PAPER 97
- EVOLUTION OF THE GOD CONCEPT AMONG THE HEBREWS
The spiritual leaders of
the Hebrews did what no others before them had ever
succeeded in doing--they deanthropomorphized their God
concept without converting it into an abstraction of Deity
comprehensible only to philosophers. Even common people were
able to regard the matured concept of Yahweh as a Father, if
not of the individual, at least of the race.
The concept of the
personality of God, while clearly taught at Salem in the
days of Melchizedek, was vague and hazy at the time of the
flight from Egypt and only gradually evolved in the Hebraic
mind from generation to generation in response to the
teaching of the spiritual leaders. The perception of
Yahweh's personality was much more continuous in its
progressive evolution than was that of many other of the
Deity attributes. From Moses to Malachi there occurred an
almost unbroken ideational growth of the personality of God
in the Hebrew mind, and this concept was eventually
heightened and glorified by the teachings of Jesus about the
Father in heaven.
1. SAMUEL--FIRST
OF THE HEBREW PROPHETS
Hostile pressure of the
surrounding peoples in Palestine soon taught the Hebrew
sheiks they could not hope to survive unless they
confederated their tribal organizations into a centralized
government. And this centralization of administrative
authority afforded a better opportunity for Samuel to
function as a teacher and reformer.
Samuel sprang from a long
line of the Salem teachers who had persisted in maintaining
the truths of Melchizedek as a part of their worship forms.
This teacher was a virile and resolute man. Only his great
devotion, coupled with his extraordinary determination,
enabled him to withstand the almost universal opposition
which he encountered when he started out to turn all Israel
back to the worship of the supreme Yahweh of Mosaic times.
And even then he was only partially successful; he won back
to the service of the higher concept of Yahweh only the more
intelligent half of the Hebrews; the other half continued in
the worship of the tribal gods of the country and in the
baser conception of Yahweh.
Samuel was a
rough-and-ready type of man, a practical reformer who could
go out in one day with his associates and overthrow a score
of Baal sites. The progress he made was by sheer force of
compulsion; he did little preaching, less teaching, but he
did act. One day he was mocking the priest of Baal; the
next, chopping in pieces a captive king. He devotedly
believed in the one God, and he had a clear concept of that
one God as creator of heaven and earth: "The pillars of the
earth are the Lord's, and he has set the world upon them."
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But the great contribution
which Samuel made to the development of the concept of Deity
was his ringing pronouncement that Yahweh was changeless,
forever the same embodiment of unerring perfection and
divinity. In these times Yahweh was conceived to be a fitful
God of jealous whims, always regretting that he had done
thus and so; but now, for the first time since the Hebrews
sallied forth from Egypt, they heard these startling words,
"The Strength of Israel will not lie nor repent, for he is
not a man, that he should repent." Stability in dealing with
Divinity was proclaimed. Samuel reiterated the Melchizedek
covenant with Abraham and declared that the Lord God of
Israel was the source of all truth, stability, and
constancy. Always had the Hebrews looked upon their God as a
man, a superman, an exalted spirit of unknown origin; but
now they heard the onetime spirit of Horeb exalted as an
unchanging God of creator perfection. Samuel was aiding the
evolving God concept to ascend to heights above the changing
state of men's minds and the vicissitudes of mortal
existence. Under his teaching, the God of the Hebrews was
beginning the ascent from an idea on the order of the tribal
gods to the ideal of an all-powerful and changeless Creator
and Supervisor of all creation.
And he preached anew the
story of God's sincerity, his covenant-keeping reliability.
Said Samuel: "The Lord will not forsake his people." "He has
made with us an everlasting covenant, ordered in all things
and sure." And so, throughout all Palestine there sounded
the call back to the worship of the supreme Yahweh. Ever
this energetic teacher proclaimed, "You are great, O Lord
God, for there is none like you, neither is there any God
beside you."
Theretofore the Hebrews
had regarded the favor of Yahweh mainly in terms of material
prosperity. It was a great shock to Israel, and almost cost
Samuel his life, when he dared to proclaim: "The Lord
enriches and impoverishes; he debases and exalts. He raises
the poor out of the dust and lifts up the beggars to set
them among princes to make them inherit the throne of
glory." Not since Moses had such comforting promises for the
humble and the less fortunate been proclaimed, and thousands
of despairing among the poor began to take hope that they
could improve their spiritual status.
But Samuel did not
progress very far beyond the concept of a tribal god. He
proclaimed a Yahweh who made all men but was occupied
chiefly with the Hebrews, his chosen people. Even so, as in
the days of Moses, once more the God concept portrayed a
Deity who is holy and upright. "There is none as holy as the
Lord. Who can be compared to this holy Lord God?"
As the years passed, the
grizzled old leader progressed in the understanding of God,
for he declared: "The Lord is a God of knowledge, and
actions are weighed by him. The Lord will judge the ends of
the earth, showing mercy to the merciful, and with the
upright man he will also be upright." Even here is the dawn
of mercy, albeit it is limited to those who are merciful.
Later he went one step further when, in their adversity, he
exhorted his people: "Let us fall now into the hands of the
Lord, for his mercies are great." "There is no restraint
upon the Lord to save many or few."
And this gradual
development of the concept of the character of Yahweh
continued under the ministry of Samuel's successors. They
attempted to present Yahweh as a covenant-keeping God but
hardly maintained the pace set by Samuel; they failed to
develop the idea of the mercy of God as Samuel had later
conceived it. There was a steady drift back toward the
recognition of other gods,
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despite the maintenance that
Yahweh was above all. "Yours is the kingdom, O Lord, and you
are exalted as head above all."
The keynote of this era
was divine power; the prophets of this age preached a
religion designed to foster the king upon the Hebrew throne.
"Yours, O Lord, is the greatness and the power and the glory
and the victory and the majesty. In your hand is power and
might, and you are able to make great and to give strength
to all." And this was the status of the God concept during
the time of Samuel and his immediate successors.
2. ELIJAH AND
ELISHA
In the tenth century
before Christ the Hebrew nation became divided into two
kingdoms. In both of these political divisions many truth
teachers endeavored to stem the reactionary tide of
spiritual decadence that had set in, and which continued
disastrously after the war of separation. But these efforts
to advance the Hebraic religion did not prosper until that
determined and fearless warrior for righteousness, Elijah,
began his teaching. Elijah restored to the northern kingdom
a concept of God comparable with that held in the days of
Samuel. Elijah had little opportunity to present an advanced
concept of God; he was kept busy, as Samuel had been before
him, overthrowing the altars of Baal and demolishing the
idols of false gods. And he carried forward his reforms in
the face of the opposition of an idolatrous monarch; his
task was even more gigantic and difficult than that which
Samuel had faced.
When Elijah was called
away, Elisha, his faithful associate, took up his work and,
with the invaluable assistance of the little-known Micaiah,
kept the light of truth alive in Palestine.
But these were not times
of progress in the concept of Deity. Not yet had the Hebrews
ascended even to the Mosaic ideal. The era of Elijah and
Elisha closed with the better classes returning to the
worship of the supreme Yahweh and witnessed the restoration
of the idea of the Universal Creator to about that place
where Samuel had left it.
3. YAHWEH AND
BAAL
The long-drawn-out
controversy between the believers in Yahweh and the
followers of Baal was a socioeconomic clash of ideologies
rather than a difference in religious beliefs.
The inhabitants of
Palestine differed in their attitude toward private
ownership of land. The southern or wandering Arabian tribes
(the Yahwehites) looked upon land as an inalienable--as a
gift of Deity to the clan. They held that land could not be
sold or mortgaged. "Yahweh spoke, saying, `The land shall
not be sold, for the land is mine.'"
The northern and more
settled Canaanites (the Baalites) freely bought, sold, and
mortgaged their lands. The word Baal means owner. The Baal
cult was founded on two major doctrines: First, the
validation of property exchange, contracts, and
covenants--the right to buy and sell land. Second, Baal was
supposed to send rain--he was a god of fertility of the
soil. Good crops depended on the favor of Baal. The cult was
largely concerned with land, its ownership and
fertility.
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In general, the Baalites
owned houses, lands, and slaves. They were the aristocratic
landlords and lived in the cities. Each Baal had a sacred
place, a priesthood, and the "holy women," the ritual
prostitutes.
Out of this basic
difference in the regard for land, there evolved the bitter
antagonisms of social, economic, moral, and religious
attitudes exhibited by the Canaanites and the Hebrews. This
socioeconomic controversy did not become a definite
religious issue until the times of Elijah. From the days of
this aggressive prophet the issue was fought out on more
strictly religious lines--Yahweh vs. Baal--and it
ended in the triumph of Yahweh and the subsequent drive
toward monotheism.
Elijah shifted the
Yahweh-Baal controversy from the land issue to the religious
aspect of Hebrew and Canaanite ideologies. When Ahab
murdered the Naboths in the intrigue to get possession of
their land, Elijah made a moral issue out of the olden land
mores and launched his vigorous campaign against the
Baalites. This was also a fight of the country folk against
domination by the cities. It was chiefly under Elijah that
Yahweh became Elohim. The prophet began as an agrarian
reformer and ended up by exalting Deity. Baals were many,
Yahweh was one--monotheism won over polytheism.
4. AMOS AND HOSEA
A great step in the
transition of the tribal god--the god who had so long been
served with sacrifices and ceremonies, the Yahweh of the
earlier Hebrews--to a God who would punish crime and
immorality among even his own people, was taken by Amos, who
appeared from among the southern hills to denounce the
criminality, drunkenness, oppression, and immorality of the
northern tribes. Not since the times of Moses had such
ringing truths been proclaimed in Palestine.
Amos was not merely a
restorer or reformer; he was a discoverer of new concepts of
Deity. He proclaimed much about God that had been announced
by his predecessors and courageously attacked the belief in
a Divine Being who would countenance sin among his so-called
chosen people. For the first time since the days of
Melchizedek the ears of man heard the denunciation of the
double standard of national justice and morality. For the
first time in their history Hebrew ears heard that their own
God, Yahweh, would no more tolerate crime and sin in their
lives than he would among any other people. Amos envisioned
the stern and just God of Samuel and Elijah, but he also saw
a God who thought no differently of the Hebrews than of any
other nation when it came to the punishment of wrongdoing.
This was a direct attack on the egoistic doctrine of the
"chosen people," and many Hebrews of those days bitterly
resented it.
Said Amos: "He who formed
the mountains and created the wind, seek him who formed the
seven stars and Orion, who turns the shadow of death into
the morning and makes the day dark as night." And in
denouncing his half-religious, timeserving, and sometimes
immoral fellows, he sought to portray the inexorable justice
of an unchanging Yahweh when he said of the evildoers:
"Though they dig into hell, thence shall I take them; though
they climb up to heaven, thence will I bring them down."
"And though they go into captivity before their enemies,
thence will I direct the sword of justice, and it shall slay
them." Amos further startled his hearers when, pointing a
reproving and accusing finger at them, he declared in the
name of Yahweh: "Surely I will never forget any of your
works." "And I will sift the house of Israel among all
nations as wheat is sifted in a sieve."
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Amos proclaimed Yahweh the
"God of all nations" and warned the Israelites that ritual
must not take the place of righteousness. And before this
courageous teacher was stoned to death, he had spread enough
leaven of truth to save the doctrine of the supreme Yahweh;
he had insured the further evolution of the Melchizedek
revelation.
Hosea followed Amos and
his doctrine of a universal God of justice by the
resurrection of the Mosaic concept of a God of love. Hosea
preached forgiveness through repentance, not by sacrifice.
He proclaimed a gospel of loving-kindness and divine mercy,
saying: "I will betroth you to me forever; yes, I will
betroth you to me in righteousness and judgment and in
loving-kindness and in mercies. I will even betroth you to
me in faithfulness." "I will love them freely, for my anger
is turned away."
Hosea faithfully continued
the moral warnings of Amos, saying of God, "It is my desire
that I chastise them." But the Israelites regarded it as
cruelty bordering on treason when he said: "I will say to
those who were not my people, `you are my people'; and they
will say, `you are our God.'" He continued to preach
repentance and forgiveness, saying, "I will heal their
backsliding; I will love them freely, for my anger is turned
away." Always Hosea proclaimed hope and forgiveness. The
burden of his message ever was: "I will have mercy upon my
people. They shall know no God but me, for there is no
savior beside me."
Amos quickened the
national conscience of the Hebrews to the recognition that
Yahweh would not condone crime and sin among them because
they were supposedly the chosen people, while Hosea struck
the opening notes in the later merciful chords of divine
compassion and loving-kindness which were so exquisitely
sung by Isaiah and his associates.
5. THE FIRST
ISAIAH
These were the times when
some were proclaiming threatenings of punishment against
personal sins and national crime among the northern clans
while others predicted calamity in retribution for the
transgressions of the southern kingdom. It was in the wake
of this arousal of conscience and consciousness in the
Hebrew nations that the first Isaiah made his appearance.
Isaiah went on to preach
the eternal nature of God, his infinite wisdom, his
unchanging perfection of reliability. He represented the God
of Israel as saying: "Judgment also will I lay to the line
and righteousness to the plummet." "The Lord will give you
rest from your sorrow and from your fear and from the hard
bondage wherein man has been made to serve." "And your ears
shall hear a word behind you, saying, `this is the way, walk
in it.'" "Behold God is my salvation; I will trust and not
be afraid, for the Lord is my strength and my song." "`Come
now and let us reason together,' says the Lord, `though your
sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though
they be red like the crimson, they shall be as wool.'"
Speaking to the
fear-ridden and soul-hungry Hebrews, this prophet said:
"Arise and shine, for your light has come, and the glory of
the Lord has risen upon you." "The spirit of the Lord is
upon me because he has anointed me to preach good tidings to
the meek; he has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted, to
proclaim liberty to the captives and the opening of the
prison to those who are bound." "I will greatly rejoice in
the Lord, my soul shall be joyful in my God,
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for he has clothed me with
the garments of salvation and has covered me with his robe
of righteousness." "In all their afflictions he was
afflicted, and the angel of his presence saved them. In his
love and in his pity he redeemed them."
This Isaiah was followed
by Micah and Obadiah, who confirmed and embellished his
soul-satisfying gospel. And these two brave messengers
boldly denounced the priest-ridden ritual of the Hebrews and
fearlessly attacked the whole sacrificial system.
Micah denounced "the
rulers who judge for reward and the priests who teach for
hire and the prophets who divine for money." He taught of a
day of freedom from superstition and priestcraft, saying:
"But every man shall sit under his own vine, and no one
shall make him afraid, for all people will live, each one
according to his understanding of God."
Ever the burden of Micah's
message was: "Shall I come before God with burnt offerings?
Will the Lord be pleased with a thousand rams or with ten
thousand rivers of oil? Shall I give my first-born for my
transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?
He has shown me, O man, what is good; and what does the Lord
require of you but to do justly and to love mercy and to
walk humbly with your God." And it was a great age; these
were indeed stirring times when mortal man heard, and some
even believed, such emancipating messages more than two and
a half millenniums ago. And but for the stubborn resistance
of the priests, these teachers would have overthrown the
whole bloody ceremonial of the Hebrew ritual of worship.
6. JEREMIAH THE
FEARLESS
While several teachers
continued to expound the gospel of Isaiah, it remained for
Jeremiah to take the next bold step in the
internationalization of Yahweh, God of the Hebrews.
Jeremiah fearlessly
declared that Yahweh was not on the side of the Hebrews in
their military struggles with other nations. He asserted
that Yahweh was God of all the earth, of all nations and of
all peoples. Jeremiah's teaching was the crescendo of the
rising wave of the internationalization of the God of
Israel; finally and forever did this intrepid preacher
proclaim that Yahweh was God of all nations, and that there
was no Osiris for the Egyptians, Bel for the Babylonians,
Ashur for the Assyrians, or Dagon for the Philistines. And
thus did the religion of the Hebrews share in that
renaissance of monotheism throughout the world at about and
following this time; at last the concept of Yahweh had
ascended to a Deity level of planetary and even cosmic
dignity. But many of Jeremiah's associates found it
difficult to conceive of Yahweh apart from the Hebrew
nation.
Jeremiah also preached of
the just and loving God described by Isaiah, declaring:
"Yes, I have loved you with an everlasting love; therefore
with loving-kindness have I drawn you." "For he does not
afflict willingly the children of men."
Said this fearless
prophet: "Righteous is our Lord, great in counsel and mighty
in work. His eyes are open upon all the ways of all the sons
of men, to give every one according to his ways and
according to the fruit of his doings." But it was considered
blasphemous treason when, during the siege of Jerusalem, he
said: "And now have I given these lands into the hand of
Nebuchadnezzar,
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the king of Babylon, my
servant." And when Jeremiah counseled the surrender of the
city, the priests and civil rulers cast him into the miry
pit of a dismal dungeon.
7. THE SECOND
ISAIAH
The destruction of the
Hebrew nation and their captivity in Mesopotamia would have
proved of great benefit to their expanding theology had it
not been for the determined action of their priesthood.
Their nation had fallen before the armies of Babylon, and
their nationalistic Yahweh had suffered from the
international preachments of the spiritual leaders. It was
resentment of the loss of their national god that led the
Jewish priests to go to such lengths in the invention of
fables and the multiplication of miraculous appearing events
in Hebrew history in an effort to restore the Jews as the
chosen people of even the new and expanded idea of an
internationalized God of all nations.
During the captivity the
Jews were much influenced by Babylonian traditions and
legends, although it should be noted that they unfailingly
improved the moral tone and spiritual significance of the
Chaldean stories which they adopted, notwithstanding that
they invariably distorted these legends to reflect honor and
glory upon the ancestry and history of Israel.
These Hebrew priests and
scribes had a single idea in their minds, and that was the
rehabilitation of the Jewish nation, the glorification of
Hebrew traditions, and the exaltation of their racial
history. If there is resentment of the fact that these
priests have fastened their erroneous ideas upon such a
large part of the Occidental world, it should be remembered
that they did not intentionally do this; they did not claim
to be writing by inspiration; they made no profession to be
writing a sacred book. They were merely preparing a textbook
designed to bolster up the dwindling courage of their
fellows in captivity. They were definitely aiming at
improving the national spirit and morale of their
compatriots. It remained for later-day men to assemble these
and other writings into a guide book of supposedly
infallible teachings.
The Jewish priesthood made
liberal use of these writings subsequent to the captivity,
but they were greatly hindered in their influence over their
fellow captives by the presence of a young and indomitable
prophet, Isaiah the second, who was a full convert to the
elder Isaiah's God of justice, love, righteousness, and
mercy. He also believed with Jeremiah that Yahweh had become
the God of all nations. He preached these theories of the
nature of God with such telling effect that he made converts
equally among the Jews and their captors. And this young
preacher left on record his teachings, which the hostile and
unforgiving priests sought to divorce from all association
with him, although sheer respect for their beauty and
grandeur led to their incorporation among the writings of
the earlier Isaiah. And thus may be found the writings of
this second Isaiah in the book of that name, embracing
chapters forty to fifty-five inclusive.
No prophet or religious
teacher from Machiventa to the time of Jesus attained the
high concept of God that Isaiah the second proclaimed during
these days of the captivity. It was no small,
anthropomorphic, man-made God that this spiritual leader
proclaimed. "Behold he takes up the isles as a very little
thing." "And as the heavens are higher than the earth, so
are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts higher
than your thoughts."
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At last Machiventa
Melchizedek beheld human teachers proclaiming a real God to
mortal man. Like Isaiah the first, this leader preached a
God of universal creation and upholding. "I have made the
earth and put man upon it. I have created it not in vain; I
formed it to be inhabited." "I am the first and the last;
there is no God beside me." Speaking for the Lord God of
Israel, this new prophet said: "The heavens may vanish and
the earth wax old, but my righteousness shall endure forever
and my salvation from generation to generation." "Fear you
not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God."
"There is no God beside me--a just God and a Savior."
And it comforted the
Jewish captives, as it has thousands upon thousands ever
since, to hear such words as: "Thus says the Lord, `I have
created you, I have redeemed you, I have called you by your
name; you are mine.'" "When you pass through the waters, I
will be with you since you are precious in my sight." "Can a
woman forget her suckling child that she should not have
compassion on her son? Yes, she may forget, yet will I not
forget my children, for behold I have graven them upon the
palms of my hands; I have even covered them with the shadow
of my hands." "Let the wicked forsake his ways and the
unrighteous man his thoughts, and let him return to the
Lord, and he will have mercy upon him, and to our God, for
he will abundantly pardon."
Listen again to the gospel
of this new revelation of the God of Salem: "He shall feed
his flock like a shepherd; he shall gather the lambs in his
arms and carry them in his bosom. He gives power to the
faint, and to those who have no might he increases strength.
Those who wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength;
they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run and
not be weary; they shall walk and not faint."
This Isaiah conducted a
far-flung propaganda of the gospel of the enlarging concept
of a supreme Yahweh. He vied with Moses in the eloquence
with which he portrayed the Lord God of Israel as the
Universal Creator. He was poetic in his portrayal of the
infinite attributes of the Universal Father. No more
beautiful pronouncements about the heavenly Father have ever
been made. Like the Psalms, the writings of Isaiah are among
the most sublime and true presentations of the spiritual
concept of God ever to greet the ears of mortal man prior to
the arrival of Michael on Urantia. Listen to his portrayal
of Deity: "I am the high and lofty one who inhabits
eternity." "I am the first and the last, and beside me there
is no other God." "And the Lord's hand is not shortened that
it cannot save, neither his ear heavy that it cannot hear."
And it was a new doctrine in Jewry when this benign but
commanding prophet persisted in the preachment of divine
constancy, God's faithfulness. He declared that "God would
not forget, would not forsake."
This daring teacher
proclaimed that man was very closely related to God, saying:
"Every one who is called by my name I have created for my
glory, and they shall show forth my praise. I, even I, am he
who blots out their transgressions for my own sake, and I
will not remember their sins."
Hear this great Hebrew
demolish the concept of a national God while in glory he
proclaims the divinity of the Universal Father, of whom he
says, "The heavens are my throne, and the earth is my
footstool." And Isaiah's God was none the less holy,
majestic, just, and unsearchable. The concept of the angry,
vengeful, and jealous Yahweh of the desert Bedouins has
almost vanished. A new concept of the supreme and universal
Yahweh has appeared in the mind of mortal man, never to be
lost to human view. The realization of divine justice has
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begun the destruction of
primitive magic and biologic fear. At last, man is
introduced to a universe of law and order and to a universal
God of dependable and final attributes.
And this preacher of a
supernal God never ceased to proclaim this God of love.
"I dwell in the high and holy place, also with him who is of
a contrite and humble spirit." And still further words of
comfort did this great teacher speak to his contemporaries:
"And the Lord will guide you continually and satisfy your
soul. You shall be like a watered garden and like a spring
whose waters fail not. And if the enemy shall come in like a
flood, the spirit of the Lord will lift up a defense against
him." And once again did the fear-destroying gospel of
Melchizedek and the trust-breeding religion of Salem shine
forth for the blessing of mankind.
The farseeing and
courageous Isaiah effectively eclipsed the nationalistic
Yahweh by his sublime portraiture of the majesty and
universal omnipotence of the supreme Yahweh, God of love,
ruler of the universe, and affectionate Father of all
mankind. Ever since those eventful days the highest God
concept in the Occident has embraced universal justice,
divine mercy, and eternal righteousness. In superb language
and with matchless grace this great teacher portrayed the
all-powerful Creator as the all-loving Father.
This prophet of the
captivity preached to his people and to those of many
nations as they listened by the river in Babylon. And this
second Isaiah did much to counteract the many wrong and
racially egoistic concepts of the mission of the promised
Messiah. But in this effort he was not wholly successful.
Had the priests not dedicated themselves to the work of
building up a misconceived nationalism, the teachings of the
two Isaiahs would have prepared the way for the recognition
and reception of the promised Messiah.
8. SACRED AND
PROFANE HISTORY
The custom of looking upon
the record of the experiences of the Hebrews as sacred
history and upon the transactions of the rest of the world
as profane history is responsible for much of the confusion
existing in the human mind as to the interpretation of
history. And this difficulty arises because there is no
secular history of the Jews. After the priests of the
Babylonian exile had prepared their new record of God's
supposedly miraculous dealings with the Hebrews, the sacred
history of Israel as portrayed in the Old Testament, they
carefully and completely destroyed the existing records of
Hebrew affairs--such books as "The Doings of the Kings of
Israel" and "The Doings of the Kings of Judah," together
with several other more or less accurate records of Hebrew
history.
In order to understand how
the devastating pressure and the inescapable coercion of
secular history so terrorized the captive and alien-ruled
Jews that they attempted the complete rewriting and
recasting of their history, we should briefly survey the
record of their perplexing national experience. It must be
remembered that the Jews failed to evolve an adequate
nontheologic philosophy of life. They struggled with their
original and Egyptian concept of divine rewards for
righteousness coupled with dire punishments for sin. The
drama of Job was something of a protest against this
erroneous philosophy. The frank pessimism of Ecclesiastes
was a worldly wise reaction to these overoptimistic beliefs
in Providence.
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But five hundred years of the
overlordship of alien rulers was too much for even the
patient and long-suffering Jews. The prophets and priests
began to cry: "How long, O Lord, how long?" As the honest
Jew searched the Scriptures, his confusion became worse
confounded. An olden seer promised that God would protect
and deliver his "chosen people." Amos had threatened that
God would abandon Israel unless they re-established their
standards of national righteousness. The scribe of
Deuteronomy had portrayed the Great Choice--as between the
good and the evil, the blessing and the curse. Isaiah the
first had preached a beneficent king-deliverer. Jeremiah had
proclaimed an era of inner righteousness--the covenant
written on the tablets of the heart. The second Isaiah
talked about salvation by sacrifice and redemption. Ezekiel
proclaimed deliverance through the service of devotion, and
Ezra promised prosperity by adherence to the law. But in
spite of all this they lingered on in bondage, and
deliverance was deferred. Then Daniel presented the drama of
the impending "crisis"--the smiting of the great image and
the immediate establishment of the everlasting reign of
righteousness, the Messianic kingdom.
And all of this false hope
led to such a degree of racial disappointment and
frustration that the leaders of the Jews were so confused
they failed to recognize and accept the mission and ministry
of a divine Son of Paradise when he presently came to them
in the likeness of mortal flesh--incarnated as the Son of
Man.
All modern religions have
seriously blundered in the attempt to put a miraculous
interpretation on certain epochs of human history. While it
is true that God has many times thrust a Father's hand of
providential intervention into the stream of human affairs,
it is a mistake to regard theologic dogmas and religious
superstition as a supernatural sedimentation appearing by
miraculous action in this stream of human history. The fact
that the "Most Highs rule in the kingdoms of men" does not
convert secular history into so-called sacred history.
New Testament authors and
later Christian writers further complicated the distortion
of Hebrew history by their well-meant attempts to
transcendentalize the Jewish prophets. Thus has Hebrew
history been disastrously exploited by both Jewish and
Christian writers. Secular Hebrew history has been
thoroughly dogmatized. It has been converted into a fiction
of sacred history and has become inextricably bound up with
the moral concepts and religious teachings of the so-called
Christian nations.
A brief recital of the
high points in Hebrew history will illustrate how the facts
of the record were so altered in Babylon by the Jewish
priests as to turn the everyday secular history of their
people into a fictitious and sacred history.
9. HEBREW HISTORY
There never were twelve
tribes of the Israelites--only three or four tribes settled
in Palestine. The Hebrew nation came into being as the
result of the union of the so-called Israelites and the
Canaanites. "And the children of Israel dwelt among the
Canaanites. And they took their daughters to be their wives
and gave their daughters to the sons of the Canaanites." The
Hebrews never drove the Canaanites out of Palestine,
notwithstanding that the priests' record of these things
unhesitatingly declared that they did.
The Israelitish
consciousness took origin in the hill country of Ephraim;
the later Jewish consciousness originated in the southern
clan of Judah. The Jews
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(Judahites) always sought to
defame and blacken the record of the northern Israelites
(Ephraimites).
Pretentious Hebrew history
begins with Saul's rallying the northern clans to withstand
an attack by the Ammonites upon their fellow tribesmen--the
Gileadites--east of the Jordan. With an army of a little
more than three thousand he defeated the enemy, and it was
this exploit that led the hill tribes to make him king. When
the exiled priests rewrote this story, they raised Saul's
army to 330,000 and added "Judah" to the list of tribes
participating in the battle.
Immediately following the
defeat of the Ammonites, Saul was made king by popular
election by his troops. No priest or prophet participated in
this affair. But the priests later on put it in the record
that Saul was crowned king by the prophet Samuel in
accordance with divine directions. This they did in order to
establish a "divine line of descent" for David's Judahite
kingship.
The greatest of all
distortions of Jewish history had to do with David. After
Saul's victory over the Ammonites (which he ascribed to
Yahweh) the Philistines became alarmed and began attacks on
the northern clans. David and Saul never could agree. David
with six hundred men entered into a Philistine alliance and
marched up the coast to Esdraelon. At Gath the Philistines
ordered David off the field; they feared he might go over to
Saul. David retired; the Philistines attacked and defeated
Saul. They could not have done this had David been loyal to
Israel. David's army was a polyglot assortment of
malcontents, being for the most part made up of social
misfits and fugitives from justice.
Saul's tragic defeat at
Gilboa by the Philistines brought Yahweh to a low point
among the gods in the eyes of the surrounding Canaanites.
Ordinarily, Saul's defeat would have been ascribed to
apostasy from Yahweh, but this time the Judahite editors
attributed it to ritual errors. They required the tradition
of Saul and Samuel as a background for the kingship of
David.
David with his small army
made his headquarters at the non-Hebrew city of Hebron.
Presently his compatriots proclaimed him king of the new
kingdom of Judah. Judah was made up mostly of non-Hebrew
elements--Kenites, Calebites, Jebusites, and other
Canaanites. They were nomads--herders--and so were devoted
to the Hebrew idea of land ownership. They held the
ideologies of the desert clans.
The difference between
sacred and profane history is well illustrated by the two
differing stories concerning making David king as they are
found in the Old Testament. A part of the secular story of
how his immediate followers (his army) made him king was
inadvertently left in the record by the priests who
subsequently prepared the lengthy and prosaic account of the
sacred history wherein is depicted how the prophet Samuel,
by divine direction, selected David from among his brethren
and proceeded formally and by elaborate and solemn
ceremonies to anoint him king over the Hebrews and then to
proclaim him Saul's successor.
So many times did the
priests, after preparing their fictitious narratives of
God's miraculous dealings with Israel, fail fully to delete
the plain and matter-of-fact statements which already rested
in the records.
David sought to build
himself up politically by first marrying Saul's daughter,
then the widow of Nabal the rich Edomite, and then the
daughter of Talmai, the king of Geshur. He took six wives
from the women of Jebus, not to mention Bathsheba, the wife
of the Hittite.
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And it was by such methods
and out of such people that David built up the fiction of a
divine kingdom of Judah as the successor of the heritage and
traditions of the vanishing northern kingdom of Ephraimite
Israel. David's cosmopolitan tribe of Judah was more gentile
than Jewish; nevertheless the oppressed elders of Ephraim
came down and "anointed him king of Israel." After a
military threat, David then made a compact with the
Jebusites and established his capital of the united kingdom
at Jebus (Jerusalem), which was a strong-walled city midway
between Judah and Israel. The Philistines were aroused and
soon attacked David. After a fierce battle they were
defeated, and once more Yahweh was established as "The Lord
God of Hosts."
But Yahweh must, perforce,
share some of this glory with the Canaanite gods, for the
bulk of David's army was non-Hebrew. And so there appears in
your record (overlooked by the Judahite editors) this
telltale statement: "Yahweh has broken my enemies before me.
Therefore he called the name of the place Baal-Perazim." And
they did this because eighty per cent of David's soldiers
were Baalites.
David explained Saul's
defeat at Gilboa by pointing out that Saul had attacked a
Canaanite city, Gibeon, whose people had a peace treaty with
the Ephraimites. Because of this, Yahweh forsook him. Even
in Saul's time David had defended the Canaanite city of
Keilah against the Philistines, and then he located his
capital in a Canaanite city. In keeping with the policy of
compromise with the Canaanites, David turned seven of Saul's
descendants over to the Gibeonites to be hanged.
After the defeat of the
Philistines, David gained possession of the "ark of Yahweh,"
brought it to Jerusalem, and made the worship of Yahweh
official for his kingdom. He next laid heavy tribute on the
neighboring tribes--the Edomites, Moabites, Ammonites, and
Syrians.
David's corrupt political
machine began to get personal possession of land in the
north in violation of the Hebrew mores and presently gained
control of the caravan tariffs formerly collected by the
Philistines. And then came a series of atrocities climaxed
by the murder of Uriah. All judicial appeals were
adjudicated at Jerusalem; no longer could "the elders" mete
out justice. No wonder rebellion broke out. Today, Absalom
might be called a demagogue; his mother was a Canaanite.
There were a half dozen contenders for the throne besides
the son of Bathsheba--Solomon.
After David's death
Solomon purged the political machine of all northern
influences but continued all of the tyranny and taxation of
his father's regime. Solomon bankrupted the nation by his
lavish court and by his elaborate building program: There
was the house of Lebanon, the palace of Pharaoh's daughter,
the temple of Yahweh, the king's palace, and the restoration
of the walls of many cities. Solomon created a vast Hebrew
navy, operated by Syrian sailors and trading with all the
world. His harem numbered almost one thousand.
By this time Yahweh's
temple at Shiloh was discredited, and all the worship of the
nation was centered at Jebus in the gorgeous royal chapel.
The northern kingdom returned more to the worship of Elohim.
They enjoyed the favor of the Pharaohs, who later enslaved
Judah, putting the southern kingdom under tribute.
There were ups and
downs--wars between Israel and Judah. After four years of
civil war and three dynasties, Israel fell under the rule of
city despots who began to trade in land. Even King Omri
attempted to buy Shemer's estate.
Page 1074
But the end drew on apace
when Shalmaneser III decided to control the Mediterranean
coast. King Ahab of Ephraim gathered ten other groups and
resisted at Karkar; the battle was a draw. The Assyrian was
stopped but the allies were decimated. This great fight is
not even mentioned in the Old Testament.
New trouble started when
King Ahab tried to buy land from Naboth. His Phoenician wife
forged Ahab's name to papers directing that Naboth's land be
confiscated on the charge that he had blasphemed the names
of "Elohim and the king." He and his sons were promptly
executed. The vigorous Elijah appeared on the scene
denouncing Ahab for the murder of the Naboths. Thus Elijah,
one of the greatest of the prophets, began his teaching as a
defender of the old land mores as against the land-selling
attitude of the Baalim, against the attempt of the cities to
dominate the country. But the reform did not succeed until
the country landlord Jehu joined forces with the gypsy
chieftain Jehonadab to destroy the prophets (real estate
agents) of Baal at Samaria.
New life appeared as
Jehoash and his son Jeroboam delivered Israel from its
enemies. But by this time there ruled in Samaria a
gangster-nobility whose depredations rivaled those of the
Davidic dynasty of olden days. State and church went along
hand in hand. The attempt to suppress freedom of speech led
Elijah, Amos, and Hosea to begin their secret writing, and
this was the real beginning of the Jewish and Christian
Bibles.
But the northern kingdom
did not vanish from history until the king of Israel
conspired with the king of Egypt and refused to pay further
tribute to Assyria. Then began the three years' siege
followed by the total dispersion of the northern kingdom.
Ephraim (Israel) thus vanished. Judah--the Jews, the
"remnant of Israel"--had begun the concentration of land in
the hands of the few, as Isaiah said, "Adding house to house
and field to field." Presently there was in Jerusalem a
temple of Baal alongside the temple of Yahweh. This reign of
terror was ended by a monotheistic revolt led by the boy
king Joash, who crusaded for Yahweh for thirty-five years.
The next king, Amaziah,
had trouble with the revolting tax-paying Edomites and their
neighbors. After a signal victory he turned to attack his
northern neighbors and was just as signally defeated. Then
the rural folk revolted; they assassinated the king and put
his sixteen-year-old son on the throne. This was Azariah,
called Uzziah by Isaiah. After Uzziah, things went from bad
to worse, and Judah existed for a hundred years by paying
tribute to the kings of Assyria. Isaiah the first told them
that Jerusalem, being the city of Yahweh, would never fall.
But Jeremiah did not hesitate to proclaim its downfall.
The real undoing of Judah
was effected by a corrupt and rich ring of politicians
operating under the rule of a boy king, Manasseh. The
changing economy favored the return of the worship of Baal,
whose private land dealings were against the ideology of
Yahweh. The fall of Assyria and the ascendency of Egypt
brought deliverance to Judah for a time, and the country
folk took over. Under Josiah they destroyed the Jerusalem
ring of corrupt politicians.
But this era came to a
tragic end when Josiah presumed to go out to intercept
Necho's mighty army as it moved up the coast from Egypt for
the aid of Assyria against Babylon. He was wiped out, and
Judah went under tribute to Egypt. The Baal political party
returned to power in Jerusalem, and thus began the real
Egyptian bondage. Then ensued a period in which the Baalim
politicians controlled both the courts and the priesthood.
Baal worship was an economic and
Page 1075
social system dealing with
property rights as well as having to do with soil fertility.
With the overthrow of
Necho by Nebuchadnezzar, Judah fell under the rule of
Babylon and was given ten years of grace, but soon rebelled.
When Nebuchadnezzar came against them, the Judahites started
social reforms, such as releasing slaves, to influence
Yahweh. When the Babylonian army temporarily withdrew, the
Hebrews rejoiced that their magic of reform had delivered
them. It was during this period that Jeremiah told them of
the impending doom, and presently Nebuchadnezzar returned.
And so the end of Judah
came suddenly. The city was destroyed, and the people were
carried away into Babylon. The Yahweh-Baal struggle ended
with the captivity. And the captivity shocked the remnant of
Israel into monotheism.
In Babylon the Jews
arrived at the conclusion that they could not exist as a
small group in Palestine, having their own peculiar social
and economic customs, and that, if their ideologies were to
prevail, they must convert the gentiles. Thus originated
their new concept of destiny--the idea that the Jews must
become the chosen servants of Yahweh. The Jewish religion of
the Old Testament really evolved in Babylon during the
captivity.
The doctrine of
immortality also took form at Babylon. The Jews had thought
that the idea of the future life detracted from the emphasis
of their gospel of social justice. Now for the first time
theology displaced sociology and economics. Religion was
taking shape as a system of human thought and conduct more
and more to be separated from politics, sociology, and
economics.
And so does the truth
about the Jewish people disclose that much which has been
regarded as sacred history turns out to be little more than
the chronicle of ordinary profane history. Judaism was the
soil out of which Christianity grew, but the Jews were not a
miraculous people.
10. THE HEBREW
RELIGION
Their leaders had taught
the Israelites that they were a chosen people, not for
special indulgence and monopoly of divine favor, but for the
special service of carrying the truth of the one God over
all to every nation. And they had promised the Jews that, if
they would fulfill this destiny, they would become the
spiritual leaders of all peoples, and that the coming
Messiah would reign over them and all the world as the
Prince of Peace.
When the Jews had been
freed by the Persians, they returned to Palestine only to
fall into bondage to their own priest-ridden code of laws,
sacrifices, and rituals. And as the Hebrew clans rejected
the wonderful story of God presented in the farewell oration
of Moses for the rituals of sacrifice and penance, so did
these remnants of the Hebrew nation reject the magnificent
concept of the second Isaiah for the rules, regulations, and
rituals of their growing priesthood.
National egotism, false
faith in a misconceived promised Messiah, and the increasing
bondage and tyranny of the priesthood forever silenced the
voices of the spiritual leaders (excepting Daniel, Ezekiel,
Haggai, and Malachi); and from that day to the time of John
the Baptist all Israel experienced an increasing spiritual
retrogression. But the Jews never lost the concept of the
Universal Father; even to the twentieth century after Christ
they have continued to follow this Deity conception.
Page 1076
From Moses to John the
Baptist there extended an unbroken line of faithful teachers
who passed the monotheistic torch of light from one
generation to another while they unceasingly rebuked
unscrupulous rulers, denounced commercializing priests, and
ever exhorted the people to adhere to the worship of the
supreme Yahweh, the Lord God of Israel.
As a nation the Jews
eventually lost their political identity, but the Hebrew
religion of sincere belief in the one and universal God
continues to live in the hearts of the scattered exiles. And
this religion survives because it has effectively functioned
to conserve the highest values of its followers. The Jewish
religion did preserve the ideals of a people, but it failed
to foster progress and encourage philosophic creative
discovery in the realms of truth. The Jewish religion had
many faults--it was deficient in philosophy and almost
devoid of aesthetic qualities--but it did conserve moral
values; therefore it persisted. The supreme Yahweh, as
compared with other concepts of Deity, was clear-cut, vivid,
personal, and moral.
The Jews loved justice,
wisdom, truth, and righteousness as have few peoples, but
they contributed least of all peoples to the intellectual
comprehension and to the spiritual understanding of these
divine qualities. Though Hebrew theology refused to expand,
it played an important part in the development of two other
world religions, Christianity and Mohammedanism.
The Jewish religion
persisted also because of its institutions. It is difficult
for religion to survive as the private practice of isolated
individuals. This has ever been the error of the religious
leaders: Seeing the evils of institutionalized religion,
they seek to destroy the technique of group functioning. In
place of destroying all ritual, they would do better to
reform it. In this respect Ezekiel was wiser than his
contemporaries; though he joined with them in insisting on
personal moral responsibility, he also set about to
establish the faithful observance of a superior and purified
ritual.
And thus the successive
teachers of Israel accomplished the greatest feat in the
evolution of religion ever to be effected on Urantia: the
gradual but continuous transformation of the barbaric
concept of the savage demon Yahweh, the jealous and cruel
spirit god of the fulminating Sinai volcano, to the later
exalted and supernal concept of the supreme Yahweh, creator
of all things and the loving and merciful Father of all
mankind. And this Hebraic concept of God was the highest
human visualization of the Universal Father up to that time
when it was further enlarged and so exquisitely amplified by
the personal teachings and life example of his Son, Michael
of Nebadon.
[Presented by a
Melchizedek of Nebadon.] |