too simple solution is ruled
    out by the combined weight of all the other
    biblical data plus additional information from
    external data. So the interval from Exodus comes
    out not at 480 years but as over 553 years (by
    three unknown amounts), if we trouble to go
    carefully through all the known biblical figures
    for this period. It is evident that the 480 years
    cannot cover fully the 553 X years. At best, it
    could be a selection from them, or else it is a
    schematic figure (12 X 40 years, or

31
Dating the Exodus Period
  • similar). But again, on other evidence to be
    considered, a date of ca. 1519 BC (966553) and
    earlier is even less realistic for the Exodus.
    Kitchen, Exodus, The, ABD, II, 702
  • 5.2 From Egyptian data, a bottom date for the
    Exodus can also be set. In his 5th year, 1209 BC,
    Merneptah (Rameses IIs successor) mentions four
    entities recently subdued in Canaan Ascalon,
    Gexer, Yenoam, and Israel by the hieroglyphic
    determinatives, clearly three territorial
    city-states and a people, respectively. The
    disposition of related reliefs at Karnak would
    confirm (in conjunction with the Israel Stela)
    the location of earliest Israel in that

32
Dating the Exodus Period
  • area later known as Ephraim and (W) Manasseh,
    Hence, the Exodus, the sojourn in the wilderness,
    and the entry into Canaan can reasonably be
    limited to within ca. 1279-1209 BC, a maximum of
    70 years or if within about 1260-1220 BC, very
    nearly 300 years before the 4th years of Solomon
    (966 BC). Kitchen, Exodus, The, ABD, II, 702

33
Egyptian Coloration of Exodus
  • Sarna, "Exodus, Book of," ABD, II, 697-8
  • 1. "The descent of the Israelite shepherds into
    Egypt in the days of Joseph in order to escape
    famine finds an analogy in Papyrus Anastasi VI,
    in which a frontier official reports on the
    passage of Edomite Bedouin tribes from Asia into
    the delta of Egypt 'to keep them and their cattle
    alive.'(ANET, 259)"
  • 2. "The title 'pharaoh,' uniformly used for the
    king of Egypt, points to the development that
    took place during the late 18th Dynasty when the
    term, meaning 'The Great House' and originally
    applied to the royal palace, came to be employed
    as a metonymy for the reigning monarch."

34
Egyptian Coloration of Exodus
  • 3. "The conscription of Israelites for work on
    state projects (Ex 1.1-10 correlates with the
    tradition preserved by Diodorus Siculus (1.56)
    that Rameses II preferred to conscript foreigners
    rather than Egyptians for his vast building
    program."
  • 4. "The Israelites are said to have built the
    cities of Pithom and Raamses (Ex 1.11). The first
    is the Egyptian P(r)'ltm, 'House of (the god)
    Atum,' and the second is P(r)R'mss, 'House of
    Rameses, built Rameses II in the eastern delta of
    the Nile. Egyptian texts extol the beauty and
    glory of this city (ANET, 470-471 cf. Gen
    47.5-6, 11)."

35
(No Transcript)
36
Egyptian Coloration of Exodus
  • 5. "The Israelites were also subjected to hard
    work in the fields (Ex 1.14). The Egyptian texts
    known as the 'Satire on the Trades' emphasizes
    the harsh conditions under which agricultural
    laborers worked (ANET, 433 AEL 1187-88
    2170)."
  • 6. "The making of bricks proved to be an
    especially onerous imposition on the Israelites
    (Ex 1.14 5.7-8, 13-14). Alluvial mud supplied by
    the river Nile and shaped into bricks was the
    common building material in Egypt, other than for
    monumental architecture. Ordinary private
    dwellings as well as administrative building were
    mainly constructed of bricks and often reached a
    height of about 60 feet. it is estimated that the
    pyramids

37
Egyptian Coloration of Exodus
  • of Sesostris III at Dahshur required about 24.5
    million bricks. The massive building program of
    Rameses II would have necessitated the
    manufacture of enormous quantities of bricks
    (Spencer 1979). Surviving records from the time
    of this pharaoh describe how a quota of 2000
    bricks was assigned to each of a gang of forty
    men and how that target was rarely reached
    (Kitchen 1976). The aforementioned 'Satire on the
    Trade' describes the hardship endured by the
    brickmakers (ANET, 433)."

38
Egyptian Coloration of Exodus
  • "The small building contractor carries mud... He
    is dirtier than vines or pigs, from treading
    under his mud. His clothes are stiff with clay
    his leather belt is going to ruin. Entering into
    the wind, he is miserable. His lamp goes out,
    though (still) in good condition. He pounds with
    his feet he crushes with his own self, muddying
    the court of every house, when the water of the
    streets has flooded." ANET, 433

39
Brick Making
40
Brick Making
41
Egyptian Coloration of Exodus
  • 7. "The midwives play a prominent role in the
    early phase of the oppression (Ex 1.15-21). The
    craft was evidently held in high esteem in Egypt,
    for in one Egyptian tale it was practiced by
    three goddesses (AEL 1220). The name Shiphrah
    held by one of the Hebrew midwives has turned up
    as belonging to an Asiatic woman in a list of
    slaves attached to an Egyptian household
    (Albright 195229, no. 233)."
  • 8. "Mention of the birth stool (Ex 1.16) appears
    to be connected with the Egyptian custom of women
    experiencing parturition in a crouching or
    sitting position. The Egyptian hieroglyph for
    birth is a kneeling woman, and one text
    explicitly refers to 'sitting on bricks like a
    woman in labor' (ANET, 381)."

42
Egyptian Coloration of Exodus
  • 9. "The story of the birth of Moses and his
    exposure in the Nile (Ex 2.1-10) reflects the
    widespread motif of the abandoned hero, known
    from the ANE and the classical world. A local
    Egyptian analogy exists in the story of the
    concealment of Horus from Seth."
  • 10. "The name of Moses (Ex 2.10) is of Egyptian
    origin and appears as a frequent element in
    proper name, usually with the addition of a
    divine element (cf. Ahmose, Ramose, Ptahmose,
    Thutmose), and sometimes without it (EHI, 329)."

43
Egyptian Coloration of Exodus
  • 11. "Although not explicitly stated, it may be
    inferred from Ex 2.10 that Moses grew up and was
    educated in Egyptian court circles. Evidence
    exists for the presence of foreign students,
    especially Semites, in the royal schools in the
    Ramesside period."
  • 12. "The promised land is described for the first
    time as 'a land flowing with milk and honey' (Ex
    3.8). This matches the description of the land
    found in the Egyptian tale of Sinuhe (ANET,
    18-23, and the Annals of Thutmoses III (ANET,
    237-38 Fensham 1966)

44
Egyptian Coloration of Exodus
  • 13. "The request of Moses to allow the Israelites
    a three-day release from their corvee labors in
    order to celebrate a religious festival (Ex 3.18
    5.1-3 8.22-25) follows established precedent as
    attested by extant records kept by the
    supervisors of labor gangs (Erman 1971124
    Kitchen 1975156-57)."
  • 14. "The exceptional role of wonder-working in
    the early Exodus narrative (Ex 4.2-5, 6-9
    7.8-12, 22 8.3, 14-15) must be viewed in the
    light of the extraordinary place of magic as an
    essential part of daily life at all levels of
    Egyptian society. The feat of turning rod into a
    snake finds analogy in the popular tale 'King
    Cheops (Khufu) and the

45
Egyptian Coloration of Exodus
  • Magicians' (Erman 196636-38). As a matter of
    fact, the snake as stiff as a rod is still
    practiced in Egypt and has been well documented
    in modern times (Mannix 196032). The specific
    selection of this trick in order to impress both
    the Israelites and the pharaoh and his court may
    have been conditioned by the ceremonial insignia
    of Egyptian monarchs. The rod, or scepter, was
    emblematic of royalty, power, and authority, and
    the uraeus, or stylized representation of the
    sacred cobra, was worn on the forehead by the
    pharaohs as a symbol of imperial authority."

46
Egyptian Coloration of Exodus
  • 15. "The turning of water into blood (Ex 4.9
    7.17-22) is mentioned in Egyptian compositions.
    'The admonitions of an Egyptian Sage' (ANET,
    441), and the story of 'Setne Khamwas and
    Si-osire' (AEL 3148) both refer to it."
  • 16. "The ninth plague, darkness (Ex 10.21-23),
    may be compared with mention of a similar
    phenomenon in the 'Prophecies of Neferti' (ANET,
    445)
  • 17. "Finally, the ten plagues are described as
    'judgments on the gods of Egypt' (Ex 12.12 cf.
    Num 33.4 Jer 46.25), a verdict early interpreted
    to mean that they were a mockery of Egyptian

47
Egyptian Coloration of Exodus
  • paganism (12.23-27 16.1-14 cf. Ex 10.2 Jud.
    48.5). Some of the plagues can be so explained if
    taken in a context of Egyptian religious beliefs.
    The Nile, the vital artery of the land, was
    personified as the god Hapi, and its annual
    inundation was regarded as a manifestation of
    Osiris. The first two plagues centered on the
    river and could certainly have been understood by
    the Egyptians as nullifying the powers of these
    two deities. The plague of frogs could well have
    been taken as mocking the frog goddess Heqt, who
    was fancied as assisting women in labor and who
    was the consort of Khnum, the one who fashioned
    human beings out of clay. The plague of darkness

48
Egyptian Coloration of Exodus
  • represented the defeat of the sun god Re, symbol
    of cosmic order. To the Egyptian mind, it would
    have evoked the powerful cosmogonic myth in which
    the monster Apophis, symbolic of darkness and the
    embodiment of all that is terrible, daily vied
    for victory over Re."

49
Conquest
  • Three Models
  • Nomadic Infiltration
  • Military Conquest
  • Peasant Revolt

50
Nomadic Infiltration
  • 1. This model was first developed by scholars
    such as Alt and Noth, and later modified by
    Weippert. It posits that the early Israelites
    were nomads or semi-nomads in a process of
    gradual sedentarization in the sparsely inhabited
    hill country. The settlement was a two-stage
    process.
  • They first entered the land in the process of
    changing pastures. Slowly they began to settle
    permanently in the sparsely populated parts of
    the country and extended their territory as
    occasion offered. The whole process began by
    peaceful means without the use of force.

51
Nomadic Infiltration
  • As the settlers increased in numbers, they
    gradually moved into the lowlands and came into
    conflict with the Canaanite urban centers.
  • This model views Joshua 1-12 as etiologically
    generated traditions with little historical
    value. Some cities such as Hazor and Bethel were
    destroyed by the Israelites as they moved into
    the lowlands, but the bulk of Joshua 1-12 is
    fictional.
  • 2. "This model emphasizes the uncoordinated
    movements of Israelites into Canaan from
    different directions and at different times. If
    there was such an exodus event, only a fraction
    of later Israel was involved."

52
Nomadic Infiltration
  • An early wave into the central western highlands
    by Reuben, Simeon, Levi, and Gad. These tribes
    were later displaced and declined in importance.
  • The penetration of the tribes of Ephraim,
    Manasseh, and Benjamin. This became the nucleus
    of the conquest story of Joshua 1-12. Those who
    had experienced an exodus from Egypt would have
    been among these groups.
  • Another group entering from the south through the
    Negev, probably from Kadesh. These group of
    tribes eventually consolidated in the form of
    Judah.

53
Nomadic Infiltration
  • 3. This model is based on an evolutionary
    assumption that nomads frequently penetrate into
    settled areas. First, it is in conjunction with
    seasonal movements, but gradually they take up
    more permanent settlement in unoccupied areas or
    seize land by force.
  • This model has been used to suggest a continuity
    between the Israelites and the Apiru who appear
    to be social outcasts and outlaws throughout the
    ANE.

54
Nomadic Infiltration
  • 4. Weippert further identifies the early
    Israelites with the Shasu known from Egyptian
    texts and reliefs dating from 1500-1150.
  • They were nomads who lived in tents and raised
    small cattle. The heart of their land was
    originally in southern Edom, but ranged as far as
    southern Lebanon and Syria.
  • He claims that internal and external population
    pressures of the thirteenth century led to such
    stress that the traditional nomadic economies
    were insufficient to feed the Shasu population.
  • They migrated to the Transjordan and also
    colonized the interior of Palestine. Moreover, the

55
Nomadic Infiltration
  • overpopulation forced them to convert from a
    pastoral economy to systematic agriculture.

56
Criticism Nomadic Infiltration
  • 1. First, the model's inability to demonstrate
    that Israel originated from outside the land. All
    evidence indicates that the early Israelites
    resembled their Canaanite neighbors in appearance
    and material culture.
  • If the Israelites are depicted on the reliefs of
    Merneptah's battle scenes, then the Israelites
    are portrayed the same as the Canaanites in
    appearance.
  • The Egyptian reliefs indicate the Shasu were
    distinct from the Canaanites in appearance.

57
Criticism Nomadic Infiltration
  • 2. Second, the model presents an inadequate
    understanding of nomadism.
  • Pastoral nomadism can no longer viewed as an
    evolutionary interval between hunting and
    gathering and plant cultivation societies. It is
    rather a marginal specialization of animal
    husbandry. No evidence of overpopulation, and
    "land hunger" is more characteristic of peasants
    than nomads.
  • The relationship between agriculturist and
    pastoralist was symbiotic. During the summer the
    pastoralist needs the stubble of the harvested
    fields for their flock, and the agriculturist in
    turn

58
Criticism Nomadic Infiltration
  • received manure to fertilize the fields for the
    next planting.
  • Early Israel appears to have practiced both
    pastoralism and agriculture.
  • 3. Third, the biblical traditions view the desert
    as hostile and alien where Israel needed God's
    assistance, not an idealized past.
  • 4. Fourth, this model was formulated before much
    archaeological work had been done in the hill
    country. The model does not adequately reflect
    the archaeology that has been done since.

59
Military Conquest
  • 1. This model was created in response to the
    nomadic infiltration model. Its main proponents
    are Albright, Wright, Bright, and Lapp. For them
    archaeology has vindicated the essential
    historicity of the narratives in Joshua 1-12 by
    demonstrating that numerous cities stated in the
    text to have been destroyed do in fact provide
    evidence of massive destruction.
  • Although Jericho, Ai, Gibeon, Arad pose problems
    because they provide no evidence of occupation at
    the time, the overwhelming evidence for the many
    other cities is decisive.

60
Military Conquest
  • Moreover, the destruction levels are followed by
    poor unfortified occupations.
  • There is also a large number of sites with new
    occupation or occupation that followed centuries
    of abandonment.
  • All this indicates a large group of uncultured
    foreigners-in other words, our nomad
    pastoralists-rapidly moving into Palestine in
    which the conflict with the Canaanites was
    primarily political.

61
Criticism Military Conquest
  • 1. This model has been challenged on its very
    assumption that archaeology could be used to
    verify the biblical texts, for archaeological
    data is inherently ambiguous. A destroyed city
    does not indicate the agents of destruction. Why
    must it have been the Israelites? Why not the
    Egyptians or the Sea Peoples, or even an
    accidental fire?
  • Massive destruction occurred in areas where
    Canaanites subsequently remained dominant and
    Israelites showed little interest in settling.
  • There application of archaeology to Joshua 1-12
    is selective. The evidence is mute for most of
    the text,

62
Criticism Military Conquest
  • and it is embarrassing with regard to Jericho,
    Ai, Gibeon, and Arad. Also added to list could be
    Kadesh-barnea, Hormah, Heshbon, Dibon, and
    Hebron.
  • Archaeology presents chronological problems in
    that not all the cities were destroyed during the
    same time period.
  • 2. This model insists that the material culture
    of early Israel would be intrusive into the
    Canaanite culture. But antecedents to the
    Israelite culture cannot be found outside
    Palestine. Instead, their culture is identical to
    the Canaanite culture four room house,

63
Criticism Military Conquest
  • collared rim jars, hewed cisterns-all of these
    have Late Bronze Age antecedents in Palestine.
  • 3. This model has been inconsistent and imprecise
    in conceptualizing Canaan, Israel and their
    mutual antagonism
  • Israel is usually viewed as a nation-state in
    contrast to the city-states of Canaan.
  • Prior to the settlement of the hill country
    Israel had no territorial definition.
  • Prior to central administration of the kingdom of
    David, Israel's poor,unfortified towns and
    villages attest to neither centralized political
    control nor

64
Criticism Military Conquest
  • extraction and redistribution of a significant
    economic surplus.
  • The nation-state is not a viable category for
    examining the history of Israel during this
    period.

65
Peasant Revolt
  • 1. This model was first put forward by
    Mendenhall. The Amarna letters-which refer to the
    internal struggles in Palestine caused by the
    Apiru and the biblical events represent the same
    political process namely, the withdrawal of
    large population groups from an obligation to
    existing political regimes, and therefore, the
    renunciation of any protection from these
    sources.
  • There was no statistically important invasion of
    Palestine no displacement of population no
    genocide no large scale driving out of the
    population, Canaanite city-states.

66
Peasant Revolt
  • This model suggests internal turmoil reminiscent
    of the Apiru during the period of Akhenaton. But
    in thirteenth century Palestine the catalyst for
    this movement was the exodus group A group of
    slave-labor captives who escaped from Egypt and
    made a covenant with Yahweh at Sinai. This exodus
    group espoused an ideology attractive to those
    who were oppressed in Canaan and who immediately
    joined them.
  • 2. This model has been subsequently amended by
    numerous scholars, but most influentially by
    Norman Gottwald.

67
Peasant Revolt
  • Mendenhall's "withdrawal of large population
    groups" was not physically nor geographically,
    but politically and subjectively. However, the
    geographical aspect should not be downplayed.
  • Many of the biblical texts suggest that the
    people of Israel were notable to conquer the
    cities of the plains until David's time.
    Therefore, early Israel had geographically
    removed itself from the Canaanite city-states by
    retreating into the wooded hill country.
  • The early Israelite settlements were in fact
    opening this previously uninhabited frontier.
    Credit should be given to several technological
    improvements-iron, rock terraces, lined
    cisterns-which made this

68
Peasant Revolt
  • achievement possible. Moreover, it should be
    recognized that such frontiers attract the
    socially disenfranchised.

69
Criticism Peasant Revolt
  • 1. This model has failed to demonstrate the
    existence of a true peasant's revolt in ancient
    Israel. In their development of this model, they
    have imposed modern idiosyncratic, especially
    Marxist, ideologies on ancient Israel.
  • 2. This model has been accused of applying a poor
    understanding of anthropological and sociological
    theory, particularly doctrinaire and outdated
    theories of cultural evolution.
  • 3. This model also lacks an awareness of
    Israelite geography, the status of current
    archaeological research, and a clear
    understanding of the Apiru.

70
Criticism Peasant Revolt
  • This model overemphasizes the uniqueness of the
    Israelite phenomenon. The early highland villages
    of Israel are identical to other highland
    villages outside of the land.
  • They are not connected to Israel's religious
    experience.
  • They do not represent an "egalitarian" society.
  • Technological innovations are given undue credit
    for the settlement process.

71
Monarchy
  • 1. Early Attempts at Kingship
  • 1.1 "The Israelite tribes prized their autonomy.
    When faced with military threats from Canaanite
    city-states such as Hazor (Judges 4-5) or from
    bedouin raiders such as the Midianites (Judges
    6-8), the Israelite tribes depended on military
    leaders who emerged in response to specific
    crises. It was in the aftermath of such a crisis
    (1 Samuel 8-10) that the first attempts at
    establishing a permanent form of leadership took
    place."
  • 1.2 Gideon (Jdg 8.22-23) Abimelech (Jdg 9)
    Ammonite threat (1 Sam 11) Saul (1 Sam 13-14
    31).

72
Monarchy
  • 2. David (1000-961)
  • 2.1 Abner Ishbaal (2 Sam 2.8), while David at
    Hebron (2 Sam 2.1-4, 11).
  • 2.2 Abner (2 Sam 326-27) Ishbaal (2 Sam 41-7)
    killed.
  • 2.3 David becomes King of a dual kingdom (2 Sam
    51-5).
  • 2.4 Establishing a capitol at Jerusalem (2 Sam
    56-12) bring in the Ark (2 Sam 6)
  • 2.5 Battles Philistines (2 Sam 517-25)
    Transjordanian kingdoms Arameans and extended
    Israel's frontier to the Euphrates (2 Sam
    1015-19) Edom (2 Sam 812).

73
Monarchy
  • 3. Solomon (961-922)
  • 3.1 Succession Narratives 2 Sam 9-20 1 Kgs 1-2
    (Adonijah 1 Kgs 1.5-8)
  • 3.2 "He protected the borders of his kingdom by
    peaceful relations with neighboring kings (1 Kgs
    31 51-6 111-3)."
  • 3.3 Building Projects Temple Palaces Megiddo,
    Gezer, and Hazor (1 Kgs 915-19).
  • 3.4 Taxation Forced labor ceded twenty cities
    in Galilee to Tyre to ease his financial problems
    (1 Kgs 910-13).

74
Monarchy
  • 4. Collapse of the David-Solomon Empire
  • 4.1 Rehoboam rejected at Shechem (1 Kgs 1216),
    while Jeroboam is chosen and established his
    capitol in Shechem (1 Kgs 1225).
  • 4.2 The Nature of the two kingdoms
  • South - stable dynasty, but poor economically
    with only about 200,000 people.
  • North Politically unstable, with 9 coups d'etas
    out of 19 kings in 200 years. A population of
    800,000 with much natural resources.
  • 4.3 Social stratification develops in both
    kingdoms.

75
Monarchy
  • 5. Period of Conflict (922-876)
  • 5.1 Jeroboam I (922-901) Dan Bethel, Levites
    (1 Kgs 1226-32).
  • 5.2 Egypt invaded the territories of the two
    kingdoms (1 Kgs 1425-28). Rehoboam builds
    frontier fortifications (2 Chr 115-12).
  • 5.3 South Abijah (915-913) Asa (913-873)
    Aramean support against North.
  • 5.4 Nadab (901-900), coup Baasha (900-887)
    Elah, assassinated (877-876) Zimri (876) Omri
    (876-89)

76
Monarchy
  • 6. Period of Cooperation (876-842)
  • 6.1 Omride Dynasty
  • 6.1.1 Omri Propserity "He sealed the alliance
    with the marriage of his son Ahab with Jezebel,
    the daughter of Ethbaal, king of Sidon. Omri
    ended 50 years of fruitless conflict with Judah
    by giving his daughter Athaliah in marriage to
    Jehoram, the heir to the throne of the S
    kingdom."
  • 6.1.2 Ahab (869-850) Battle of Qarqar Baalism
  • 6.1.3 Ahaziah (850-849) Jehoram (849-842)

77
Monarchy
  • 6. Period of Cooperation (876-842)
  • 6.2 Jehoshaphat (873-849) - Prosperous
  • 6.3 Jehoram (849-842) executed members of his
    family and court (2 Chr 214). Edom rebelled
    causing Judah to lose its control of the King's
    Highway.
  • 6.4 Ahaziah (842)

78
Monarchy
  • 7. Revolution Its Aftermath (842-786)
  • 7.1 Jehu (842-814)
  • Lost treaty with Tyre Judah
  • To avoid Arameans, he rushed into a treaty
    relationship with the neo-Assyrian empire under
    Shalmaneser III.
  • Problems with Hazael, king of Aram
  • 7.2 Jehoahaz (815-801)
  • 7.3 Joash (801-786)
  • 7.4 Judah Athaliah (842-837) Jehoash (837-800)
    Amaziah (800-783)

79
Monarchy
  • 8. Period of Prosperity (786-746)
  • 8.1 Jeroboam II (786-721) "The rejuvenation of
    the N kingdom that began with Joash reached its
    apex during the forty-year reign of Jeroboam II.
    Both Joash and Jeroboam were able rulers and
    their combined 56 years on the throne were a time
    of territorial expansion and economic success."
  • 8.2 Judah Azariah/Uzziah (783-742)
  • 8.3 Jotham (742-735)

80
Monarchy
  • 9. The Fall of Israel (746-721)
  • 9.1 Ahaz (735-715)
  • 9.2 Israel Zechariah (746-745), assassinated
    after 6 months.
  • 9.3 Shallum (745) deposed after 1 month
  • 9.4 Menahem (745-738) became a vassal of the
    Assyrians who required that he pay a heavy
    tribute to keep his throne (2 Kgs 1519-20).
  • 9.5 Pekahiah (738-737) continued the policy of
    submitting to the Assyrians, but is therefore
    assassinated by Pekah.

81
Monarchy
  • 9.6 Pekah (737-732) "Pekah put aside old
    animosities and joined Aram in an anti-Assyrian
    coalition. They tried to enlist Judah but failed.
    The coalition collapsed before Assyrian military
    power." He is then assassinated by Hoshea.
  • 9.7 Hoshea (732-722) "Hoshea did not remain a
    compliant vassal to Assyria . . . . Upon hearing
    of Tiglath-Pileser's death in 724, Hoshea began
    negotiations with Egypt to secure its support for
    a revolt against Assyria. When Hoshea made his
    move, Shalmaneser V, the new Assyrian monarch,
    easily swept Israel's army aside. After a three
    year siege, the Assyrians destroyed Samaria,

82
Monarchy
  • incorporated what remained of the N kingdom into
    the Assyrian provincial system, and exiled many
    of Israel's leading citizens. By 721, the Kingdom
    of Israel ceased to exist as an independent
    nation."
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