Antikythera Mechanism from second century BCE. This was an early analog computer which could calculate positions of astronomical objects. |
INTRODUCTION:
Much has been written about the
idea that Judaism, Christianity and Islam are united under the general banner
of Abrahamic faiths. This is a good thing because we would all rather live in a
world where there is more harmony than disharmony and there are certainly many
areas where we have much in common. However, testing the notion of Abrahamic faith
from a technically theological position reveals some interesting fault lines.
This article, based extensively
on the writings of Professor Jon D Levenson[1]
from Harvard Divinity School, explores how differently Abraham is depicted
within the three main faith groups of Judaism, Christianity and Islam.
THE DECEPTIVELY SIMPLE TALE:
Levenson describes the biblical
story of Abraham depicted in Genesis as a “deceptively simple tale”.
Abraham is told to leave his homeland in Mesopotamia (Iraq) and is given a
series of extravagant promises. Although childless, he will be the father of a
great nation and his descendants will be given the land of Canaan. The tension
begins immediately because although Abraham gets the wealth associated with the
promise quite quickly, Sarah is advancing in years and there is no heir. And
when he eventually does get a son, it is not through his main wife, Sarah, but
through the Egyptian surrogate Hagar who gives birth to Ishmael. Abraham thinks
Ishmael is to be his heir, but then Sarah is told she will give birth to the
promised son. This son will inherit not just blessing (wealth) and great
nationhood like his brother Ishmael, but – unlike Ishmael – he will inherit the
covenant as well. Hagar gets thrown out of the house with her son and
eventually finds an Egyptian wife for Ishmael, confirming that the line is not
through her son. Meanwhile, Sarah gives birth to Isaac, confirming the line, but
then Abraham is told to sacrifice his son. Isaac is saved and Abraham arranges
a marriage for him within his family in Mesopotamia. As for the promise of
land, all Abraham manages to secure is a small burial plot for Sarah.
ABRAHAM IN THE TEXT OF THE TORAH:
This story of promise and partial
fulfilment of those promises, is all the Torah really tells us about Abraham.
The rest is richly filled in by rabbinic and particularly Midrashic
interpretation. But, as Levenson will points out, one can trace patterns of
rabbinic thought adding to the Abraham story, that directly correspond to the
living conditions of Jews under Greek and Roman domination when these embellishments
were made:
Levenson (2012:3) writes:
“The
evolution of the figure of Abraham in Jewish sources reflects the evolution of
Judaism over the centuries.”
Although Abraham is known as Avraham
Avinu (our father Abraham), very little about Judaism and Jewish observance
is found in the actual Torah text around Abraham. That gap is readily filled by
rabbinic embellishments.
The dictum ma’asei avot siman
lebanim (whatever happened to the patriarchs was to happen to the
descendants) describes how the Patriarchs are said to have pre-enacted all of
future Jewish history and we are told that they kept the entire Torah even
before it was given.
מָצִינוּ שֶׁעָשָׂה אַבְרָהָם
אָבִינוּ אֶת כָּל הַתּוֹרָה כֻּלָּהּ עַד שֶׁלֹּא נִתְּנָה, שֶׁנֶּאֱמַר, (שם כו[2])
עֵקֶב אֲשֶׁר שָׁמַע אַבְרָהָם בְּקֹלִי וַיִּשְׁמֹר מִשְׁמַרְתִּי מִצְוֹתַי
חֻקּוֹתַי וְתוֹרֹתָי[3]
Yet, Levenson points out that the
text of the Torah gives no indication that Abraham kept Shabbat, for example,
as that law was - according to the text - only given later in the time of
Moshe.[4]
Although Rashi tells us that the
angels visited Abraham during the festival of Pesach, and that the food
was prepared with the laws of Kashrut in mind, the text itself makes no
mention of such laws. Besides for Brit Millah (circumcision), the text
tells us nothing about the opposition to idolatry(!), the insistence of belief
in one G-d, ethical and legal laws and so on. In fact, very little of what
Abraham does is amenable to replication, and in the text, Abraham does not
teach anything at all. Levenson (2012:4) mentions that in a sense it is more
apt to refer to Moshe as the founder of Jewish practices, rather than Abraham. But
all this quickly changes with the application of the rabbinic interpretative tradition.
And when and where these interpretations were applied to Abraham, becomes an
interesting study in itself.
ABRAHAM
AS A RESPONSE TO THE DISCOVERY OF PREDICTABLE PLANETARY MOTION:
Around 200 BCE, towards the end
of the Second Temple period, the world became a very different place because of
certain Greco-Roman scientific advances that changed the way people viewed the universe.
Levenson (2012:5) writes:
“[T]he
discovery of mathematically predictable regularities inscribed in the motion of
the heavenly bodies posed a formidable challenge to the traditional Jewish
belief in a personal God who created the world (including the planets and
stars) and actively governs it through his providence.”
The response in the rabbinic
literature at that time was to show Abraham as one who had found G-d to be
above astrology and astronomy (which were not yet separate disciplines).
Abraham is then depicted as seeing the movement of the stars and realising that
Someone was controlling their movements. Thus, a current reaction to a new
challenge was projected back onto the patriarch in the Midrashic
literature.
ABRAHAM AS A RESPONSE TO
IDOLATRY:
Although the book of Joshua (24:2-4) refers to Abraham's father, Terach, worshiping idols, the Torah text in Genesis makes no mention of Abraham’s opposition to idolatry and there is no mention of false gods. However - also at around the same period - when the Jewish martyrs of the late Second Temple period were prepared to defend monotheism with their very lives, a picture of Abraham emerges in Midrashic literature of a man who too, uncompromisingly, rejected idolatry and defended G-d with his very life. One thinks of the Midrash about a woman who brings fine flour to Abraham to offer the gods. Abraham is looking after his father's shop while he is out, and he smashes all the idols bar the biggest whom he blames for the destruction. Terach turns his son over to Nimrod and Abraham is depicted as being saved miraculously from the fiery furnace of the idolatrous Nimrod who tries to get Abraham to worship fire. Abraham's brother Haran is not so lucky and he perishes in the flames:
נסתיה
ומסרתיה לנמרוד, אמר ליה נסגוד לנורא, אמר ליה נסגוד למייא דמטפין לנורא, אמר ליה
ונסגוד למיא, אמר ליה נסגוד לענני דטעני מיא, אמר ליה ונסגוד לעננא, אמר ליה נסגוד
לרוחא דמובלי עננא, [אמר ליה] ונסגוד לרוחא, אמר ליה נסגוד לבר נשא דסביל רוחא,
אמר ליה מלין את משתעי לא נסגוד אלא לאור הריני משליכך בו ויבוא אלהיך שאתה משתחוה
לו ויצילך ממנו
הוה
תמן הרן קאים פליג אמר מה נפשך אם נצח אברהם אנא אמר מן דאברם אנא, אם נצח נמרוד
אמר אנא מנמרוד אנא, כיון שירד אברם לכבשן האש ונוצל אמ' ליה מן דמן את, אמר ליה מן
דאברם, נטלוהו והשליכוהו באש ונחמרו מעיו ויצא ומת על פני אביו. הה"ד וימת
הרן על פני תרח אביו
(See footnote for full
English translation[5])
The Book of Jubilees (12:12-14), from around the second century BCE, talks
of Abraham setting his father’s idols on fire and Haran's death in these very
flames trying to save them:
“In the sixtieth year of the life of Abram,
i.e. in the fourth week, in its fourth year, Abram arose in the night and
burned the house of the idols. And he burned everything in the house. And there
was no man who knew. And they rose up in the night, and they wanted to save
their gods from the midst of the fire. And Haran rushed to save them, and the
fire flared up over him. And he was burned in the fire and died in Ur of the
Chaldees before Terah, his father. And they buried him in Ur of the Chaldees (translation by James Kugel).”[6]
Most remarkable about this account which to this day is very well-known, is that the book of Jubilees is not even part of the authorised cannon of the Tanach. [13]
The Midrash and the book of Jubilees offer two very different accounts of the same event but the message against idolatry is the same.
Along similar lines, another work
that appears in no scriptural canon, the Apocalypse of Abraham (written
between 70 -150 CE) has Abraham’s father Terach depicted as an idol-maker by
trade. Terach is shown lifting a fallen idol and the head falls off. He
destroys the old head and makes a new one. His son Abraham is quick to point
out the absurdity of such an action by pointing out to his father that "They did not help themselves; how can they help you or bless me? (4:3-4)." This too has, surprisingly, become a
widespread and accepted interpretation of Abraham's signature challenge to idolatry.
Again, a new perception of Abraham is projected back onto the biblical patriarch by Midrashic and other literature whilst the text itself makes no reference to idolatry. Interestingly, the Qur’an much later, also depicts Abraham’s fierce opposition to idolatry;
"And by Allah, I will show your idols my guile, after you turn your backs. Then he reduced them to pieces except for their chief, so that they might turn to him (Qur'an 21:57-58)."
There is also a reference to the fire (although Nimrod’s
name does not appear):
“We [Allah] said: ‘Oh fire, be
coolness and peace upon Abraham’ (Qur’an 21:69)”
Islam emphasised Abraham’s fight against idolatry because
Muhammad, according to Islamic tradition, also faced fierce opposition from the
original Arabian “unbelievers [who] plotted against you, so as to confine
you, kill you or expel you (Qur’an 8:30)”.
Christianity however, does not develop this idea of Abraham's opposition to idolatry.
ABRAHAM AS A RESPONSE TO STOIC MONOTHEISM:
During the Second Temple period right up to the end of Talmudic times
in around 500 CE, the focus was not so much on the number of deities but what
seemed to be of primary concern was the general transcendence of G-d over
nature. Later, during the Middle Ages, the oneness of G-d took on a more
primary focus.
In the Greco-Roman world, around
the latter Second Temple period, there existed, surprisingly, a form of pagan
monotheism. The Stoic philosophers believed in one god but, unlike Abrahamic
religions, this god is not the creator. He is immanent in nature but not
transcendent. This is very similar to the Hindu belief where there is no
beginning of time as it is considered infinite and cyclic. This existence is
just part of many cycles which are self-destroyed and self-re-created. Also,
unlike Abrahamic religions, this one god does not reveal himself to his unique
and special community.
In Second Temple theology, it was
important to emphasise that the one monotheistic God differed from the stoic
monotheistic god in that He revealed himself to Abraham and founded His special
community with their specific observances. The observances of this community
were emphasised and reflected back to Abraham who is said to have kept all the
laws before they were given to Moshe.
ABRAHAM AS A RESPONSE TO CHISTIANITY:
With the rise of Christianity in
the first century CE, there was a new set of challengers which followed from
the Stoic era in which the community of Abraham (and their observances) was
emphasised. The question now became which specific community and which
practices are to be emphasised – Jewish or Christian?
The apostle Paul defined the
community of Abraham as all those who “follow the example of the faith that
our father Abraham had before he was circumcised” (Rom 4:11-12). Faith was
more important than practice and lineage. If you have faith, you belong to the
community of Abraham because Abraham was pronounced righteous by G-d long
before Moshe gave the Torah to the Israelites and even before Abraham was
circumcised. Keeping the commandments of the Torah was therefore no longer
necessary.
The early Christian theologian
Justin Martyr who wrote just after the failed Bar Kochba Revolt (132-135 CE),
took the notion of circumcision to next level. Instead of it being a symbol of
G-d’s enduring covenant with Israel, he claimed it was a symbol of rejection
by G-d. Although it was handed down through Abraham, it was a sign that:
“[Y]ou and
only you might suffer the afflictions that are now justly yours; that only your
land be desolate …that not one of you be permitted to enter the city of
Jerusalem.”[7]
The rabbinic response in the Talmud,
which began to appear at the same time as Christianity was emerging, was to
refer to circumcision as the “covenant of Avraham Avinu (our father
Abraham)”. The Talmud states:
״אֲשֶׁר
קִדְּשָׁנוּ בְּמִצְוֹתָיו וְצִוָּנוּ לְהַכְנִיסוֹ בִּבְרִיתוֹ שֶׁל אַבְרָהָם
אָבִינוּ״
And:
שֶׁאִילְמָלֵא דַּם בְּרִית לֹא נִתְקַיְּימוּ שָׁמַיִם וָאָרֶץ
“Were it
not for the blood of circumcision, heaven and earth would not endure.”[8]
This way, together with showing
that Abraham kept all the commandments before they were given, the rabbis
highlighted their claim as rightful heirs to Abraham through the Brit Millah,
which excluded the Christian claim that faith alone brings one into the community
of Abraham. And one could add that for the Stoics, they threw in a reference to
the heavens and the earth as creations and not just part of a cyclical process,
as well.
Levenson (2012:8) does point out,
though, that the idea that Abraham kept all the commandments was pre-Christian
(see note 4). Nevertheless, emphasising this idea at that time would have been
important in order to counter the rise of a new religion also claiming its
roots in Abraham.
Another angle taken by early Christians
was based on G-d’s promise to Abraham “In you shall all the families of the
earth be blessed (Genesis 12:3b)”. Because Christians were concerned with
converting all the “families of the earth” and Jews were not[9],
they were carrying on the rightful legacy Abraham and not the Jews.
Thus, again the Jews were excluded from their Abrahamic legacy.
The Midrashic response was
a reinterpretation of “in you shall all the families of the earth be blessed”
to “by you”. The notion of zechut avot, or merit of the
patriarchs was emphasised. Jews did not
need to convert the world because the spiritual “merit” of Abraham would
suffice. The presence of Abraham’s descendants observing his laws was the
source of (vicarious) blessing for all the other nations.
וְנִבְרְכוּ בְךָ, הַגְּשָׁמִים בִּזְכוּתְךָ, הַטְּלָלִים
בִּזְכוּתְךָ, הֲדָא
הוּא דִכְתִיב (אסתר ב, כב): וַיִּוָּדַע הַדָּבָר לְמָרְדְּכָי וַיַּגֵּד
לְאֶסְתֵּר הַמַּלְכָּה וגו'. זֶה מָהוּל וְזֶה עָרֵל, וְחָס עָלָיו, אֶתְמְהָא,
רַבִּי יְהוּדָה וְרַבִּי נְחֶמְיָה, רַבִּי יְהוּדָה אוֹמֵר (תהלים קיט, ק):
מִזְּקֵנִים אֶתְבּוֹנָן כִּי פִקּוּדֶיךָ נָצָרְתִּי, אָמַר, יַעֲקֹב בֵּרַךְ אֶת
פַּרְעֹה, שֶׁנֶּאֱמַר (בראשית מז, ז): וַיְבָרֶךְ יַעֲקֹב אֶת פַּרְעֹה, יוֹסֵף
גִּלָּה לוֹ, דָּנִיֵּאל גִּלָּה לִנְבוּכַדְנֶצַר, אַף אֲנִי כֵן וַיַּגֵּד
לְאֶסְתֵּר הַמַּלְכָּה. וְרַבִּי נְחֶמְיָה אָמַר, אָמַר הַקָּדוֹשׁ בָּרוּךְ
הוּא לְאַבְרָהָם אָבִינוּ וְנִבְרְכוּ בְךָ כֹּל מִשְׁפְּחֹת הָאֲדָמָה
וּבְזַרְעֶךָ, אִין תֵּימַר דְּלֶהֱוֵי עַתִּירִין, הֲרֵי עַתִּירִין אִנּוּן
מִינָן, אֶלָּא לִשְׁאֵלָה, כְּשֶׁהֵן נִכְנָסִים לְצָרָה הֵם נִשְׁאָלִים לָנוּ
וְאָנוּ מְגַלִּין לָהֶם[10]
This Midrash expounds on
numerous examples of Gentiles who prosper because of the activities of the
Jews. This “zechut” or merit is what the verse “by you shall all the
families of the earth be blessed” refers to – not to the need to convert
the world.
Perhaps most importantly, we must
remember how Christianity viewed the Akeidah, or
the binding of Isaac. Abraham's son, Isaac, is regarded as the prototype for
Jesus, the son of G-d:
"in
order that in Christ Jesus the blessing of Abraham might come to the Gentiles
(Gal.3:4).”
Paul writes in his letters:
“Now the
promises were made to Abraham and his offspring; it does not say, ‘And to
offsprings,’ as of many; but it says, ‘And to your offspring,’ that is, to one
person, who is Christ (Gal. 3:16).”
In the second century CE, Bishop
Melito of Sardis wrote:
“As a ram
he was bound, he says concerning our Lord Jesus Christ…going up to slaughter
like Isaac at the hand of his father. But Christ suffered. Isaac did not
suffer, for he was a type of the passion of Christ which was to come…
When the
thing comes about of which the sketch was a type…then the type is destroyed, it
has become useless…What was once valuable becomes worthless… So the people were
valuable before the church arose, And the law was wonderful before the
illumination of the Gospel. (On Pascha, 76, 37, 40-42. Cited by Levenson
2012:102).”
According to Christianity, Abraham’s legacy is not a
particular philosophy nor a practice. It is a faith “that that comes from the
preaching of the Christian gospel (Levenson 2012:138).”
Ideas like these, prompt Levenson (2012:104) to state:
“[T]he fact
that Judaism and Christianity share scriptures in general and revere the narratives
about the patriarchs in particular constitutes a historical bond, and even a
theological bond of sorts; but it also constitutes a formidable barrier.”
ABRAHAM AS A RESPONSE TO
ISLAM:
Islam emerged after the Talmudic
period, in the seventh century CE, and it focuses more on Abraham than both
Judaism and Christianity (Levenson 2012:8). It too, seeks to distance Abraham
from the Jewish people.
However, Islam adopts a very different strategy than Christianity. While Christianity claims that ‘descent’ from Abraham, through faith not birth, is vital – Islam claims that ‘descent’ is of no consequence. Abraham is no longer the Jewish “Abraham our father”, nor the Christian “father of all who have faith”, but now a link in the chain of prophets starting with Adam and a prefiguration of the greatest or the “Seal of the prophets”[11], Muhammad (Levenson 2012:105). As the Qur'an states:
"the people who are worthiest of Abraham are those who followed him, together with this Prophet (3:68)."
Islam thus sought to restore “the religion of Abraham”[12] after its misrepresentation by both Judaism and Christianity. Another great difference is Islam’s rejection of the canonical status of Genesis. This is significant because Genesis claims Isaac as the son who inherits the covenant. The claim of Islam is that the heir is Ishmael regardless of what it states in Genesis.
In the Qur’an the “Akeidah” appears
as a very short narrative. Abraham tells his son that saw himself slaughtering
him, in a dream. The son replies: “My father, do what you are commanded, you
will find me, Allah willing, one of the steadfast (37:102).” After both
have submitted, G-d tells Abraham that its is all a test and provides a large
sacrifice as a ransom.
The identity of the son is
unknown as he is not named. Early Muslim scholars debated over the identity and
the consensus was equally shared as pertaining to both Isaac and Ishmael. The
older tradition had the identity as Isaac while the later and more modern scholars
had it as Ishmael. By the eleventh century al-Tha’labi wrote: “The Jews
claim that it was Isaac, but the Jews lie” (Firestone cited by Levenson
2012:105).”
PRESERVING THE JEWISH
TRADITION OF ABRAHAM:
Perhaps by understanding how the
figure of Abraham has been attempted to be extricated from Jewish theological
control, we can better understand the development and the message of
extra-biblical literature surrounding the patriarch.
In the Midrashic
literature concerning the account of the animals used for the covenant-making
ceremony, the animals are said to symbolise the various empires who ruled over
the Jewish people culminating in Rome (which ruled at that time and was
becoming increasingly Christian). The message was that all empires would come
and go but the (Jewish) covenant with Abraham would endure.
Another case in point was the Akeidah
(the binding of Abraham’s son, Isaac) which is hardly mentioned again in the
Torah. Yet it took on new meaning and relevance especially during the first few
centuries of the Common Era. Perhaps
this was in response to the Christian idea of the ‘son’ being sacrificed which
was modelled around the Akeidah story.
Interestingly, at the same time
that Midrashim were expanding upon Abraham, Christians developed their
own extra-biblical interpretations and homiletics where Abraham is said to have
talked to Jesus, and Muslims were describing Abraham and his son Ishmael
purifying the ka’ba in Mecca.
IS ABRAHAM THE COMMON DENOMINATOR OR THE GREAT DIVIDE?
Whilst achieving harmony between
all faiths is most desirable, understanding their differences does not need to
be a hindrance to such an endeavour. It may indeed be the very reason to seek
out that harmony, because only a harmony based on understanding can endure.
Levenson (2012:8-9) writes:
“[T]he
claim that Abraham is the source of reconciliation among the three traditions
increasingly called ‘Abrahamic’ is as simplistic as it is now widespread.
Historically, Abraham has functioned much more as a point of differentiation
among the three religious communities than a node of commonality.”
Significantly he adds:
“[A]lthough
interreligious concord is devoutly to be desired, the patriarch is less useful
to that end than many think.”
FURTHER READING:
For a different perspective on
Abrahamic faith, see: Kotzk
Blog: The Retraction of Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks
[1]
Levenson, J.D., 2012, Inheriting Abraham: The Legacy of the Patriarch in
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, Princeton University Press.
[2]
Genesis 26:5.
[3]
Mishna Kiddushin 4:14.
[4] I wonder, though, how Levenson would read Genesis 26:5 which reads: "Abraham obeyed my voice and kept my charge, my commandments, my statutes, and my laws.” Perhaps Levenson is referring the lack of any concrete mention of any of these laws, or perhaps he reads the verse to simply mean that Abraham obeyed G-d’s instructions such as to travel and so forth (interpreting the rather convincing mitzvotai, chukotai and torotai in a non-literal manner)?
[5] He
(Terah) took him (Abraham) and gave him over to Nimrod. (Nimrod) said to him:
Let us worship the fire! (Abraham) said to him: Should we not then worship
water, which extinguishes fire! (Nimrod) said to him: Then, let us worship the
water! (Abraham) said to him: Should we not then worship the clouds, which
carry the water? (Nimrod) said to him: Then, let us worship the cloud! (Abraham)
said to him: If so, Should we not then worship the wind, which scatters the
clouds? (Nimrod) said to him: Then, let us worship the wind! (Abraham) said to
him: Should we not then worship the human, who withstands the wind? (Nimrod)
said to him: You are merely piling words; we should bow to none other than the
fire. I shall therefore cast you in it, and let your God to whom you bow come
and save you from it!
Haran (Abraham's brother) was standing there. He
said (to himself): what shall I do? If Abraham wins, I shall say: "I am of
Abraham's (followers)," if Nimrod wins I shall say, "I am of Nimrod's
(followers)." When Abraham went into the furnace and survived, Haran was
asked: "Whose (follower) are you?" and he answered: "I am
Abraham's (follower)!" So, they took him and threw him into the furnace,
and his innards were burned and he died and predeceased Terah, his father. This
is the meaning of the verse (Gen 11:28), “And Haran died in the lifetime of his
father Terah.”
[Bereishit Rabbah 38:11]. According to Sefaria,
the Midrash Rabbah was completed at around 500 CE. It is most likely
that these Midrashim were built upon earlier traditions.
[6] Kiel,
Y., 2015, Why the Midrash Has Abraham Thrown into Nimrod's Furnace:
The historical association of Abraham and Nimrod with Zoroaster, the founder of Zoroastrianism.
[7] See
Siker, Disinheriting the Jews, 169. Cited in Levenson (2012:29).
[8] b. Shabbat
137b.
[9] For
another approach see Kotzk
Blog: 309) WERE JEWS EVER MISSIONARIES?
[10]
Bereishit Rabba 39:12.
[11]
Qur’an 33:40.
[12]
Qur’an 2:135.
[13] The book of Joshua 24:2, however, gives idolatry as the reason why Abraham left. Still, Jubilees provides the graphic embellisment. It is also possible that Jubilees was just recording an existing Jewish tradition.
delectable.
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