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War in the Hebrew Bible: A Study in the Ethics of Violence

por Susan Niditch

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Dealing with a wide spectrum of war ideologies in the Hebrew Bible, this study seeks to discover why and how these views might have made sense to biblical writers. It challenges the stereotype of the "violent" Old Testament.
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Begins by illustrating the "terrible burden" of the biblical tradition. In 1689 Cotton Mather preached a sermon to comfort the armed forces going into battle against the native inhabitants of New England. "The mood is intense, electric with blood-strirring references to beloved friends killed by Indians...to the need for courage, and to the faith owed a supportive but demanding God." In cadences of the Bible, he speaks the listeners' myth. They are Israel in the wilderness, confronted by Amalek. Israel must approach the enemy with a priestly purity of body and soul. Amalek, deserving of vengeance and total destruction, is to be "beaten small as the Dust before the Wind, Cast out as Dirt in the Streets, eliminated, exterminated."

Well into the 18th century the campaigns against native people were justified by preachers who thanked "the mercies of God in extirpating the enemies of Israel in Canaan." The author states: "This ongoing identification between contemporary situations and the warring scenes of the Hebrew Bible is a burden the tradition must guiltily bear." [4] Indeed, "The particular violence of the Hebrew Scriputres has inspired violence, has served as a model ofand model for persecution, subjugation, and extermination for millennia beyond its own reality."

In fact, little archeology supports any suggestion that the Jews, or their scripture, are genocidal, or unusually so. In fact the authors of Chronicles and Jonah, and some Deuteronomic threads, are clearly uncomfortable with war, and especially wars of extermination. [5] A vast range of war ideologies emerge, and they are compelled by a long social history. Of which we know embarrassingly little. [10]

"The first war text of the Hebrew Scriptures, Genesis 14, is the story of Abram's military rescue of his nephew Lot." This night assault "has baffled generations of scholars and the bibliography concerning it is extensive." [11] Many of the texts and rules conflict with each other. If Genesis 14 preserves a record of a battle, and it portrays a patriarch who is socially equivalent to the warrior kings around him, but a leader who undertakes war only for defensive purposes to right an injustice, and who does not seek to profit from the battle." [12] ( )
  keylawk | Jul 4, 2019 |
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Dealing with a wide spectrum of war ideologies in the Hebrew Bible, this study seeks to discover why and how these views might have made sense to biblical writers. It challenges the stereotype of the "violent" Old Testament.

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