| Review Article
Fiat Lux: Archeology and the Old Testament
But in the 1970s a new trend emerged as archeologists began to treat discoveries in the Holy Land as they would those anywhere else. Concentrating on Israel's ancient history itself, rather than solely on its biblical associations, they used artifacts, architecture, settlement patterns, animal bones, seeds, soil samples, anthropological models drawn from world cultures, and other modern methods to produce a description based on scientific evidence. The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts by Israel Finkelstein and Neil Asher Silberman (Free Press, New York, 2001, 385 pages, ISBN 0684869128, cloth, $26.00; Touchstone Books, New York, 2002, ISBN 0684869136, paperback, $14.00) brings this scholarship to a general audience. Dr. Finkelstein is director of the Sonia and Marco Nadler Institute of Archaeology at Tel Aviv University, and Dr. Silberman is director of historical interpretation for the Ename Center for Public Archaeology and Heritage Presentation in Belgium. Seeking to "separate history from legend," the authors "share the most recent archaeological insights -- still largely unknown outside scholarly circles -- not only on when, but also why the Bible was written," discoveries which "have revolutionized the study of early Israel and have cast serious doubt on the historical basis of such famous biblical stories as the wanderings of the Patriarchs, the Exodus from Egypt and conquest of Canaan, and the glorious empire of David and Solomon" (p. 3). The Bible Unearthed discusses in some detail the evidence behind these claims, and shows why, although "no archaeologist can deny that the Bible contains legends, characters, and story fragments that reach far back in time. . . . archaeology can show that the Torah and the Deuteronomistic History bear unmistakable hallmarks of their initial compilation in the seventh century BCE" (p. 23). The Bible opens its account of the Jewish people with the wandering of the patriarchs, beginning with Abraham. To judge by recent cover stories in such magazines as National Geographic and Time, one would think that Abraham must be a well-established historical character. Said to be a Babylonian from Ur in what is now southern Iraq, according to Genesis Abraham moved northwest to Haran in southern Turkey, where the voice of God told him to go south into Canaan. The Bible traces all the nations of the region to his family. The Moabites and Ammonites derive from his nephew Lot; the Jews and southern Arabs from Abraham's sons, Isaac and Ishmael respectively. There follow Isaac's sons Esau -- father of the Edomites and other desert tribes -- and Jacob; then Jacob's twelve sons, each of whom ruled one of the twelve tribes of Israel. One son, Joseph, is sold into slavery in Egypt. During a famine the rest of the family, seeking relief there, discover that Joseph has risen high in the Pharaoh's favor. After Jacob's death, the children of Israel remain in Egypt. What archeological evidence is there concerning these biblical figures? Archeologists, many of them churchmen, have searched in- tensely for evidence of the historical patriarchs because they felt that unless these people actually existed, their own religious faith would be erroneous. Although the Bible provides a great deal of specific information, the search has proved unsuccessful. Discrepancies in details are significant because such "specific references in the text to cities, neighboring peoples, and familiar places are precisely those aspects that distinguish the patriarchal stories from completely mythical folktales. They are crucially important for identifying the date and message of the text" (p. 38). For example, camels were not commonly used as beasts of burden in the Near East until the seventh century BCE, and the Philistines did not settle in Canaan until after 1200 BCE. Excavation of several sites mentioned as prominent in Genesis sometimes show that in the early Iron Age they were insignificant or nonexistent, but by the late eighth and seventh century BCE had become important. Analysis shows, moreover, that the genealogies of the patriarchs and the nations deriving from them represent "a colorful human map of the ancient Near East from the unmistakable viewpoint of the kingdom of Israel and the kingdom of Judah in the eighth and seventh centuries BCE. These stories offer a highly sophisticated commentary on political affairs in this region in the Assyrian and Neo-Babylonian periods" (pp. 38-9). The Bible also gives a dominant role to Judah in Genesis, even though at that time it was insignificant: It is now evident that the selection of Abraham, with his close connection
to Hebron, Judah's earliest royal city, and to Jerusalem . . . was meant
also to emphasize the primacy of Judah even in the earliest eras of Israel's
history. It is almost as if an American scripture describing pre-Columbian
history placed inordinate attention on Manhattan Island or on the tract
of land that would later become Washington, D.C. The pointed political
meaning of the inclusion of such a detail in a larger narrative at least
calls into question its historical credibility. -- p. 43 must be considered as a sort of pious "prehistory" of Israel
in which Judah played a decisive role. They describe the very early history
of the nation, delineate ethnic boundaries, emphasize that the Israelites
were outsiders and not part of the indigenous population of Canaan, and
embrace the traditions of both the north and the south, while ultimately
stressing the superiority of Judah. -- p. 45 A second series of biblical events revolves around the slavery of the Jewish people in Egypt, the miraculous escape of 600,000 led by Moses, their wandering in the wilderness for forty years, their swift conquest of the Promised Land under Joshua, and the slaughter of all the original inhabitants. These events, memorialized in major Jewish festivals, occupy four of the first five books of the Bible traditionally attributed to Moses. Physical evidence and historical texts confirm that Canaanites had traditionally settled in the prosperous east delta region of Egypt, particularly in times of drought, famine, and war. Some came as landless conscripts and prisoners of war, others as farmers, herders, or tradesmen. Egyptian historians tell of the Hyksos, Canaanite immigrants who became dominant in a great delta city and were forcibly expelled by the Egyptians around 1570 BCE. After the Hyksos expulsion, the Egyptian government controlled immigration from Canaan closely and built forts along the eastern delta and at one-day intervals along the Mediterreanean coast to Gaza. These forts kept extensive records, none of which mention the Israelites or any other foreign ethnic group entering, leaving, or living as a people in the delta. Biblical scholars place the Exodus in the late thirteenth century BCE, and up to that time there is only one mention of the name Israel, despite many Egyptian records concerning Canaan. Nor is there any archeological evidence for a body of people encamping in the desert and mountains of Sinai in the Late Bronze Age: Sites mentioned in the Exodus narrative are real. A few were well known
and apparently occupied in much earlier periods and much later periods
-- after the kingdom of Judah was established, when the text of the biblical
narrative was set down in writing for the first time. Unfortunately for
those seeking a historical Exodus, they were unoccupied precisely at the
time they reportedly played a role in the events of the wandering of the
children of Israel in the wilderness. -- p. 64 The book of Joshua offered an unforgettable epic with a clear lesson
-- how, when the people of Israel did follow the Law of the covenant with
God to the letter, no victory could be denied to them. That point was
made with some of the most vivid folktales -- the fall of the walls of
Jericho, the sun standing still at Gibeon, the rout of Canaanite kings
down the narrow ascent at Beth-horon -- recast as a single epic against
a highly familiar and suggestive seventh century background, and played
out in places of the greatest concern to the Deuteronomistic ideology.
In reading and reciting these stories, the Judahites of the late seventh
century BCE would have seen their deepest wishes and religious beliefs
expressed. -- pp. 94-5 These surveys revolutionized the study of early Israel. The discovery
of the remains of a dense network of highland villages -- all apparently
established within the span of a few generations -- indicated that a dramatic
social transformation had taken place in the central hill country of Canaan
around 1200 BCE. There was no sign of violent invasion or even the infiltration
of a clearly defined ethnic group. Instead, it seemed to be a revolution
in lifestyle. In the formerly sparsely populated highlands from the Judean
hills in the south to the hills of Samaria in the north, far from the
Canaanite cities that were in the process of collapse and disintegration,
about two-hundred fifty hilltop communities suddenly sprang up. Here were
the first Israelites. -- p. 107 the emergence of early Israel was an outcome of the collapse of the Canaanite
culture, not its cause. And most of the Israelites did not come from outside
Canaan -- they emerged from within it. There was no mass Exodus from Egypt.
There was no violent conquest of Canaan. Most of the people who formed
early Israel were local people -- the same people whom we see in the highlands
throughout the Bronze and Iron Ages. The early Israelites were -- irony
of ironies -- themselves originally Canaanites! -- p. 118 Thirdly, the Bible tells of the golden age of the united kingdom of Israel ruled over by a Judean monarch, first David and then his son Solomon. It describes a renowned empire spreading from the Red Sea to the border of Syria, the splendor of Jerusalem and the first Temple built by Solomon, as well as other magnificent building projects. This united kingdom then split into Israel in the north and Judah in the south. Does archeology confirm this picture? Despite legendary exaggerations and elaborations, the authors believe that David and Solomon did exist -- but as minor highland chieftains ruling a population of perhaps 5,000 people. No archeological evidence exits around 1005-970 BCE for David's conquest or his empire, nor in Solomon's time (ca. 970-931 BCE) is there any evidence of monumental architecture or of Jerusalem as more than a village: As far as we can see on the basis of the archaeological surveys, Judah
remained relatively empty of permanent population, quite isolated, and
very marginal right up to and past the presumed time of David and Solomon,
with no major urban centers and with no pronounced hierarchy of hamlets,
villages, and towns. -- p. 132
In summing up the significance of these recent findings, Finkelstein and Silberman maintain that "the historical saga contained in the Bible . . . was not a miraculous revelation, but a brilliant product of human imagination" (p. 1), and argue that the Bible's integrity and, in fact, its historicity, do not depend on
dutiful historical "proof" of any of its particular events or
personalities . . . The power of the biblical saga stems from its being
a compelling and coherent narrative expression of the timeless themes
of a people's liberation, continuing resistance to oppression, and quest
for social equality. It eloquently expresses the deeply rooted sense of
shared origins, experiences, and destiny that every human community needs
in order to survive. -- p. 318 (From Sunrise magazine, February/March 2003; copyright © 2003 Theosophical University Press)
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