Biblical Genealogy and Nationalism
Abstract
:‘Only barbarians are not curious about where they come from,how they came to be where they are, where they appear to be going,whether they wish to go there, and if so, why, and if not, why not.’Isaiah Berlin
The Tokheha in Leviticus
And I will make the land a desolation, your cities ruins,and your enemies living there will be amazed.I will scatter you among the nations with drawn sword following youwhile your land lies waste,because when you were there you did not keep its Sabbaths.
In enemy lands, your survivors will be pursuedby fear, by the sound of a falling leaf.They will flee as from a swordand fall though none pursues them,swallowed by their enemies,pining in sin and in their fathers’ sins.
But if they confess the wrong they have done to me,for which they have been brought to the land of their enemies,if their uncircumcised hearts are humbledand they accept their punishment,I will remember my covenant with Jacob, Isaac and Abraham.14
Song of comfort (late 6th century)
Take comfort, comfort… my people…your God will say.Talk gently to Jerusalem.Tell her the exile is over, her sin forgiven.
For at the Lord’s hand she served double timefor all her sins…
Listen! A voice!
Clear a road in the desert!Straight through the plain -Lift every valley, level each hill,make the winding ways straightand the rugged land -The Lord’s glory will be revealed.\All flesh will know he has spoken.
Cry out! The voice declares.What shall I cry? I ask.
All flesh is grass,all its beauty like a blossom in a field…As grass dies, as the flower withers,touched by the breath of God,so the people are grass…Grass dies, the blossom fades,but the word of our God will be forever.18
- The genealogy of biblical ethics
- In quest of a portable national culture
- The struggle for national union
- Genesis and the united nation
Jacob and the angel (Hosea, mid-8th century BCE)
God has a quarrel with Judah -he will punish Jacob for his evil,and reward him for doing good.
In the womb, he gripped his brother’s heel,he wrestled with the angel and won,the angel wept, begged him: let me go!
The Lord found him at Betheland there he spoke to us…
And I speak with the mouth of a prophet.I too have visions…
And Jacob fled to the land of Aram,for a wife he labored,for a wife he kept sheep…
By a prophetthe Lord brought Israel from Egypt.By a prophet he was saved…
Yet Ephraim enraged the Lord -his end will be bloodyin return… 32
- The bones of Joseph
Ezekiel: the dry bones (early 6th century BCE)
The hand of the Lord upon me,I was blown to the bone-filled valley…
Round and round he took me…so many bones, all so dry.
Son of man:Can these bones live? he asked.My Lord, God you know!
He said: prophesy to these bones.Say: ‘I’ll give you flesh, veins, skin.I’ll breathe in you the breath of life,and you will know I am the Lord.’
So I prophesied.I heard a sound, a rattling.The bones joined together,veins, flesh and skin appeared -but there was no breath in them.
Then he said: prophesy to the wind!Prophesy, Son of Man!Say: ‘Come from the four winds.Fill these slaughtered men with the breath of life!’So I prophesied.
Breath filled them.They stood, a huge crowd.
He said: Son of Man!These bones are the people of Israel.Some say our bones are dry,our hope is lostwe’re clean cut off.
Prophesy! Tell them:I will open your graves and bring you to life.I will bring you back to the land of Israel!36
- The prophets and national unity
Israel and Judah reunited
The Lord said to me: Son of Man!
Take a stick, write on it: ‘For Judah’ -for the children of Israel -and take another stick, and write: ‘For Joseph’,the stick of Ephraim -for all the house of Israel.
Join them into one stick.Your people will ask: what does this mean?Say this:
The Lord God says:I will take the stick of Joseph,a sign of Ephraim and the tribes of Israel,together with the stick of Judah,and make them one.
Hold up your writing sticks before them.Say this:
The Lord God says:I will take the children of Israelfrom among the nationsand gather them backto their own land:and make them one nationwith one kingon Israel’s mountains:
no more two nations,no more two kingdoms,no more detestable defilementwith idols,
no more sin…I will cleanse and save themwherever they areand they will be my people,and I will be their God.David my servant will be their king -one shepherd -and they will walk in my judgments,and keep my statutes,and live in the land I gave to Jacob my servant,where your fathers lived,and your children and children’s children, forever:David their prince, forever.
I will make a covenant of peace,an everlasting covenant with them,and multiply themand set my sanctuary among themforever.38
Jeremiah, a contemporary of Ezekiel (and also a priest) at the time of the Babylonian conquest in 586 BCE, unites both kingdoms in mourning them, when he recalls Rachel, their common mother (of Joseph and Benjamin):
Listen!Bitter sobs and laments in Ramah…Rachel weeps for her sons.She won’t be consoledfor they are gone…Do not cry: reward will come for your labor.They will return from enemy land.There’s hope for you yet.Your sons will come back to their land.39
- The sense of future genealogy
- Toward a moral/aesthetic genealogy
- Guilt and national identity
Give bread to the hungry.Take the poor into your home.Clothe the naked.Don’t ignore them, your own flesh.Then your light will break as the dawn.45
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1 | Isaiah 43: 27; 51: 2; Ezekiel 33:24; Deuteronomy 26:5. John Milton, in Paradise Lost, sums up in the angel Michael’s speech to Adam before leaving Paradise the genealogical importance of Abraham in the future of the human race:
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2 | In the evolution of the Hebrew Bible, books from a time later than the 6th century BCE were included (e.g., Esther and Daniel), and the final canon was not fixed until after the destruction of the Jewish state by the Romans in 70 CE; yet the bulk of the Bible, from Genesis to Kings—and the prophetic works from the time of Isaiah ben Amotz to Zachariah, i.e., from the late 8th century BCE to the late 6th century BCE—follows a rough chronology. |
3 | Pirke Avot (Ethics of the Fathers) 1:1. |
4 | Ibid. 2: 2. |
5 | Other biblical names, too, including Isaac, Jacob, and Moses, are given to only one person in the Bible; this might have been intentional. It seems unlikely that in the centuries of life in the (nominally) monotheist kingdoms no father would name his son ‘Abraham’; but in the Bible there is—literally—only one Abraham—in 175 biblical references to the name—and, by implication, none to compare with him. The absence of ‘Abraham’ among the dozens of names in the biblical narrative and genealogical lists suggests that the stories of Abraham were unknown to many (perhaps all) in the Israelite population, until a later date. From a purely narrative point of view of the Bible editors, the stories of the patriarchs served the crucial function of highlighting the unified origin both of the dead earthly kingdoms and post-exilic Judean faith in the living celestial kingdom of God. |
6 | The Hebrew Bible is also known as the Tanakh, an acronym of Torah, Nevi’im [prophets], Ketuvim [‘Writings’ that entered the canon]. Literature can be cited to support both the claim that nations and nationalism are a modern creation and that they are rooted in history and myth. On balance, as I have tried to show in my book on national poetry (Aberbach 2015), literature—especially when taking the Hebrew Bible into account—gives most credence to the view that nations have pre-modern origins. On nationalism as a modern phenomenon, see for example Kedourie (1960), Gellner (1983), Deutsch (1966), Hobsbawm (1990), and Anderson ([1983] 1991). Much of the terminology is modern: according to the OED, the word ‘nation’ in the sense of a people dates from 1818, ‘nationalism’ from 1844 and ‘nationhood’ from 1850. The opposing view, that nations have ancient ‘navels’, is argued among others by Seton-Watson (1977), Armstrong (1982), Hutchinson (1994), Grosby (2002), and especially Smith (1991, 1999, 2004, 2008). In the field of ancient Jewish studies, there is similar debate as to whether modern concepts such as ‘nationalism’ or ‘imperialism’ are applicable; in practice, these terms are widely applied to the Jews in the ancient Near Eastern and Graeco-Roman world, though often with qualification (e.g., (Walzer 1985; Millar 1993; Goodblatt 2006)). In particular, Walzer has written, the story of the Israelite slaves in Egypt, a chief source of the high valuation of freedom, has inspired much modern nationalism. Hobsbawm (1990, p. 54), however, in stressing the idea of nationalism as a largely modern phenomenon, regards modern Hebrew as ‘virtually invented’, a view incompatible with the linguistic evidence of continuity of Hebrew from biblical times to the present: ‘The [Hebrew] language has remained substantially the same down the years, undergoing changes that have appreciably affected its vocabulary but not, on the whole, its essential morphological, phonological or even syntactic structure. The truth of this statement even extends to Hebrew spoken and written today, following a fascinating process of revival. The fundamental unity of Hebrew, both its language and its literature, is beyond doubt. Not only have the basic structures of the language, its morphological system and especially its verbal morphology, been preserved without major changes over the centuries, but it is also possible to claim that the vocabulary of the Bible has been the basis for all later periods, despite the numerous innovations of each era’ (Sáenz-Badillos 1993, p. 50). |
7 | |
8 | On genealogical lists in Near Eastern cultures, see Van Seters (1983) and Pritchard ([1950] 2011). The subject of variant and rival texts in biblical historiography, and their implications for the understanding of biblical and Near Eastern forms of nationalism, is vast (see Khan et al. 2013) and beyond the scope of this article. |
9 | ‘…battle lost, progress won’. On Waterloo: Victor Hugo, Les Misérables, Tome 2, ‘Cosette’, Chapter XVI (‘Quot libras in Duce’). |
10 | On editing as a 19th-century nationalist phenomenon, see Van Hulle and Leerssen (2008). The impact the Bible editors sought to make is, perhaps, hinted at in the accounts of the rediscovery of the ‘Book of the Law’ in the Temple in the time of Josiah, triggering off massive reform (II Kings 22–3, II Chronicles 34–5). The Bible editors evidently saw Josiah as a rare monarchic antecedent to their own monotheist devotion. |
11 | Parts of the Bible, e.g., the books of Daniel and Ecclesiastes, are thought to have been added in the period of Greek hegemony, after the fall of the Persian empire in the 4th century BCE. |
12 | It may be no accident that the first word spoken to a human being in the Bible, Ayekha?, when God asks Adam ‘Where are you?’ (Genesis 3: 9), appears nowhere else in scripture. The Hebrew language itself represents a cultural genealogy, in its vocabulary and grammar from ancient to modern times. The root hashav, for example, meaning ‘to think’ in the Hebrew Bible, evolves into heshbon (arithmetic) in rabbinic literature, then in the Middle Ages into heshbon nefesh (soul-searching) and heshbon in the sense of a bank account, to mahshev (computer) in modern Hebrew. Similarly, Hebrew literature has a genealogy of motifs from ancient to modern times (Aberbach 1997). See note 6 above. |
13 | Smith (1991, p. 51). |
14 | Leviticus 26: 33f. |
15 | For the text of the Cyrus Cylinder, which allowed exiles to return to their countries of origin but does not refer to Judah, see Pritchard ([1950] 2011). Also, see Ackroyd (1968) on biblical theological development; Friedman (1987) on the origins of the text; Albertz (2003) on literary elements and editing, in the context of the 6th century BCE Babylonian exile; and Vaughn and Killebrew (2003); on the archaeological background. For approaches to Bible interpretation, see Frye (1981), Kermode and Alter (1987), Barton (1997), Kugel (2008), Carmichael (2020), and Swenson (2021). On the alleged unified redaction of the Five Books of Moses under Persian rule, see Baden (2009), and on dating biblical texts, see Bautch and Lackowski (2019). The Bible itself tells practically nothing about the exile. Publication of Babylonian sources and archaeological evidence, though fascinating, has so far added little to our knowledge. See Pearce and Wunsch (2014). |
16 | Nehemiah 9: 36–7; Isaiah 41: 8. |
17 | Genesis 12: 1. |
18 | Isaiah 40: 1–8. |
19 | Isaiah 49: 6; 56: 7; 61: 11. On the Jews and Greeks as peoples with a uniquely national consciousness evolving into ‘a conscious cosmopolitantism and universalism’, see Kohn ([1994] 2005: chap. II). |
20 | The biblical association of the ideal nation with morality and law, though generally accepted in modern national literature, is not necessarily characteristic of nationalism. In Hegel’s view, the policies and actions of each nation are determined by its own interests. National self-interest and rivalry culminated in World War I: ‘World War I created widespread awareness that while nationalism can inspire survival, defiance, cultural creativity and the hope of freedom, it can also express the dark violent side, the fanatic heart of a nation, its abandonment of moral discipline, its secret wish for death in a blaze of violent glory rather than a life of humiliating, though peaceful, accommodation’ (Aberbach 2015, p. 188). Tagore (1917), for example, attacks the moral degeneracy associated with nationalism; and some poets, notably D’Annunzio, regard nationalism not in terms of morality but rather of Dionysian letting go. For examples of national literature portraying a world of moral depravity, see p. xx above. |
21 | On Jethro, see Exodus chs. 18–20; on Balaam’s poems in praise of Israel, see Numbers chs. 23–4; on Ruth, see the Five Megillot, book of Ruth; on Naaman, II Kings ch. 5. To these might be added Job who is evidently from the land of Edom. |
22 | Isaiah 10: 5. In the siege of Jerusalem, c. 701 BCE, the Assyrian negotiator (the Rabshakeh) speaking in Hebrew, claims, as does the prophet, that Assyria is following divine will: ‘Go up against this land, and destroy it’ (II Kings 18: 25; Isaiah 36: 10). |
23 | Josephus, writing after the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE, describes the destruction of the First Temple in 586 BCE as occurring exactly 3513 years, six months and ten days after the generation of Adam (Antiquities X viii 5). Among reasons for the detailed genealogies in the Bible, the desire to establish continuity from past to present was paramount. Connectedness with the past became a central feature of Judaism and an influence on Christian and Islamic scripture. |
24 | Deuteronomy 31: 6; Isaiah 1: 4; 42: 6; 60: 21. For the expression ‘a stiff-necked people’, see Exodus 32: 9; 33: 3, 5; 34: 9; Deuteronomy 9: 6, 13; 31: 27. |
25 | Judah = ‘Yehuda’ in Hebrew, hence the word ‘Yehudi’ = ‘Jew’. The word ‘Yehudi’ appears only in later works in the Bible, particularly Ezra, Nehemiah, and Esther, and in later chapters of Jeremiah. |
26 | On the promise to Abraham that he would be father of a great nation, and a blessing to many nations, see Genesis 12. On the Bible and Judaism, see Epstein (1959). On biblical history, see Miller and Hayes (2006); and in the context of Jewish history as a whole, Baron (1952); on the question in the modern world of the relevance of Judaism, and its wisdom inherited and accumulated from ancient times, see for example Momigliano (1994). |
27 | Zachariah 3: 2. |
28 | |
29 | In connection with the memory of the selling of Joseph into slavery, biblical law states emphatically that the kidnapping and selling of an Israelite brother (i.e., all Israelites) is a capital offence (Exodus 21: 16; Deuteronomy 24: 7). |
30 | On allusions to Genesis in Isaiah, see 43: 27; 51: 3; 54: 9. |
31 | Genesis 18: 23–33. For echoes of Abraham’s intervention and the divine response, see Jeremiah 5:1, Job 45: 5. Moses, too, intercedes with God, successfully, to prevent the destruction of his sinful people (Exodus 32: 10f., 33: 5); the entire book of Job implies human free will—even in the questioning of divine justice. The concept of zekhut avot (‘merit of the Fathers’) is fundamental in Judaism: in time of crisis, genealogy is the court of last resort, in appealing for divine intercession. The patriarchs are remembered too in the Eighteen Benedictions (Shmoneh Esreh), recited each weekday in the siddur (Hebrew prayerbook); and the in the festival of Sukkot (Tabernacles), they are guests (ushpizin) in the sukkah. |
32 | Hosea 12: 3–5, 11, 13–15. Allusions are to Genesis 25: 26; 28: 10–19; 29: 18f.; 32: 25–31. Moses is the ‘prophet’ who took Israel from Egypt (see Deuteronomy 34: 10). |
33 | Genesis 50: 25; Joshua 24: 32. |
34 | Deuteronomy 28: 15–68. Joshua 24: 32. |
35 | |
36 | Ezekiel 37:1–12. |
37 | All the extant 8th century BCE biblical prophets predicted the return of the northern Kingdom of Israel—to no avail (Amos 9: 14–15; Hosea 11: 11; Isaiah 11: 16; Micah 2: 12). |
38 | Ezekiel 37: 15–26. The use of the word ‘stick’ (etz) rather than ‘sceptre’ = ‘tribe’ (shevet) to represent the tribal kingdoms of Israel and Judah might signify their fall from power. Jacob’s blessing that ‘The sceptre [shevet] will not quit Judah’ (Genesis 49: 10), proved false inasmuch as the kingdom of Judah was destroyed. The expressions Shevet Yehuda (the tribe of Judah) and Malkhut Yehuda (the kingdom of Judah) occur in the Hebrew Bible only in connection with the division of the kingdom (I Kings 12: 20, 17: 18; Psalms 78: 68; I Chronicles 11: 17). In contrast, the word malkhut frequently describes the Persian kingdom in works postdating the 539 BCE Persian conquest of Babylonia (Daniel, Ezra, Nehemiah, and Esther): in the world in which the Hebrew Bible germinated, power (malkhut) was in Persian hands. It may be that acknowledgment of and subservience to the ruling power was a prerequisite in editing the Bible, as it was in rebuilding Jerusalem; hence, perhaps, the praise of Cyrus as ‘messiah’ in the book of Isaiah. |
39 | Jeremiah 31: 15–17. |
40 | Deuteronomy 29: 14. |
41 | To William Tyndale, the leading translator of the Hebrew Bible into English, England and ancient Israel were one: ‘As it went with their kings and rulers, so shall it be with ours. As it was with their common people, so shall it be with ours’ (Daniell 2003, pp. 237–38). |
42 | Freud (1926, p. 274). The Jewish experience of being a small people in the shadow of powerful imperial cultures might be reflected in the biblical warning against the evil majority: ‘Thou shalt not follow a multitude to do evil’ (Exodus 23: 2, KJV). |
43 | In its emotional highs and lows, the Hebrew Bible differs markedly from its only real literary rival in the Iron Age, Homer in The Iliad and The Odyssey: in its shifts from utter despair to ecstasy, typically linked with moral conflict; in its expression of love of God and humanity and kindness toward the poor, as against realities of idolatry, cruelty and sin. Erich Auerbach points out in Mimesis (Auerbach 1974), Greek narrative is relatively flat: Homer tells of the death of Hector’s dog in the same tone as the fall of Troy. Yet, Homer and the Bible both tell of peoples far from home and scarred by war who seek to return and rebuild their lives as before. James Joyce recognizes this parallel in making his modern Ulysses a ‘jewgreek’—Leopold Bloom, in Ulysses. |
44 | |
45 | Isaiah 58: 7–8. |
46 | An exception is, perhaps, 17th century England during and after the Puritan Revolution led by Oliver Cromwell when, briefly, the powerful national identification with Israel and Hebrew scripture included, at times, much that in the Bible was allegedly wrong with the Jews. In Dryden’s allegory of the Exclusion Crisis (1679–81), Absolom and Achitophel, the English are tainted with ‘Jewish’ failings as portrayed in the Bible: The Jews, a headstrong, moody, murmuring race, As ever tried th’extent and stretch of grace; God’s pampered people, whom, debauched with ease, No king could govern, nor no God could please… (ll. 45–48) |
47 | See Parkes (1964, pp. 62–63) on the split between Christian arrogation of Old Testament blessings to the followers of Jesus and its curses to the Jews. The authority of the Church was such that ‘ultimately one believes it’; and with passions inflamed by the First Crusade, belief in the accursed Jews burst into violence which has periodically recurred ever since. |
48 | O’Brien (1988, pp. 3–4) contrasts divine promises of land to Abraham in the Hebrew Bible with Luke 4: 5–8: whereas in Jewish Scripture, God offers land to Abraham and he accepts it, in the Gospels, Satan offers land to Jesus, who refuses it. The Christian Bible effectively blanks out Jewish nationalism: the Promised Land is not the land of Israel but Heaven; and the Chosen People are not the Jews but all who have faith in Jesus—these share in the divine covenant. As deicides, agents of Satan, Jews lost their status as bearers of a divine tradition, and could regain it only through conversion to Christianity. |
49 | On Christian anti-Jewish polemical use of the Hebrew Bible, see for example Matthew 21: 13, 42–3; Romans 9: 31–3, 10: 19, 21; Mark 11: 17. Rabbinic literature suggests that many other passages from Hebrew scripture were cited in anti-Jewish arguments, contributing to a consequent rabbinic reaction against Jewish self-criticism in the Hebrew Bible (Aberbach 2022). Anti-Jewish polemics in the early Christian era reach a tragic climax in the gospels with the fateful charge of Jewish deicide, ‘His blood on our hands’ (Matthew 27: 25). Jewish guilt for the crucifixion is reiterated in the Christian Bible: see, for example, Matthew 5: 12; 23: 30–37; Luke 11: 47–51; 13: 34; 16: 31; Acts 7: 51–2; I Thessalonians 2: 15. |
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Aberbach, D. Biblical Genealogy and Nationalism. Genealogy 2023, 7, 82. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy7040082
Aberbach D. Biblical Genealogy and Nationalism. Genealogy. 2023; 7(4):82. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy7040082
Chicago/Turabian StyleAberbach, David. 2023. "Biblical Genealogy and Nationalism" Genealogy 7, no. 4: 82. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy7040082
APA StyleAberbach, D. (2023). Biblical Genealogy and Nationalism. Genealogy, 7(4), 82. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy7040082