Nmherman on Sat, 19 May 2001 18:46:28 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] This is interesting, and a little sad |
- To: undisclosed-recipients:;
- Subject: Re: Bible BS
- From: Dan Schneider <cosmoetica@att.net>
- Date: Fri, 18 May 2001 23:15:38 -0500
- Organization: cosmoetica
- References: <H00004df03577cc3@MHS>
Schneider_Daniel_E@bns.att.com wrote: > A Battle of Biblical Proportions > > > Scripture as fiction? A series of lectures in L.A. will air > controversial view. > > Los Angeles Times via Dow Jones > > Publication Date: Friday May 11, 2001 Page E-1 Los Angeles > Times (Home Edition) Copyright 2001 / The Times Mirror > Company By TERESA WATANABE TIMES RELIGION > WRITER > > Corrected May 17, 2001 > > **** Start of Correction **** May 17, 2001 Home Edition > Page A-2 Section: A2 Desk FOR THE RECORD Misspelled > name--In a story in the May 11 Southern California Living > section, the name of the editor of Biblical Archeology Review > was misspelled. He is Hershel Shanks. **** End of Correction > **** > > The ancient tales present glorious scenes of a united > monarchy of Israel familiar to every Bible reader: King > David, so brave that he slew a giant. Solomon, so wise that he > ruled a vast empire and built the first Jerusalem temple. But > 3,000 years after the great monarchs are thought to have > lived, their epic stories are at the center of a vitriolic debate > today over how much is actually history. > > On one side are most archeologists and modern biblical > scholars, who believe that the Bible contains historical > truth--although exactly how much is a matter of decided > disagreement. On the other side is a small but emergent group > of scholars who are gaining increasing public attention for > their provocative views that the Hebrew Bible, also known as > the Old Testament, is all or mostly fiction. > > Based mostly in Europe, the revisionists have recently been > joined in their skepticism by such well-respected Israeli > archeologists as Israel Finkelstein and Ze'ev Herzog at Tel > Aviv University. While these Israelis do not deny the > existence of David and Solomon as some Europeans do, they > argue that tales of a vast united kingdom are exaggerations > and that the rulers were at best local tribal chieftains. > > The controversy will be aired in Los Angeles beginning > Monday, when the California Museum of Ancient Art > presents the first of a four-part lecture series, "The > Archeology of Ancient Israel." William Dever, one of North > America's leading archeologists, will kick off the series with a > lecture rebutting the revisionists and presenting the > archeological evidence for the biblical portrait of David and > Solomon. > > "The revisionists have become ideologues who repeat their > astounding claims without any evidence," said Dever, a > professor of Near Eastern archeology and anthropology at the > University of Arizona. "They are dangerous because they are > dishonest, and they're not going to go away." > > Finkelstein calls the attacks on him "an orchestrated attempt, > when people have no ammunition, to disqualify my scientific > observations with name-calling." > > Herzog defends the revisionist positions as a willingness to > analyze the evidence uncolored by any religious agenda to > prove the Bible's historical veracity. "It is part of a scientific > revolution, and younger scholars are more willing to accept > revolution than older ones," he said. > > Devout believers who view the Bible as the literal word of > God may be aghast at any suggestion that the Good Book is > not entirely historical. But Dever expressed concern that > revisionist challenges to the Bible's historical veracity will > only build, buoyed by the recent publication of the first > popular book on the subject, "The Bible Unearthed" by > Finkelstein and archeological journalist Neil Asher > Silberman. > > The book argues that the Hebrew Bible is a collection of > ancient memories, fragmentary histories and rewritten > legends. When it comes to the united monarchy, supposed > archeological evidence for it is "no more than wishful > thinking," the authors say. > > The book has hit the top of archeological bestseller lists, is a > selection for four book-of-the-month clubs and has inspired > television documentaries now in the works by at least three > national media organizations. > > Although many scholars have questioned the Bible's veracity > for decades, the foundation for the latest revisionist challenge > to ancient Israel's history emerged in 1992. That's when > Philip R. Davies of the University of Sheffield in Britain > published a provocative book, "In Search of 'Ancient Israel,' " > that argued that the Hebrew Bible was composed long after > the fact and contains no real history. > > Finkelstein, director of Tel Aviv University's Institute of > Archeology, said he valued the work of Davies and others for > stimulating the field with challenging questions. > > "Even if they are wrong, the questions they raise are not only > right but positive because it has made us think again," he said. > The work has been resoundingly rejected by mainstream > scholars and has deeply disturbed many people. > > Jerome Berman, executive director of the ancient art museum, > likened the revisionists to Holocaust deniers who are > discounting a century of archeological evidence to try to erase > Israel's ancient past. > > At least some of the revisionists appear to have political > agendas, Dever said, evident in such works as the 1996 book > by Keith Whitelam of the University of Stirling in Scotland, > "The Invention of Ancient Israel: the Silencing of Palestinian > History." Those who raise questions about the biblical stories > have been attacked for supporting enemies of Israel, but > Finkelstein called such charges "absolutely appalling." > > "I think there is room enough for all of us to be in the field > and have scientific debates," he said. > > Herschel Shan, editor of Biblical Archeological Review, > dismisses the revisionists as a tiny group of scholars whose > minimal influence is already starting to wane. But Dever is > less sanguine. He wants to sound the alarm that their views > are having an impact, creating a "storm of controversy" in the > scholarly literature, national professional meetings and on the > Internet. > > Dever recounted one 1996 Society of Biblical Literature > meeting where a leading revisionist, Thomas L. Thompson of > Copenhagen, triumphantly announced that there was no > ancient Israel or Judaism until the second century. > Thompson's remarks were greeted with applause, Dever said, > drowning out his protests. > > "Everywhere I go, I find young Bible scholars taken in by > their nonsense, and I'm just appalled," said Dever, who has > taken them on directly in his new book, "What Did the > Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It?" The > book, published this week, will be available for signing at the > lecture. > > Waging War Over David and Solomon > > The time of David and Solomon in the 10th century BC has > emerged as the raging battleground between the two sides. > For earlier periods, many archeologists have given up trying > to find material evidence supporting such stories as the > Creation, the Flood, the Exodus and Joshua's conquests--and > even Dever believes that they are at best a mix of myth and > probably unrecoverable history. (Some researchers continue > to search for evidence and have recently reported findings of > an ancient, cataclysmic flood in the Black Sea, for instance, or > coral-encrusted remains of what they believe are chariot > wheels of a pharaoh's vanquished army in the Red Sea.) > > The later periods are indisputably historical because of > clear-cut archeological evidence and corroboration in > nonbiblical records. Beginning with King Ahab, who lived > around 850 BC, a century after David and Solomon, the > Israeli kings are consistently mentioned in Mesopotamian and > other Near Eastern records, according to Steven Feldman, > managing editor of Biblical Archeology Review. > > The middle period between the two has become what > Finkelstein called "the last bastion" of scholarly dispute. > "What we have with the united monarchy is enough evidence > to make it plausible but not quite enough to make it > convincing," Feldman said. "It is just ambiguous enough to > leave room for doubt." > > In his lecture and slide presentation Monday, Dever said he > intends to discuss the revisionists and detail the evidence > supporting the united monarchy. Among other things, he said, > three massive and similar entry gates excavated at the ancient > biblical sites at Gezer, Hazor and Megiddo dated to Solomon's > time support biblical stories of his vast central bureaucracy > and building programs. > > Finkelstein, however, argued that the gates cannot be tied to > Solomon because similar structures have been found outside > his territory and after his reign, and that his own analysis > indicates that they were built at different times at least a > century later. > > Solomon's temple, which some revisionists regard as fiction, > will most probably never be found, since it is believed to lie > directly under the Dome of the Rock, an Islamic holy site > known by Jews as the Temple Mount. But Dever said that the > temple's every detail as described in the Bible can be > corroborated through the discovery of sites with similar > features in Syria and elsewhere. > > In the second lecture, on May 21, William M. Schniedewind, > chairman of UCLA's department of Near Eastern languages > and cultures, will explore how the discovery of ancient > inscriptions has shed light on Israel's past. The most famous is > the 1993 discovery at Tel Dan in northern Galilee of a 9th > century BC inscription that refers to the "House of David" > and 'King of Israel." The inscription created a sensation as the > first extrabiblical reference to David and proof of his > existence, but some revisionists have refused to accept that > view and argue the inscription could be read as a place-name. > > Other lectures will feature Lawrence Geraty of La Sierra > University in Riverside, who will speak about a possible > Israeli tribe at Tell 'Umayri east of the Jordan River, and John > Monson of Wheaton College in Illinois, who will detail how > an ancient temple at 'Ain Dara in northern Syria shares > several common features with descriptions of Solomon's > temple in Jerusalem. > > The California Museum of Ancient Art, founded in 1983 with > a focus on Egypt, Mesopotamia and the Levant, has sponsored > 130 lectures on everything from the Dead Sea Scrolls to > women of the ancient world to ancient Egypt. The upcoming > lecture series will focus on the period of 1200 to 600 BC. > > "The three kings of the united monarchy--Saul, David and > Solomon--are the people that formed the state that produced > the Bible," Berman said. "Certainly for any Christian, Jew or > Muslim, it is important to know how this lineage started and > how these rulers came about." > > * > > The first lecture will be held Monday from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at > Wilshire Boulevard Temple, 3663 Wilshire Blvd., Los > Angeles. Full series is $52 for museum members, $64 for > nonmembers; single tickets are $15 for members, $18 for > nonmembers. (818) 762-5500. > > PHOTO: Jerome Berman, head of California Museum of > Ancient Art, says revisionists are trying to erase Israel's past.; > ; PHOTOGRAPHER: CLARENCE WILLIAMS / Los > Angeles Times