PAPER 96
- YAHWEH--GOD OF THE HEBREWS
In conceiving of Deity,
man first includes all gods, then subordinates all foreign
gods to his tribal deity, and finally excludes all but the
one God of final and supreme value. The Jews synthesized all
gods into their more sublime concept of the Lord God of
Israel. The Hindus likewise combined their multifarious
deities into the "one spirituality of the gods" portrayed in
the Rig-Veda, while the Mesopotamians reduced their gods to
the more centralized concept of Bel-Marduk. These ideas of
monotheism matured all over the world not long after the
appearance of Machiventa Melchizedek at Salem in Palestine.
But the Melchizedek concept of Deity was unlike that of the
evolutionary philosophy of inclusion, subordination, and
exclusion; it was based exclusively on creative power
and very soon influenced the highest deity concepts of
Mesopotamia, India, and Egypt.
The Salem religion was
revered as a tradition by the Kenites and several other
Canaanite tribes. And this was one of the purposes of
Melchizedek's incarnation: That a religion of one God should
be so fostered as to prepare the way for the earth bestowal
of a Son of that one God. Michael could hardly come to
Urantia until there existed a people believing in the
Universal Father among whom he could appear.
The Salem religion
persisted among the Kenites in Palestine as their creed, and
this religion as it was later adopted by the Hebrews was
influenced, first, by Egyptian moral teachings; later, by
Babylonian theologic thought; and lastly, by Iranian
conceptions of good and evil. Factually the Hebrew religion
is predicated upon the covenant between Abraham and
Machiventa Melchizedek, evolutionally it is the outgrowth of
many unique situational circumstances, but culturally it has
borrowed freely from the religion, morality, and philosophy
of the entire Levant. It is through the Hebrew religion that
much of the morality and religious thought of Egypt,
Mesopotamia, and Iran was transmitted to the Occidental
peoples.
1. DEITY CONCEPTS
AMONG THE SEMITES
The early Semites regarded
everything as being indwelt by a spirit. There were spirits
of the animal and vegetable worlds; annual spirits, the lord
of progeny; spirits of fire, water, and air; a veritable
pantheon of spirits to be feared and worshiped. And the
teaching of Melchizedek regarding a Universal Creator never
fully destroyed the belief in these subordinate spirits or
nature gods.
The progress of the
Hebrews from polytheism through henotheism to monotheism was
not an unbroken and continuous conceptual development. They
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experienced many
retrogressions in the evolution of their Deity concepts,
while during any one epoch there existed varying ideas of
God among different groups of Semite believers. From time to
time numerous terms were applied to their concepts of God,
and in order to prevent confusion these various Deity titles
will be defined as they pertain to the evolution of Jewish
theology:
1. Yahweh was the
god of the southern Palestinian tribes, who associated this
concept of deity with Mount Horeb, the Sinai volcano. Yahweh
was merely one of the hundreds and thousands of nature gods
which held the attention and claimed the worship of the
Semitic tribes and peoples.
2. El Elyon. For
centuries after Melchizedek's sojourn at Salem his doctrine
of Deity persisted in various versions but was generally
connoted by the term El Elyon, the Most High God of heaven.
Many Semites, including the immediate descendants of
Abraham, at various times worshiped both Yahweh and El
Elyon.
3. El Shaddai. It
is difficult to explain what El Shaddai stood for. This idea
of God was a composite derived from the teachings of
Amenemope's Book of Wisdom modified by Ikhnaton's doctrine
of Aton and further influenced by Melchizedek's teachings
embodied in the concept of El Elyon. But as the concept of
El Shaddai permeated the Hebrew mind, it became thoroughly
colored with the Yahweh beliefs of the desert.
One of the dominant ideas
of the religion of this era was the Egyptian concept of
divine Providence, the teaching that material prosperity was
a reward for serving El Shaddai.
4. El. Amid all
this confusion of terminology and haziness of concept, many
devout believers sincerely endeavored to worship all of
these evolving ideas of divinity, and there grew up the
practice of referring to this composite Deity as El. And
this term included still other of the Bedouin nature gods.
5. Elohim. In Kish
and Ur there long persisted Sumerian-Chaldean groups who
taught a three-in-one God concept founded on the traditions
of the days of Adam and Melchizedek. This doctrine was
carried to Egypt, where this Trinity was worshiped under the
name of Elohim, or in the singular as Eloah. The philosophic
circles of Egypt and later Alexandrian teachers of Hebraic
extraction taught this unity of pluralistic Gods, and many
of Moses' advisers at the time of the exodus believed in
this Trinity. But the concept of the trinitarian Elohim
never became a real part of Hebrew theology until after they
had come under the political influence of the Babylonians.
6. Sundry names.
The Semites disliked to speak the name of their Deity, and
they therefore resorted to numerous appellations from time
to time, such as: The Spirit of God, The Lord, The Angel of
the Lord, The Almighty, The Holy One, The Most High, Adonai,
The Ancient of Days, The Lord God of Israel, The Creator of
Heaven and Earth, Kyrios, Jah, The Lord of Hosts, and The
Father in Heaven.
Jehovah is a term
which in recent times has been employed to designate the
completed concept of Yahweh which finally evolved in the
long Hebrew experience. But the name Jehovah did not come
into use until fifteen hundred years after the times of
Jesus.
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Up to about 2000 B.C., Mount
Sinai was intermittently active as a volcano, occasional
eruptions occurring as late as the time of the sojourn of
the Israelites in this region. The fire and smoke, together
with the thunderous detonations associated with the
eruptions of this volcanic mountain, all impressed and awed
the Bedouins of the surrounding regions and caused them
greatly to fear Yahweh. This spirit of Mount Horeb later
became the god of the Hebrew Semites, and they eventually
believed him to be supreme over all other gods.
The Canaanites had long
revered Yahweh, and although many of the Kenites believed
more or less in El Elyon, the supergod of the Salem
religion, a majority of the Canaanites held loosely to the
worship of the old tribal deities. They were hardly willing
to abandon their national deities in favor of an
international, not to say an interplanetary, God. They were
not universal-deity minded, and therefore these tribes
continued to worship their tribal deities, including Yahweh
and the silver and golden calves which symbolized the
Bedouin herders' concept of the spirit of the Sinai volcano.
The Syrians, while
worshiping their gods, also believed in Yahweh of the
Hebrews, for their prophets said to the Syrian king: "Their
gods are gods of the hills; therefore they were stronger
than we; but let us fight against them on the plain, and
surely we shall be stronger than they."
As man advances in
culture, the lesser gods are subordinated to a supreme
deity; the great Jove persists only as an exclamation. The
monotheists keep their subordinate gods as spirits, demons,
fates, Nereids, fairies, brownies, dwarfs, banshees, and the
evil eye. The Hebrews passed through henotheism and long
believed in the existence of gods other than Yahweh, but
they increasingly held that these foreign deities were
subordinate to Yahweh. They conceded the actuality of
Chemosh, god of the Amorites, but maintained that he was
subordinate to Yahweh.
The idea of Yahweh has
undergone the most extensive development of all the mortal
theories of God. Its progressive evolution can only be
compared with the metamorphosis of the Buddha concept in
Asia, which in the end led to the concept of the Universal
Absolute even as the Yahweh concept finally led to the idea
of the Universal Father. But as a matter of historic fact,
it should be understood that, while the Jews thus changed
their views of Deity from the tribal god of Mount Horeb to
the loving and merciful Creator Father of later times, they
did not change his name; they continued all the way along to
call this evolving concept of Deity, Yahweh.
2. THE SEMITIC
PEOPLES
The Semites of the East
were well-organized and well-led horsemen who invaded the
eastern regions of the fertile crescent and there united
with the Babylonians. The Chaldeans near Ur were among the
most advanced of the eastern Semites. The Phoenicians were a
superior and well-organized group of mixed Semites who held
the western section of Palestine, along the Mediterranean
coast. Racially the Semites were among the most blended of
Urantia peoples, containing hereditary factors from almost
all of the nine world races.
Again and again the
Arabian Semites fought their way into the northern Promised
Land, the land that "flowed with milk and honey," but just
as often were they ejected by the better-organized and more
highly civilized northern Semites and Hittites. Later,
during an unusually severe famine, these roving Bedouins
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entered Egypt in large
numbers as contract laborers on the Egyptian public works,
only to find themselves undergoing the bitter experience of
enslavement at the hard daily toil of the common and
downtrodden laborers of the Nile valley.
It was only after the days
of Machiventa Melchizedek and Abraham that certain tribes of
Semites, because of their peculiar religious beliefs, were
called the children of Israel and later on Hebrews, Jews,
and the "chosen people." Abraham was not the racial father
of all the Hebrews; he was not even the progenitor of all
the Bedouin Semites who were held captive in Egypt. True,
his offspring, coming up out of Egypt, did form the nucleus
of the later Jewish people, but the vast majority of the men
and women who became incorporated into the clans of Israel
had never sojourned in Egypt. They were merely fellow nomads
who chose to follow the leadership of Moses as the children
of Abraham and their Semite associates from Egypt journeyed
through northern Arabia.
The Melchizedek teaching
concerning El Elyon, the Most High, and the covenant of
divine favor through faith, had been largely forgotten by
the time of the Egyptian enslavement of the Semite peoples
who were shortly to form the Hebrew nation. But throughout
this period of captivity these Arabian nomads maintained a
lingering traditional belief in Yahweh as their racial
deity.
Yahweh was worshiped by
more than one hundred separate Arabian tribes, and except
for the tinge of the El Elyon concept of Melchizedek which
persisted among the more educated classes of Egypt,
including the mixed Hebrew and Egyptian stocks, the religion
of the rank and file of the Hebrew captive slaves was a
modified version of the old Yahweh ritual of magic and
sacrifice.
3. THE MATCHLESS
MOSES
The beginning of the
evolution of the Hebraic concepts and ideals of a Supreme
Creator dates from the departure of the Semites from Egypt
under that great leader, teacher, and organizer, Moses. His
mother was of the royal family of Egypt; his father was a
Semitic liaison officer between the government and the
Bedouin captives. Moses thus possessed qualities derived
from superior racial sources; his ancestry was so highly
blended that it is impossible to classify him in any one
racial group. Had he not been of this mixed type, he would
never have displayed that unusual versatility and
adaptability which enabled him to manage the diversified
horde which eventually became associated with those Bedouin
Semites who fled from Egypt to the Arabian Desert under his
leadership.
Despite the enticements of
the culture of the Nile kingdom, Moses elected to cast his
lot with the people of his father. At the time this great
organizer was formulating his plans for the eventual freeing
of his father's people, the Bedouin captives hardly had a
religion worthy of the name; they were virtually without a
true concept of God and without hope in the world.
No leader ever undertook
to reform and uplift a more forlorn, downcast, dejected, and
ignorant group of human beings. But these slaves carried
latent possibilities of development in their hereditary
strains, and there were a sufficient number of educated
leaders who had been coached by Moses in preparation for the
day of revolt and the strike for liberty to constitute a
corps of efficient organizers. These superior men had been
employed as native overseers of their people; they had
received some education because of Moses' influence with the
Egyptian rulers.
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Moses endeavored to negotiate
diplomatically for the freedom of his fellow Semites. He and
his brother entered into a compact with the king of Egypt
whereby they were granted permission peaceably to leave the
valley of the Nile for the Arabian Desert. They were to
receive a modest payment of money and goods in token of
their long service in Egypt. The Hebrews for their part
entered into an agreement to maintain friendly relations
with the Pharaohs and not to join in any alliance against
Egypt. But the king later saw fit to repudiate this treaty,
giving as his reason the excuse that his spies had
discovered disloyalty among the Bedouin slaves. He claimed
they sought freedom for the purpose of going into the desert
to organize the nomads against Egypt.
But Moses was not
discouraged; he bided his time, and in less than a year,
when the Egyptian military forces were fully occupied in
resisting the simultaneous onslaughts of a strong Libyan
thrust from the south and a Greek naval invasion from the
north, this intrepid organizer led his compatriots out of
Egypt in a spectacular night flight. This dash for liberty
was carefully planned and skillfully executed. And they were
successful, notwithstanding that they were hotly pursued by
Pharaoh and a small body of Egyptians, who all fell before
the fugitives' defense, yielding much booty, all of which
was augmented by the loot of the advancing host of escaping
slaves as they marched on toward their ancestral desert
home.
4. THE
PROCLAMATION OF YAHWEH
The evolution and
elevation of the Mosaic teaching has influenced almost one
half of all the world, and still does even in the twentieth
century. While Moses comprehended the more advanced Egyptian
religious philosophy, the Bedouin slaves knew little about
such teachings, but they had never entirely forgotten the
god of Mount Horeb, whom their ancestors had called Yahweh.
Moses had heard of the
teachings of Machiventa Melchizedek from both his father and
his mother, their commonness of religious belief being the
explanation for the unusual union between a woman of royal
blood and a man from a captive race. Moses' father-in-law
was a Kenite worshiper of El Elyon, but the emancipator's
parents were believers in El Shaddai. Moses thus was
educated an El Shaddaist; through the influence of his
father-in-law he became an El Elyonist; and by the time of
the Hebrew encampment about Mount Sinai after the flight
from Egypt, he had formulated a new and enlarged concept of
Deity (derived from all his former beliefs), which he wisely
decided to proclaim to his people as an expanded concept of
their olden tribal god, Yahweh.
Moses had endeavored to
teach these Bedouins the idea of El Elyon, but before
leaving Egypt, he had become convinced they would never
fully comprehend this doctrine. Therefore he deliberately
determined upon the compromise adoption of their tribal god
of the desert as the one and only god of his followers.
Moses did not specifically teach that other peoples and
nations might not have other gods, but he did resolutely
maintain that Yahweh was over and above all, especially to
the Hebrews. But always was he plagued by the awkward
predicament of trying to present his new and higher idea of
Deity to these ignorant slaves under the guise of the
ancient term Yahweh, which had always been symbolized by the
golden calf of the Bedouin tribes.
The fact that Yahweh was
the god of the fleeing Hebrews explains why they tarried so
long before the holy mountain of Sinai, and why they there
received
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the Ten Commandments which
Moses promulgated in the name of Yahweh, the god of Horeb.
During this lengthy sojourn before Sinai the religious
ceremonials of the newly evolving Hebrew worship were
further perfected.
It does not appear that
Moses would ever have succeeded in the establishment of his
somewhat advanced ceremonial worship and in keeping his
followers intact for a quarter of a century had it not been
for the violent eruption of Horeb during the third week of
their worshipful sojourn at its base. "The mountain of
Yahweh was consumed in fire, and the smoke ascended like the
smoke of a furnace, and the whole mountain quaked greatly."
In view of this cataclysm it is not surprising that Moses
could impress upon his brethren the teaching that their God
was "mighty, terrible, a devouring fire, fearful, and
all-powerful."
Moses proclaimed that
Yahweh was the Lord God of Israel, who had singled out the
Hebrews as his chosen people; he was building a new nation,
and he wisely nationalized his religious teachings, telling
his followers that Yahweh was a hard taskmaster, a "jealous
God." But none the less he sought to enlarge their concept
of divinity when he taught them that Yahweh was the "God of
the spirits of all flesh," and when he said, "The eternal
God is your refuge, and underneath are the everlasting
arms." Moses taught that Yahweh was a covenant-keeping God;
that he "will not forsake you, neither destroy you, nor
forget the covenant of your fathers because the Lord loves
you and will not forget the oath by which he swore to your
fathers."
Moses made a heroic effort
to uplift Yahweh to the dignity of a supreme Deity when he
presented him as the "God of truth and without iniquity,
just and right in all his ways." And yet, despite this
exalted teaching, the limited understanding of his followers
made it necessary to speak of God as being in man's image,
as being subject to fits of anger, wrath, and severity, even
that he was vengeful and easily influenced by man's conduct.
Under the teachings of
Moses this tribal nature god, Yahweh, became the Lord God of
Israel, who followed them through the wilderness and even
into exile, where he presently was conceived of as the God
of all peoples. The later captivity that enslaved the Jews
in Babylon finally liberated the evolving concept of Yahweh
to assume the monotheistic role of the God of all nations.
The most unique and
amazing feature of the religious history of the Hebrews
concerns this continuous evolution of the concept of Deity
from the primitive god of Mount Horeb up through the
teachings of their successive spiritual leaders to the high
level of development depicted in the Deity doctrines of the
Isaiahs, who proclaimed that magnificent concept of the
loving and merciful Creator Father.
5. THE TEACHINGS
OF MOSES
Moses was an extraordinary
combination of military leader, social organizer, and
religious teacher. He was the most important individual
world teacher and leader between the times of Machiventa and
Jesus. Moses attempted to introduce many reforms in Israel
of which there is no record. In the space of one man's life
he led the polyglot horde of so-called Hebrews out of
slavery and uncivilized roaming while he laid the foundation
for the subsequent birth of a nation and the perpetuation of
a race.
There is so little on
record of the great work of Moses because the Hebrews had no
written language at the time of the exodus. The record of
the times and
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doings of Moses was derived
from the traditions extant more than one thousand years
after the death of the great leader.
Many of the advances which
Moses made over and above the religion of the Egyptians and
the surrounding Levantine tribes were due to the Kenite
traditions of the time of Melchizedek. Without the teaching
of Machiventa to Abraham and his contemporaries, the Hebrews
would have come out of Egypt in hopeless darkness. Moses and
his father-in-law, Jethro, gathered up the residue of the
traditions of the days of Melchizedek, and these teachings,
joined to the learning of the Egyptians, guided Moses in the
creation of the improved religion and ritual of the
Israelites. Moses was an organizer; he selected the best in
the religion and mores of Egypt and Palestine and,
associating these practices with the traditions of the
Melchizedek teachings, organized the Hebrew ceremonial
system of worship.
Moses was a believer in
Providence; he had become thoroughly tainted with the
doctrines of Egypt concerning the supernatural control of
the Nile and the other elements of nature. He had a great
vision of God, but he was thoroughly sincere when he taught
the Hebrews that, if they would obey God, "He will love you,
bless you, and multiply you. He will multiply the fruit of
your womb and the fruit of your land--the corn, wine, oil,
and your flocks. You shall be prospered above all people,
and the Lord your God will take away from you all sickness
and will put none of the evil diseases of Egypt upon you."
He even said: "Remember the Lord your God, for it is he who
gives you the power to get wealth." "You shall lend to many
nations, but you shall not borrow. You shall reign over many
nations, but they shall not reign over you."
But it was truly pitiful
to watch this great mind of Moses trying to adapt his
sublime concept of El Elyon, the Most High, to the
comprehension of the ignorant and illiterate Hebrews. To his
assembled leaders he thundered, "The Lord your God is one
God; there is none beside him"; while to the mixed multitude
he declared, "Who is like your God among all the gods?"
Moses made a brave and partly successful stand against
fetishes and idolatry, declaring, "You saw no similitude on
the day that your God spoke to you at Horeb out of the midst
of the fire." He also forbade the making of images of any
sort.
Moses feared to proclaim
the mercy of Yahweh, preferring to awe his people with the
fear of the justice of God, saying: "The Lord your God is
God of Gods, and Lord of Lords, a great God, a mighty and
terrible God, who regards not man." Again he sought to
control the turbulent clans when he declared that "your God
kills when you disobey him; he heals and gives life when you
obey him." But Moses taught these tribes that they would
become the chosen people of God only on condition that they
"kept all his commandments and obeyed all his statutes."
Little of the mercy of God
was taught the Hebrews during these early times. They
learned of God as "the Almighty; the Lord is a man of war,
God of battles, glorious in power, who dashes in pieces his
enemies." "The Lord your God walks in the midst of the camp
to deliver you." The Israelites thought of their God as one
who loved them, but who also "hardened Pharaoh's heart" and
"cursed their enemies."
While Moses presented
fleeting glimpses of a universal and beneficent Deity to the
children of Israel, on the whole, their day-by-day concept
of Yahweh was
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that of a God but little
better than the tribal gods of the surrounding peoples.
Their concept of God was primitive, crude, and
anthropomorphic; when Moses passed on, these Bedouin tribes
quickly reverted to the semibarbaric ideas of their olden
gods of Horeb and the desert. The enlarged and more sublime
vision of God which Moses every now and then presented to
his leaders was soon lost to view, while most of the people
turned to the worship of their fetish golden calves, the
Palestinian herdsman's symbol of Yahweh.
When Moses turned over the
command of the Hebrews to Joshua, he had already gathered up
thousands of the collateral descendants of Abraham, Nahor,
Lot, and other of the related tribes and had whipped them
into a self-sustaining and partially self-regulating nation
of pastoral warriors.
6. THE GOD
CONCEPT AFTER MOSES' DEATH
Upon the death of Moses
his lofty concept of Yahweh rapidly deteriorated. Joshua and
the leaders of Israel continued to harbor the Mosaic
traditions of the all-wise, beneficent, and almighty God,
but the common people rapidly reverted to the older desert
idea of Yahweh. And this backward drift of the concept of
Deity continued increasingly under the successive rule of
the various tribal sheiks, the so-called Judges.
The spell of the
extraordinary personality of Moses had kept alive in the
hearts of his followers the inspiration of an increasingly
enlarged concept of God; but when they once reached the
fertile lands of Palestine, they quickly evolved from
nomadic herders into settled and somewhat sedate farmers.
And this evolution of life practices and change of religious
viewpoint demanded a more or less complete change in the
character of their conception of the nature of their God,
Yahweh. During the times of the beginning of the
transmutation of the austere, crude, exacting, and
thunderous desert god of Sinai into the later appearing
concept of a God of love, justice, and mercy, the Hebrews
almost lost sight of Moses' lofty teachings. They came near
losing all concept of monotheism; they nearly lost their
opportunity of becoming the people who would serve as a
vital link in the spiritual evolution of Urantia, the group
who would conserve the Melchizedek teaching of one God until
the times of the incarnation of a bestowal Son of that
Father of all.
Desperately Joshua sought
to hold the concept of a supreme Yahweh in the minds of the
tribesmen, causing it to be proclaimed: "As I was with
Moses, so will I be with you; I will not fail you nor
forsake you." Joshua found it necessary to preach a stern
gospel to his disbelieving people, people all too willing to
believe their old and native religion but unwilling to go
forward in the religion of faith and righteousness. The
burden of Joshua's teaching became: "Yahweh is a holy God;
he is a jealous God; he will not forgive your transgressions
nor your sins." The highest concept of this age pictured
Yahweh as a "God of power, judgment, and justice."
But even in this dark age,
every now and then a solitary teacher would arise
proclaiming the Mosaic concept of divinity: "You children of
wickedness cannot serve the Lord, for he is a holy God."
"Shall mortal man be more just than God? shall a man be more
pure than his Maker?" "Can you by searching find out God?
Can you find out the Almighty to perfection? Behold, God is
great and we know him not. Touching the Almighty, we cannot
find him out."
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7. PSALMS AND THE
BOOK OF JOB
Under the leadership of
their sheiks and priests the Hebrews became loosely
established in Palestine. But they soon drifted back into
the benighted beliefs of the desert and became contaminated
with the less advanced Canaanite religious practices. They
became idolatrous and licentious, and their idea of Deity
fell far below the Egyptian and Mesopotamian concepts of God
that were maintained by certain surviving Salem groups, and
which are recorded in some of the Psalms and in the
so-called Book of Job.
The Psalms are the work of
a score or more of authors; many were written by Egyptian
and Mesopotamian teachers. During these times when the
Levant worshiped nature gods, there were still a goodly
number who believed in the supremacy of El Elyon, the Most
High.
No collection of religious
writings gives expression to such a wealth of devotion and
inspirational ideas of God as the Book of Psalms. And it
would be very helpful if, in the perusal of this wonderful
collection of worshipful literature, consideration could be
given to the source and chronology of each separate hymn of
praise and adoration, bearing in mind that no other single
collection covers such a great range of time. This Book of
Psalms is the record of the varying concepts of God
entertained by the believers of the Salem religion
throughout the Levant and embraces the entire period from
Amenemope to Isaiah. In the Psalms God is depicted in all
phases of conception, from the crude idea of a tribal deity
to the vastly expanded ideal of the later Hebrews, wherein
Yahweh is pictured as a loving ruler and merciful Father.
And when thus regarded,
this group of Psalms constitutes the most valuable and
helpful assortment of devotional sentiments ever assembled
by man up to the times of the twentieth century. The
worshipful spirit of this collection of hymns transcends
that of all other sacred books of the world.
The variegated picture of
Deity presented in the Book of Job was the product of more
than a score of Mesopotamian religious teachers extending
over a period of almost three hundred years. And when you
read the lofty concept of divinity found in this compilation
of Mesopotamian beliefs, you will recognize that it was in
the neighborhood of Ur of Chaldea that the idea of a real
God was best preserved during the dark days in Palestine.
In Palestine the wisdom
and all-pervasiveness of God was often grasped but seldom
his love and mercy. The Yahweh of these times "sends evil
spirits to dominate the souls of his enemies"; he prospers
his own and obedient children, while he curses and visits
dire judgments upon all others. "He disappoints the devices
of the crafty; he takes the wise in their own deceit."
Only at Ur did a voice
arise to cry out the mercy of God, saying: "He shall pray to
God and shall find favor with him and shall see his face
with joy, for God will give to man divine righteousness."
Thus from Ur there is preached salvation, divine favor, by
faith: "He is gracious to the repentant and says, `Deliver
him from going down in the pit, for I have found a ransom.'
If any say, `I have sinned and perverted that which was
right, and it profited me not,' God will deliver his soul
from going into the pit, and he shall see the light." Not
since the times of Melchizedek had the Levantine world heard
such a ringing and cheering
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message of human salvation as
this extraordinary teaching of Elihu, the prophet of Ur and
priest of the Salem believers, that is, the remnant of the
onetime Melchizedek colony in Mesopotamia.
And thus did the remnants
of the Salem missionaries in Mesopotamia maintain the light
of truth during the period of the disorganization of the
Hebrew peoples until the appearance of the first of that
long line of the teachers of Israel who never stopped as
they built, concept upon concept, until they had achieved
the realization of the ideal of the Universal and Creator
Father of all, the acme of the evolution of the Yahweh
concept.
[Presented by a
Melchizedek of Nebadon.] |