Transcript Job
Religions of the
Middle East
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
Monarchy, Captivity, Diaspora, Job,
Afterlife, Rabbinic & Modern Judaism
First Midterm Exam
Tu 10/21 at 3pm to Tu 10/28 at 7pm
CEN 456 lab, Cottage Grove Center or
approved proctor
See syllabus for further details
The Monarchy
Under Judges Israel was a loose
confederation of tribes
Secular explanation: no united military
defense, no standing army
Religious explanation: God was punishing
them for worshiping idols
Saul
First King - tall, charismatic, good
commander, but insubordinate
Makes a sacrifice reserved for Levites
(Priests)
Botches the Amalekite genocide
Resorts to necromancy
Commits suicide, body mutilated, cremated
David
Good King, makes Saul look like a false
start
Promised an everlasting Kingdom, model
for the Messiah
Sin with Bathsheba results in personal and
political consequences
Samuel’s parable of the pet lamb
Solomon
Asks God for wisdom, given riches as well
Weakness for foreign women, builds
temples to their gods
Because of his Father, retains Kingdom, but
his son loses it
922 B.C. Israel split into Northern and
Southern Kingdoms
The Divided Kingdom
Secular explanation: Reheboam’s rash
threats, regional conflicts and resentment
over Solomon’s building projects
“My little finger is thicker than my father’s
loins!”
Religious explanation for split: God is
punishing Solomon for idolatry
Successive Conquest
The Split of the Kingdom into the Northern and
Southern Kingdoms in 922 B.C.
Israel falls to the Assyrians in 722 B.C.
Judah falls to the Babylonians in 587 B.C.
The Babylonian Captivity
Successive Conquest
The Babylonian Captivity
Temple system and sacrifice less important
Emphasis on study of scripture and prayer on
Sabbath at local house of worship (synagogue)
Importance of Teacher schooled in Scripture &
Tradition (Rabbi)
Successive Conquest
The Persians Defeat the Babylonians, Jews
return to Judah, rebuild Jerusalem
The Greek Conquest and Maccabean Revolt
Hanukkah
Roman Rule
Rebellion and the Diaspora 70, 130 A.D.
The Holocaust and Restoration of Israel in
1948
Did God keep his promise to
David and Solomon?
Promised an “everlasting” kingdom
Conditional promise?
Later Jews (and Christians) came to believe
the promise would be fulfilled by a
descendent of David who would restore a
united Kingdom of Israel (the Messiah)
The Messiah
Hebrew for “annointed one”, sign of being
chosen by God, of God’s spirit, royalty
Military leader like the Judges who would
deliver Israel from their enemies and
establish an everlasting Kingdom
Developed over time as empire after
empire conquered Israel
The Babylonian Captivity
(587-538 BC)
No Temple, so no animal sacrifices
(afterwards less important)
Worship in private homes centered around
study of scriptures and prayer (become
Synagogue system)
Rising importance of a Rabbi (“teacher”) to
interpret scripture
Talmud Begins
The Afterlife in Early Judaism
(2000 BC - 538? BC)
The dead go to Sheol (“the grave”)
No conscious experience good or bad
Eternal rest unless you break God’s law and
conduct a séance (necromancy)
Later Judaism
538? BC to Present
Bodily Resurrection
Persian Zoroastrian Influence
Ezekiel’s Vision - Valley of Dry Bones
Questions about God’s Justice
Daniel 12:2 ONLY unambiguous reference
in entire Tanakh
Job
Early view: Punishment for sin
Later view: Test from God, Satan
Job
Why do bad things happen to good people?
Wager between God and Satan
Satan borrowed from Persians?
Only TWO other references in Tanakh
1 Chronicles 21:1, (cf. 2 Sam 24:1)
Zechariah 3:1-2
Is. 14:12-22 and Ezekiel 28:12-19 refer to the
Kings of Babylon and Tyre, not Satan
Why do bad things happen to
good people?
A test of our faith from Satan
We can’t hope to understand God’s ways;
we should just trust and obey
No corporate responsibility
Rejection of misfortune as a manifestation
of divine wrath? (Deuteronomy 28)
The Holocaust
The theme of Job writ large
6 million Jews killed, most in gas chambers
Garnered international sympathy
Israel made a nation after WW II without it?
Judaism
Meaning in History
God works through the Nation of Israel and the
Jewish people
Human problem = sin (willful disobedience to
God’s commands)
Solution: Concentrate on one group of people,
give commands and enforce them. Animal
sacrifices early on, later repentance only
Major festivals
Passover (Exodus celebration)
Shavuot (Pentacost - Law given 50th day after
Passover)
Sukkot (Wilderness Wandering - Tablernacles)
Purim (Saved from Persians by Esther)
Rosh Hashana (Jewish New Year)
Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement)
Hanukkah (Festival of Lights, independence from
Greeks/Seleucids)
The Talmud
Commentary on The Law
Theology, Demonology, Practical
Application (e.g. how to keep Sabbath)
Opinions of Rabbis from the Babylonian
Captivity on
Authoritative but not inspired
Four Branches of Judaism
Orthodox
Conservative
Reformed
Reconstructionist