Landmarks
We cross two big thresholds tonight. First, this is the 50th post of Michael Reads the Bible, an arbitrary distinction but one worth mentioning. More significantly, I have also now finished the Pentateuch, the first five books of the Bible that comprise the Torah.
Actually, there's three big landmarks if you include finishing Deuteronomy, but that's kind of implicit in finishing the Pentateuch.
Deuteronomy 26 - 34
If you've been following along, you will not be especially surprised by what happens in the final nine chapters of Deuteronomy. Moses finishes the long speech he has been making over the course of the book, and then, in the final chapter, dies.
The back end of the speech is pretty rhetorical in nature. Unlike last week, Moses doesn't add a ton of new law, but instead reitterates in a number of ways the importance of remembering and obeying the law that has already been established. He touches on the rewards that will come to the Israelites if they obey, but really goes on an on and on about the punishments awaiting them if they screw up. Threats and curses abound; these are not chapters to go to for the joyful side of Christianity. This is more along the line of the classic fire-and-brimstone preacher.
Here, I'll walk you through it.
Deut 26
Instructions on giving the offering of firstfruits and on titheing. If I am reading this right, the idea of the tithe is that you give a tenth of your produce or earnings for charity every third year. I'd never heard the "every third year" part before.
Deut 27
Moses tells the people that, once they have crossed the Jordan, they should create a stone alter and set up several large, flat stones, on which the law can is to be written. The idea, it seems, is to make the law both accessible to all and consistent. If it is literally set down in stone, anybody who has a friend who can read can go check on what it says any time; it won't change or be misremembered.
Once the altar is complete, everyone is to gather around for a long call-and-response chant. It is to go like this:14 The Levites shall recite to all the people of Israel in a loud voice:
15 "Cursed is the man who carves an image or casts an idol—a thing detestable to the LORD, the work of the craftsman's hands—and sets it up in secret." Then all the people shall say, "Amen!"
16 "Cursed is the man who dishonors his father or his mother." Then all the people shall say, "Amen!"
...and so on. For each of the acts of malice or disobedience chanted by the Levites, "then all the people shall say, 'Amen!'" (The passage would work really well as reggae lyrics, it seems to me.) They work their way through land fraud, deceiving the blind, oppressing the weak, sleeping with your mom, sister, mother-in-law, or livestock, murder, and so on. These are prohibitions, so it makes a certain amount of sense that they are couched in the negative, but this is an example of how punishment for the disobedient is stressed over reward for the obedient.
The function of this ritual is clearly the same as that of writing out the laws on a public monument: to make sure everyone knows the rules. The whole community is making a very visible show of buying in to the laws in this ritual; after all the people have said "Amen!" so many times, no one will be able to plead ignorance of the law, or to break the law unintentionally out of ignorance.
Deut 28
The first thirteen verses of this chapter promise extravagant rewards to the obediant, summarized like so: You will be blessed in the city and blessed in the country. (3) The final 54 verses lay out the punishments awaiting the disobedient: You will be cursed in the city and cursed in the country. (16) The punishments start as symetrical opposites of the blessings, but eventually get a little nuts, with loss of property, bad harvests, wayward children, boils, and women who plan ahead to eat their children when times get hard. It's gonna be bad.
This verse, and others like it, paint the Bible into a bit of a corner. The ratio of 4 parts punishment to 1 part reward sets a grim tone, for one thing, and doesn't do anything to inspire the mood of joyful worship that God is apparently, according to some passages, going for. But beyond that, we have millenia of history now to show that Moses' threats and promises, as recorded in Deut 28, were entirely bogus. Neither the success of nations in general, nor the fortunes of the Jews in particular through the ages, have had much to do with how faithfully they happened to be following the laws of Moses. As a giver of law, Moses has done an exemplary job, but as a literal prophet, he has done no better or worse than anyone else who has taken a crack at predicting the future.
[In all likelihood, incidentally, this was all written during or after the Babylonian captivity, by someone trying to advance a conservative religious agenda by blaming the fall of Israel's power on failure to obey God's laws. People have been playing that card for a long, long time.]
Deut 29
The Covenant, God's promise of a homeland for the Israelites, is a contract that has been signed and sealed at least a dozen times throughout the Pentateuch. In this chapter, it is reaffirmed, with Moses making sure everyone understands that they are individual parties to the contract. Every individual Israelite gets the benefit of the Promised Land, but must obey the laws in return.
Again, there are threats involved. Moses says that if the laws are disobeyed, God's punishment will be so brutal that people from other lands will travel to look at the devastation, and marvel at the destructive power that had been unleashed on the former Chosen People. The whole land will be a burning waste of salt and sulfur -- nothing planted, nothing sprouting, no vegetation growing in it. (23)
Individuals who reject the Covenant, meanwhile, will be subject to misfortune, disaster, and a multitude of curses, and thus the Bible again paints itself into a corner. Any adult who thinks that disaster and misfortune will fall disproportionately on people who ignore Biblical law needs to get out there and have some life experience. Or for that matter, read more of the Bible. Even in the context of Biblical literature, it is hardly the case that the bad things happen only to the disobediant people. Book of Job, anyone?
Deut 30
More about how the Israelites really ought to obey the law. In Verse 13, Moses "calls heaven and earth as witnesses" of the commitments that the Israelites have made to the law. He has given them a choice between the life of obedience and the death of rebellion, he says, and urges them to "choose life."
[There are a couple of passages in this verse about how, if the Israelites ever lose the homeland and get dispersed or taken into captivity or anything, God will get them back to the Promised Land eventually. More evidence peeking through that this stuff was written during or after the Babylonian captivity, much, much later than the events it describes.]
Deut 31
Joshua is appointed as Moses' successor. He is called to a meeting with God and Moses in the Tent of Meeting, where they have an extremely interesting conversation. "I already know that the people are going to turn against me and start worshipping foreign gods," says God. On that day I will become angry with them and forsake them; I will hide my face from them, and they will be destroyed. (17)
God teaches Moses and Joshua a song to teach the people, which describes his revenge against a people who become to successful and fail to follow the laws. The people will pass this song down from generation to generation, he says, so that several generations hence the song will still be around and people will understand from it why their situation is so terrible: God has forsaken them because their parents and grandparents screwed up.
Taken literally, this is pretty chilling reasoning on God's part. Even as he is about to lead the Israelites into the Promised Land, he is planning on sending them into exile from it in punishment for future crimes. [On the other hand, it makes total sense in the context of post-captivity rabbis trying to explain what went wrong.]
Deut 32
The song mentioned in the previous chapter. An angry, vengeful little tune.
Deut 33
Moses blesses each of the twelve tribes in turn. Actually, he praises the individual sons of Jacob, from whom each tribe is said to have descended. You can imagine each of the tribes roaring their approval in turn as he gets to "their guy." Give it up for Naphtali!
Deut 34
Moses dies at 120, in good health up to the end. He is buried in Moab, but to this day no one knows where his grave is. (6)
Looking Ahead
We've been with Moses for a long time, through Exodus, Leviticus, Number, and through the long, long speech of Deuteronomy. It seems like the Bible will almost HAVE to be different without him. Indeed, the very fact that the first five books are collectively considered the Pentateuch, the Torah, suggests that all books following them will be... something else. I honestly have only the vaguest notion of what happens from here, and I'm looking forward to finding out.
But, I also want to process the first five books in a more big-picture way than I've been able to so far. I haven't decided yet whether I want to do that before moving forward into the Book of Joshua, or to just keep moving so as to not lose momentum. I'll let you know.
Sunday, February 03, 2008
Deuteronomy 26 - 34: Curses!
Posted by Michael5000 at 2/03/2008 07:22:00 PM 1 comments
Sunday, January 20, 2008
Deuteronomy 22 - 25: In Which Moses Reads the Fine Print
Moses' long farewell speech continues....
In the next four chapters, Moses continues laying down the law. As I talked about last time, it makes a lot of sense that he would be thinking about law at this point, as the Israelites are about to make a huge lifestyle transition without him around to guide them through it. But whereas in the proceeding chapters, he was concerned with the large-scale issues of maintaining an egalitarian society in a new context, at this point he is getting down to the nitty gritty. Deuteronomy 22 through 25 is basically a list of laws, some new, some from the earlier books. I will summarize them for your convenience.
Deut 22
- If you see somebody's animal or property lying around, don't be a jerk: take it back to them. If you see somebody's animal in trouble, help it out.
- 5A woman must not wear men's clothing, nor a man wear women's clothing, for the Lord your God detests anyone who does this.
- If you take chicks from a bird's nest, you can't take the mother bird at the same time.
- Houses should have parapets, so nobody falls off the roof.
- Don't plant two kinds of seed in the same field.
- Don't put and ox and a donkey in a yoke together.
- Don't weave wool and linen together.
- Put tassels on the four corners of your cloak.
- If a guy tries to get rid of his new wife by saying that she wasn't a virgin, but her father can prove she was, he has to pay a hundred shekels and can never divorce her.
- However, if she really did have premarital sexual intercourse, the town should tie her up and throw rocks at her until she dies.
- Adultery: Both parties die.
- If a man has sex with an engaged woman in town, stone both of them to death. He is considered to have raped her, and she didn't shout for help.
- If it happens in the country, though, only the man gets stoned to death; it's assumed that she shouted for help, but nobody could hear her.
- If a man rapes a single girl, he has to give her dad 50 shekels and marry her with no chance of divorce.
- Marrying your father's wife is right out.
Three kinds people may not enter "the assembly of the Lord."
- Anyone who "has been emasculated by crushing or cutting."
(Ouch!)
- Those rotten Ammonites and Moabites.
- First or Second-generation Edomites or Egyptians.
- Keep things tidy in a military camp. Dig a latrine.
- Shelter fugitive slaves
- No shrine prostitutes in this religion!
- No charging interest on loans within the community (although you can feel free to stick it to foreigners).
- If you swear to God, you better follow through.
And then, another great "don't be a jerk" law:
- If you are in your neighbor's farm, you can pick a few grapes or kernals of grain, but don't start filling a basket or using your sickle. What were you, born in a barn?
Deut 24
- If a couple is divorced and one of them remarries, they can't remarry each other again.
- After a man gets married, he is exempt from military service for a year.
- You can't accept a millstone as collateral, because the miller's livelihood depends on it.
- Kidnapping and slaving of fellow Israelites is a capital offense.
- Don't mess around with leprosy. See a doctor!
- If you make a loan, don't be a jerk about claiming the collateral.
- Pay your employees' wages promptly.
- Parents and children can not be punished for each other's crimes.
- Aliens, widows, and orphans must receive equal protection under the law.
- Don't be overly thorough when harvesting; leave some produce in your fields for the poor to gather.
Deut 25
- Guilt or innocence is to be determined by the court, and the court will mete out punishment. No more than forty lashes may ever be given.
- 4Do not muzzle an ox while it is treading out the grain.
- If a man dies, his brother must marry the widow. If he doesn't want to, the town elders will sit down with him for a little counseling session. If he STILL won't marry her, this is what is in store for him:
9his brother's widow shall go up to him in the presence of the elders, take off
one of his sandals, spit in his face and say, "This is what is done to the man
who will not build up his brother's family line." 10That man's line shall be
known in Israel as The Family of the Unsandaled.
That will be a fun passage to remember next time you hear someone advocating a return to Biblical standards of morality. As will this one:
- 11If two men are fighting and the wife of one of them comes to rescue her husband from his assailant, and she reaches out and seizes him by his private parts, 12you shall cut off her hand. Show her no pity.
- Don't cheat people by using inaccurate weights and measures.
- And finally, don't forget that the Amalekites are a bunch of rotten bastards, and that God wants you not only to destroy them, but destroy their legacy so that they disappear from human memory!
NEXT UP: Blessings, Curses, Reggae....
Posted by Michael5000 at 1/20/2008 09:26:00 PM 0 comments
Sunday, January 13, 2008
Deuteronomy 14 - 21: Moses Lays Down the Law, Again
We rejoin Moses in the epic-length farewell speech that is the Book of Deuteronomy....
Deut 14
This week's reading starts like this: 1 You are the children of the LORD your God. Do not cut yourselves or shave the front of your heads for the dead, 2 for you are a people holy to the LORD your God.
...and right away we know we are back in the quirky world of Old Testament law. Over the next several chapters, Moses will do less general sermonizing, and focus more on the specifics of allowable personal and social behavior. And while much of this is review of law that were laid out in Exodus, Numbers, and Leviticus, there is some new material too.
In Chapter 14, for instance, there is a concise little review of dietary laws (yes: ox, mountain sheep, ibex; no: rabbit, screech owl, bat), followed by a call for tithing that as far as I can remember is new in its details. You are expected to put aside a tenth of your crops, and the firstborn of your animals, and take them to the central place of worship for sacrifice. But now that everyone is not going to be in the same camp, there's a bow to practicality: if you live a long way from the central place -- let's just jump the gun and start calling it "The Temple" -- you can sell your tithe close to home, travel to the Temple, buy equivalent produce and animals, and sacrifice those. There is also a vague provision that, in every third year, the tithe ought to benefit the Levite priests, as well as the widows widows, orphans, aliens of the towns.
Now, that bit about supporting the poor people in the towns is interesting. Think about the situation as Moses is giving this pep talk; the Israelites are planning to make the transition from a nomadic to a settled agrarian lifestyle. For the last generation, they've all lived together in a sprawling mobile camp, but as soon as this Promised Land is conquered they are going to spread out and take up farming. The communal life of the camp has doubtless enforced some measure of social equality, and that's all going to go by the wayside as people prosper or fail according to their luck and skill as a farmer, and their luck and skill in getting their hands on the best chunks of land. Moreover, once you have farms, you will also have market towns and trade specialization, with the diversification of social class and function that will come along with them. Among many, many other things, this means that you will start to have a class of the poor and dispossessed, and that they will tend to wash up in the towns and cities. This tweak in the tithing rules sounds like a proactive attempt to deal with this new reality.
Deut 15
Chapter 15 introduces another law which is, as far as I can recall, new: at the end of every seven years, the Israelites must cancel all of their debts to each other. Moreover, if somebody asks you to lend them some money during Year Six, you can't be a jerk about it. "There should be no poor among you," says Moses (4) (although admitting almost immediately that "there will always be poor people in the land" (11)). Here again, we see a recognition that the new way of life is going to create winners and losers, and an attempt to set up a system where the losers will still be able to share in the wealth of the general community. We also see yet another of the countless ways that our modern way of life has nothing whatsoever to do with its alleged Judeo-Christian foundation. I may have to write to my mortgage holder about how it's God's will that all debts are cancelled after seven years, just to see what happens.
You have to release a servant after seven years of service, too, unless the servant really likes you and wants to make the arrangement permanent. In that event, you have him or her stand in your doorway with their head against the doorframe, and you drive an awl through their earlobe into the wood. The Israelites have a refreshingly hearty approach to labor law.
Deut 16 - 17
Mostly, Chapter 16 is Moses reminding the people to celebrate Passover and the other feasts. In Verses 18 to 20, there is the beginning of what you might call a mini-Constitution. In the new towns that are going to pop up, says Moses, you are going to need judges and local officials. Make sure they are fair, and don't let them take bribes. In Chapter 17, after an admonition on the familiar topic of how it is not OK to worship other gods, and you need to kill anybody who does, there is a provision for a sort of appellate court among the Levites, a body to handle cases that are too much for the local courts.
Finally, in 17:14-20, Moses gives instructions for the appointment of a king. The provisions are interesting: He has to be an Israelite, can't accumulate wealth, wives, or horses, and can't send people back to Egypt for any reason. He has to read a copy of these provisions daily, so he won't "consider himself better than his brothers" (20). He is clearly intended to govern a still quasi-egalitarian society, able to lead the people by their consent but limited in his economic means (wealth), family connections (wives), and military power (horses) from having excessive power to inflict his personal will. It really is an amazingly progressive vision of government that Moses is trying to set up for the Promised Land.
Deut 18
Chapter 18 covers some specifics of how the Levites will be supported, and issues a stern warning against anyone taking up the "detestable practices" of other peoples: child sacrifice, witchcraft, communication with the dead, or divination. However, says Moses, God will eventually elevate another prophet who, like Moses, will be able to communicate God's will to the people. If somebody claims to be that prophet, says Moses, it will be pretty easy to test them. Does what they say will happen actually happen? If not, that's not the prophet I'm talking about.
Deut 19
The "Cities of Refuge" concept is revisited: three cities are to be set aside as safe havens for anybody who has accidentally killed someone and is afraid that their victim's relatives will kill them. In an interesting appendage, Moses adds
8 If the LORD your God enlarges your territory, as he promised on oath to your forefathers, and gives you the whole land he promised them, 9 because you carefully follow all these laws I command you today—to love the LORD your God and to walk always in his ways—then you are to set aside three more cities.
This is the first we've heard explicitly that all those Covenants from Genesis might be contingent on good behavior.
Deut 20
Deuteronomy 20 is all about war and how to conduct it. It implies that, for the Israelites, military service is kind of like jury duty -- if you have a good excuse, or just kind of whine a little, you can get out of it easy enough. Next, Moses instructs the Israelites to always start with an offer of peace. This is new, and quite different than the rock-em-sock-em rhetoric of chapters past. Mind you, the offer of peace is really an invitation of surrender into slavery, but still. If this offer is declined, the standing orders are still to split up the women and children, but to put to the sword all the men. (13)
Wait! I read it wrong the first time through! On closer examination, Moses is actually only telling the Israelites to offer peace to enemies outside of the Promised Land. The competing locals are indeed, as we have read before, are to be slaughtered: in the cities of the nations the Lord you God is giving you as an inheritance, do not leave alive anything that breathes. (16)
Finally, Moses tells the people not to cut down fruit trees around a city they are besieging because, duh, you'll want that fruit!
Deut 21
Finally, Deuteronomy 21 provides some miscellaneous laws, all of them new. If there's an unsolved murder, kill a cow in a complicated manner and have the elders of the nearest towns wash their hands over the cow to atone for the sin. If you fall in love with an enemy woman, you can marry her after a one-month cooling down period; but if you change you mind, you can't treat her like a captive. If you have a wife you love and a wife you don't, you can't favor the children of the wife you love. If a child is totally out of control and the father and mother tell the town they can't deal with him any more, everybody joins in stoning the child to death. And, when you hang someone, don't leave them out overnight. All of these are new, I think, and I don't see any particular logical connection between them. File under Laws, Miscellaneous.
Next Week: More Laws, Miscellaneous.
Posted by Michael5000 at 1/13/2008 08:04:00 PM 2 comments
Sunday, January 06, 2008
Deuteronomy 9 - 13: The Speech Continues
When we left the action last week, Moses was well into a long speech that serves both as his farewell address and a pep talk to the Israelites, who are will shortly be crossing the Jordan and commencing their conquest of the Promised Land. I predicted last week that he would be returning frequently to the subject of obedience to God. I was right. Obedience has not exactly been a strong suit for the Israelites, and Moses is running out of time for convincing them to mend their ways, so he passes no opportunity to press the point.
In Deuteronomy 9 - 13 the sermon continues as it did in the first eight chapters, with a loosely organized blend of exhortations to obedience, reminders about specifics of the legal code, and recountings of events from recent history.
Deut 9: 1 - 6 -- Just because y'all's the chosen people, you ain't so great
Just because you are God's chosen people, Moses tells the people, don't get to feeling all high and mighty about yourself. He makes an interesting distinction: God is not going to enable the Israelites to conquer nations that are more powerful than them because they are righteous, he says, but because those other nations are evil.It is not because of your righteousness or your integrity that you are going
in to take possession of their land; but on account of the wickedness of these
nations, the Lord your God will drive them out before you.... (5)
Now, this is interesting. We usually think of concepts like evil/wickedness and goodness/righteousness as existing on something of a continuum, with most people being somewhere in between those two poles. For myself, I seldom think of an acquaintance as being unambiguously righteous or completely evil. I see flaws in the best people, and mitigating factors in the worst, and I think most people are like me in this.
But God and Moses seem to disagree with this way of looking at things. In my own perceived realm of relative righteousness, there's not much difference between saying "the Israelites will prevail because they are righteous" and "everybody else will be put to the sword because they are wicked," because either way it is the relative virtue of the two that saves one and damns the other. The only important factor is that the Israelites are enough higher on the righteousness continuum to be above what we might call the Smiting Point.
God and Moses, on the other hand, appear to be laying out a binary, or possibly a three-level, definition of morality. There is righteousness and there is wickedness. The Israelites are not righteous, and should not get to thinking they are. Everybody else in the neighborhood is wicked, and is about to pay the consequences. The Israelites are either wicked, but excused from extinction by special dispensation (binary model), or they are in a intermediate, not-wicked, not-righteous category (three-level model).
I go into all this because many religious people get so very exercised in opposition to the idea of "relative morality." Well, here in Deuteronomy 9, God and Moses seem to concur.
Deut 9:7 - 10:10 -- The Ten Commandments (reprise)
As an example of how the Israelites (or at least, as I pointed out last time, their parents) have been disobedient to God, Moses tells the story of how, while he was receiving God's laws on Mt. Sinai, the unpleasant business with the Golden Calf went down. It is interesting that the retelling here, although it does not absolutely contradict the telling in Exodus 32, is quite different in its details. Here are the key events, in sequence:
- God tells Moses that the people have built the calf, and that he will destroy them. (Exodus & Deut)
- Moses then begs God to spare them, and God agrees. (Exodus version)
- Moses goes down the mountain, sees the calf, and breaks the tablets. (Exodus & Deut)
- Moses lies prostrate & fasting for forty days, begging God to spare the Israelites. God agrees. (Deut version)
- Moses destroys the calf, reduces it to a powder, mixes it in water, and makes the people drink it. (Exodus version)
- Moses destroys the calf, reduces it to a powder, and dumps the powder in a creek. (Deut version)
- Moses has the Levites, who reject the calf, kill about 3000 calf-worshipers. (Mentioned only in Exodus)
- God strikes the people with a plague. (Mentioned only in Exodus)
- Some time later, Moses goes up the mountain again, witnesses God, and comes back with a second set of tablets. (Exodus & Deut)
Deut 10:12 - 11 -- Obey!
Much talk about how the Israelites must obey God, along with, for a change of pace, warnings about how they should not disobey God. Very much in the style of a sermon.
Deut 12: Places of Worship
Deut 12 begins with a warning against adopting any of the religious practices of the people that the Israelites will find in the Promised Land. Any places where other gods have been worshiped, for instance, are to be destroyed utterly. The Israelites are obviously forbidden to adopt new gods, but they are also warned here against adopting any foreign religious practices as a way of worshipping their own god (which is to say: God).
It's an interesting prohibition. Through human history, whenever people of one religion conquer another, it is a commonplace that the sacred sites of the conquered religion become sacred sites for the conquerors, and that the rituals of the old religions have a way of sneaking into the new. Many of the churches of Europe and Latin America rest on the foundations, sometimes quite literally, of older "pagan" places of worship, and many of those churches have seen centuries of Christmas trees, Easter eggs, and many other Christian or quasi-Christian rituals of non-Christian origin.
Moses seems fully aware of this phenomenon, and wants nothing of it. Destroy the holy sites of the others, he tells the Israelites; God will tell you where to locate a central place for His worship. There will be just one place that God "will choose as a dwelling for his Name," and that will be the only proper place to go for sacrifice.
At this point, there is a long digression into exactly what kinds of sacrifice will be limited to this one central place, but the general point has been made, and the idea of the one holy place seems to prefigure the Jerusalem temple in which the Ark of the Covenant will be kept.
The chapter ends with a reiteration of the warning not to adopt the religious ritual of other peoples. 31 You must not worship the LORD your God in their way, because in worshiping their gods, they do all kinds of detestable things the LORD hates. They even burn their sons and daughters in the fire as sacrifices to their gods. This seems like a ridiculous piece of bronze-age slander, an unsubtle attempt to demonize the enemy people that the Israelites are about to take up arms against. Except that, from what I've read, there is archeological evidence that ritual sacrifice of children by fire actually was practiced by some Middle Eastern tribal peoples. Icky.
Deut 13 -- Troubleshooting
For yourself, the important thing is to obey God's laws. If anybody else starts worshipping other gods, though, it is your duty to set them straight. In most cases, the best way to do this is to kill them. Any prophet who appears and suggests that you follow other gods is to be ignored, even if he has really good miracles. If your best pal, your spouse, your child, or your parent suggests a change of religion, you are to kill him or her immediately; it's best to do this by leading your neighbors in stoning him or her to death, as this is good for building community and consensus. (6-11) If a town changes its religion, it should be destroyed and left a ruin in perpetuity, with all its residents slain and all of their belongings burnt. Tolerance is decidedly not considered a virtue in the Mosaic world view.
Next Week: Obedience in General, Obedience in Specific
Posted by Michael5000 at 1/06/2008 08:34:00 PM 1 comments
Sunday, December 30, 2007
Deuteronomy 1 - 8: The Farewell Speech Begins
We're back. MRTB is rested, refreshed, and ready to venture further into the mysteries of the Old Testament. But first:
Procedural Notes
I blog for lots of reasons. I enjoy writing, and I like the thinking that you have to do when you're writing regularly. The communities that develop around blogs has been a huge and unanticipated bonus; it gets harder and harder to distinguish between "blog friends" and "real life friends," with the important exception that I always know what members of the latter group look like.
The original reason I started keeping blogs, though, was to light a fire under my long-term projects. Whether it's my reading list, my "Great Films" project, my quilting goals, or -- of course -- reading the Bible, blogging about it backs me into a corner. I've got to stick with my projects, or I'll look like an idiot. More of an idiot, anyway.
The problem is this: you reach a point where, between all of the projects and the write-ups, you start to have trouble getting enough sleep. I've reached that point, and need to do some cutting back. Am I going to abandon the Bible project? Absolutely not. It's a great project! But, it's not a very popular blog. It just doesn't get read very much, and it hardly gets comments at all. At the end of the day, there's just not enough happening to justify the amount of time I've put into it.
So with that in mind, for now I am going to continue but strip things down a little. Here's the plan:
- No More Art. Finding the images has been fun and rewarding, but time-consuming; basically, it's been a whole side-project of its own. For now, we'll be text-only.
- Bigger Bites. I've been averaging about four chapters per entry recently. I'm going to try to bump that up to six or seven chapters per entry.
- Less Detail. It's hard, because there is just SO MUCH that's interesting. But I bet nobody will complain if I back off on some of the detail.
- Schedule? I'm not sure if I want to stick to the Sunday night schedule or not. We'll see.
So that's the plan. Let's roll.
"Today, I consider myself the luckiest prophet on the face of this Earth."
The first 33 of Deuteronomy's 34 chapters -- I snuck a peek ahead -- turns out to be Moses' long goodbye speech. Chapter 34 describes his death. Since most of what he wants to talk about seems to be the events described in Exodus, Leviticus, and Numbers, as well as the laws that were revealed in those chapters, there is clearly going to be some review going on.
Deut 1 - 3: How Did We Get Here?
You know those guys who show up at athletic events with signs referencing a single Biblical verse, hoping that they'll be caught on camera so that the entire viewing audience will be struck with curiosity and crack open the family Bible? They pick out verses that they think summarize their personal religious philosophy especially well, of course. Well, I often stumble across verses that are so incidental, so trivial, so devoid of spiritual insight, such obvious candidates for removal if the Bible had ever been edited, that the absurdist in me wants to slap them on a sign and head for the stadium. Such is the case with Deuteronomy 1:2, which reads as follows:
(It takes eleven days to go from Horeb to Kadesh Barnea by the Mount Seir road.)
But I digress. In the first three chapters of Deuteronomy, Moses recounts the events of Numbers 10 - 36, from the point when the Israelites broke camp at Mt. Sinai. Despite that a full generation has passed since that time, he lays it on pretty thick with the guilt trips, continually reminding the assembly of times they let him, and God, down. Presumably, he is thinking of their parents, but what the heck. He's a very old guy by now, and likely a bit confused.
Deut 4 - 6: The Law
It looks like there is going to be a lot of recap of the law here in Deuteronomy. For now, Moses speaks generally about the greatness of God, the importance of obedience of God and of the Law, and the prohibition of idols. Also, the Ten Commandments are repeated, in exactly the same wording as they were originally presented back in Exodus 20. Particularly dogged readers might recall that I challenged the importance of these particular 10 injunctions back then, pointing out that there is nothing in particular in Exodus to indicate that they are any more crucial than the many other laws before and after them. That they are set aside and highlighted here in Deuteronomy pretty much shoots down that criticism.
Deut 7: Imperial Israel
Moses assures the Israelites again that God will deliver the Promised Land, as long as they honor him and his laws. They are, as we have seen before, not expected to be gracious to their defeated enemies. Make no treaty with them, exhorts Moses, and show them no mercy. (2) Their leaders are not only to be killed, but to have their names wipe[d] out from under heaven. (24) Their religious buildings and monuments are to be destroyed utterly, of course, but the people themselves are pretty much marked for slaughter as well: The Lord your God will send the hornet among them until even the survivors who hide from you have perished. (20)
Deut 8: Encore!
Chapter 8 discusses, again, how important it is to follow the law, to remember that God freed the nation from slavery and therefore deserves and expects submission to his will. This is the main point that Moses is making in his speech, of course -- the Israelites do not have the strongest of track records, obedience-wise, and he knows that this is his last shot at whipping them into shape. So, with the speech only one-quarter done, I'm guessing this is not the last time he will reiterate the point.
Next Time: Before television, a crowd could sit still while they were being read the legal code.
Posted by Michael5000 at 12/30/2007 07:24:00 PM 8 comments