http://dissidentvoice.org/ 2014/12/the-myth-of-abraham- and-americas-allegiance-to- israel/
The Myth of Abraham and America’s Allegiance to Israel
“We Ought to Support Israel because God Said So”
by Gary Leupp, Professor of History at Tufts University/December 23rd, 2014. Dissident Voice.
The Charm of Myth
Karl Marx once observed that ancient Greek art, rooted in Greek mythology,
still constituted for modern people “a source of aesthetic enjoyment
and in certain respects prevails as the standard and model beyond
attainment.” He asked: “Why should the social childhood of mankind,
where it has obtained its most beautiful development, not exert an
eternal charm as an age that will never return?”
(In
other words, even though Marx’s beloved Homer and Aeschylus were
products of a society long extinct, its slave-owning class structure
abhorrent to the modern mind, Greek myths still retain profound meanings
for us in the age of industrial capitalism. Sigmund Freud, who posited
the Oedipus and Elektra complexes, would of course agree.)
The story of Prometheus, for example, delighted the young Marx. Recall that Prometheus was the Titan who, having sided with Zeus and the gods of Mt. Olympus in the epochal battle with the other Titans at the dawn of time, later steals fire from Mt. Olympus and gives it to humanity. That, at least, is Hesiod’s account written about 700 BCE. In punishment for this generous act, Zeus and the other gods punish Prometheus by chaining him to a rock on a mountain in the Caucasus where an eagle visits daily to chew on his liver.
In his doctoral dissertation Marx declared this god “the most eminent saint and martyr in the philosophical calendar.” He quoted the words of Prometheus in Aeschylus’s play Prometheus Unbound: “In a word, I hate all the gods!” He interpreted Prometheus as a revolutionary boldly defying cruel, oppressive authority. I would say it’s a positive myth, promoting altruism and self-sacrifice.
The story of Prometheus, for example, delighted the young Marx. Recall that Prometheus was the Titan who, having sided with Zeus and the gods of Mt. Olympus in the epochal battle with the other Titans at the dawn of time, later steals fire from Mt. Olympus and gives it to humanity. That, at least, is Hesiod’s account written about 700 BCE. In punishment for this generous act, Zeus and the other gods punish Prometheus by chaining him to a rock on a mountain in the Caucasus where an eagle visits daily to chew on his liver.
In his doctoral dissertation Marx declared this god “the most eminent saint and martyr in the philosophical calendar.” He quoted the words of Prometheus in Aeschylus’s play Prometheus Unbound: “In a word, I hate all the gods!” He interpreted Prometheus as a revolutionary boldly defying cruel, oppressive authority. I would say it’s a positive myth, promoting altruism and self-sacrifice.
The ancient Chinese myth of the winged “thousand-li
horse” who gallops too swiftly for any man to mount, has been embraced
by the North Koreans (in the form of Chollima) as a symbol of rapid
economic development. I have no problem with this myth either.
I don’t really have a problem with the ancient Sumerian myth, as found in the Epic of Gilgamesh,
in which the gods are so annoyed with human noisiness that they decide
to wipe them (and all other life) out by a global flood. Fortunately the
god Ea warns the righteous man Utnapishtim about what is going to
happen and orders him to build a huge boat. Utnapishtim does so, and has
his relatives and craftsmen, and “all the beasts and animals of the
field” board the boat. Seven days and seven nights of rainfall follow.
The boat lands on Mt. Nimush. When the rains end Utnapishtim sends out a
dove to search for dry land; the bird returns. But the third bird
dispatched does not return, signaling that the crisis is over.
Sound
familiar? It is surely an early version of the myth of Noah and the Ark
(Genesis 6:5-8:14), which is at least 1000 years younger. (The earliest
Sumerian references to the flood myth appear during the Third Dynasty
of Ur, ca. 2100-2000 B.C.) The biblical myth differs significantly in
adapting the story to a monotheistic framework and making the issue
human sin as
opposed to boisterous clamor. The myth causes one to think about human
vulnerability to natural disasters, and has of course been the
inspiration of much western art and cinematography.
Dangerous Myths
But
the Hebrew version includes a spin-off myth that is not so charming.
This is the myth of Ham, one of Noah’s three sons, who after the Flood
receives his father’s curse. Noah tells him that he (and by implication,
his progeny) will be enslaved by his brother Shem (Genesis 9:20-27).
Why?
Because Noah–“the first to plant the vine,” introducing wine to the
world–was found passed out drunk and naked in his tent by Ham, who told
his brothers, who covered Noah with a cloak. When Noah sobered up and
realized what had happened, he (for some reason) declared that Ham will
henceforth be “the meanest slave” of his brothers Shem and Japheth.
For
centuries many Jews and Christians believed that all the world’s
peoples were descended from these three brothers, who supposedly with
their wives repopulated the planet beginning around 4300 years ago.
Japheth was seen as the father of Europeans, and maybe some others;
Shem, the father of Semites, and maybe Asian peoples in general; and
Ham, the peoples of Cush, Put and Sheba among others–which is to say,
black African peoples (Genesis 10:6-7).
The
Jewish Midrash texts (composed from the fifth through fifteenth
centuries) explained that the curse of Ham only applies to eldest son
Cush and his descendents in sub-Saharan Africa. Among Muslim thinkers,
the Persian Muhammad ibn Jaririr al-Tabari (839-923) and the famous
North African world-traveler Ibn Khaldun (1332-1406) both repeated this
myth linking Han to black slaves (although it doesn’t appear in the
Qu’ran and plainly enters Islamic lore via medieval Jewish tradition).
For
centuries the myth helped justify the traffic in African slaves of both
Jewish and Muslim merchants in the Islamic world and beyond. (Some of
these were referred to as Zanj–as in “Zanzibar”–and rose up in a great
revolt around Basra in the ninth century.) By the early
nineteenth-century, in the U.S.A. the Ham myth was part of the standard
arsenal of arguments in support of slavery. It strikes me as a bad myth. It’s hard to think of one more pernicious.
But
here’s another one: the myth of Samson, as we find in the Book of
Judges, chapters 14 through 16. Samson is the last of the “judges”
chosen by Yahweh (God) to lead his chosen people before the advent of
the monarchy. He supposedly lives around 1000 BCE, although this account
is composed maybe four centuries later.
You may know the story, if only from Sunday School, the 1949 Cecile B. DeMille film Samson and Delilah, recent novels by David Grossman and Ginger Gerrett, and countless artistic depictions.
Samson,
according the Bible, is born to a hitherto barren woman and her husband
after Yahweh appears to the woman in a dream and announces she will
have a son who will “start rescuing Israel from the power of the
Philistines” (Judges 13:5). (As you may know, the word “Philistine” is
related to the word “Palestine.”)
But she is to make sure that no razor ever touches his head; it becomes
clear that his long hair is the source of his superhuman strength. God
appears repeatedly to both husband and wife in dreams, and then in the
flames of an altar sacrifice (13:20). The boy is born, given his name,
and Yahweh blesses him.
This
boy Samson grows up to be an extremely violent man. He craves a
Philistine bride, refusing his family’s appeal that he wed a fellow
Israelite. (They don’t realize that “all this came from Yahweh, who was
seeking grounds for a quarrel with the Philistines, since at this time
the Philistines dominated Israel,” 14:4.) En route to her home near the
vineyards of Timnah, Samson is attacked by a lion that he tears apart
with his bare hands. He visits the Philistine woman and while returning
home revisits the lion carcass. He discovers that a swarm of bees has
settled inside it and produced honey. He takes some of this and presents
it to his parents.
He
contracts the marriage deal with the woman’s relatives, and arranges a
great wedding feast. He is given an entourage of 30 Philistines, with
whom he makes a sort of wager at the feast. He proposes that he give the
men a riddle, and if they can solve it within seven days he will give
them thirty pieces of linen and thirty festal robes. If they cannot,
they will have to give the same to him. They agree, and (alluding to his
recent feat, which he has kept secret) he asks them to explain this:
Out of the eater came what was eaten,
And out of the strong came what was sweet (14:14).
And out of the strong came what was sweet (14:14).
Unable
to solve the riddle, the men go to Samson’s new wife and threaten to
burn her and her father’s family to death if she doesn’t wheedle out the
solution to it from her husband. She does so, and an enraged Samson,
accusing the thirty of having “ploughed with my heifer,” goes on a
rampage. He kills 30 innocent Philistines, stealing their clothes to pay
the debt he’s incurred. When he returns with the loot, and the father
declares that in the interim he’s given his bride to another, Samson in
another rage incinerates the Philistines’ cornfields, olive orchards and
vineyards, using 300 foxes whose tails he sets on fire to achieve this
task (15:5).
Philistines
blaming the woman’s family for this disaster burn her and her relatives
to death. They ask the Israelites to turn Samson over to them for
punishment for the burning of their property, and the Israelites comply.
But Samson using the jawbone of an ass he finds on the roadside kills
1000 of them, escapes, spends a night with a Philistine prostitute in a
Gaza brothel, then destroys the gates of the town before leaving
(16:1-3).
He
then “falls in love” with another Philistine woman, Delilah. This
character has of course has long been a popular culture trope for the
back-stabbing woman (as for example in Tom Jones’ 1968 hit song
“Delilah.”)
Delilah
famously betrays Samson to the Philistines by telling them the secret
of his superhuman strength: his long hair. A barber shaves him while
he’s drunk; the Philistines apprehend, blind, imprison, and humiliate
him. But once his hair grows back Samson regains his strength and, when
called to appear in the Philistines’ banquet hall in Gaza, stands
between the pillars upholding it, pushes them apart and brings down the
building. He thereby kills 3000 revelers as well as himself.
It
is hard to find any redeeming quality in the story; it’s a celebration
of a Yahweh-supported terrorist suicide attack against a people who had
inhabited Canaan before the Israelites appeared on the scene. It
depicts in the most favorable light the Israelite man’s usage of
Philistine women to achieve God’s goal of destroying the Philistines to
“rescue” Israel from their presence in the land. If seen through a
modern lens, it’s a racist, misogynist celebration of egregious violence
against humans, animals (the poor foxes!), and trees (the incinerated
olive groves). It’s a horrible myth.
Military
analysts in Israel today use the term “Samson Option” to refer to the
use of Israel’s nuclear weapons in a future conflict. Perhaps some of
them actually believe the story actually happened, and think what Samson
did was totally cool. That should scare you.
And
then there’s the very mother of destructive biblical myths: that of
Abraham, and God’s vow to him that his descendants as the “Chosen
People” (Deuteronomy 7:6) would inhabit what came to be called (by
English Christians by the 1580s) the “Promised Land.” It is in some
communities a deeply beloved myth. But it is a myth, and it has been
used to justify intolerable cruelty.
A Comparison: the Japanese Creation Myth
Let
me suggest a comparable myth. The Bible myth of the Promised Land is
somewhat comparable to the Japanese creation story, according to which
the Japanese islands were created by the god Izanagi and his
sibling-consort Izanami, pacified by the grandson of the Sun Goddess
Amaterasu, and governed thereafter by his descendents, a line of divine
emperors unbroken from the dawn of time–or to quote the text of the
Japanese constitution in effect from 1889 to 1945, a line “coeval with
heaven and earth.” (Yes, the fundamental legal text of the country
asserted that the Japanese imperial line had existed from the very dawn
of cosmic time.)
For over six decades the official Japanese ideology of kokutai
(national essence), built upon this mythology, stressed the unity
between the state, the “pure” Japanese people, and the divine monarch
descended from the Sun Goddess ruling over the divine islands and
extending his benevolence to what for a time was called the Greater East
Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere. Is that disturbing?
The
myths as they appear in the eighth century chronicles seem harmless
enough. The primordial divine pair stands on the Floating Bridge of
Heaven, stirring the waters below with a bejeweled spear. As they raise
the spear, the brine dripping off it solidifies into an island. They
descend to the island, construct a phallic pillar, walk around it in
opposite directions, then meet and greet one another. The female Izanami
asks the male Izanagi how his body is formed. He explains that it’s
just as she sees, but there is a part formed to excess (his penis). He
asks her the same question; she replies that there is a part of her
formed insufficiently.
Izanagi
then casually suggests that they unite the extra part of him with the
insufficient part of her and thus “create the land.” She immediately
agrees. Their copulation produces two islands that they consider
failures. They return to heaven where a council of deities, consulting
with diviners, conclude that things went wrong because the female spoke
first.
They
pair are commanded to return to the island and try again. This time
they produce islands and all manner of things, mostly from their limbs.
But Izanami’s genitals burn as she gives birth to the fire-god and she
dies, winding up in the Land of Yomi, a type of netherworld. An enraged
Izanagi chops off the head of his newborn son, whose blood becomes
volcanoes. After visiting Yomi and trying in vain to return his now
maggot-ridden wife to the land of the living, Izanagi returns to earth
and bathes in a river to purify himself after exposure to great
defilement. He produces the Sun Goddess from one of his eyes and her
mischievous younger brother Susanoo from his nose.
Susanoo
gets expelled from heaven after hurling excrement around the palace and
throwing the skinned carcass of a pony through the roof, causing the
startled Heavenly Weaving Woman to ram her genitals against her loom,
dying on the spot. Susanoo descends to Japan, slays a dragon, and sires
80 sons, one of whom becomes Master of the Land. However, the Sun
Goddess decides to dispatch her grandson Ninigi to rule the land, and
Susanoo defers to her decision. (He is enshrined at Izumo as a reward
for this cooperation.) One of Ninigi’s grandsons, Jinmu, establishes his
rule from the southern island of Kyushu to the middle of the main
island of Honshu, supposedly in what in our calendar would be 660 BCE.
Charming
myths!–like the Hebrew ones. Absurd myths! But perhaps dangerous if
taken seriously, as they once were by tens of millions of devout Shinto
believers. For example: there was surely no unified state in Japan until
the late third century CE at the earliest; the 660 BCE date was
invented in the eighth century CE to make it appear that Japan was
unified before China. You might call it an early assertion of ethnic
superiority. And an assault on historical objectivity.
Of
the official list of Japanese emperors, ending with the current Akihito
(the 125th), at the least the first fourteen–with some reigns lasting
70, 80 or 100 years–are thought by serious scholars to be fictional. But
there was a time when the state promoted this mythology in the public
schools. And there was a time when Japanese historians refrained from a
scientific critique of the list, lest they be charged with the serious
crime of lèse-majesté (a variant of “heresy”).
Today,
few Japanese take the myths, with all their charming scatology and
unproblematic sexuality, seriously. (But you notice, whenever anything
pertaining to the Japanese imperial family is reported in the western
press, this idea that the imperial line dates back over 2500 years is
part of the routine, clueless coverage.) If religion constitutes belief
in immortal souls, deities, and an afterlife, Japan has become one of
the most irreligious countries in the world. The Japanese example shows
that it is possible for a sophisticated modern people to disabuse itself of its traditional mythologies!
If
the modern promotion of the Japanese myths in the service of
nationalism has been largely destructive, this is true with the myth of
Abraham too. The former posited a special relationship between the
Japanese, their land, their emperor and the gods that justified any
number of acts of aggression against neighboring peoples. The latter
posits a special relationship between God and the Jews that justifies
not only the existence of the present Jewish state but its actions
against its neighbors in what it inevitably describes as “self-defense.”
The Myth of Abraham
We
speak of the “Abrahamic faiths” as a positive phenomenon, because
belief in Abraham (whom Muslims call Ibrahim) shows common ground
between Judaism, Christianity and Islam. (Arab Muslims see themselves as
descendents of Ishmael, son of Abraham by his wife’s Egyptian slave
Hagar, half-brother of Isaac.) I suppose this common reverence for the
patriarch can in some instances be a unifying factor. But I think in the main the Abraham myth is dangerously divisive.
Why?
Because much of the U.S. public and political class believe it, and it
deeply influences their views of Israel. These views in turn assure
Israel of unlimited U.S. support, and cause the entire Arab and Muslim
worlds that are appropriately enraged at the abuse of the Palestinian
people to view the world’s only existing superpower with deep antipathy.
The decisive support for Israel in this country (which is often virtually unconditional)
is rooted among religious Jews who believe that God gave Israel to the
Jews, and among Christians who believe the same thing. But of these, the
Christians are by far more numerous. (Religious Jews only number about
1.7% of the U.S. population. If you add the non-religious Jews the
figure rises to 2.2%).
According
to a recent Pew Research study 82% of Protestant Christian evangelicals
(who believe that the Bible is “the Word of God” to be understood
literally) believe that God made this eternal gift to the descendents of
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. (Evangelicals as of 2007 accounted for about
29% of the U.S. population.)
One
must stress that only 40% of U.S. Jews believe this. That includes 47%
of self-defining religious Jews and just 16% of non-religious Jews. In
the U.S. general public, 44% believe it; among the Christian population,
55%. (But there are major differences between denominations; fewer than
40% of Catholics do.) Christians who literally believe the Bible are
unquestionably the driving force behind the routine UN vetoes, the
predictable Congressional resolutions, the ironclad votes for annual
Israel aid.
Many politicians are swayed by Christian Evangelical Protestant teachings. Texas governor and presidential candidate Rick Perry told the neocon Weekly Standard in 2009: “My faith requires me to support Israel.” He added that the very idea that a U.S. president would ask Israel to return to its 1967 borders “sent a chill” down his spine.
Many politicians are swayed by Christian Evangelical Protestant teachings. Texas governor and presidential candidate Rick Perry told the neocon Weekly Standard in 2009: “My faith requires me to support Israel.” He added that the very idea that a U.S. president would ask Israel to return to its 1967 borders “sent a chill” down his spine.
In May 2011 Sarah Palin addressed
the Republican Jewish Coalition where she acknowledged the religious
basis for her allegiance to the Jewish state: “I am convinced in my
heart and in my mind that if the United States fails to stand with
Israel, that is the end of the United States … [W]e have to show that we
are inextricably entwined, that as a nation we have been blessed
because of our relationship with Israel, and if we reject Israel, then
there is a curse that comes into play. And my husband and I are both
Christians, and we believe very strongly the verse from Genesis, we
believe very strongly that nations also receive blessings as they bless
Israel. It is a strong and beautiful principle.”
(For
those of you who need reminding, that verse is Genesis 12:3 and runs:
“The Lord said to Abram: ‘Go forth from the land of your kinsfolk and
from your father’s house to a land that I will show you. I will make of
you a great nation, and I will bless you; I will make your name great,
so that you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you and
curse those who curse you. All the communities of the earth shall find
blessing in you.’”)
Congressman Doug Lamborn, Democrat from Colorado, also invokes Genesis 12:3 to explain his deference to Israel. In other words, politicians from both parties believe God will curse the U.S. if it seriously challenges Israel to stop its illegal settlements, demands it withdraw from occupied lands, criticizes its attacks on its neighbors or withholds part of the $ 3 billion plus annual subsidy.
Congressman Doug Lamborn, Democrat from Colorado, also invokes Genesis 12:3 to explain his deference to Israel. In other words, politicians from both parties believe God will curse the U.S. if it seriously challenges Israel to stop its illegal settlements, demands it withdraw from occupied lands, criticizes its attacks on its neighbors or withholds part of the $ 3 billion plus annual subsidy.
Senator
Ted Cruz recently spoke before a conference on the plight of Christians
in the Middle East, and was booed when he referred to Israel as a
friend of the region’s Christians. “If you will not stand with Israel
and the Jews,” he retorted, “I will not stand with you” as he retreated
from the stage.
Republican
Senator from Oklahoma James Inhofe has unashamedly declared, on the
floor of Congress: “I believe very strongly that we ought to support
Israel, and that it has a right to the land, because God said so. In
Genesis 13:14-17, the Bible says: ‘The Lord said to Abram, ‘Lift up now
your eyes, and look from the place where you are northward, southward,
eastward and westward: for all the land which you see, to you will I
give it, and to your seed forever… Arise, walk through the land in the
length of it and in the breadth of it; for I will give it to thee.’ That
is God talking. The Bible says that Abram removed his tent and came and
dwelt in the plain of Mamre, which is in Hebron, and built there an
altar before the Lord. Hebron is in the West Bank. It is at this place
where God appeared to Abram and said, ‘I am giving you this land’ — the
West Bank. This is not a political battle at all. It is a contest over
whether or not the word of God is true.”
Or
listen to Senator Bob Menendez, Democrat from New Jersey: “…There is no
denying the Jewish people a homeland for which they have thousands of
years of history going back to Abraham and Sarah. And, if together we
continue to stand with Israel, Israel will have centuries ahead of that
reality.” Really? No denying?
Biblical
myth-based support for the Israeli Jewish settlers on the West Bank
runs deep in U.S. politics. To achieve a breakthrough–to encourage the
U.S. public and electorate to adopt a less knee-jerk, pro-Israel
position and to reasonably empathize with the reality of Palestinian
oppression; and to encourage a firm stance against illegal
settlement–one should focus on challenging the Christian Zionist mindset. This is more of a significant political phenomenon than (even) American Jewish Zionism and its coffers.
Challenging the Myth-Centered Mindset
But
how to challenge that mindset? It is hard; probably as difficult as
breaking someone from a drug habit. Religion is, as Marx put it, “the
sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the
soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium of the people.”
The
figure of Abraham figures prominently in Negro spirituals like “Rocker
my soul in de bosom of Abraham” that dates from at least the
mid-nineteenth century. Rock as in rock a baby in a cradle, to put the
baby to sleep. But how to wake people up? One option: try to promote
historical objectivity. Question the believer’s reasoning. Mention that,
according to the Old Testament timeline (as reckoned by the
seventeenth-century Irish bishop James Ussher) Abraham lived from around
1996 BC to around 1821 BC.
(While
“BCE”–“before the Common Era” has become standard terminology in the
historical field, alongside “CE” or “Common Era”–I recommend that you
use the traditional “BC” and “AD” if in dialogue with Christian friends
who might be put off by the now-standard academic terminology. They may
see the latter as a disparagement of the role of Christ in world
history.)
Mention
that the very oldest inscriptions in the Hebrew language such as the
Siloam Inscription date (only) to the 800s BCE. There are some passages
in the Old Testament (Tanakh) that may be older, written down originally
in a Canaanite script preceding both Phoenician and Proto-Hebrew. (The
Song of Deborah in Judges 5 may have been composed in the twelfth
century BCE. But the most prestigious scholars of Jewish history at
Israel’s Tel Aviv University, such as archeologist Israel Finkelstein,
believe that the Old Testament scriptures were for the most part written
from the seventh through fifth centuries BCE and that Abraham was a
fictional figure.)
So
there is a time gap of a thousand years between the time of the
biblical Abraham and the first written account of his life. Maybe
driving that point sharply home, repeatedly, might jar the consciousness
of some.
Of
course this doesn’t clinch the argument. The believer might say, well,
whenever the scriptures were written they were written by scribes under
the direction of the Holy Spirit. Or they can say, these stories were
preserved by oral tradition for a thousand years before they could be
written down (even though we know that oral traditions are never passed
down without alteration and embellishment over centuries). So end of
story.
Still,
even modest efforts to sow doubt can have a constructive impact
ultimately. You don’t kick an opiate addiction overnight. But therapists
can use various means to encourage withdrawal.
Summary of the Abraham Narrative
Sometimes
it’s good for the believer to hear a familiar Bible narrative
summarized matter-of-factly in modern language. That can sometimes
underscore the surreal nature of the story and sow slow-germinating
seeds of doubt.
So
let us review the biblical account of Abraham’s life. Abraham
(originally Abram) hails from Ur (Tell el-Muqayyar in modern Iraq), the
site of the Tower of Babel. This is where Yahweh (God) had created the
variety of human languages to thwart the then still monolingual human
race from building a structure that would reach heaven. (This is
probably an allusion to the Mesopotamian ziggurats that were first built
during the third millennium BCE, when there were surely many human
languages.)
Abram’s father
Terah forces his son, along with his (barren) wife Sarai, nephew Lot
and his entourage, the family flocks and an assortment of dependents to
depart for the land of Canaan. (This was more or less, modern
Israel/Palestine). They get as far as Haran, in what is today southern
Turkey, and remain there for a time. Terah dies there at age 205
(Genesis 11:32).
Abram
then receives a message from Yahweh, “Leave your country, your kindred
and your father’s house for a country I will show you” (Genesis 12:1).
Yahweh had spoken to people before–to Adam, Eve, Cain, Noah–but this is
the first time he speaks to Abram. He tells him that he will make of him
a great nation, bless those who bless him, and curse those who curse
him.
Having purchased
slaves and livestock in Haran (Genesis 12:5) Abram proceeds to Canaan,
proceeding “stage by stage” to the Negev desert. At the “holy place at
Shechem” (today’s Tell Balata on the occupied West Bank) Yahweh speaks
to Abram again, saying “I will give this country to your progeny.” Abram
builds an altar to Yahweh there, and another in the mountainous
district east of Bethel, where he pitches his tent. (This is also
located in the central West Bank, where the illegal Jewish settlement
Beit El has been established.)
But
there is a severe famine in the region, so Abram and Sarai go down to
Egypt. (The text doesn’t say this, but the Nile River Delta was in
fact the breadbasket of the Mediterranean at this time. This narrative
anticipates Genesis chapter 42 in which Joseph’s brothers during a
famine also visit Egypt seeking grain.)
Arriving
in Egypt Abram tells Sarai that since she’s a “beautiful woman”
Egyptians might kill him but leave her alive (presumably as a
sex-slave?). So he urges her to tell people she’s his sister “so that
they may treat me well because of you and spare my life out of regard
for you” (Genesis 12:11-12).
Indeed
the Egyptian officials who receive these visitors find (the
65-year-old) Sarai beautiful and sing her praises to the pharaoh, who
takes her into his household. The pharaoh treats Abram well “because of
her” and awards him flocks, oxen, donkeys, cattle and camels, as well as
male and female slaves. But then severe plagues afflict Egypt
(anticipating the plagues we find in the myth of Moses and the Exodus
from Egypt we read about in the Book of Exodus), and somehow the pharaoh
realizes that this is divine punishment on him for housing Abram’s wife
as he had. (It’s not clear from Genesis 12: 15-20 what exactly the
reader is supposed to think about the relationship between the pharaoh
and Sarai.) In any case the Egyptian ruler orders the couple to leave
the country, allowing Abram to leave with all his new possessions.
Abram,
now rich in livestock, gold and silver acquired during the Egyptian
sojourn, returns to the Negev and then back to Bethel, accompanied by
his nephew Lot. The herdsmen of the two men fall to quarreling, and so
Abram proposes that the two separate to avoid such discord. Lot leaves
for the Jordan plain and settles in the town of Sodom (where there are
“great and vicious sinners against Yahweh,” Genesis 13:13). (This town
was likely located on the southern coast of the Dead Sea.) Yahweh then
again speaks to Abram, telling him to look around in all directions
because all the land he sees will belong to his descendants forever. He
orders him to travel the length and breadth of this land. Abram moves to
Hebron to set up his tent, and build yet another altar to Yahweh.
Meanwhile,
war breaks out among nine local kings, including the king of Sodom.
Sodom is looted and Lot and his people are carried off as captives.
Abram amasses a force from his own household–318 men–and tracks down
Lot’s people and their captors to a place near the city of Damascus (in
Syria). He defeats the enemy and recaptures all the goods and people
taken from Sodom. Approaching Sodom with Lot and the reclaimed captives,
he’s met in the Valley of Shaveh by the kings of Salem and Sodom.
Salem’s king Melchezedik, while not a kinsman of Abram, is described as a
“priest of God Most High.” He pronounces a blessing on Abram, and Abram
gives him one-tenth of the loot from his victory. On the other hand,
when the king of Sodom asks Abram to return the retrieved people to him
but tells him he can keep the goods for himself, Abram refuses to take
anything lest it be said that the king of Sodom had made him rich
(Genesis 14:24).
Later,
Yahweh appears to Abram again and promises him a “great reward.” Abram
asks–since he remains childless and has no offspring–what great reward
Yahweh could give him. God tells him to look up at the night sky and see
the multitude of stars; his own descendants will be as numerous. He
tells him that his descendants will be enslaved and oppressed for 400
years (a clear reference to the tale of the enslavement in Egypt between
the generations of Joseph and Moses in Exodus chapters 1 through 13),
and declares that he will give to the descendants of Abram all the
territory between the Nile and the Euphrates Rivers (Genesis 15:18).
Then
Sarai suggests to Abram that, since they have no children and she is
way past childbearing age, he sire a child by Hagar, a slave girl she’d
acquired in Egypt. Abram agrees. After Hagar conceives, she takes on
airs. Her “mistress [counts] for nothing in her eyes” anymore. An
indignant Sarai protests to her husband who tells her to treat the slave
as she sees fit. Sarai abuses Hagar so badly that the pregnant woman
flees into the desert, where an angel of Yahweh assists her, assuring
her that her descendants will be too numerous to be counted, and that
her son (who should be named Ishmael) will be a “wild donkey of a man”
at odds with his kin (Genesis 16:12). Hagar returns to Abram’s tent and
gives birth. Abram is at this point 86.
(For
what it’ s worth, the Qur’an describes Ishmael [Ismail] more positively
as “a keeper of his promise, and he was a messenger, a prophet. He
enjoined upon his people worship and almsgiving, and was most acceptable
in the sight of his Lord.” See Sura XIX: 54. This depiction of course
is set down at least 1200 years after Genesis was composed and over two
and a half millennia after the events it purports to depict.)
Thirteen
years later, God speaks to Abram again, promising to make him the
father of “many nations” and conferring the entire land of Canaan to his
posterity. He tells him he is changing his name from Abram to Abraham,
and Sarai’s name to Sarah. He informs Abraham that he will sire a son by
Sarah (now 90). Abraham laughs incredulously.
Yahweh also
orders him to circumcise the flesh of his foreskin and to do the same
for all the males in his household. “That will be the sign of the
covenant between myself and you” (Genesis 17:17:12). Those who refuse to
submit to this procedure are to be cut off from his people. Abraham
personally circumcises all the men of his household, including slaves
“bought from foreigners.” (This practice, of African origin, most
commonly applied as an adolescent rite of passage, probably passed into
the Levant from Egypt some centuries before the Greek historian
Herodotus mentions it in his fifth century work.)
Soon
afterwards, according to the Bible story, while sitting outside his
tent on the hottest day of the year, Abraham is approached by three men
who turn out to be angels. They tell Abraham, as Sarai listens in the
tent, that she will have a son by the following year. She, too, laughs.
Yahweh later asks Abraham–since all things are possible with Yahweh–“Why
did she laugh?” Sarah, participating in the exchange (and “lying
because she was afraid”), denies having laughed. But God replies to her:
“Oh yes you did” (Genesis 18:14-15). Neither she nor Abraham are
punished for their laughter, however.
The
three strange men depart for the town of Sodom, and Abraham accompanies
them part way. Yahweh tells Abraham that he is “going down” to Sodom
and Gomorrah to see whether or not the people’s actions are as evil as
reported. (In other words, the three angels are an investigative team.)
Fearing that God will wipe out all the residents of Sodom, where Lot
lives, Abraham appeals for him to relent if there are 50 righteous men
in the town. Yahweh agrees, and even agrees when Abraham proposes a
minimal figure of just 10 righteous men.
The
three angels arrive in Sodom where Lot insists on hosting them in his
home. But the young and old men of the town surround his house and cry
out for him to send out the men so that they can have sex with them.
(This is of course the origin of the term “sodomize.”)
Lot
begs the mob to back off, offering his two virgin daughters to them
instead of the men (see Genesis 19:8-9). This proposal fails and the men
of Sodom attempt to storm the house to bugger the angels. The angels
however avert the assault by blinding the attackers. They urge Lot and
his family to flee for their lives, and not to look back as they run.
God rains down fire and brimstone on the town, killing everyone. Lot’s
wife as she flees forgets the angels’ counsel, looks back and turns into
a pillar of salt.
(It
is unclear in Genesis why she was punished in this way. The Midrash
explains that Sodom was a town especially hostile to outsiders, and that
Lot’s Sodomite wife opposed his kindness to the strangers. When Lot
sought to offer salt to his guests–along with unleavened bread, staples
of Middle Eastern hospitality– she declared that she had none.
Therefore, Yahweh turned her into salt.)
When
Abraham is 100, and Sarah 90, she gives birth to Isaac. She again asks
that Hagar be expelled from the household, along with her son Ishmael.
Abraham agrees, and sends them into the desert of Beersheba where they
nearly die of thirst. When their water jug runs out, Hagar places
Ishmael under a bush for shade. Not wanting to see him die, she walks
away anguished by his cries. (Following the chronology, he should be
around 15 at this time, although you get the impression he’s still an
infant. Some commentators suggest that there are some editorial problems
here.)
Yahweh
hearing his cries asks Hagar what’s wrong. She explains her plight and
he causes a well to appear. (Abraham and King Abimelech later sign a
covenant that includes this well as part of Abraham’s property.) God is
with Ishmael (Genesis 21:20), who grows up in the desert, becomes an
archer, and marries an Egyptian woman whom his mother finds for him.
Yahweh
again speaks to Abraham, suddenly demanding that he offer his son Isaac
as a human sacrifice to himself. Abraham without asking any questions
sets about the task. He prepares a sacrificial altar on a mountain
(believed by many to be the Temple Mount in Jerusalem). As he is about
to slit his son’s throat, God commands him to stop. He has passed the
test, showing absolute obedience. “All nations,” Yahweh declares, “will
bless themselves by your descendants as a reward for your obedience”
(Genesis 22:18).
Shortly
after this Sarah dies at age 127. Abraham buys a plot of land for her
burial, from the sons of Heth the Hittite in Hebron. (Some identity this
as the Tomb of the Patriarchs.) Abraham then sends his chief steward to
Upper Mesopotamia, where his kin still live, to find a wife for Isaac.
The steward goes to a well intending to choose the first young woman
willing to serve him and his donkey water. This turns out to be Rebecca,
a great-grand-niece of Abraham. She returns with the steward and
becomes Isaac’s wife, mother of Esau and Jacob (whom Yahweh eventually
renames “Israel”).
Abraham
remarries, and has six more sons by his new wife Keturah, and more by
concubines. All the latter are sent east. He dies at age 175 and his
sons Isaac and Ishmael bury him alongside Sarah in Hebron.
Rational Questions
The
unusual events here–which you will perhaps agree stretch normal
credulity, and require ”faith” to be taken seriously–include the talking
with God, the visits from angels, the fire and brimstone on Sodom and
Gomorrah, the miraculous appearance of a well in the desert of
Beersheba, and the turning of Lot’s wife into a pillar of salt.
About the first, the believer can say either “God did talk directly to people back then,” or “The communication wasn’t literally
talking, but psychic communication.” Or you might hear, “God talks to
people now too, in different ways.” (To the latter you can reply that
lots of mentally ill people claim to hear God talking to them. But I’m
not sure that’s the best or most useful argument in this context.)
Ridiculing
the aspect of Abraham’s chats with God won’t be effective. Nor will the
question of the existence of angels. You can point out that angelic
beings appear in many world religious texts (I think of ashuras
in Buddhism, and similar beings in Zoroastrianism) but your Christian
friend will likely say, “See, that just strengthens the case that they
exist!”
You
can question the story that Yahweh punished the people of two towns for
their sins by raining down fire from the sky. (And you might note sadly
that the story of Sodom and Gomorrah and the townsmen’s supposed
inclination to sodomize visitors has been used historically to justify
the vicious executions of gay men.)
But
if you say the story’s a myth, that it never happened, you’re likely to
hear about the 2008 Fox News story about how “scientists” have
concluded that it was probably an asteroid that did it. Certainly the
believer can say that the event described in Genesis 19 really happened and that there’s scientific evidence
for the means God used to make it happen! As for why a woman might turn
into salt during an asteroid attack–well, I suppose someone can devise a
theory about that too.
No,
it’s not good enough to just point out that these stories seem as
fanciful as Greek or Hindu or Norse myths–although that should be said
and emphasized. There has to be more.
You
can point to the implausible life spans. The Book of Genesis indicates
that Abraham was a descendent of Noah’s son Shem, who died at age 600.
Here then is his supposed linear ancestry, with the ages of his
ancestors when they died:
Shem (600)
Arpachshad (465)
Cainan (460)
Shelah (433)
Eber (464)
Pelug (239)
Reu (239)
Serug (230)
Nahor (148)
Terah (205)
Arpachshad (465)
Cainan (460)
Shelah (433)
Eber (464)
Pelug (239)
Reu (239)
Serug (230)
Nahor (148)
Terah (205)
These
are supposed to have lived between around 3000 and 2000. But the
archeological record for the Neolithic Middle East suggests that the
great majority of people only lived into their 30s. (See Mark N. Cohen
and George J. Armelagos, Paleopathology at the Origins of Agriculture, 1984.)
If there has ever been a discovery of human bones thought to belong to
someone dying after 200, I think it would have been front-page news. But
again, the believer can say, radiocarbon data is all a hoax. Maybe even
something designed by Satan to challenge faith.
One
could point out that the biblical references to Abraham’s camels (as in
Genesis 12:17 and 24:10) don’t square with archeologists’ conclusion
that camels didn’t actually appear in the region before around 900
BCE. In the end you want to ask–having perhaps planted a little doubt
here or there in your Christian Zionist friend’s mind–should this
ancient story really shape your attitudes towards things happening in
the Middle East today?
What’s Likeable about Abraham?
Then finally there’s the question of the mythic figure’s character.
One could ask the believer: Why does he deserve your reverence? He is
hardly a compassionate Jesus-prototype. (In the much later Muslim
tradition as reflected in the Qu’ran, however, he is actively
compassionate.)
In
the Old Testament, Abraham is a slave-owner. He buys people or receives
them as gifts from a pharaoh and king. He is married to his
half-sister, and whether that is right or wrong (or whether it was
either before Yahweh set down the Law to Moses, as found in Leviticus
18:9 and Deuteronomy 27:22, supposedly written by the thirteenth century
BCE–although one must repeat the Hebrew written language did not exist
until 500 years after that time) he repeatedly presents her in public as
his sister rather than his wife. He does so thinking men coveting her
might kill him and make her their own. (This is obviously the literature
of a society in which women had little agency and were at the mercy of
violent men.)
Twice
Abraham accedes to Sarah’s stays at royal courts where she is
vulnerable to rape, even as he accepts gifts from her hosts. In both
instances he profits when the host realizes the marital relationship and
is terrified to discover Abraham’s closeness to Yahweh. Twice Abraham
banishes the slave-girl Hagar from his tents into the desert, once while
pregnant with his own child, and again–with the boy–after Ishmael is
born.
What
are we, as we read the Bible, supposed to imagine Yahweh found so
exemplary about this man from Ur, such that he would, in his infinite
wisdom, decide to make his descendents eternal rulers of the land of
Canaan?
The
fact that he cared enough about his nephew Lot to go to battle to
release him from captivity? The fact that he remonstrated with his holy
self in arguing against the annihilation of Sodom? Because those are the
only two (possible) instances of moral courage that I see in these
Bible stories about Abraham.
Or
does he–one should ask the true believer–deserve your reverence because
of his quiet, automatic acceptance of Yahweh’s command that he
sacrifice his son Isaac as a burnt offering? (You might raise at this
point the whole concept of burning animals, including people, in
different religious traditions, and “offering” them to deities as though
they somehow needed them in order to be happy or placated.) Or that
he’s willing to personally cut off the foreskins of all the males in his
household? Is his moral integrity best reflected is his willingness to
obey what he thinks is the voice of God–even so far as to cut his son’s
throat and immolate the body?
Maybe
the Christian Zionist should be asked that question. And maybe also be
asked: Is your willingness to support the modern state of Israel–as it
offers countless Palestinians as sacrificial lambs to its Bible-based
vision of “Eretz Yisrael” rooted in “faith”–compatible with reason and
morality?
(The
Palestinians, you should know, also trace their ancestry to Abraham
through Isaac, who buried Abraham at Hebron alongside his younger
brother Isaac. And it is very likely that many Judeans who remained in
Roman Judea after the Diaspora converted to Christianity by the fourth
century and/or to Islam after the seventh century Arab conquest. In
other words, if bloodline is so important, shouldn’t these descendants
of Jews who lived in Judea at the time of Christ have as much right to
the land as European Jews with their rich admixture of Gentile blood?)
Or
does your faith in the myths of Abraham, the Chosen People and Promised
Land trump such considerations as apartheid, Palestinian property
seizures, brutal attacks on Gaza and Lebanon that Israeli officials
positively boast about as “disproportionate,” laws against Israeli-Arab
married couples living in some housing developments, and the culture of
racism that results in half of Israel’s Jewish high school students
opposing the presence of Arabs in their midst?
Are you really willing to embrace that sort of racism, based on your religious faith in what–you must surely realize–is a view of history that many reasonable, thoughtful, informed, well-educated people seriously dispute?
Are you really willing to embrace that sort of racism, based on your religious faith in what–you must surely realize–is a view of history that many reasonable, thoughtful, informed, well-educated people seriously dispute?
*****
Of
course I have no real “faith” in this approach. The situation is grim.
Ignorance and irrationality prevail. The “History Channel” to its
eternal shame markets Bible tales as “history.” Even National Geographic
capitalizes on religious gullibility. It’s easy to do in a country
where 60% of the people believe in the charming myths of Noah and the
ark, and the parting of the Red Sea.
Still,
just as the first step in overcoming a drug addiction is to acknowledge
that there is a problem, the first step in overcoming the Abraham
myth–and associated delusions stemming from religion, the opium of the
masses–is to recognize it for what it is.
It
is not a question of religious intolerance. (I am happy to accept my
octogenarian Japanese mother-in-law’s naive acceptance of Shinto myth,
although should she start to deploy it to–say–justify a Japanese attack
on Chinese territory I would have to say, “Don’t you realize this is all
nonsense”?) In world history, few things have proven more destructive
than religion in the service of aggression. But that’s what the myth of
Abraham is all about, in the minds of Israel’s U.S. Christian allies:
the justification of Zionist aggression.
Those
serious about challenging the default-mode Israelophilia that pervades
U.S. policy ought, in my humble view, to hone in on this myth–this
fountainhead of racism, colonialism, and messianic End Times
craziness–and challenge it at every turn, urging their deluded friends
to wake up.
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