On Creation and Killing Canaanites: One Simple, Hardly Worth Mentioning (but I feel that I should) Thought
http://www.patheos.com/blogs/peterenns/2013/04/on-creation-and-killing-canaanites-one-simple-hardly-worth-mentioning-but-i-feel-that-i-should-thought/
April
28, 2013 By peteenns 2 Comments
In
recent months, these two issues–creation and Canaanite extermination–have been
among the more heat-producing that I have dealt with on this blog. Today, I
want to make one simple point that concerns both of these issues, and others
like it.
Nothing
creative or profound. Pretty standard stuff, actually, though when push comes
to shove (literally) in controversial issues, it is often the first we lose
sight of.
Here
it is: Ancient context matters—a lot.
So,
when the debate is about whether Christianity and evolution can co-exist, the
conversation often turns immediately to the very interesting canonical,
theological, and philosophical factors that arise for Christianity if evolution
is true and there is no first couple.
Of
course, these factors are vitally important, must be brought to the table, and
require our full attention. But far too often these factors are raised in happy
isolation from the historical/literary factor of the ancient Near Eastern
context that gave us these texts–as if the conversation can simply proceed
without considering what the Adam story is doing from the point of view of an
ancient mindset.
Seeing
Genesis as an expression of ancient theology, asking ancient questions, and
giving ancient answers, would necessarily reframe theological discussions of
origins that are otherwise too commonly locked in abstractions and categories
of thought that have little to no grounding in the biblical narratives
themselves.
Put
another way, when I see discussions of how or whether biblical Christianity and
evolution can co-exist but that leave to the side how these ancient texts
functioned in antiquity, I get nervous.
The
same idea hold for Canaanite extermination (and here). At least as much as creation,
this topic often leaps immediately to what we think God can, can’t, should, would,
or must do, based on alleged immutable starting points: his character,
holiness, righteousness, etc.
Again,
all fine and good, but when we look at the Canaanite genocide stories within
the ancient context in which they are written, speculations of God are
tempered.
Once
we see that Yahweh’s actions toward the Canaanites are like that of the gods of
other nations toward their enemies, the discussion cannot continue as before. A vital historical
contextual factor is brought into our speculative theological and philosophical
musings.
We
can talk about God’s actions toward the Canaanites within the parameters of the
canon or carefully worded categories of dogmatics and systematic theology. But
once we see that Chemosh, god of the Moabites, tells king Mesha (or better,
Mesha tells us what Chemosh told him) to take Nebo from the Israelites and “put
to the ban” the entire population–and that the word “ban”
corresponds precisely to the Hebrew word for the same sort of
behavior–well, it puts the theological and philosophical discussion on a whole
different level.
So,
the question, “Why would God command the Israelites to exterminate the
Canaanites?” cannot be addressed in an intramural theological
back-and-forth. It must also include this little bit of historical
information: Yahweh’s actions are not unique but seem part of an ancient way of
thinking.
Maybe
that’s the best way to sum up what I’m saying here: theological discussions
about biblical interpretation must be in conversation with ancient ways of
thinking.
Told
you. Not very profound. But then again, I feel like I need to keep saying it.
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