The Birth and Evolution of Judaism:
National Monolatry and Monotheism
(~1300-1000 BC)
According to Hebrew history narrated in Exodus
, the second book of the Torah,
the Hebrews became a nation and adopted a national god on the slopes
of Mount Sinai in southern Arabia. While we know nothing whatsoever
of Hebrew life in Egypt, the flight from Egypt is described in Hebrew
history with immense and powerful detail. The migration itself creates
a new entity in history: the Israelites; Exodus is the first
place in the Torah which refers to the Hebrews as a single
national group, the "bene yisrael," or "children
of Israel."
The flight from Egypt itself stands as the single
greatest sign from Yahweh that the Israelites were the chosen people
of Yahweh; it is the event to be always remembered as demonstrating
Yahweh's purpose for the Hebrew people. It is the point in history
that the scattered tribes descended from Abraham
become a single unit, a single nation. It is also the crucial point
in history that the Hebrews adopt Yahweh as their national god.
Hebrew history is absolutely silent about Hebrew
worship during the sojourn in Egypt. A single religious observance,
the observation of Passover,
originates in Egypt immediately before the migration. This observance
commemorates how Yahweh spared the Hebrews when he destroyed all
the first born sons in the land of Egypt. The Yahweh religion itself,
however, is learned when the mass of Hebrews collect at Mount Sinai
in Midian, which is located in the southern regions of the Arabian
peninsula. During this period, called the Sinai pericope,
Moses teaches the Hebrews the name of their god and brings to them
the laws that the Hebrews, as the chosen people, must observe. The
Sinai pericope is a time of legislation and of cultural formation
in the Hebrew view of history. In the main, the Hebrews learn all
the cultic practices and observances that they are to perform for
Yahweh.
Scholars are in bitter disagreement over the origin
of the the Yahweh religion and the identity of its founder, Moses. While Moses is an Egyptian name,
the religion itself comes from Midian. In the account, Moses lives for a time with a Midianite
priest, Jethro, at the foot of Mount Sinai. The Midianites seem
to have a Yahweh religion already in place; they worship the god
of Mount Sinai as a kind of powerful nature deity. So it's possible
that the Hebrews picked up the Yahweh religion from another group
of Semites and that this Yahweh religion slowly developed into the
central religion of the Hebrews. All scholars are agreed, however,
that the process was slow and painful. In the Hebrew history, all
during the migration and for two centuries afterwards, the Hebrews
follow many various religions unevenly.
The Mosaic religion was initially a monolatrous
religion; while the Hebrews are enjoined to worship no deity but
Yahweh, there is no evidence that the earliest Mosaic religion denied
the existence of other gods. In fact, the account of the migration
contains numerous references by the historical characters to other
gods, and the first law of the Decalogue is, after all, that no
gods be put before Yahweh, not that no other gods exist.
While controversial among many people, most scholars have concluded
that the initial Mosaic religion for about two hundred years was
a monolatrous religion. For there is ample evidence in the Hebrew
account of the settlement of Palestine, that the Hebrews frequently
changed religions, often several times in a single lifetime.
The name of god introduced in the Mosaic religion
is a mysterious term. In Hebrew, the word is YHWH (there are no
vowels in biblical Hebrew); we have no clue how this word is pronounced.
Linguists believe that the word is related to the Semitic root of
the verb, "to be," and may mean something like, "he
causes to be." In English, the word is translated "I AM":
"I AM THAT I AM. You will say to the children of Israel, I
AM has sent you."
For a few centuries, Yahweh was largely an anthropomorphic
god, that is, he had human qualities and physical characteristics.
The Yahweh of the Torah is frequently angry and often capricious;
the entire series of plagues on Egypt, for instance, seem unreasonably
cruel. In an account from the monarchical period, Yahweh strikes
someone dead for touching the Ark of the Covenant; that individual,
Uzza, was only touching the ark to keep it from falling over (I
Chronicles 13.10).
But there are some striking innovations in this
new god. First, this god, anthropomorphic or not, is conceived as
operating above and outside nature and the human world. The Mosaic
god is conceived as the ruler of the Hebrews, so the Mosaic laws
also have the status of a ruler. The laws themselves in the Torah
were probably written much later, in the eighth or seventh centuries.
It is not unreasonable, however, to conclude that the early Mosaic
religion was a law-based religion that imagined Yahweh as the author
and enforcer of these laws. In fact, the early Hebrews seemed to
have conceived of Yahweh as a kind of monarch. In addition, Yahweh
is more abstract than any previous gods; one injunction to the Hebrews
is that no images of Yahweh be made or worshipped. Finally, there
was no afterlife in the Mosaic religion. All human and religious
concerns were oriented around this world and Yahweh's purposes in
this world.
As the Hebrews struggled with this new religion,
lapsing frequently into other religions, they were slowly sliding
towards their first major religious and ethical crisis: the monarchy.
The Yahweh religion would be shaken to its roots by this crisis
and would be irrevocably changed.