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The Origin of Biblical Israel
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This article outlines my answer to the problem of the
origin of ‘biblical Israel’. I look for a period when ‘Israel’ was dominant and
‘Judah’ subordinate, and a period of time in which an identity ‘Israel’ could be
absorbed by a population that also saw itself as ‘Judah’ in such a way that it
was irreversible. However, we do not need to look specifically for a political
definition of ‘Israel’, since when it is defined so as to include Judah
(especially the Pentateuch) rather than when referring to the kingdom that bore
the name (especially Samuel and Kings), ‘Israel’ is used in a primarily
religious (including ethnic) sense, not a political one. This accords well with
its usage in the Neo-Babylonian and Persian periods. For over a century, a
province called ‘Judah’ was in fact governed from a territory that, as the Bible
and biblical historians themselves would describe it, was 'Benjamin’. During
this period the identity ‘Israel’ could very easily permeate the population of
‘Benjamin-Judah’ in such a way that the later restoration of political and
cultic supremacy to Jerusalem could not challenge it, let alone remove it. But
with the reestablishment of Jerusalem, Bethel was defamed and destroyed;
‘Israelite’ stories were revised and overlaid with Judean ones, and (if
Blenkinsopp's reconstruction of the Judean Priesthood during the Neo-Babylonian
and Achaemenid Periods is correct) its Aaronite priesthood was transferred to
Jerusalem, thus relocating the religious centre of Jacob/Israel to the ‘city of
David’. The name ‘Israel’ was thus retained and redefined: ‘biblical Israel’ was
invented, with Judah at its head. The implications of the answer for the history
of biblical traditions are considerable.
Title: The Origin of Biblical Israel
Description:
This article outlines my answer to the problem of the
origin of ‘biblical Israel’.
I look for a period when ‘Israel’ was dominant and
‘Judah’ subordinate, and a period of time in which an identity ‘Israel’ could be
absorbed by a population that also saw itself as ‘Judah’ in such a way that it
was irreversible.
However, we do not need to look specifically for a political
definition of ‘Israel’, since when it is defined so as to include Judah
(especially the Pentateuch) rather than when referring to the kingdom that bore
the name (especially Samuel and Kings), ‘Israel’ is used in a primarily
religious (including ethnic) sense, not a political one.
This accords well with
its usage in the Neo-Babylonian and Persian periods.
For over a century, a
province called ‘Judah’ was in fact governed from a territory that, as the Bible
and biblical historians themselves would describe it, was 'Benjamin’.
During
this period the identity ‘Israel’ could very easily permeate the population of
‘Benjamin-Judah’ in such a way that the later restoration of political and
cultic supremacy to Jerusalem could not challenge it, let alone remove it.
But
with the reestablishment of Jerusalem, Bethel was defamed and destroyed;
‘Israelite’ stories were revised and overlaid with Judean ones, and (if
Blenkinsopp's reconstruction of the Judean Priesthood during the Neo-Babylonian
and Achaemenid Periods is correct) its Aaronite priesthood was transferred to
Jerusalem, thus relocating the religious centre of Jacob/Israel to the ‘city of
David’.
The name ‘Israel’ was thus retained and redefined: ‘biblical Israel’ was
invented, with Judah at its head.
The implications of the answer for the history
of biblical traditions are considerable.
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