CHAPTER SEVEN
For the cloud of the Lord hovered over the
Tabernacle
by day, and
there was fire in the cloud by night, and the
Israelites
could see it at every stage of their journey.
(Ex.40.38)
The Old Testament narrative paints a picture of God. He is
never far away; is, you might say, the subtext of the stories. He is the
creator-god, the avenging-god, the choosing god, the covenant god. The promise he makes to Abraham that launches the narrative is renewed and
thus brought back to our attention at the introduction of each new hero in
the line from Abraham to Jesus. Even when he
is not participating as a character in the action of the story his
presence is felt. From the beginning we have been told how the events of
the story are under the control of this god, and at the conclusion of
Exodus we find that his presence will be constantly, visually on the canvas
- day and night - omnipresent. "And the Israelites could see it at
every stage of their journey." This cloud and the Tent of the
Presence are constant reminders to the newly freed Israelites of the power
and presence of their tribal god. Not only did he free them from slavery
but he is also guiding them to their promised land. He reveals the way to
his people and they are never lost in the desert.
Just as Yahweh reveals the way through the desert to the
rich valleys of Canaan, so also does he reveal the way to religious and
political riches. A priestly account of the origins of the sanctuary, its
personnel and rituals follows in Leviticus. Time after time the formula
"the Lord spoke to Moses and said," announces a new set of
rules concerning offerings, installation of priests, sacrifices, sexual conduct,
purification and atonement, preparation of food offerings, and the
approved slaughtering techniques. The Tent of the Presence is the center
of the religious life of the tribes and from it come the laws that will
bind the tribes together into a people. Negotiating meaning between
the Presence and the People - that is, the approved readers of the subtext
- are the priests, the members of the tribe of Levi.
The patriarchal religion was patterned
after the patron deity of the clan - the "god of the fathers" -
and its rules and patterns are developed in the stories in the post exodus
books. Religion in the early Near East consisted not so much in certain
beliefs as in common patterns of ritual enactment.1 The recurring
prophetic metaphor shows a relationship of parent to child:
When Israel was a child, I loved him
and out of Egypt, I called my son. (Hosea
11.1)
where the desert
sojourn is viewed as Israel's childhood and where Yahweh taught
his children the necessity for discipline and trust. In the stories
of conquest we see the most basic form of the contract theory of political obligation: obey the laws
of the divine ruler and the consequences will be good, disobey and chaos
will follow. Contract theory as developed later by Hobbes and Rousseau is
implicit in the Old Testament stories although never specifically
offered as a political theory. Why does one have an obligation to Moses, Joshua and
the Judges? Because they are divinely appointed and speak the words of
Yahweh. The battles that go against the tribes are ones where the will of
Yahweh has not been followed. Good consequences flow to those who obey and
are righteous; when events turn out bad the reasons are to be found in the
disobedience of the people who have broken the contract.
Throughout the forty year
"childhood" the lack of food and water and the risk of attack by
hostile tribes were constant threats. Time after time Yahweh provides
for his people through miraculous delivery of manna and quail in the midst
of a barren desert and through the equally miraculous ability to
produce water from the dry and barren landscape. In one story (Num. 20) we
are given the reason why Moses will not be able to enter the promised land
and it revolves around water.
The Lord spoke to Moses and said, `Take a staff, and then with
Aaron your brother assemble all the community, and,
in front of
them all, speak to the rock and it
will yield its water. Thus you will
produce water for the community out of
the rock, for them and
their beasts to drink.'
Moses makes a fatal, human error. Responding to the
community with impatience (and who wouldn't given the constant complaining
of the community?) he does not speak to the rock as commanded, but strikes
the rock twice with his staff, saying, `Listen to me, you rebels. Must we
get water out of this rock for you?' This one loss of patience, this human
response to a toilsome situation, costs him dearly:
`You did not trust me so far as to
uphold my holiness in the sight of
the Israelites; therefore you shall
not lead this assembly into the
land which I promised to give them.'
No one, not even the
faithful, long serving, reluctant hero, Moses, is
immune from the commands of Yahweh. Moses
disobeys and is denied access to the promised land.
Moses' ability to
inspire is dramatically shown in the story of the battle against the
Amelekites. While Joshua led the attack, Moses stood on a hill in full
view of his army holding his arms over his head and as long as his
arms were outstretched the Hebrews were successful, " and Joshua
mowed down Amalek and his people with the edge of the sword." A
constant theme throughout the story of the conquest of Canaan: it is the
divine power of Yahweh that is responsible for success.
According to the Priestly account (Ex.
19.1; Num. 10.11) the Hebrews spent nearly a year at Mount Sinai before
finally breaking camp and striking out toward the Wilderness of Paran.
With them on the journey goes the portable ark and the tabernacle as
evidence of Yahweh's presence as
they push on to the vicinity of Kadesh where the official forty years in
the wilderness is spent. Throughout Yahweh faithfully produces water,
manna, and quail.
The Balaam story (chs. 22-24) provides a delightful
interlude in the Numbers narrative and is the one case in the Bible of a
talking animal and a touch of humor - for here the dumb beast is more enlightened
than the learned master. Talking animals are not unusual in the literature
of the time (e.g., Achilles' horse Xanathus in the Iliad) but the only
other Old Testament example
is the serpent in the Garden of Eden. The emphasis in these oracle stories
is on the fact that an oracle is only as good as Yahweh allows him to be and foreshadows the
later prophetic conception of the divine Word.
The words of Deuteronomy are the words of the
ritualistic covenant agreement
with an emphasis on the timeless and contemporary nature of the agreement.
Each new generation stands before the God of Sinai to hear the words of
the lawgiver and renew the covenant:
Hear, O Israel, the statutes and the
ordinances which I speak in
your hearing this day, and you shall
learn them and be careful to do
them. The Lord our God made a covenant with us in Horeb. Not
with our fathers did the Lord make
this covenant, but with us,
who
are all of us here alive this day.
(Deut. 5.1-3)
The story of the time in the wilderness
emphasizes the ongoing power of Yahweh and his covenant promise to the chosen people. It also tells
of victories and defeats as the tribes seek a way of entering Canaan to
settle in the promised land. The laws that will bind the tribes together
and the rituals that will be constant reminders of the power and glory of
Yahweh are a part of the official line of these books, establishing as they do the
many priestly observations that will be a part of the history and
celebration of the covenant. The beginning story for one of the important
Jewish holidays is described as follows:
Along with the annual feasts stipulated in the Covenant Code,
Levitical law added the Day of
Atonement (Yom Kippur), the
most solemn of all Hebrew fasts.
Observed on the tenth day of
penitence at the beginning of the New
Year, when forgiveness was
sought for the sins of the past year.
Although it was not until the
post-Exilic period that it received a
fixed place in the liturgical
calendar, its rituals appear to be
quite old. Sin offerings were made
by the high priest for himself, his family, and "for all
the assembly
of Israel," after which the
nation's sins were symbolically laid upon
the scapegoat (goat for
"Azazel"), which was driven into the
wilderness to die. The day of
Atonement was the one day in the
year when the high priest entered into
the Holy of Holies, the inner
shrine of the temple.2
The book of Joshua tells us the official
story of the conquest of Canaan. Although all the extra-biblical evidence
indicates a long and gradual encroachment by the Hebrew tribes here we are
given three swift and decisive campaigns to bring the whole land into
Israelite control. The battle of Jericho is a prime example of the point
of these stories. On the way to the city the tribes must cross the Jordan
River. As they approach the river the waters miraculously stop and allow
their passage in a story reminiscent of the Red Sea episode on the way out
of Egypt. After observing the Passover the assault on the city begins.
With the priests in the front, carrying the Ark and blowing trumpets, they
march around the city seven times and then miraculously a mighty shout is
sufficient to bring down the walls of Jericho. The city is then totally
destroyed as a sacrifice to Yahweh.
Narrative conquest of the promised land
is portrayed as a sudden and complete victory but all of the evidence,
even other biblical evidence, indicates a much less thoroughgoing victory
as we see at the beginning of the book of Judges where the question raised
after Joshua's death is "Who shall go up against the Canaanites, to
fight against them?" indicating that the victory is not complete, the
lands not yet secured.
After the death of Moses the mantle of authority passes on to
Joshua, the warrior hero, who will reign over the conquest. The climactic
entry into the promised land, a land that Moses will see but never enter,
is promised again in Yahweh's charge to
Joshua at the beginning of the book of Joshua:
`My servant Moses is dead; now it is for you to cross the
Jordan, you and this whole people of
Israel, to this land which I am
giving them. Every place where you set
foot is yours: I have given it
to you, as I promised Moses....Be strong,
be resolute; it is you who
are to put this people in possession
of the land which I swore to
give to their fathers....for the Lord
your God is with you wherever
you go.'
And indeed the story offers evidence that
Yahweh is with Joshua, for he is not only able
to capture and destroy Jericho and Ai, but he is also able to defeat the
combined forces of all of the Amorite kings in the battle outside
of Gilgal in Gibeon (Joshua 10). It is in that battle that the power of
Yahweh is exhibited in a most dramatic way - the sun itself stands still
"until a nation had taken vengeance on its enemies."
Signs, miracles, victories, all signal
the proclamation that the chosen people are the instrument of a powerful
god, a god who is fulfilling a promise made to the patriarchs so many
hundreds of years before. In the ongoing covenant story of the Pentateuch we see a simple
ethic: follow the rules and good consequences will come; break the rules
and bad consequences will come. But the Hebrew writers also knew that this
simple explanation of good and evil was unable to explain all the real
events in a community's life. Sometimes the bad prosper. Sometimes the
good suffer. This conflict between the official line and the story of a real life is wrestled with
in the Wisdom literature. Proverbs, for example, tells us of a practical
wisdom to employ in everyday life, while the books of Job and Ecclesiastes
offer a counterpoint to the official position that God always rewards good
and punishes evil.