Playing with Peace: Solomon as the Man of Peace and Rest, and the Temple as the House of Rest
Abstract
:1. Introduction
It is possible to find an explanation for the Chronicler’s adaptation of the Deuteronomistic History version of Solomon’s narrative in the wider international context. It might well be that the Chronicler had the wider international discourse on peace in his mind when he transformed Solomon into the king of peace and the man of rest. In this way the Chronicler probably indicated that the king of peace should be sought in their own Judahite past and not in the wider international context. The house of rest was to be found in Jerusalem and not in Persepolis. Above all, the Giver of Peace is Yahweh of Judah, and not Ahuramazda of Persia.
2. War and Peace in Persian and Greek Sources
Proclaims Darius, the king: Auramazda, when he saw this earth in turmoil, after that he bestowed it upon me; me he made king; I am king. By the favour of Auramazda I put it in its proper place. What I have said to them, that they did, as was my desire.(DNa 31–36—translation of Schmitt 2000, vol. 2)
Proclaims Darius, the king: May Auramazda bring me aid together with all the gods; and may Auramazda protect this country from the (enemy) army, from crop failure (and) from Falsehood! Upon this country may not come an (enemy) army, nor crop failure nor Falsehood! This I pray as a favour of Auramazda together with all the gods; this favour may Auramazda grant me together with all the gods.(DPd 12–24—translation of Schmitt 2000, vol. 2)
Proclaims Darius, the king: By the favour of Auramazda I am of such a kind that I am friendly to right, (but) I am not friendly to wrong. (It is) not my desire that the weak one might be treated wrongly for the strong one’s sake, (and) that (is) not my desire that the strong one might be treated wrongly for the weak one’s sake. What (is) right, that (is) my desire. To the man following Falsehood I am not friendly. I am not hot-tempered. Whatever occurs to me in a quarrel, I firmly hold back in my thinking; I am firmly in control of myself. The man who co-operates, for him, according to the co-operation, thus I care for him; who does harm, according to the harm done, thus I punish him. (It is) not my desire that a man should do harm; moreover that (is) not my desire: If he should do harm, he should not be punished.(DNb 5–21—translation of Schmitt 2000, vol. 2)
[A]s he owes his kingship to the favor of Auramazda, the king is obliged to protect the god’s good creation. He is capable of doing so because the god has given him the ability to tell right from wrong and because he has special qualities which are conducive to the promotion of justice and the protection of order. Although an absolute monarch, he is capable of being impartial and self-controlled; he judges, rewards, and punishes not at his own discretion, but always on the basis of fairness; …. Order, not chaos, peace, not tension, good conduct of the subjects and royal generosity, not disloyalty and kingly misbehavior dominate the inscriptions and the imagery of the royal residences. … Carrot and stick, guarantee of well-being … and graveyard peace after the quelling of rebellions were the two sides of the pax Achaemenidica at all times
[F]rom the fourth century onwards [i.e., approximately 50 years after the supposed treaty—L.C.J.] everybody knew of a ‘Peace of Callias’ by which Athens bound the Persians to keep away from the Aegean and the west coast of Asia Minor… Most scholars have been sufficiently impressed by the later evidence to believe in a treaty. It is clear that the fears of the late 450s were no more and that Athens stopped prosecuting the war against Persia; there may even have been some kind of understanding with the Persian satraps in western Asia Minor; but the formal treaty was probably invented after 386, when the Greeks of Asia Minor had been handed back to Persia … to illustrate how much more glorious the past had been than the shameful present.
When Tiribazus called a meeting of all who wished to hear the peace terms which the king had issued, everyone came swiftly to the meeting. When they were assembled, Tiribazus showed them the king’s seal and then read out the text, which was as follows: “King Artaxerxes considers it just that the cities in Asia and, among the islands, Clazomenae and Cyprus should belong to him; the other Greek cities, both big and small, should be autonomous, except for Lemnos, Imbros and Skyros, which should belong to Athens, as in the past. And if either of the two parties refuses to accept this peace, I, together with those who do accept it, will make war on that party both by land and by sea, with ships and with money”.(Hellenica V, 1.30–31—translation of Kuhrt 2013, p. 381)
[A]fter the Corinthian War … Greek diplomacy managed to create a new institution of international law that overcame the provisional nature of treaties in the form of spondai. This was the koine eirene. In 386 the “King’s Peace” … inaugurated a series of common peace treaties, ranging over 50 years, leading to the “League of Corinth” in 337 …, and even inspiring the foundation of the Hellenic League under Antigonus and Demetrius in 303/2 …. Successively adapted and refined, these general peace treaties contain fundamental changes: the diplomatic instrument is designated as eirene and is now formally and properly a peace treaty; as in the modern law of nations, the peace treaty is concluded for an unlimited duration and therefore politically and legally terminates war. It is therefore not restricted to simply containing the conflict while leaving open the possibility of an eventual renewal of hostilities after the accord’s expiration (as usually occurred with long-term spondai); the pact ceases to be bilateral, restricted to two parties, and becomes genuinely multilateral, extending to all Greek states (whether adherent to the pact or not); it consecrates as universal the principle of polis autonomy; and beginning with the common peace concluded at Athens in 371, the contracting parties also swear to a guarantee-clause which obliges all parties to ward off with arms any assault against these agreements of peace and independence. Politically and legally, this was, without doubt, the first great diplomatic movement in the history of Greece to organize peace on a general level.
Such emphasis on “common peace” suggests that fifth century experiences, in particular the Peloponnesian War, had encouraged the Greeks to find a way not only to end conflict but preempt it, that is, to protect communities and establish a process by which conflicts might be resolved without recourse to war. The “common peace” was an effort to solve the very problem that had proved detrimental in 432 when there was no means to enact arbitration in the conflict between Athens and Sparta over Corinth and Corcyra. … Try as they might, their efforts met with only modest success as ambitions for power and domination drove communities to give priority to their own needs and goals. Such conflicting ambitions resulted in war, and war’s effects rippled through society like a stone tossed into a still pond.
3. An Awareness of Peace (and War) Nearer to Home in Yehud
Can we assume that years of peaceful occupation at a site may simply be attested by a lack of destruction layers, incidental finds of weaponry, or skeletal remains which show the trauma of close combat? Such conclusions are inexact and imprecise at best. Warfare need not result in a terrible conflagration for cities or towns. Armies may take heavy casualties in the field, with little or no damage done to towns in the rear area of operations. So how do we tell the difference archaeologically between periods of war and peace? Can this differentiation be made solely on the basis of artifactual remains? Or is it necessary to correlate artifacts with historical, textual evidence to support claims concerning war or peace?.
The fourth century in Phoenicia, and in the city states along the southern Levantine coast and inland, including Samaria and Yehud, was a time of change and rebellion. The literary sources document repeated military actions by discontented Persian vassals. Archaeological and numismatic evidence corroborates this situation. The introduction of the Attic weight standard in the coin series of Sidon, Tyre, and Yehud, can only have occurred in the context of rebellion against the Great King. … Practically all the coastal peoples took part in this revolt, including the Syrians and Phoenicians, including, most likely, the people of Yehud, Samaria, and the coastal city-states
In sum, although the rebellion of Tennes was potentially serious, it seems to have collapsed suddenly without any major fighting (apart from a preliminary engagement in which the combined armies of the satraps Belesys and Mazeaus were defeated by the Phoenicians) …. The only city destroyed was Sidon, … There is little evidence that other areas of Phoenicia suffered from fighting, much less Samaria or Judah or other areas of the Palestinian interior.
4. Re-Reading the Chronicler’s Solomon Narrative
David said to Solomon, “My son, I had it in my heart to build a house to the name of the Lord my God. But the word of the Lord came to me, saying, ‘You have shed much blood and have waged great wars. You shall not build a house to my name, because you have shed so much blood before me on the earth. Behold, a son shall be born to you who shall be a man of rest (אִישׁ מְנוּחָה). I will give him rest (נוח in the Hiph’il) from all his surrounding enemies. For his name shall be Solomon (שְׁלֹמֹה), and I will give peace (שָׁלוֹם) and quiet (שֶׁקֶט) to Israel in his days. He shall build a house for my name. He shall be my son, and I will be his father, and I will establish his royal throne in Israel forever.’6
Then King David rose to his feet and said: “Hear me, my brothers and my people. I had it in my heart to build a house of rest (בֵית מְנוּחָה) for the ark of the covenant of the Lord and for the footstool of our God, and I made preparations for building. But God said to me, ‘You may not build a house for my name, for you are a man of war and have shed blood.’8
5. Conclusions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Tuplin gives a similar description: “[B]oth war and peace do figure in Achaemenid imperial ideology, and war perhaps more than is sometimes suggested: indeed, methodologically speaking, it is quite striking that the Persian and Greek data-sets, radically different in content and character, turn out not to be that far apart in their depiction of an ideological environment in which military values played a larger role than is sometimes acknowledged but were less fundamental than one might have expected. The Persians’ two greatest achievements in the fourth century were the recovery of Egypt and the recovery of Greek Anatolia. The former was eventually achieved straightforwardly by war. But the latter, though prepared by war (including a brief invasion of Greece in 393), was sealed by the so-called King’s Peace” (Tuplin 2017, p. 51). See the discussion below of the “King’s Peace.” |
2 | For an overview of Greek (and Latin) sources shedding light on the period in which Yehud existed as Achaemenid province, see Grabbe (2004, chp. 6); Kuhrt (2013). |
3 | Although some scholars (e.g., Steins 1995; Finkelstein 2018) have challenged the consensus view on the date of origin of Chronicles, the majority of commentators still adhere to the late Achaemenid and/or early Hellenistic period. See, e.g., Willi (1972); Williamson (1982); Japhet (1993); Knoppers (2003b); McKenzie (2004); and Klein (2006). Particularly, Knoppers’ commentary includes a very thorough discussion of different theories about the date and origin of Chronicles (Knoppers 2003b, pp. 101–17). |
4 | About the archaeological and Greek sources, Betlyon writes as follows: “Archaeological evidence for these revolts is meagre at best. A few sites show evidence of destruction from the fourth century, although the ability to date pottery manufactured in this period is too imprecise to establish verifiable dates. Without literary/historical sources such as Diodorus, however reliable or unreliable his writing may be, historians would have great difficulty reconstructing the history of the late fifth and fourth century Levant” (Betlyon 2017, p. 101). |
5 | Root, e.g., disagrees on numismatic grounds that the Jews from Yehud were using their new coinage system to fund a military rebellion: “Although the Jews are never listed as participants in either the Great Satrapal Revolt of 360 or the Tennes Revolt of the 340s, some believe that these coins were used to finance a rebel army. This hypothesis is unsound, since the Yehud coins are much too small to indicate military spending” (Root 2005, p. 134). |
6 | Adapted from ESV translation. |
7 | See the discussions of this section in Williamson (1982, pp. 153–57); Japhet (1993, pp. 395–98); Knoppers (2003b, pp. 771–76); and Klein (2006, pp. 435–39). |
8 | Adapted from ESV translation. |
9 | See in my methodological description in Jonker (2016, chp. 2.2.1) a further explanation of the assumptions of postcolonial theory. |
10 | Archaeological evidence (see Lipschits et al. 2017) shows that Ramat Rahel was no longer in use as administrative centre during the second half of the 4th century BCE. It is highly likely, however, that the Persian officials were based in Jerusalem itself, near the temple, which served as economic connection between Yehud and the imperial centre. I thank Yigal Levin for pointing this out to me. |
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Jonker, L.C. Playing with Peace: Solomon as the Man of Peace and Rest, and the Temple as the House of Rest. Religions 2022, 13, 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13010002
Jonker LC. Playing with Peace: Solomon as the Man of Peace and Rest, and the Temple as the House of Rest. Religions. 2022; 13(1):2. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13010002
Chicago/Turabian StyleJonker, Louis C. 2022. "Playing with Peace: Solomon as the Man of Peace and Rest, and the Temple as the House of Rest" Religions 13, no. 1: 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13010002
APA StyleJonker, L. C. (2022). Playing with Peace: Solomon as the Man of Peace and Rest, and the Temple as the House of Rest. Religions, 13(1), 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13010002