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Wednesday, December 31, 2008

The Judaic Digital Library - Free Online

The Judaic Digital Library is available free online. The Basic Reference Collection contains a list of 197 titles with 209 volumes.

Included in the collection are books such as The International Critical Commentary, the JPS Torah Commentary, Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics by James Hastings, Folk-lore in the Old Testament: Studies in Comparative Religion Legend and Law by James G. Frazer, A Commentary on the Book of Genesis by Umberto Cassuto, The Jewish Encyclopedia, and many more.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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The Head of Amenhotep III


Photo: Amenhotep’s head




The head of Amenhotep III, a king of the 18th Dynasty, was returned to Egypt after it was smuggled out of Egypt two decades ago.

Read the story of the theft of Amenhotep’s head and how it was brought back to Egypt by clicking here.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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The Goddess Vesta


Photo: The lid containing 4,000 year old writing



Macedonia archeologists have discovered an artifact that contains 4,000 year old writing. The writing is the oldest example of the old Macedonian language.

The 4,000 year old signs written on the lid of the clay artifact reveal the name of the Goddess Vesta.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Top Five Historical Discoveries of 2008

“Of making lists there is no end” (A paraphrase of Ecclesiastes 12:12).

This list is for history lovers.

Heather Whipps, the History Columnist for Live Science has posted her list of the top five historical discoveries of 2008.

Of the five, I have blogged on one of the discoveries and have mentioned a second one on another post.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Eight Significant Archaeological Discoveries

Todd Bolen at Bible Places has posted his list of what he considers the top eight archaeological discoveries in 2008 that are related to the Bible and its world.

I invite you to read Todd’s selection and then compare with my selection of the most significant archaeological discoveries of 2008.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Monday, December 29, 2008

The Shortage of Priests in the Catholic Church

According to a report published in The New York Times, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Owensboro is recruiting foreign priests to serve in a diocese that covers the western part of Kentucky.

Rev. Darrell Venters, who recruits the foreign priests, said that if he did not recruit international priests, some priests in his diocese would end up having five parishes each. He said the shortage is so severe that if one of the priests were to leave or die suddenly, he would have no one to fill some of those parishes.

According to the report,

In the last six years, he has brought 12 priests from Africa, Asia and Latin America who are serving in this diocese covering the western third of Kentucky, where a vast majority of residents are white. His experiences offer a close look at the church’s drive to import foreign priests to compensate for a dearth of Americans, and the ways in which this trend is reshaping the Roman Catholic experience in America.

One of six diocesan priests now serving in the United States came from abroad, according to “International Priests in America,” a large study published in 2006. About 300 international priests arrive to work here each year. Even in American seminaries, about a third of those studying for the priesthood are foreign-born.

Father Venters has seen lows. Some foreign priests had to be sent home. One became romantically entangled with a female co-worker. One isolated himself in the rectory. Still, another would not learn to drive. A priest from the Philippines left after two weeks because he could not stand the cold. A Peruvian priest was hostile toward Hispanics who were not from Peru.

There are several reasons for the shortage of candidates for the priesthood in the Catholic Church and for the pastorate of Protestant churches in the United States.

One problem that affects both churches is the secularism and materialism confronting church members today. Our society offers so much to so many that few are willing to abandon the lures of our society to focus on spiritual concerns as a matter of vocation and life interest. This problem, however, is as old as the church itself. Paul said of one of his co-workers: “Demas has deserted me, because he loved this present world” (2 Timothy 4:10).

Another reason few people are willing to enter the priesthood or the ministry is because the church believes that priests and ministers must be paid as little as possible, as if poverty produces humility and godliness. According to the report published in The Times,

The foreign priests in Owensboro earn the same amount as their American counterparts: a base salary of $1,350 a month, plus $60 for each year since ordination. (The pay scale varies among dioceses, and many pay foreign priests significantly less than Americans.) They can also earn as much as $130 a month in Mass intentions, or special requests, plus $50 for weddings and $25 for baptisms. For the African priests, it is a windfall.

$1,350 a month can be a windfall for the African priests, but it is a pittance here in America. Many Protestant churches in America do not compensate their ministers any better. Most seminary students must spend four years in college and another three to four years earning a Master in Divinity degree before they can be ordained as pastors of a local church.

After accumulating thousands of dollars in debt to finish their education, most pastors will begin their ministry making $30,000-40,000 per year, not even enough money to pay the debt they incurred in their preparation for the ministry.

The pool of priests is shrinking because of retirements, deaths, and a few who were removed from the ministry because of sexual misconduct. But, the Catholic Church faces a peculiar problem. The issue of celibacy serves as a strong deterrent to make the priesthood in the Catholic Church a viable option for most men. And since the Church also refuses to ordain women to the priesthood, it is clear that the shortage of candidates for the priesthood will continue for years to come, unless the Church is willing to change its policy, which may never happen.

One important reason the shortage of candidates for the priesthood and ministry is so acute today is that the Church has almost stopped calling people to consider the ministry as a noble vocation.

According to the report published in The Times, it has been five years since a new priest was ordained in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Owensboro. The same occurs in Protestant churches. In some Protestant churches, no one has ever been called to consider the ministry as a life vocation.

Jesus said: “The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few; therefore pray earnestly to the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest” (Matthew 9:37-38). There is much work to be done in the Lord’s harvest. Those of us who are involved in the pastoral ministry must encourage a younger generation of Christians to consider the ministry as a vocation worthy of the God who loved us so much.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Saturday, December 27, 2008

The Old Testament and the Presidents

CNN.com in a news release asked the following question: “Obama picks Bible for inauguration, but what verse?” The following are a few excerpts from the news release. I have added the items in italics in order to emphasize the Presidents and their choices of verses from the Old Testament.

(CNN) -- While President-elect Barack Obama will certainly be making history when he takes the oath of office on January 20, he'll also be repeating it -- by placing his hand on the same Bible that Abraham Lincoln used during the inauguration of 1861.

The Constitution does not require presidents to be sworn in on a Bible, though almost every chief executive since George Washington has chosen to do so. Presidents have differed greatly, however, on the question of which passage the Bible should be opened to during the swearing-in ceremony.

It brings up the question of what -- if any -- biblical passage Obama will emphasize.

2 Chronicles 7:14

According to Gleaves Whitney, a presidential historian at Michigan's Grand Valley State University, II Chronicles 7:14 was used for three swearing-in ceremonies: "If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and will heal their land."

Bill Clinton

If Obama wants to stress that theme again on January 20, he may prefer to follow Bill Clinton's lead from the 1997 inaugural and open the Bible to Isaiah 58:12: "Thou shalt raise up the foundations of many generations, and thou shalt be called the repairer of the breach."

Richard Nixon

Shortly after winning the White House on a similar pledge to end another divisive conflict -- this one in Vietnam -- Richard Nixon took the oath with a family Bible opened to Isaiah 2:4: "And he shall judge among the nations, and shall rebuke many people: and they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruninghooks: Nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more."

Woodrow Wilson

With the polls showing an overwhelming majority of Americans convinced the country is on the wrong track, Obama might hint at a back-to-basics message by doing what Woodrow Wilson did in 1913. During his first inaugural, Wilson opened the Bible to Psalm 119, which concludes "I have gone astray like a lost sheep; seek thy servant; for I do not forget thy commandments."

George Washington

Almost 220 years ago, in 1789, Washington opened the King James version of a Masonic Bible to Genesis 49:13 -- "Zebulun shall dwell at the haven of the sea; and he shall be for a haven of ships; and his border shall be unto Zidon."

Barack Obama

Barack Obama has not yet taken the oath of office, so, we still do not know what verse from the Bible he will choose, nor do we know whether he will select a passage from the Old Testament or the New Testament.

I have some suggestions for the President-Elect. First, I would suggest that he selects a passage from the Old Testament. The reason for this suggestion is that since he is trying to bring together the diverse constituency that put him in office, by selecting a passage from the Old Testament or the Hebrew Bible, he can please both Christians and Jews at the same time.

Second, if he chooses a passage from the Old Testament, I suggest that he does not select 1 Samuel 8:11-17. In this passage Samuel describes the kind of President (king) the people would have, since they had rejected God and selected a man to rule over them. Samuel said:

“This is the way the kind of king [President] you’re talking about operates. He’ll take your sons and make soldiers of them—chariotry, cavalry, infantry, regimented in battalions and squadrons. He’ll put some to forced labor on his farms, plowing and harvesting, and others to making either weapons of war or chariots in which he can ride in luxury. He’ll put your daughters to work as beauticians and waitresses and cooks. He’ll conscript your best fields, vineyards, and orchards and hand them over to his special friends. He’ll tax your harvests and vintage to support his extensive bureaucracy. Your prize workers and best animals he’ll take for his own use. He’ll lay a tax on your flocks and you'll end up no better than slaves” (1 Samuel 8:11-17).

This kind of President [king] is more like a Banana Republic dictator, but that was the kind of ruler the people wanted. And sure enough, later on the people repented because now they had the kind of king they wanted. The people said to Samuel: “Intercede for your servants with the LORD your God that we may not die, for we have added to all our sins the wickedness of asking for a king” (1 Samuel 12:19). I guess all the taxes the king imposed on them became a burden heavier than the people could carry. Indeed, it was heavy taxation that caused the kingdom to divide. When King-Elect Rehoboam came to his inauguration, the people said to him: “Your father made life hard for us—worked our fingers to the bone. Give us a break; lighten up on us and we’ll willingly serve you” (1 King 12:4).

I would suggest that Barack Obama places his hand on Psalm 72, a psalm that talks about a ruler who would rule with justice and equity for all. Here are some of the words of Psalm 72, words that I dedicate to Obama:

Give the gift of wise rule to the king, O God,
the gift of just rule to the crown prince.
May he judge your people rightly,
be honorable to your meek and lowly.
Let the mountains give exuberant witness;
shape the hills with the contours of right living.
Let him stand up for the poor,
help the children of the needy,
come down hard on the cruel tyrants.
Let righteousness burst into blossom
and peace abound until the moon fades to nothing.
Let him rescue the poor at the first sign of need,
the destitute who have run out of luck.
Let him open a place in his heart for the down-and-out,
Let him restore the wretched of the earth.
Let him free the needy from tyranny and torture—
when they bleed, he bleeds;
when they die, he dies.
And let him live! Oh, let him live!
May the people offer prayers unceasing for him,
Let them pray for him from morning to night.

If Obama becomes the kind of ruler the psalmist was praying for, he will become one of the greatest Presidents of the United States. Obama is coming to the Presidency with the prayers and well-wishes of the American people. What kind of king, what kind of President Obama will be is up to him.

Let us hope and pray that at the end of his term, either four or eight years from now, he can depart the White House and say the same words Samuel said at the end of his leadership as a judge in Israel:

“I am old and gray. I’ve led you faithfully from my youth until this very day. Look at me! Do you have any complaints to bring before God and his anointed? Have I ever stolen so much as an ox or a donkey? Have I ever taken advantage of you or exploited you? Have I ever taken a bribe or played fast and loose with the law? Bring your complaint and I’ll make it right” (1 Samuel 12:2-3).

Best wishes to the President-Elect.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Friday, December 26, 2008

Seeding Missional Communities

My colleague David Fitch, The Betty R. Lindner Chair of Evangelical Theology at Northern Baptist Seminary is announcing a missional non/conference: “Seeding Missional Communities: A Learning Commons. ” The Conference will be held on January 3, 2009, from 8-4 p.m in Fort Wayne Indiana.

David has posted the following announcement on his blog:

Last year, we did this missional conference that is a non-conference kind of thing. We gathered, had very short presentations, nobody paid, some people brought food to share, and we talked all things missional. It was encouraging and informative. I think we can do it even better this year.

So. I am calling for another meeting of the "Seeding Missional Communities Learning Commons." This year we' ll meet in Fort Wayne Indiana on Saturday Jan 3rd. We will meet be at the place Ben Sternke's community gathers in Fort Wayne, Indiana. We'll gather and discuss an array of issues including a.) the merits of missional orders as a community-forming missional/evangelistic discipline, b.) the Sunday gathering as missional, and c.) the need for a missional evangelistic tool to nurture new conversions in our communities (read about that here). Now there is very little organization being done for this. We'll gather, have different presenters and open discussion, and some time for decompression. THERE WILL BE NO CHARGE. No one will be selling books. We're just getting together to encourage and commiserate for the gospel.

The day will look like this:

8 a.m. sitting around introducing ourselves and what brought us here - prayers for the day.
8:45 a.m. First presentation 20 minutes.
9:15 - 10.00 Discussion- questions - prayer.
10:00-10:30 Break - coffee - chat - decompression.
10:30 a.m. Second Presentation 20 minutes.
10:50-11:45 Discussion-questions - prayer.
12 noon - 1:30 p.m. lunch -with friends.
1:30 Third presntation - 20 minutes.
1:50- 2:45 Discussion-questions- prayer.
2:45 Fourth presentation - 20 minutes.
3 :05 - 4:00 Discussion- questions-prayer.
4:00 p.m. Dismissal- benediction- Being Sent Out for Mission.

Again, I'm proposing we gather Saturday, Jan 3rd, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. For those who come in Friday nite, we can coordinate hanging out somewhere. For those who don't rush off on Saturday, we can hang out somewhere then too.

We need at least twenty people to commit (who won't back out). So let me know if you can join us by e-mailing me (e-mail me at fitchest@gmail.com). I'll collect these e-mails and I'll e-mail you back with a confirmation and a map as to how to get to the church and any hotels we all might be staying in. If you want to present, tell me who you are, what you want to present, give me an outline and we'll get back to you. For those who have already e-mailed me, I have received your e-mail, no need to e-mail me back. I'll confirm what's going on here by Dec 22nd.

To give you a taste of what an informal presentation looks like, take a look at my 15 minute presentation below at Canada's Cultivate gathering last year. It's rather humble I admit. And it's short and its goal is to get the discussion going. This is the kind of presentations we'll be shooting for. I'll be doing only ONE of the four presentations BTW.

To see the video, visit David’s blog, Reclaiming the Mission.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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The Symbol of the First Christians in Jerusalem


Image: This image shows how Judaism and Christianity were linked by the fish and the Star of David


An article that was published recently in Israel Today discusses the close relationship between the early Christians and Judaism. Israel Today published the following excerpt of the article:


It is not only the “ichthys” fish that is widely recognized as the secret identifying symbol of the early Christians in the Roman Empire. The Greek word for fish is ichthys—ΙΧΘΥΣ—which became an acronym for Iesous Christos Theou Hyios Soter—Jesus Christ, Son of God, Savior.

As the first church of Jewish believers had their own bishop during the first two centuries—a man who had to be full of the Holy Spirit and also a descendant of the house of David so that he was physically linked to the Messiah—they had their own identifying symbol. However, after the non-Jewish Christians grew throughout the world and began to outnumber the small group of Jewish Christians, it was not only the bishop that disappeared but also the Messianic congregation together with its early Christian symbol.

This symbol, discovered in Jerusalem, shows how the beliefs of the first Christians were distinctly Jewish.

Unfortunately, the full text of the article is available only to Israel Today subscribers.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Thursday, December 25, 2008

Christmas: God With Us

Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall call his name Immanuel” (which means, God with us)” Matthew 1:23.


Today is Christmas day. On Christmas we celebrate the birth of Christ and are reassured that in the child of Bethlehem, God is with us. This is the meaning of the prophetic words: “And they shall call his name Immanuel.” Immanuel means God is with us.

Just imagine, however, what would happen if Jesus Christ had not been born in Bethlehem? What kind of world our world would be? In a world without Christmas there would be no Christmas stockings, no Christmas bells, no Christmas wreath, and no Christ to comfort our hearts, to bring happiness to our lives, and to save our souls.

In a world without Christmas there would be no churches, no crosses pointing to heavens, there would be no Gospel, no promises of hope and salvation, and no Christmas carols to be sung by grateful people.

In a world without Christmas there would be no message of consolation at funerals, no promise of glorious resurrection for our loved ones, and no hope of life eternal with God in heaven.

But, there is Christmas, for Christ was born and God is with us. So, this Christmas, let us be glad and celebrate with joyful hearts because Jesus Christ was born in Bethlehem and the God of glory is present with us.

This Christmas day, let us remember the words of the angel: “I bring you good news of great joy that will be for all the people. Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is Christ the Lord” (Luke 2:10-11).

On Christmas day, a great shout of joy and praise calls on believers everywhere to proclaim the coming of the Savior:

O come, all ye faithful, joyful and triumphant,
O come ye, O come ye to Bethlehem;
Come and behold Him born the King of angels;
O come, let us adore Him, O come let us adore Him,
O come, let us adore Him, Christ, the Lord.

On this Christmas day I pray that you and your loved ones may enjoy a peaceful and blessed Christmas.

Merry Christmas.


Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Isaiah 7:14: “A Virgin Shall Conceive”

At Christmas time, many Christians are studying Isaiah’s prophecy of the birth of Immanuel. Isaiah 7:14 reads:

“Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign. Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel” (Isaiah 7:14 ESV).

The Gospel of Matthew says that the birth of Christ was the fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophecy. In the Gospel of Matthew, the angel said to Joseph:

“Joseph, son of David, do not fear to take Mary as your wife, for that which is conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit. She will bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins." All this took place to fulfill what the Lord had spoken by the prophet: "Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall call his name Immanuel" (which means, God with us).” (Matthew 1:20-23)

Below I provide three links to studies of Isaiah 7:14. Each post presents a different perspective on Isaiah 7:14.

1. The first link is an article I published in 2006:

Isaiah 7:14 and the TNIV Reconsidered

2. The second link is an article written by Douglas Mangum at Biblia Hebraica, published on December 22, 2008:

Behold, a Virgin shall be with Child . . .

3. The third link is an article published by Ben Witherington on December 12, 2008:

The Virginal Conception-- Miracle on Nazareth Street


Enjoy these three studies on Isaiah 7:14

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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The Christ of Christmas

Christmas is one of the greatest holidays in the history of the world. The other great holiday is Easter. However, without Christmas there would not be an Easter celebration. Christians everywhere celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ because he is our Savior. At Christmas time we think of Jesus Christ in different ways:

1. Jesus Christ: The Son of Abraham. As the son of Abraham, Jesus is the promised seed through whom all the nations of the earth will be blessed:

"Now to Abraham and his seed were the promises made. He saith not, And to seeds, as of many; but as of one, And to thy seed, which is Christ" (Galatians 3:16).

2. Jesus Christ: The Son of David. As the son of David, Jesus is the promised king of Israel, the anointed one of God. As king, Jesus came to reign in the hearts of men and women everywhere:

"He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High. The Lord God will give him the throne of his father David" (Luke 1:32).

3. Jesus Christ: The Son of Joseph. As the son of Joseph, Jesus is the Son of Man, the one who took upon Himself human nature and who came to carry on His cross the pains and sufferings of humanity:

"Since therefore the children share in flesh and blood, he himself likewise partook of the same things, that through death he might destroy the one who has the power of death" (Hebrews 2:14).

4. Jesus Christ: The Son of God. As the Son of God, Jesus was sent by the Father to tell human beings of God’s love and to save those who believe in Him:

"For God so loved the world,1 that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him" (John 3:16-17).

I take this opportunity to wish you and your loved ones a happy and blessed Christmas. May the Christ of Christmas bring you love, joy, happiness, and an abundance of blessings this Christmas. And may the New Year bring God’s grace to you every day.


Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Tuesday, December 23, 2008

A Message to Galileo: “All Is Forgiven”

The Vatican is changing Galileo’s status from a heretic to a hero of faith and science.

A news report published in the Chicago Tribune describes the Vatican’s change of heart:

The Vatican is recasting the most famous victim of its Inquisition as a man of faith, just in time for the 400th anniversary of Galileo's telescope and the U.N.-designated International Year of Astronomy next year.

Pope Benedict XVI paid tribute to the Italian astronomer and physicist Sunday, saying he and other scientists had helped the faithful better understand and "contemplate with gratitude the Lord's works."

In May, several Vatican officials will participate in an international conference to re-examine the Galileo affair, and top Vatican officials are now saying Galileo should be named the "patron" of the dialogue between faith and reason.

It's quite a reversal of fortune for Galileo Galilei (1564-1642), who made the first complete astronomical telescope and used it to gather evidence that the Earth revolved around the sun. Church teaching at the time placed Earth at the center of the universe.

The church denounced Galileo's theory as dangerous to the faith, but Galileo defied its warnings. Tried as a heretic in 1633 and forced to recant, he was sentenced to life imprisonment, later changed to house arrest.

The Church has for years been striving to shed its reputation for being hostile to science, in part by producing top-notch research out of its own telescope.

In 1992, Pope John Paul II declared that the ruling against Galileo was an error resulting from "tragic mutual incomprehension."

But that apparently wasn't enough. In January, Benedict canceled a speech at Rome's La Sapienza University after a group of professors, citing the Galileo episode and depicting Benedict as a religious figure opposed to science, argued that he shouldn't speak at a public university.

The Galileo anniversary appears to be giving the Vatican new impetus to put the matter to rest. In doing so, Vatican officials are stressing Galileo's faith as well as his science, to show the two are not mutually exclusive.

So, after almost 400 years, the message of the church to Galileo is: “All is forgiven.” Too bad Galileo is not here to hear these words and discover that the church is not infallible after all.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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The Precious Gift of Christmas

Every year Christians around the world celebrate the birth of Christ with joy and happiness. The birth of Mary’s child in the poor manger in Bethlehem was an event that changed human history. That little child was more than just another baby born on earth. That child was the one about whom the prophets spoke. He was the one whom God had promised to send in order to become the Savior of the world.

In a few days you will gather with your family and friends to celebrate God’s wonderful gift: the gift of His love. In a few days, people around the world will celebrate Christmas. This special day is generally celebrated by giving and receiving gifts. Remembering your Christmases past, what is the most precious and the most special Christmas gift you have ever received? Most of us are so blessed in life that at times it is hard to remember the gifts we have received.

As you reflect on the meaning of Christmas, think back to all the precious gifts God has given you in the past. None has been more special than the gift of His Son. At Christmas we think about the song of the angels, the joy of the shepherds, and the gifts of the Magi. However, it is the gift of God’s love that should motivate us to celebrate Christmas. The birth of Jesus Christ is the greatest evidence of God’s love for you. Unto us a Savior is born.

Christmas is a great time to express love and concern for others. This is what God did by sending His only Son. God so loved the world that He sent His Son Jesus to give us eternal life and to reveal the extent of God’s love for you. This is the meaning of the angels’ words: Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is Christ the Lord (Luke 2:11).

As you and your loved ones celebrate the birth of Jesus this Christmas, pray for peace in the world and for peace in the hearts of men and women everywhere. Pray because you are celebrating the birth of the Prince of Peace.

I take this opportunity to wish you and your loved ones a joyful and blessed Christmas. May the love of God manifested in the manger of Bethlehem enrich your life and the lives of your loved ones this Christmas Season. I pray you will make this Christmas a special day to honor God’s gift by offering Him sacrifices of praises and thanksgiving.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Monday, December 22, 2008

264 Gold Coins Found in Jerusalem


Photo: Gold Coins found in Jerusalem

The Israel Antiquities Authority has announced that a large cache of 264 coins, all made of gold, was discovered among the ruins of the building in the City of David, in the walls around Jerusalem National Park.

According to the archeologists responsible for the excavation, all of the coins bear the likeness of the emperor Heraclius (610-641 CE). On the obverse, the coins bear the likeness of the emperor wearing military garb and holding a cross in his right hand, while the sign of the cross is on the reverse. These coins were minted at the beginning of Heraclius’ reign (between the years 610-613 CE), one year before the Persians conquered Byzantine Jerusalem (614 CE).

You can read the full press release issued by the Israel Antiquities Authority here and a news release by CNN here.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Friday, December 19, 2008

King Tut’s Father



Image
: Tutankhamun on his throne

Rossella Lorenzi, writing for Discovery News, says that an inscribed limestone block found a few months ago in a storeroom at el Ashmunein, a village on the west bank of the Nile, some 150 miles south of Cairo, reveals who fathered the boy pharaoh King Tut.

According to Zahi Hawass, chief of Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities, the father of Tutankhamun, also known as King Tut, was Akhenaten, the famous king of who promoted religious reforms in Egypt.

Hawass said that slab provides “an accurate piece of evidence that proves Tut lived in el Amarna with Akhenaten.

This discovery is important because it sheds light on two famous Egyptian pharaohs and helps scholars in their study of an important period in the history of ancient Egypt.

Read the article by clicking here.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Thursday, December 18, 2008

Rick Warren and the Invocation at Obama’s Inauguration

John Hobbins has written a post in which he reports, as it has been reported in the press, that Barack Obama has invited Rick Warren to deliver the invocation at Obama’s Inauguration.

After you read John’s post, read here the reaction of some of the Obama's supporters to the decision of the President-Elect to invite Warren to give the Invocation (and make sure you read some of the comments too).

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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The Antikythera Mechanism


Photo: The Antikythera Mechanism


Several months ago, I published an article on the Antikythera Mechanism. The Antikythera Mechanism has been called “the world first computer.” The mechanism was developed by the Greeks around 100 B.C. Recently, scientists using modern-day techniques have concluded that the Antikythera mechanism was an astronomical calculator.

Nature Magazine (Volume 444, Issue 7119, pp. 587-591 [2006]) has published an article, “Decoding the Antikythera Mechanism: Investigation of an Ancient Astronomical Calculator,” that studies the nature and purpose of the mechanism. The article is available in PDF format free online here.

There is also a web page dedicated to the study of the Antikythera Mechanism. As described in their web page, The Antikythera Mechanism Research Project “is an international collaboration of academic researchers, supported by some of the world's best high-technology companies, which aims to completely reassess the function and significance of the Antikythera Mechanism.”

The Antikythera Mechanism Research Project has produced an intensive bibliography of academic articles on the Antikythera Mechanism. The bibliography is available here.

HT: Mike Heiser at PaleoBabble


Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Remains of an Ancient Town Found in Samaria

Israel National News has announced that the remains of Second Temple era Jewish town have been found. According to the published report, the Jewish town was located on the edge of the Samaria desert during the Second Temple Period.

The following is an excerpt from the news release:

(IsraelNN.com) Archaeological evidence of a Jewish town located on the edge of the Samaria desert during the Second Temple Period (516 BCE to 70 CE) will be made public later this month. The recently-discovered artifacts include the remains of a mikveh (ritual bath), stone tools and hidden chambers.

The town was located in the Akraba district, a frontier region northeast of Jerusalem. The poorly-developed district served as a natural division between the Samarians, who distanced themselves from Jerusalem as the political and spiritual center of Judea, and the Jews. The geographical and ethnic make-up of the region also gave rise to militant rebel sects, such as the Sicarii faction led by Shimon Bar-Giora during the First Jewish-Roman War (1st century CE).

Eitan Klein, a researcher from Bar-Ilan University, explained that “until recently, historical sources, dated from the Second Temple Period until the Bar Kochva Rebellion, testified to Jewish settlement existing in the Akraba district. As opposed to the wealth of relevant historical sources, there were few archaeological findings that supported the presence of such a settlement.” The current findings, Klein said, support historical references to the Jewish presence in the Akraba region in ancient documentation.

Klein is to present the latest archaeological findings at the fourth annual Frontier and the Desert Conference sponsored by the Susia Center for Exploration and Study, located in Susia in the South Hevron Hills. The conference is scheduled for December 29, the eighth day of the Chanukah holiday, and will feature lectures on a variety of topics related to history and agriculture, both ancient and modern.

Like Klein, Doron Sher Avi of Susia will be looking into the distant past and discussing recent revelations about the daily lives of Jews and Nabateans, based on ancient documents discovered in hillside caves in the Judean desert. These documents, from the end of the first century BCE through the start of the second century CE, include fascinating insights, including a wealth of Jewish and Nabatean names and descriptive appellations.

The article does not provide much information about this Jewish town. Let us hope that the presentation during the conference will provide more information about this town.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Swiss Watch Found in a 400-year-old Tomb


Archaeologists in China have found a Swiss watch in a 400-year old tomb. According to archaeologists, the time was stopped at 10:06 a.m. On the back of the watch was engraved the word “Swiss.”

Chinese archaeologists say they do not know what happened since they believe the tomb had been undisturbed since it was created during the Ming dynasty 400 years ago.

So, what happened? Did a Swiss archaeologist travel back in time and left the watch there as a souvenir? Probably not.

The best explanation for this mystery is that someone had entered the tomb in the past. The discovery of this watch can teach us an important lesson about archaeology: archaeologists must be very careful in their work and avoid contamination of an archaeological site. Contamination can affect the dating of the site and can bring suspicion on the authenticity of what is found at the site.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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The Largest Known Statue of Ramses II

According to a news release, Egyptian archaeologists have begun uncovering the largest known statue of Pharaoh Ramses II. The statue is buried in the southern Egyptian town of Sohag. According to archaeologists, the statue was part of a temple complex dedicated to Ramses II.

The reign of Ramses II was marked by major building projects and archeologists say that he is reputed to have built more buildings and statues in Egypt than any other pharaoh.

Ramses II ruled for approximately 67 years. In addition to being known as a builder, Ramses II is also believed to have carved his name over the names of other Pharaohs to rededicate their statues to himself.

I hope archaeologists will publish a photo of the statue as soon as it is available.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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The Cleopatra We Never Knew




Researchers at Cambridge University have recreated the face of Cleopatra, the Egyptian queen who reigned from 69-30 BC, on a computer. The recreation of Cleopatra’s face was based on 2,000-year-old drawings and images on coins.

The most famous image of Cleopatra was the portrayals of her by Hollywood actress Elizabeth Taylor in the movie “Cleopatra' (1963).”

The picture above is Elizabeth Taylor as Cleopatra. Now, click here to see how different the new face of Cleopatra looks.


Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Preaching on the Messianic Prophecies

In understanding Old Testament passages related to the birth and ministry of Jesus Christ, it is important to grasp two very important factors. First, each passage must be understood in its proper historical and theological context.

The prophets, who proclaimed the divine promises related to the coming of the Anointed One of God, spoke and ministered to a specific group of people who lived in a precise moment in history. That moment in history gave meaning to and provided the background for the proclamation of the divine message. That same moment in history also provided the means by which the people could understand the message of the prophets. Thus, to separate the message from its historical and theological moorings is to neglect the primary intent of the prophets and of their message.

Second, each Messianic oracle must be understood within the parameters of the dialectic between promise and fulfillment. The divine promises made by the prophets were given first and primarily to Israel and were fulfilled within the history of the people of God in the Old Testament. However, the fulfillment of a divine promise brings in itself such an enrichment of the promise and transforms it so thoroughly that the fulfillment becomes a promise for a greater fulfillment in the future.

A good example is the promise of the land in the Old Testament. When the children of Abraham inherited the promised land, the Old Testament indicates that that alone would not mean the full realization of the promise. Thus, beyond the account of the fulfillment of God’s promise, there remains open the expectation of a promise yet unredeemed, waiting for another fulfillment. The gift of the land, then, is only an assurance of a greater promise yet to be fulfilled.

The whole history of Israel in the Old Testament is presented in terms of fulfillment of a prophetic word which always recurs anew. The words which came to the prophets by divine revelation were words of promise. These words were promises of judgment and salvation, to be sure, but they were divine promises mediated to the people by the prophets.

As a messenger of Yahweh, the prophet proclaimed the word of God as the divine will for Israel, and sometimes, for the nations. Between the time of the announcement of the divine word and the time of its fulfillment, there was an interval filled with tension.

This tension-laden interval was the time for the listener to react to the proclaimed word, a time to accept it or to reject it. When Yahweh sent Jonah to preach in Nineveh, Jonah’s message was simple: “Yet forty days and Nineveh will be overthrown” (Jonah 3:4). This interval of forty days was a time for the people of Nineveh to exercise their freedom and choose. They chose repentance and the judgment was averted.

Thus, the language of promise does not only carry divine condemnation but also the possibility of salvation. The message of hope and salvation proclaimed by the prophets, when interpreted correctly, proclaims the work and the will of God for the salvation of his people. The proclamation of the divine word is the proclamation of the divine will and only God himself can interpret all the ramifications of his promise when it is fulfilled. Divine interpretations can be full of surprises, even for the prophet who proclaimed the promise.

It is in this light that the true Messianic passages of the Old Testament should be interpreted. The promise of God to David in 2 Samuel 7 establishes the proper background to interpret Micah 5:1-4; Isaiah 7:14; Isaiah 9; Isaiah 11, and many other messianic passages. The king in Jerusalem is God’s anointed one (Hebrew: “Messiah”). He represents the continuation of God’s promise to David: “Your house and your kingdom shall be made sure for ever before me; your throne shall be established for ever” (2 Sam. 7:16).

Thus, when the time came after the monarchy had disappeared in Israel, many people questioned Yahweh’s power to fulfill the promise made to David. If God is faithful to his promise, and if God promised that the throne and the kingdom of David would last for ever, has God then failed to fulfill his promise? The answer to this question is found in the oracles of salvation in which the prophets announced the coming of a descendant of David who would continue the promise God had given to David. Thus, for instance, the promise of the stump of David, producing a new shoot (Isaiah 11:1) demonstrates how judgment and salvation, promise and fulfillment stand along side each other, giving meaning to the long ago past and the future that is not yet. Because of their certainty that God would act in the future, the prophets proclaimed to the people that if not now, then some day God would raise another son of David who would restore the kingdom of David, his father. In time this hope was transferred to the future and the coming son of David became the Messiah.

Even when a contemporary king is spoken of (such as Hezekiah), the prophetic language used to describe the king transcends in the direction of the superlative. However, this description of the king in ideal terms is never fulfilled in the contemporary king. This language of exaltation should not be dismissed as an exaggeration of the scribe or prophet. Rather, because the king as the anointed one of God (the king as God’s Messiah) has a significant role in the fulfillment of the divine promises to David, the superlative words used by the prophets become words to describe the present king’s righteousness, his power, and his special relationship to Yahweh as “the son of God.” But, because no contemporary king was ever able to meet popular and divine expectations, the language then promoted the expectation of a greater king, another son of David, who is yet to come.

In conclusion, events in the Old Testament find fulfillment within the history of Israel, but this fulfillment also raises the question of a deeper fulfillment. It is for this reason that the promises given by God find fulfillment in the history of God’s people, Israel, but the fulfillment of a promise of God becomes a promise for a greater fulfillment in the life and history of God’s other people, the church.

Previous post:

Preaching from the Old Testament



Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Tuesday, December 16, 2008

The 10 Greatest Archaeology Movies Ever

Dorothy King at PhDiva has made a list of "The 10 Greatest Archaeology Movies Ever". Of the 10 greatest archaeological movies ever, I have seen seven of them. Of the 9 honorable mentions she listed, I have seen seven.

I think I like archaeology.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Ten Important Archaeological Discoveries in 2008 Related to the Bible

Several announcements were in 2008 about important archaeological discoveries that are directly or indirectly related to the Bible. It would be impossible to name all of them. What follows are ten archaeological discoveries announced in 2008 that are related to the Bible. They are not listed in order of discovery nor in order of importance to biblical studies. Rather, they are listed according to the dates of my posts describing each discovery.

1. The Kuttamuwa Stele

2. Earliest Known Hebrew Text In Proto-Canaanite Script (and here)

3. The Water Tunnel in Jerusalem

4. The Sarcophagus of the High Priest

5. The Phallic Figurines Found in Israel

6. The Walls of Jerusalem

7. Pagan Temple Found in Israel

8. The Bulla Belonging to Gedalyahu ben Pashhur

9. New Inscriptions Mentioning Seti I and Ramses II

10. A Rare Half-Shekel Coin Found in Jerusalem

Other archaeological discoveries that are also related to biblical studies:

1. Archaeological Discoveries from the First Temple Period

2. The Canaanite Warrior

3. The "Third Day" and Gabriel's Revelation

4. The Discover of King Seti I' Cartouche

5. The Assyrian Administrative Center


Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Top 10 Archaeological Discoveries for 2008

Archaeology Magazine has selected what the magazine’s editors consider to be the most important archaeological discoveries of 2008:


1. The secret of Maya Blue: A study of the sacred blue pigment used by the Mayans during human sacrifices and other religious ceremonies.

2. Masked mummy of Peru: The intact 1,700-year-old mummy of a master weaver from Peru’s Wari culture. The mummy had a wooden mask with seashell eyes. Some of the items found with the mummy included knitting needles and balls of yarn.

3. The stone with soul: The Kuttamuwa Stele, a funerary monument discovered in southeastern Turkey. The stele has a 13-line inscription in which a high official refers to food offerings that were made “for my soul that is in this stele.”

4. Brown gold from Oregon: The brown gold is the 14,300-year-old preserved feces found in eastern Oregon’s cave. The feces provide the best evidence yet that humans lived in the Americas that long ago.

5. Oldest oil paintings: The world’s oldest-known paintings was discovered in a maze of caves in Afghanistan’s Bamiyan Valley. This is site where the Taliban blew up two giant statues of Buddha in 2001.

6. The remains of the first European: Archaeologists discovered ancient hominin bones in northern Spain that has been dated back to 1.3 million years ago. The discovery suggests that the ancestors of modern humans made their way into Europe about 500,000 years earlier than previously thought.

7. The earliest shoes: The discovery of toe bones in China provides evidence that humans first began wearing shoes around 40,000 years ago.

8. Pristine Portuguese shipwreck: Archaeologists discovered a 16th-century Portuguese cargo ship off the coast of Namibia with a precious cargo: 50 pounds of gold coins, plus navigational instruments, elephant tusks and other treasures.

9. The colossal heads of the Roman Empire: Archaeologists discovered the monumental marble heads of Roman emperors in central Turkey. Among the findings were Hadrian’s head and the statues of Marcus Aurelius and Faustina the Elder, the wife of the emperor Antoninus Pius.

10. The origins of whaling: At an archaeological site in Russia, archaeologists found the carvings of a seal, a bear and a boatful of people hunting a whale from a boat. The tusk dates back about 3,000 years. The discover is considered the earliest evidence for whaling.




Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Monday, December 15, 2008

The Circus Maximus

Archaeology Magazine has an article on digital archaeology and how the Internet is helping archaeologists study ancient sites.

A good example of digital archaeology is the work of a consortium of universities which is working with Google to recreate a digital version of ancient Rome as it appeared during the reign of Constantine the Great.

In a precious post I showed an example of Ancient Rome in 3D. The picture below shows the Circus Maximus, one of the 7,000 structures of ancient Rome, part of the Rome Reborn project, which digitally reconstructs how Rome appeared in A.D. 320.








Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Preaching from the Old Testament

Preaching from the Old Testament is no easy task. It requires hours of study and a special effort at discovering the great truths found beyond the surface of the text. It requires the preacher to know the theology of the text and the theology in the text. But above all, good preaching from the Old Testament demands that the preacher be familiar with the history of Israel and the events that molded the preaching of the prophets and the circumstances that gave rise to the writing of the texts of the Old Testament.

The Old Testament as has been transmitted to us is a record of what the God of Israel has said and done in the history of his people. The study and interpretation of the Old Testament does not deal with a system of ideas or a collection of doctrines. Rather, the Old Testament is a collection of stories detailing what God has done in history, within the realm of time and space.

Since the Old Testament deals with God’s work in history, it follows then that, unless we know that history and communicate it to our people effectively, the history of God’s dealing with his people will be forgotten in time and the people who listen to us every week will be ignorant of the mighty work of God in the past and will be unable to understand the mighty work of God in the present.

Most sermons preached from our pulpits today do not present a sustained exposition of the texts found in Scriptures. Today’s sermons generally are exhortations to help our people live a better life or feel good. Elizabeth Achtemeier, in her book Preaching from the Old Testament (Louisville: Westminster/John Knox Press, 1989) said:

Most of the preaching that takes place in the United States is thematic preaching, preaching in which a theme or topic or moral lesson is distilled out of the text. The task of the sermon then becomes to prove that some thesis is true, or the task becomes one of convincing and exhorting our people to be good. We use all sorts of authorities to prove the truth of our statements, employing quotes of authorities to prove the truth of our statements, employing quotes from great thinkers or scientists or writers to back up our theses, appealing to reason and experience in all sorts of illustrations to support our theme. Sometimes we even appeal to fear, to greed for reward, or to self righteous Pharisaism to talk our people into trying to live up to some legalistic moral code. Yet all the while it is the sacred history of God’s word and acts that bear with them the gift and power of new life. And our people never know the truth and never become new creatures until they enter into that sacred history (p. 15).

This is the reason the Old Testament is neglected in our pulpits today. The proper understanding and proclamation of the Old Testament requires a knowledge of what God has done in the history of his people and an interpretation that is consistent with the historical event and divine relation.

We are preachers of the Word of God and as such we have been given a story to proclaim.

In the next few weeks I will provide some examples of texts that can be used effectively as the basis for good sermons from the Old Testament. These texts are all related to Advent. These passages, traditionally called “Messianic Prophecies,” will be studied in their proper historical context. I hope these studies will help all preachers to become better stewards of the stories God has given us.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

Read more about preaching from the Old Testament:

Preaching from Nehemiah
The Inconsistencies of the NIV - Part 1
The Inconsistencies of the NIV - Part 2

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Friday, December 12, 2008

Perfume from the Time of Christ


A group of Franciscan archaeologists has found perfume vials that may be from time of Christ. The following is an excerpt from the news release:

Franciscan archaeologists digging in the biblical town of Magdala in present-day Israel say they have uncovered vials of perfume similar to those used by Mary Magdalene, the woman believed to have washed the feet of Jesus.

The group Studium Biblicum Franciscanum conducted the dig, in which scientists uncovered the perfumed ointments intact at the bottom of a dirt-filled swimming pool. They were found alongside other hair and make-up objects.
Father Stefano de Luca, lead archaeologist for the group said: “If chemical analyses confirm it, these could be perfumes and creams similar to those that Mary Magdalene or the sinner cited in the Gospel used to anoint Christ's feet”

The claims that these Franciscan archaeologists are making are something that cannot be proved. Although the vials of perfume are similar to those that may have been used by the woman who washed Jesus’ feet, it will be almost impossible to prove that the oil used by the woman who anointed Christ’s feet was identical to the oil found in these containers.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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The Twelve Days of Christmas - Again

It is hard to kill a myth because a myth keeps on circulating from people to people and those who propagate the myth never check the facts to discover whether the myth is true or false. Today, the Internet has the power to keep a myth alive and spread it to millions of unsuspecting people who will pass on the same myth to thousands, if not millions, of gullible people.

Take, for example, the spiritualization of the words of “The Twelve Days of Christmas.” Tom Holbrook, writing for the Orlando Senior Examiner wrote the following:

One of the most sung pieces at Christmas time is 'The Twelve Days of Christmas'. A song that many of us (speaking of myself) has difficulty in remembering all the words. Did you know that there is a greater meaning to the words than what we would think? Allow me to enlighten you and open your eyes to something that could make your Christmas a lot more merrier as you sing this familiar song. Did you know that:

1- The Partridge in the pear tree represents Jesus Christ?
2- Two turtle doves represent the Old and New Testament?
3- Three French hens represent Faith, Hope and Love?
4- Four Calling birds represent the 4 gospels Matthew, Mark, Luke and John?
5- Five golden rings represent the Torah or Law- the first 5 books of the Old Testament?
6- Six geese a-laying represent the 6 days of Creation?
7- Seven swans a-swimming represent the sevenfold gifts of the Holy Spirit-Prophesy, Serving, Teaching, Exhortation, Contribution, Leadership and Mercy?
8- Eight maids a-milking represent the 8 Beatitudes?
9- Nine ladies dancing represent the 9 fruit of the Holy Spirit - Love, Joy, Peace, Patience, Kindness, Goodness, Faithfulness, Gentleness & Self-Control?
10- Ten Lords a-leaping represent the 10 Commandments?
11- Eleven pipers piping represent the 11 faithful disciples?
12- Twelve drummers drumming represent the 12 points of the Apostles' Creed?

Wow, isn't amazing how a little insight can create an entirely different attitude about something so familiar? Enjoy the season folks and every time you hear the song remember the reason for the season.

The only problem with this explanation above is that it is based on an urban legend.

On January 3, 2006, I wrote a post, The 12 Days of Christmas: The True Story in which I commented on an article published in The Daily Press, a morning newspaper in Ashland, Wisconsin. The article was about the eternal perspectives of the “Twelve Days of Christmas.”

In order to help people who will try to spiritualize the Twelve Days of Christmas again, I will reproduce my original post.

On Monday, January 2nd, 2006, The Daily Press, a morning newspaper in Ashland, Wisconsin, published an article, “The true meaning of the '12 Days of Christmas’: 'Eternal Perspectives,'” written by Sally Bair. The article’s purpose is to tell the true story behind this famous Christmas Carol.

According to the story, the song was written to teach religious truths to Roman Catholic children. Since several items in the interpretation of the song deal with the Old Testament, I was interested in the many lessons the song has to teach. Below is a copy of the article published in The Daily Press.

The familiar, nonsensical-sounding song, "The Twelve Days of Christmas," is traditionally sung—and celebrated with gifts—after Christmas, the time when the magi are believed to have visited the baby Jesus.

The famous song was written with hidden meanings in mind for Roman Catholic children. Between 1558 and 1829, Catholics were prohibited in England to practice their faith. Punishments for being caught with anything in writing that proved one's adherence to the Catholic faith meant imprisonment, hanging from a gallows, or worse. The author of The Twelve Days of Christmas wrote the song to help young Catholics secretly learn—and memorize—the tenets of their faith.

"On the first day of Christmas, my true love gave to me" refers to God himself as our True Love and Me as every baptized believer. The Partridge in a Pear Tree is Jesus Christ who symbolizes a mother bird, which feigns injury to protect her helpless nestlings. The symbol comes from Jesus' words written in Luke 13:34, "O Jerusalem, Jerusale,[sic] how often I have longed to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, but you were not willing!"

The other "gifts" in the song hold these meanings:

2 Turtle Doves (the Old and New Testaments, bearing witness to God's redeeming work of salvation to mankind);

3 French Hens (the virtues: faith, hope, and love; and the trinity: God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit);

4 Calling Birds (the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, which proclaim the Good News of God's reconciliation to himself through his Son Jesus Christ);

5 Gold Rings (the Torah, the first five books of the Old Testament which give the historic account of mankind's sinful failure and God's responding grace);

6 Geese A-laying (the six days of creation that confess God as creator and sustainer of the world);

7 Swans A-swimming (the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit: prophecy, ministry, teaching, exhortation, giving, leading, and compassion);

8 Maids A-milking (the eight beatitudes as listed in Matthew 5:3-10);

9 Ladies Dancing (the nine fruits of the Spirit: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control);

10 Lords A-leaping (the ten commandments);

11 Pipers Piping (the 11 faithful apostles, excluding Judas Iscariot, the 12th apostle who betrayed Jesus with a kiss);

12 Drummers Drumming (the twelve points of doctrine in the Apostle's Creed).

Lord, we thank you that today in American we can profess our faith in Jesus Christ openly and without fear. We ask for your special blessing on Christians in other lands who are persecuted for your Namesake. Amen. (To read the story as it was published in The Daily Press, click here [Note: The paper has withdrawn the article])

This explanation of the meaning of the words of the song would be of great value if it were true. However, this spiritualization of ‘The 12 Days of Christmas” is one of those urban legends that is circulated through the Internet and passed on from person to person through email (to read the true story about this song, click here).

There are several lessons to be learned from this article. The lesson that every journalist should learn is this: “If your mother says she loves you, check it out.”

In the original post I said that every journalist should learn an important lesson: “If your mother says she loves you, check it out.” The need to learn that lesson has not changed.


Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary


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Thursday, December 11, 2008

Genesis and Christian Theology: A Call for Papers

Luke Tallon, conference administrator and a PhD student at the University of St Andrews, has sent me an email announcing a conference on" Genesis and Christian Theology" to be held on 14-18 July 2009.


Call for Papers: Genesis and Christian Theology
14-18 July 2009
St Mary’s College, University of St Andrews

The University of St Andrews is pleased to announce its third conference on Scripture and Christian Theology. Since the first conference on the Gospel of John in 2003, the St Andrews conferences have been recognized as one of the most important occasions when biblical scholars and systematic theologians are brought together in conversation about a biblical text. The conferences aim to cut through the megaphone diplomacy or the sheer incomprehension that so often marks attempts to communicate across our disciplines. We invite you then to join us and some of the best theological and biblical minds in careful and often lively interaction about one of the most theologically generative of biblical books: the book of Genesis.

We are now calling for papers that integrate close readings of Genesis with Christian theology. While we are particularly interested in explorations of the dynamic relationship between Genesis and Christian doctrine, we also welcome proposals that combine careful reading of the text of Genesis with theological attention to art, creativity, ecology, ethics, the history of interpretation, or Jewish and Christian dialogue.

The call for paper proposals closes on 15 March 2009. Please visit our website for further details or to submit a proposal:

www.st-andrews.ac.uk/divinity/rt/conf/genesis09/.
Keynote Speakers

Gary Anderson (Professor of Old Testament/Hebrew Bible, University of Notre Dame)
David Fergusson (Professor of Divinity, The University of Edinburgh School of Divinity)
Kathryn Tanner (Dorothy Grant Maclear Professor of Theology, University of Chicago Divinity School)

Main Papers

1. Knut Backhaus (Chair of New Testament and Biblical Hermeneutics, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich)
2. Richard J. Bauckham (Professor Emeritus, University of St Andrews)
3. William P. Brown (Professor of Old Testament, Columbia Theological Seminary)
4. Stephen Chapman (Associate Professor of Old Testament, Duke Divinity School)
5. Ellen Charry (Margaret W. Harmon Associate Professor of Systematic Theology, Princeton Theological Seminary)
6. Trevor Hart (Professor of Divinity, University of St Andrews)
7. Christoph Levin (Chair of Old Testament, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich)
8. Nathan MacDonald (Lecturer in Old Testament, University of St Andrews)
9. John Milbank (Professor in Religion, Politics and Ethics, The University of Nottingham)
10. Walter Moberly (Professor of Theology, Durham University)
11. Michael Northcott (Professor of Ethics, The University of Edinburgh).
12. Manfred Oeming (Professor of Old Testament Theology, Ruprecht Karl University of Heidelberg)
13. Karla F. Pollmann (Professor of Classics, University of St Andrews)
14. Russell Reno (Professor of Theological Ethics, Creighton University)

I would love to attend this conference. If you are interested in presenting a paper at the conference, visit their website and submit a proposal.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Noah’s Flood: A New Theory


Image: A panel by Michelangelo in the Sistine Chapel in Rome depicting the Flood.

Dr. Sean Kingsley, a British marine archaeologist, has published an article in which he proposes that Noah’s Flood was the result of a deluge that occurred in Israel more than 7,000 years ago. According to this theory, the flood submerged six Neolithic villages opposite the Carmel Mountains.

Kingsley’s theory was published in the Bulletin of the Anglo-Israeli Archaeological Society. According to Kingsley, the “drowning of the Carmel Mountains villages - which include houses, temples, graves, water wells, workshops and stone tools - is by far the most compelling archeological evidence exposed to date for Noah’s flood.”

However, Ehud Galili, an Israeli archeologist who has worked at the site, has rejected Kingsley's theory. He said: “Based on our archeological finds, the village was not abandoned due to a catastrophic event, but due to the slow rise of sea levels which occurred all over the world. The pace of the increase in the sea level was very slow, so that it would not be significant enough for people to remember it in the course of their lifetime.”

You can read the news report about this new theory here.

I agree with Galili. This theory about Noah’s flood is only a theory and does not agree with the description of the events related to the flood in the book of Genesis.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Tuesday, December 09, 2008

Jeremiah and Hananiah: True and False Prophecy in Israel

The encounter between Jeremiah and Hananiah, two prominent prophets with different views of Yahweh’s work, must have divided the people listening to them. Who spoke the words of Yahweh? Both prophets used the prophetic formula “Thus says the Lord” to proclaim their message. Both prophets employed their knowledge and understanding of the prophetic tradition. This confrontation between Jeremiah and Hananiah raised a problem which must have perplexed their audience profoundly: how could one tell which prophet was speaking a message from Yahweh? When two prophets speak in the name of Yahweh and present contradictory messages, the audience must decide which message is the true message from God.

Both prophets presented true aspects of God’s work in the history of Israel. While Jeremiah spoke of Yahweh’s coming judgment upon Judah, Hananiah spoke of God’s faithfulness in delivering the nation. However, only one of them was delivering the right message, a message that was directly related to the historical situation in which they lived.

An analysis of the background of this prophetic encounter in the temple helps us understand the theological presuppositions each prophet brought to the situation.

It is evident that both Jeremiah and Hananiah were well versed in Israel’s ancient religious traditions and were familiar with the many stories of Yahweh’s mighty deeds done in the history of the nation. Out of their understanding of these ancient traditions came each prophet’s view of reality.

Prophecy can be defined as the prophet’s self-understanding of what Yahweh was doing in accomplishing his purpose in the history of Israel. For this reason, in formulating the right relationship between faith and history, the prophets addressed themselves to foreign and domestic policies, applying their understanding of the faith of Israel to current events. This application of faith to historical and political events generally was manifested by the prophets’ affirmation of Yahweh as creator, redeemer, and judge, and in their perception that Yahweh was involved in current events.

In the case of Jeremiah, while Hananiah and the religious and political leaders of Judah saw Nebuchadnezzar’s invasion and the deportation of the people to Babylon as a national tragedy, Jeremiah saw the invasion as Yahweh’s exercise of divine sovereignty in judging his people. While Jeremiah saw Nebuchadnezzar as Yahweh’s servant, doing Yahweh’s will, Hananiah saw the Babylonian invasion as a gross injustice which Yahweh would reverse by punishing Nebuchadnezzar. While Jeremiah saw Yahweh as a sovereign God over the nations, free to use whomever he desired to accomplish his purpose, Hananiah saw God as the guarantor of his promise to protect Judah notwithstanding her behavior. Jeremiah saw Yahweh as a God who in his righteousness would judge the nation but who in his great mercy would forgive the wayward nation and restore her by establishing a new covenant which would motivate the nation once again to know him and call on his name alone.

Jeremiah understood that if Judah was to be restored, she had to recognize and confess her violation of the covenantal relationship with Yahweh. Israel’s relationship with Yahweh was based on the covenant, not on natural or ancestral kinship. This concept was unique to Israel’s self-understanding and it was a major theme of Jeremiah’s preaching.

During the confrontation between Jeremiah and Hananiah, the people present in the temple were unable to make a clear decision on who was proclaiming a true message from Yahweh because it was impossible to tell the true from the false prophet. The fulfillment of the prophet’s words proved that the prophet’s oracle was true (Deuteronomy 18:22). In fact, apart from fact that the people knew that God revealed his will to the prophets, the people had no immediate objective criterion by which the claim of a prophet could be proved. The claim of who was proclaiming the true word of Yahweh, of who was right and who was wrong was subjective and only the fulfillment of the prophet’s words could prove the validity of a prophetic claim.

There was no firm set of criteria for distinguishing a true prophet from a false one. Ultimately, only the prophet himself could judge another prophet’s message to be false and then only on the basis of a fresh revelation from God. This is what happened in the confrontation between Jeremiah and Hananiah.

While Jeremiah appeared confident that he was proclaiming God’s will to the people, the strength of Hananiah’s conviction about Yahweh’s plan to restore Jehoiachin and the sacred vessels temporarily caused Jeremiah to hesitate in view of the possibility that maybe Yahweh had changed his mind about the Babylonians and their role in the domination of Judah.

As mentioned above, there are no clear set of criteria to distinguish true prophecies from false ones, primarily at the time the prophecy is uttered. There are several reasons for this problem. First, one cannot necessarily evaluate a prophecy by the theology presented in an oracle because a false prophet can often use good theology and apply it at the wrong time, as Hananiah did. Rather, it is in the fulfillment of the prophetic words, often many years later, that true prophecy can be distinguished from false prophecy.

Second, one cannot tell when a prophet is mistakenly identifying the voice of his own heart for the voice of God. Third, one cannot tell whether the right prophetic tradition is being applied to interpret a specific event or situation.

False prophets prophesy about “wine and beer” (Micah 2:11), they fill the people with false hopes, they speak visions from their own minds (Jeremiah 23:16), they commit adultery and live a lie, they strengthen the hands of evildoers, and their message does not turn the people from their wickedness (Jeremiah 23:14).

The true prophet, the one called and sent by God is filled with divine power, with justice and might to speak by the Spirit of the LORD and declare to people their transgression and rebuke them for their sins (Micah 3:8).

The people at the temple, however, could draw on past prophetic traditions to find help in deciding who was speaking the true word of God. First, true prophets proclaimed that Yahweh was sovereign over the nations and the redeemer of Israel while false prophets recognized Yahweh only as the redeemer of Israel. False prophets were exclusivists: they believed that Yahweh would protect Israel from her enemies but they could not accept Yahweh’s freedom to choose a foreign nation to serve as a rod of punishment for the sins of Israel.

Second, false prophets preached a message of peace, giving the people false hope when there was none (Jeremiah 23:16). According to Jeremiah, the true prophet of Yahweh preached about God’s judgment through war, destruction, and famine (Jeremiah 28:9). Third, true prophets challenged the status quo and made the people feel uncomfortable while false prophets supported the status quo and made the people feel secure. For these reasons true prophets and their messages were rejected by the people and as a result, most true prophets were loners and alienated from the community.

There is much to learn about true and false prophets from the encounter between Jeremiah and Hananiah. In the twenty-first century the church is being challenged by people who claim to speak a message from God but who preach a message that does not reflect the teachings of the New Testament. Christians must be aware that even today there are people who speak on behalf of God but who were not sent by God (Jeremiah 23:21).

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary


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Monday, December 08, 2008

The Assyrian Alphabet


Photo: The Assyrian Alphabet
Credit: Peter BetBasoo

Peter BetBasoo has a short introduction to the Assyrian language:

Assyrians have used two languages throughout their history: ancient Assyrian (Akkadian), and Modern Assyrian (neo-Syriac). Akkadian was written with the cuneiform writing system, on clay tablets, and was in use from the beginning to about 750 B.C.. By 750 B.C., a new way of writing, on parchment, leather, or papyrus, was developed, and the people who brought this method of writing with them, the Arameans, would eventually see their language, Aramaic, supplant Ancient Assyrian because of the technological breakthrough in writing. Aramaic was made the second official language of the Assyrian empire in 752 B.C. Although Assyrians switched to Aramaic, it was not wholesale transplantation. The brand of Aramaic that Assyrians spoke was, and is, heavily infused with Akkadian words, so much so that scholars refer to it as Assyrian Aramaic.

Read more about Assyrian history by visiting Peter’s web page.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Saturday, December 06, 2008

The World’s Oldest Marijuana

According to a recent report, researchers have discovered almost two pounds of marijuana in the Gobi Desert, an area located in southern Mongolia and the northern Inner Mongolia region of China. According to the researchers, the marijuana stash is about 2,700 years old. The following is an excerpt from the news report:

Nearly two pounds of still-green plant material found in a 2,700-year-old grave in the Gobi Desert has just been identified as the world's oldest marijuana stash, according to a paper in the latest issue of the Journal of Experimental Botany.

A barrage of tests proves the marijuana possessed potent psychoactive properties and casts doubt on the theory that the ancients only grew the plant for hemp in order to make clothing, rope and other objects.

They apparently were getting high too.

According to the report, the marijuana was found in the grave of a blue-eyed Caucasian man. It is possible that the man was a shaman but it is unknown whether the marijuana was grown for spiritual or medical purposes.

Read the news release by clicking here.

I do not approve the use of marijuana or any illicit drug. What caught my attention in this story was the fact that the man who probably used the marijuana was a shaman. In many societies people consulted shamans in order to communicate with the spirit world.

Shamans were consulted to deal with sickness caused by evil spirits. Shamans were also spiritual healers. Most shamans employed trance inducing techniques to generate a visionary ecstasy. I am sure that this blue-eyed Caucasian shaman used marijuana to induce an ecstasy and thus be able to consult the spirits.


Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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The Oil Lamps of the Roman Empire


Photo: These lamps were mass-produced in Roman times and they carried brand names clearly stamped on their clay bottoms.


Italian archaeologists have unearthed a pottery center where oil lamps were mass-produced. Theses oil lamps probably were used to bring light to many homes and cities in ancient Rome. The pottery workshop was discovered Modena, a city in central-northern Italy, during construction work to build a residential complex near the ancient walls of the city.

Donato Labate, the archaeologist in charge of the excavation said: “We found a large ancient Roman dumping filled with pottery scraps. There were vases, bottles, bricks, but most of all, hundreds of oil lamps, each bearing their maker's name.”

The photo above shows some of the mass-produced oil lamps which carried brand names clearly stamped on their clay bottoms.

Read the news story by clicking here.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Friday, December 05, 2008

The Tenth Century and the United Monarchy

In a previous post I gave an introduction to Israel Finkelstein’s and Amihai Mazar’s book, The Quest for the Historical Israel: Debating Archaeology and the History of Early Israel (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2007). In that post I listed the way the authors classify the different approaches used in writing a history of Israel. In the present post I want to introduce the content of the book and discuss what Finkelstein and Mazar believe about the tenth century and the United Monarchy.

The Quest for the Historical Israel is divided into six parts. Parts 1-5 deals with a major period in the history of Israel. In Part 6 the authors summarize the discussion by presenting the implications of the work of archaeologists to people of faith and to biblical studies. Each part contains a summary assessment by Brian B. Schmidt and one lecture by Israel Finkelstein and one by Amihai Mazar.

Part 1: “Archaeology and the Quest for Historical Israel in the Hebrew Bible.”

Israel Finkelstein: “Digging for the Truth: Archaeology and the Bible.”
Amihai Mazar: “On Archaeology, Biblical History, and Biblical Archaeology.”

Part 2: “Using Archaeology To Assess the Bible’s Traditions about ‘the Earliest Times.’”

Israel Finkelstein: “Patriarchs, Exodus, Conquest: Fact of Fiction?”
Amihai Mazar: “The Patriarchs, Exodus, and Conquest Narratives in Light of Archaeology.”

Part 3: “The Historical Origins of Collective Israel.”

Israel Finkelstein: “When and How Did the Israelites Emerge?”
Amihai Mazar: “The Israelite Settlement.”

Part 4: “The Tenth Century: The New Litmus Test for the Bible’s Historical Relevance.”

Israel Finkelstein: “King Solomon’s Golden Age?: History or Myth?”
Amihai Mazar: “The Search for David and Solomon: An Archaeological Perspective.”

Part 5: “On More Secure Ground? The Kingdoms of Israel and Judah in the Iron II Period.”

Israel Finkelstein: “The Two Kingdoms: Israel and Judah.”
Amihai Mazar: “The Divided Monarchy: Comments on Some Archaeological Issues.”

Part 6: “So What? Implications for Scholars and Communities.”

Israel Finkelstein: “A Short Summary: Bible and Archaeology.”
Amihai Mazar: “Concluding Summary: Archaeology’s Message.”

Each part deserves to be studied in detail because both Finkelstein and Mazar present relevant information for each period and discuss how archaeological findings are related to the biblical material. However, such a project would require several additional posts and a more complete review of the book. I will limit myself to the tenth century because, as the writers say, the tenth century is the new litmus test for the Bible’s historical relevance.

Finkelstein begins his discussion of the United Monarchy by taking a centrist position. He wrote: “Against the conservative or maximalist camps, I argue that much of the David and Solomon narrative in the Bible cannot be read as a straightforward historical testimony and that their kingdom was far more modest than traditionally perceived. At the same time, against the so-called minimalists, I contend that David and Solomon were historical figures–the founders of a dynasty based in the Judahite city of Jerusalem” (p. 107-08).

According to Finkelstein, the whole theory of a United Monarchy is based on the statement of 1 Kings 9:15: “This is the account of the forced labor that King Solomon conscripted to build the house of the LORD and his own house, the Millo and the wall of Jerusalem, Hazor, Megiddo, Gezer.”

Yigael Yadin saw a similarity between the six-chambered city gates at Hazor, the one at Megiddo, and the one at Gezer and concluded that archaeology proved that 1 Kings 9:15 was correct. But Finkelstein believes that the gates at Megiddo were built later than the gates at Hazor and Gezer.

Finkelstein proposes an alternative theory. Since the ashlar blocks at Megiddo preserve distinctive masons’ marks, the same marks found in the palace of Omri and Ahab at Samaria, Finkelstein concludes that the building at Megiddo must be dated to the ninth century, during the reign of Ahaz and not in the tenth century, during the reign of Solomon.

Finkelstein says that the Tel Dan inscription proves that David and Solomon were historical figures but, according to him, archaeology shows that “the kingdom of David and Solomon was no more than a poor, demographically depleted chiefdom centered in Jerusalem, a humble village” (p. 115).

Finkelstein also believes that if there was a United Monarchy, it existed during the days of Omri and it was centered in Samaria and not in Jerusalem. He wrote: “For a few decades in the first half of the ninth century, Israel managed to establish a great United Monarchy–an actual United Monarchy–which stretched from Dan in the north to Beer-sheba in the south. Yet, this United Monarchy was ruled from Samaria, not from Jerusalem” (p. 152).

Mazar begins his discussion of the tenth century by stating that the deconstruction offered by Finkelstein and other archaeologists “has gone too far” (p. 117). Mazar said that scholars accept the historicity of the Northern Kingdom because it is mentioned in documents external to the Bible. Yet, he believes that “there is no logic in acknowledging the historicity of the biblical account regarding ninth-century northern Israel but discrediting the historicity of the United Monarchy of the tenth century or for that matter, that of Judah in the ninth century” (p. 118).

Mazar criticizes Finkelstein’s proposal to lower the chronology of the Iron Age IIA by seventy-five to one hundred years, a chronology that places the archaeological assemblages attributed to the tenth century into the ninth century, thus eliminating the archaeological evidence for a United Monarchy in Judah. Mazar discusses how archaeology supports the view that there was a United Monarchy in the tenth century. He surveys archaeological excavations at Jerusalem, Megiddo, Hazor, Gezer, the Shephelah, and the Negev to show that the findings in these places are consistent with the concept of a United Monarchy in the tenth century.

Mazar emphasizes two important external sources that relate archaeology to events in the tenth century. One in the inscription of Sheshonq I (the Shishak of the Bible) inscribed in the wall of the Temple of Amun at Karnak. Although Finkelstein relates the events associated with the invasion of Sheshonq to the time of Saul (p. 148), Mazar says that Sheshonq’s military campaign in Canaan which took place in 920 B.C. was because of “the existence of a political power in the central hill country that was significant enough in the eyes of the Egyptians to justify such an exceptional route for the campaign” (p. 124).

The other source is the Tel Dan inscription which mentions the “House of David” (or bytdwd). According to Mazar the inscription shows that “approximately a century and a half after his reign, David was still recognized throughout the region as the founder of a dynasty that ruled Judah.”

Thus, these lectures by Finkelstein and Mazar demonstrate that archaeologists look at the same data and come up with contradictory interpretations of the data. The reason archaeologists arrive at such contradictory conclusions is because they use different archaeological chronologies to date their findings. And since the data is mute, archaeologists have to interpret their findings and in the process they come up with vastly different interpretations of the same archaeological data.

Mazar wrote: “The interpretation of archaeological data and its association with the biblical text may in many cases be a matter of subjective judgment, since it is often inspired by the scholar’s personal values, beliefs, ideology, and attitude toward the text or an artifact” (p. 31).

Those of us who are not directly involved in archaeological excavations must depend on the meticulous work of archaeologists as they summarize their findings. The archaeological data must be published and made available to scholars and to the public for examination and evaluation. Since the whole debate hinges on issues of interpretation, archaeologists must make their findings available for public scrutiny. As someone once said: “Trust but verify.”

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Thursday, December 04, 2008

The Treasures of Nimrud To Be Sold


Photo: Neo-Assyrian: The earrings, which are thousands of years old, are up for sale next week in New York.
Credit: Photo Courtesy of Christie's Images Ltd. 2008


Christie’s in New York is planning to auction next week a pair of earrings that could have been part of the treasures of Nimrud.

According to the auction house, the neo-Assyrian earrings are 9,000 to 10,000 years old and are expected to be sold for $65,000.

Iraqi officials say that the earrings were stolen from Iraq and taken from the country illegally. Iraqi authorities have asked the auction house to stop the sale of the earrings.

The ancient Assyrian city of Nimrud is known in the Bible as Calah and it was located near the present-day city of Mosul in Iraq.

The city of Nimrud is associated with the Nimrod of the Bible:

“Cush became the father of Nimrod; he was the first on earth to become a mighty warrior. He was a mighty hunter before the LORD; therefore it is said, "Like Nimrod a mighty hunter before the LORD." The beginning of his kingdom was Babel, Erech, and Accad, all of them in the land of Shinar. From that land he went into Assyria, and built Nineveh, Rehoboth-ir, Calah, and Resen between Nineveh and Calah; that is the great city” (Genesis 10:8-12).

For a brief overview of the riches of Nimrud and its role in Assyrian history, click here and here.

UPDATE:

Chuck Jones from the University of Chicago has informed me that Christie’s has withdrawn the sales of the earrings from Nimrud.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Jeremiah and Hananiah: The Confrontation in the Temple

Little is known about the prophet Hananiah except what is told about him in the book of Jeremiah (Jeremiah 28:1-17). Hananiah appears to have been one of the nationalistic prophets who proclaimed a message of salvation and deliverance. Hananiah apparently was well known in Judah and respected by the people and the religious and political authorities. Hananiah was the son of Azzur and a prophet from Gibeon (Jeremiah 28:1). Gibeon is the modern el-Jib, a village five miles northwest of Jerusalem.

Hananiah was an optimistic prophet who proclaimed a message of hope for Judah. Optimistic prophets promoted the welfare of their communities by proclaiming Yahweh’s legitimation for the existing social order and by providing divine sanctions for long-held religious, political, and social views. Hananiah declared that in two years Yahweh would bring back to the temple all the vessels of the LORD’s house which Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, had taken away and carried to Babylon (Jeremiah 28:3).

Optimistic prophets also supported the ruling dynasty and defended royal theology. However, while Hananiah likely was welcomed in the royal court because of his favorable message, he probably was not a court prophet in the same way the prophets employed by Ahab were (1 Kings 22:1-28). These court prophets were generally categorized in the Old Testament as false prophets because they proclaimed a message of prosperity and guaranteed military success unconditionally and without repentance.

Hananiah probably was not a court prophet nor a cultic prophet. Rather, he appeared to have a legitimacy as a prophet that was not derived from the court nor from the temple. Thus, it is in his role as a prophet of Yahweh that he challenged Jeremiah. Jeremiah and Hananiah appear in the temple as two legitimate but opposing prophets, confronting each others over what Yahweh was doing with the deportation of Judah and with the future of the nation.

The encounter between Jeremiah and Hananiah occurred in the fifth month of the fourth year of the reign of Zedekiah, King of Judah (Jeremiah 28:1), after the first deportation of Judah, which had occurred in 597 B.C. Jeremiah had been preaching disaster for Judah for some time before his meetings with Hananiah. According to Jeremiah, this disaster had come because Judah had tried to live a life independently of God, had engaged in unnatural sexual practices common in the worship of Baal, had ignored the covenant relationship, and did not heed the warnings of the prophets sent by Yahweh.

The first meeting between Jeremiah and Hananiah took place in the temple in the presence of the priests and all of the people (28:1). Jeremiah was well known as a prophet of Yahweh. Because he often was accused of stirring up trouble in the city, Jeremiah was disliked by many because of the message of doom he proclaimed.

On the other hand, Hananiah, seems to have been well liked by the people and the religious officials because of his optimistic message. His message was said to have come from Yahweh and he claimed to have the same authority Jeremiah had.

The issue confronting Judah and which was the focus of the confrontation between Jeremiah and Hananiah was whether Yahweh was going to deliver the nation from the oppressive yoke imposed on Judah by Nebuchadnezzar, thereby allowing the royal family and the deported people to return to Judah with the vessels of the temple or whether the people of Judah should submit to Babylon as Jeremiah had been preaching. If Hananiah was right, Babylon would be defeated within two years, King Jehoiachin would be restored to the throne in Jerusalem, and the vessels of the temple would be brought back with him. If Jeremiah was right, Judah would continue as a vassal of Nebuchadnezzar and face seventy years of vassalage under Babylon (Jeremiah 25:11-12).

In 594 B. C., ambassadors from Edom, Moab, Ammon, Tyre, and Sidon gathered in Jerusalem to establish a treaty with Judah and plan a coordinated effort against Nebuchadnezzar. Yahweh told Jeremiah to make a yoke and put it on his neck and declare that he had given all the lands the ambassadors represented into the hands of his servant Nebuchadnezzar, the king of Babylon (Jeremiah 27:6).

Jeremiah pleaded with Zedekiah not to revolt against Babylon. Rather, he urged submission to Nebuchadnezzar whom he insisted Yahweh had chosen to subjugate the land. Hananiah, on the other hand, probably was among those optimistic prophets who urged Zedekiah not to submit to the king of Babylon. These prophets were recommending the ratification of the treaty and open rebellion against Babylon because they believed Yahweh would favor Judah against Babylon (Jeremiah 27:14).

When Jeremiah confronted Hananiah in the temple, Jeremiah came wearing the wooden yoke on his neck. The yoke symbolized the yoke of Nebuchadnezzar which the king of Babylon would impose upon Judah and the other lands in the Ancient Near East (Jeremiah 27:8).

In that encounter, Hananiah was confident that he was bringing a message from Yahweh, a message that reflected his views that Babylon would soon be defeated. He predicted that within two years Jehoiachin would return from exile bringing with him the temple vessels taken by the Babylonians. So sure was Hananiah that he was speaking for Yahweh that he removed the wooden yoke from Jeremiah’s neck and broke it as a symbol that Yahweh would soon break the yoke Nebuchadnezzar had imposed on Judah. He said: “Thus says the LORD of hosts, the God of Israel: I have broken the yoke of the king of Babylon” (Jeremiah 28:2).

In the past Jeremiah had been very critical of other prophets because of their false message. However, Jeremiah does not criticize Hananiah for his optimistic oracle. It is possible that Jeremiah recognized God’s freedom to change his mind or that God had a different purpose which he now was revealing through Hananiah.

Jeremiah’s reticence may be due to the fact that he probably believed Hananiah to be a true prophet, one capable of speaking a genuine message from Yahweh or maybe because he genuinely wished that Hananiah’s message was correct, for he disliked his own. In response to Hananiah’s oracle, Jeremiah said: “Amen! May the LORD do so; may the LORD fulfill the words that you have prophesied, and bring back to this place from Babylon the vessels of the house of the LORD, and all the exiles” (Jeremiah 28:6).


Jeremiah did not challenge Hananiah and his optimistic message. Rather, he left the temple quietly, without saying a word. The reason for Jeremiah’s silence was because he had no word from Yahweh at that juncture. For Jeremiah, to speak when Yahweh had not spoken, was to place himself among those who had been identified as false prophets.

Shortly after Jeremiah left the temple, Yahweh spoke to him and reaffirmed that his message was the true interpretation of what he was doing to Judah through the king of Babylon. Yahweh ordered Jeremiah to make an iron yoke, put it on his neck, and then confront Hananiah again. The LORD told Jeremiah: “Go, tell Hananiah, ‘Thus says the LORD: You have broken wooden bars, but I will make in their place bars of iron. For thus says the LORD of hosts, the God of Israel: I have put upon the neck of all these nations an iron yoke of servitude to Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon, and they shall serve him’” (Jeremiah 28:13-14).

After receiving this fresh revelation from Yahweh, Jeremiah returned to confront Hananiah again, confident that his message was the right message from Yahweh. Jeremiah rebuked Hananiah for prophesying falsely in Yahweh’s name. Jeremiah told Hananiah he would die that same year. Hananiah’s death would show that he was a false prophet, that his punishment was just punishment because to prophesy falsely was a capital offense punishable by death. (Deuteronomy 13:1-5; 18:20).

The severe sentence was meant to protect the people from the problem of false predictions of impending disaster or false hope of deliverance. As Jeremiah had predicted, in the seventh month of that same year, Hananiah the prophet died (Jeremiah 28:17). The death of Hananiah vindicated Jeremiah and his prophetic ministry.

Previous posts in this series:


Jeremiah and Hananiah

Jeremiah and Hananiah: The Historical Context

Jeremiah and Hananiah: Jeremiah's Ministry


Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Wednesday, December 03, 2008

A Slide Presentation on Khirbet Qeiyafa

Yosef Garfinkel of Hebrew University and Saar Ganor of the Israel Antiquities Authority have developed a slide presentation on Khirbet Qeiyafa.

I want to thank Chris Heard for calling my attention to the presentation and for pointing out that I had the wrong picture of Khirbet Qeiyafa in my previous post.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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The City Where David Killed Goliath

Photo: Khirbet Qeiyafa

Gwen Ackerman has written an article on Khirbet Qeiyafa, “a walled city over a plain where the Bible claims David killed Goliath.” The article was published on Bloomberg.com. The following is an excerpt from the article:

The remains of a walled city over a plain where the Bible claims David killed Goliath; a pottery shard bearing script that experts claim is the oldest Hebrew text ever found; an ancient water tunnel.

Do these support Scripture's story of King David and his empire? It depends on who you ask. Recent archeological finds have reopened the debate on David and Solomon, whose reigns almost 3,000 years ago as chronicled in the Bible left so little physical proof that scholars like Neil Asher Silberman, a University of Massachusetts historian, question biblical accuracy.

Hebrew University professor Yosef Garfinkel, in an interview, said his findings amid the ruins of a fortified city in Khirbet Qeiyafa, a five-acre site 20 miles west of Jerusalem, support the biblical portrayal of David as a ruler of a kingdom strong enough to field an army. The findings, the most important of which were a second city gate and the shard, dispute claims by some scholars that David was a chieftain of a largely illiterate tribe.

The remnants might be the most important archaeological find about David since 1993 when a piece of basalt rock bearing an Assyrian king's inscription about a Davidic dynasty was found in Tel Dan in northern Israel.

To read the article, visit Bloomberg.com.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Give a Bible for Christmas

Arion Press is announcing a special printing of a folio Bible. Here is their ad:

In the tradition of grand printed lectern Bibles, the Arion Press Folio Bible is a monument to the scriptures, to fine typography, and to fine bookmaking.

If you treasure beautifully made books, read on to discover a unique, handcrafted edition of the Good Book.

Following in the tradition of Gutenberg and other fine printers over more than five centuries, Andrew Hoyem and his skilled artisans at Arion Press in San Francisco have created an oversize, Folio Edition of the Holy Bible using traditional letterpress techniques and the finest materials and craftsmanship.

“This Bible is unique because this place is unique. It’s one of the last shops in the world where all the work on a book is done under one roof”, notes Elizabeth Farnsworth of the PBS News Hour.

This special Bible is handbound in full leather, in linen box.

The price: a mere $8,500. Give several of these Bibles for Christmas

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Ancient Rome in 3D

Here is a good way to visit Ancient Rome: Ancient Rome in 3D




Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Tuesday, December 02, 2008

A New Translation of the Bible

Do we need a new translation of the Bible? There are several translations of the Bible available today and new ones are being published almost every year. A Bible translation should accurately reflect the original text and help readers understand the true ideas of the author.

In order to make the Bible more reader-friendly to gays and lesbians, a new translation of the Bible will be published soon that is designed to address the needs of the gay community.

Writer and producer Max Mitchell has announced that Revision Studios will publish a pro gay translation of the Bible to be called The Princess Diana Bible. The reason for this Bible is because Mitchell believes that “There is solid evidence that Adam and Eve were both women.”

The following are a few excerpts from the Book of Genesis taken from The Princess Diana Bible:

Ge 1:26 And God said, Let us make woman in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.

Ge 1:27 So God created woman in his image, in the image of God created he female.

Ge 2:7 And the LORD God formed woman of the dust of the ground, and breathed into her nostrils the breath of life; and woman became a living soul and God named her Aida.

Ge 2:8 And the LORD God planted a garden eastward in Eden; and there he put Aida.

Ge 2:15 And the LORD God took Aida, and put her into the garden of Eden to dress it and to keep it.

Ge 2:16 And the LORD God commanded Aida, saying, Of every tree of the garden thou mayest freely eat:

Ge 2:17 But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die.

Ge 2:18 And the LORD God said, It is not good that this woman be alone; I will make her a mate.

Ge 2:19 And the LORD God formed every beast of the field, and every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Aida to see what she would call them: and whatsoever Aida called every living creature, that was the name.

Ge 2:20 And Aida gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to every beast of the field; but for Aida there was not found a mate for her.

Ge 2:21 And the LORD God caused a deep sleep to fall upon Aida, and she slept: and he took one of her ribs, and closed up the flesh thereof;

Ge 2:22 And the rib, which the LORD God had taken from woman, made he another woman, and brought her unto the first.

Ge 2:23 And Aida said, This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh: she shall be called Eve, because she was taken out of me.

Ge 2:24 Therefore shall a woman leave her mother, and shall cleave unto her wife: and they shall be one flesh.

Ge 2:25 And they were both naked, Aida and her wife, Eve, and were not ashamed.

Ge 4:1 And Eve conceived, and bore Cain, and said, we have created a child in God’s image. And God said the male was different than the woman because he was fathered by the serpent. The man’s member is different than the woman’s because it resembles the head of his father, the serpent.

Ge 4:2 And Eve again conceived with the serpent and bore Cain’s brother Abel. And Abel was a keeper of sheep, but Cain was a tiller of the ground.

What can one say about The Princess Diana Bible? Maybe here the words of the serpent are relevant to the aims of this translation: “Did God really say these words?” (Genesis 3:1).

William Blake, in his poem “The Marriage of Heaven and Hell,” when writing about the 17th-century English poet John Milton, author of Paradise Lost, said: “The reason Milton wrote in fetters when he wrote of Angels and God, and at liberty when of Devils and Hell, is because he was a true Poet and of the Devils party without knowing it.”

Like Milton, it is possible that the authors and publishers of The Princess Diana Bible may be members of the same party “without knowing it.”

Let me know what you think about this new translation of the Bible.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Archaeology and the History of Israel

Over the weekend I finished reading one of the books I bought while I was in Boston attending the annual meeting of the SBL. One of the good things about attending the SBL is that we can examine newly published books and then buy the ones we want at a good discount.

The book I just finished reading is The Quest for the Historical Israel: Debating Archaeology and the History of Early Israel (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2007). The book is a compilation of a series of lectures presented by Israel Finkelstein and Amihai Mazar and edited by Brian B. Schmidt. The lectures were delivered at the Sixth Biennial Colloquium of the International Institute for Humanistic Judaism, Detroit, October 2005.

The book is fascinating because in it we read the work of two eminent Israeli archaeologists who look at the same archaeological record and come up with different interpretations on almost everything. There are some areas in which they agree, but in general, they are almost always on the opposite side of every issue.

In a future post, I will discuss how Finkelstein and Mazar look at the Tenth Century and discuss their conclusions about the existence of a United Monarchy and the role David and Solomon played in the formation of the state of Judah. Today, I just want to review how Finkelstein and Mazar classify scholars writing on the history of Israel.

Finkelstein and Mazar mention four different approaches taken by writers of the history of Israel. These approaches are: the Ultra-Conservative Approach, the Conservative Approach, the Moderate-Critical Approach, and the Revisionist Approach.

The following writers and books are classified according to these four approaches:

The Ultra-Conservative Approach

Kitchen, K. A., On the Reliability of the Old Testament. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans,
2003.

Hoffmeier, J. K., and Millard, A., eds., The Future of Biblical Archaeology. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 2004.

The Conservative Approach

Aharoni, Y., The Land of the Bible: A Historical Geography. Trans. A. F. Rainey. 2nd ed. Philadelphia: Westminster, 1979.

Mazar, B., The Early Biblical Period: Historical Studies. Jerusalem: The Israel Exploration Society, 1986.

Mazar, B., ed., The Patriarchs. Volume II of The World History of the Jewish People. Jerusalem: Masada Press, 1971.

Mazar, B., ed., The Judges. Volume III of The World History of the Jewish People. Jerusalem: Masada Press, 1971.

Malamat, A., ed., The Age of the Monarchies. Volume IV of The World History of the Jewish People. Jerusalem: Masada Press, 1979.

Malamat, A., History of Biblical Israel: Major Problems and Minor Issues. Leiden: Brill, 2001.

Rainey, E. and Notley, R. S., The Sacred Bridge: Carta’s Atlas of the Biblical World. Jerusalem: Carta, 2006.

Dever, W. G., What Did the Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It?: What Archaeology and the Bible Can Tell Us about Ancient Israel. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 2001.

Shanks, H. ed., Ancient Israel: From Abraham to the Roman Destruction of the Temple. 2nd rev. ed. Washington: Biblical Archaeology Society; 1999.

The Moderate-Critical Approach

Ahlström, G., The History of Ancient Palestine from the Palaeolithic Period to Alexander's Conquest. Journal for the Study of the Old Testament. Supplement 146. Sheffield: JSOT Press, 1993.

Finkelstein, I., and Silberman, N. A., The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology’s New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts. New York Free Press, 2001.

Liverani, M., Israel’s History and the History of Israel. London: Equinox, 2005.

Miller, J. M., and Hayes, J. H., A History of Ancient Israel and Judah. Second revised edition. Louisville., Ky.: Westminster John Knox, 2006.

Na’aman, N. Ancient Israel’s History and Historiography. Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 2006.

The Revisionist Approach

Davies, P. R., In Search of “Ancient Israel.” Journal for the Study of the Old Testament. Supplement 148. Sheffield: JSOT Press, 1992.

Garbini, G., Myth and History in the Bible. Journal for the Study of the Old Testament. Supplement 362. London: Sheffield Academic, 2003.

Lemche, N. P., The Israelites in History and Tradition. Louisville, Ky.: Westminster John Knox Press, 1998.

Thompson, T. L., The Bible in History: How Writers Create a Past. London: J.Cape, 1999.

This division is very interesting because of what it says about the writers and their approach to the history of Israel. I would classify Liverani among the revisionists because he writes about “the invented history of Israel,” a history written in the post-exilic period in order to give legitimacy to those who were returning back to the land of Canaan.

Miller and Hays were included with those historians who take the moderate-critical approach. Their history is not a revisionist history like Liverani’s; they rewrite the history of Israel to fit the archaeological realia. Finkelstein views himself as a centrist, to the left of the conservatives but to the right of the revisionists. Mazar views himself as a conservative, but between Finkelstein and the other conservatives.

Confronted with these different approaches, Mazar asked an important question. He wrote: “At this point, the reader might ask, how does it happen that archaeologists arrive at such contradicting conclusions? The answer lies in part in the different archaeological chronologies used, as well as in the vastly different interpretations of the same archaeological data.”

And this is the crux of the problem. The archaeological data is the same; the problem is one of interpretation. Those scholars who have a skeptical view of the biblical text interpret the archaeological data in light of their view that the text does not reflect historical events. Those who have a high view of the biblical text interpret the archaeological data with the understanding that the text is based on historical events.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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Monday, December 01, 2008

Jeremiah and Hananiah: Jeremiah’s Ministry

Jeremiah carried out his ministry during a very difficult time in the history of Judah. The latter part of the seventh century and the beginning of the sixth century was a period of constant political uncertainty in Jerusalem and the rest of the nation. Jeremiah had supported the reforms of Josiah, but during the reign of Jehoiakim, Josiah’s son, Jeremiah saw that the people were reverting to the old religious practices that existed prior to the reforms.

The deportation of part of the population of Judah to Babylon caused great anxiety among the people, a situation that resulted in a profound division among the political and religious leaders of Judah concerning the future of the nation. Judah enjoyed a brief time of independence under Josiah, time enough for the nation to believe that Assyria’s decline would lead to long term prosperity and stability for Judah. Although there is some debate among scholars whether Jeremiah began his ministry in the thirteenth year of Josiah, internal evidence seems to indicate that Jeremiah was an early supporter of the religious reforms that occurred under Josiah.

Jeremiah was the son of Hilkiah. He was born in Anathoth, a village in Benjamin, about three miles northeast of Jerusalem. His father was probably a descendant of Abiathar, the priest from Anathoth banished by Solomon because of his support of Adonijah in his bid for David’s throne. Thus, it is probable that Jeremiah and his family were descendants of a very influential family of exiled priests.

Jeremiah probably was born around 742 B.C. and was called to the prophetic ministry in the thirteenth year of Josiah’s reign (627 B.C.). He was a young man when King Josiah began his reforms in 622 B.C. According to 2 Chronicles 35:25, Jeremiah composed a song of lament at the occasion of Josiah’s death.

Although Jeremiah supported Josiah and the goals of Josiah’s reforms, he realized that the results of the reforms were superficial and inadequate to produce real changes in the religion of Judah. For this reason Jeremiah condemned the superficial commitment of the people and their lack of true repentance.

Jeremiah was shocked at the apostasy of the people. His oracles warned the nation about Yahweh’s displeasure with the religious behavior of the people. Jeremiah proclaimed that God’s punishment upon the nation for her apostasy would come from the north: Judah was under God’s judgment.

Jeremiah’s ministry occurred mostly in Jerusalem, where he remained even after the fall of Jerusalem in 587 B.C. until after the death of Gedaliah, the governor of Judah, in 582 B.C., when he was taken by force to Egypt, where he died.

Jeremiah’s relationship with some of the Judean kings was turbulent. Jeremiah was opposed to the policies of Jehoiakim, the son of Josiah to the point of open hostility. Jehoiakim had abandoned the religious reforms of his father and reinstituted some of the pagan practices Josiah had eliminated. Jehoiakim also abandoned the covenantal commitment the nations had made to serve Yahweh alone. Jeremiah believed Judean servitude to Babylonia was the judgment brought by Yahweh as punishment for the people’s rebellion and for their violation of the demands of the covenant. For this reason, Jeremiah criticized Jehoiakim’s repudiation of his fealty treaty with Nebuchadnezzar, emphasizing that his violation of the treaty was as a sign of his disloyalty to Yahweh. Jeremiah also criticized Jehoiakim for his oppression of the people. Jeremiah’s relationship with Jehoiachin and Zedekiah was no better.

Jeremiah, like the great prophets before him, was distressed by the infidelity of the royal house and the people against God. The people had no sense of guilt for their sins; they had no feelings of shame for their actions. The people of Judah said: “I am innocent” but the LORD said: “'Behold, I will bring you to judgment for saying, ‘I have not sinned’” (Jeremiah 2:35).

Jeremiah heard Yahweh’s voice calling him to proclaim to a rebellious people what he was about to do. God’s action was intended to bring Judah back to the traditions of the covenant. Jeremiah urged the people to submit to Nebuchadnezzar whom he saw as the Lord’s servant who came to exact retribution on behalf of Yahweh. Jeremiah proclaimed: “If, however, any nation or kingdom will not serve Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon or bow its neck under his yoke, I will punish that nation with the sword, famine and plague, declares the LORD, until I destroy it by his hand” ( Jeremiah 27:8).

For Jeremiah, complete submission to Nebuchadnezzar was the will of Yahweh for Judah. Submission to the Babylonian yoke was the prelude that would motivate Judah to return to the demands of the covenant which required the nation to recognize Yahweh as the only God of Israel and which required obedience to his words: “If you will obey my voice and keep my covenant, you shall be my own possession among all peoples” (Exodus 19:5).

A major role of prophets of the Old Testament was to serve as intermediaries between Yahweh and the people. The prophets’ words impacted themselves and their societies in two ways. First, when the prophets spoke, they spoke as Yahweh’s representatives. Their message was Yahweh’s message. They augmented their authority as messengers by following the tradition of the prophets who preceded them. Secondly, their message sought to have a positive effect on their society by bringing about religious reforms and social change.

Like many of the prophets who preceded him, Jeremiah was considered an outcast in Judah. Jeremiah was on the fringe of society, disliked by many, including some members of his own family, and he became a source of great irritation to the ruling class in Judah. Prophets like Jeremiah, generally operated on the edges of society, usually preaching a message of doom. They spoke of Yahweh’s anger, his judgment, and his freedom to act as he wills. They also proclaimed that Yahweh was a gracious God and the Redeemer of Israel. Any prophet who proclaimed a message of doom provoked the hostility and outrage of prophets who preached an optimistic message. Jeremiah was no exception in being the recipient of much hostility because of his message of submission to Babylon.

While Jeremiah was proclaiming the coming judgment and submission to Nebuchadnezzar, other prophets in Judah were soothing the people’s consciences by proclaiming a message of salvation and declaring that Yahweh was their faithful protector. One such prophet was Hananiah.

To be continued.

Previous posts in this series:

Jeremiah and Hananiah

Jeremiah and Hananiah: The Historical Context

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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