Old Testament Brutalities
by alethoBy The Rev. Howard Bess | Consortium News | October 16, 2009
I
decided I needed to do a refresher on basic Old Testament material. I
reread the entire books of Leviticus and Deuteronomy. I doubt if many
folks have read these two documents, but they are in the Bible, so they
must be worthy of our attention.
The
material is not unfamiliar to me, but I was jarred anew at the
absurdity and the violence, that are contained in the two books. The Ten
Commandments and commands to love God and neighbor are found in these
writings, but they are not the central themes of the two books.
The
first portion of Leviticus lays out detailed instructions about the
slaying and burning of animals to appease and please God. Not exactly a
topic of current interest.
If
a sacrifice was properly executed, sins were forgiven and the odor of
the burnt meat was pleasing to the nostrils of God. Other portions of
Leviticus describe how priests practiced health care and what a woman
must do to become “clean” after giving birth to a child.
The
last chapters are known as “The Holiness Code” and describe the details
of the life that is acceptable to God. Blasphemy is out. Sabbath
keeping is in. Permanent ownership of land is out. Keeping feast days is
in.
Slavery
is in. Men lying with men is out. Adultery is out, as is incest. Loving
your neighbor is in. Cloth woven with two different kinds of yarn is
out. Tithing is demanded. Loaning money for interest is out. Eating pork
is out.
Even
the most ardent Fundamentalist picks and chooses what to embrace and
what to reject from these ancient rules written hundreds of years after
Moses and hundred of years before Jesus.
Deuteronomy
has a different character. The book is a retelling of the basic
Moses/Law story with an emphasis on the blessings of obedience to God’s
law and the consequences of disobedience.
The
Ten Commandments are repeated and the details of the righteous life are
spelled out. Some items are redundant to Leviticus. Obedience to God’s
laws is a big concern, and long passages lay out the consequences of
disobedience.
In the 14th chapter the unbending nature of God’s law and the severity of punishment for disobedience are made plain.
“If
your brother, or your son, or your daughter, or your wife, or your
friend, who is as your own soul, entices you by saying ‘let us go and
serve other Gods,’ you shall not yield to him or listen to him, but you
shall kill him.
“You
shall take the lead and the hand of all the people shall join you. You
shall stone him to death because he sought to draw you away from the
Lord your God.”
This is dangerous material in the hands of a religious Fundamentalist. And another example:
In
the retelling of the story of the Israelites, the Deuteronomy writer
reports that the conquering Israelites entered Palestine from the south,
in obedience to the instructions of Jehovah God.
They “captured all the cities and utterly destroyed them and all men, women, and children. We left none remaining.”
This
report of violent destruction is repeated and the violence was
justified each time because they were taking land that had been given to
them by God. Never mind that people had been living there for
centuries.
As
I read about the strange rituals of Leviticus and the harsh, seemingly
senseless injustice and violence of Deuteronomy, I reacted strongly.
This does not describe the moral and ethical life that I embrace as a
follower of Jesus from Nazareth.
I
am not alone in my protest. Micah was a prophet who was contemporary
with the animal sacrifice system described in Leviticus. Micah was
outraged.
He
wrote, “With what will I come before the Lord? Shall I come with burnt
offerings? Shall I come with year old calves? Will the Lord be pleased
with ten thousand rams? The Lord has shown people what is good and what
he requires. Do justice! Love mercy! Walk humbly with your God!”
Jeremiah
and Isaiah also were protest prophets. They too were contemporary with
people who sought moral comfort through ritual and ignored justice in
favor of might.
It
is my understanding that Jesus was a prophet, who took up the mantle of
Micah, Isaiah, and Jeremiah, and carried the protest tradition of the
Bible in his own day.
In
2009, I have become wary of saying “The Lord’s Prayer” too many times,
of singing “The Star Spangled Banner” too many times, of reciting creeds
and confessions of faith too many times, of reciting the Pledge of
Allegiance too many times.
I
believe they deaden the very senses that are needed to make me a better
Christian, a better American and a better contributor to a more just
world. I cannot believe building a bigger, more effective military, that
can lose fewer of us and kill more of them, is the answer to a safer
world.
What should I read next? Revelation?
The Rev. Howard Bess is a retired American Baptist minister, who lives in Palmer, Alaska. His email address is hdbss@mtaonline.net.

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