友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!
the evolution of theology-第11部分
快捷操作: 按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页 按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页 按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部! 如果本书没有阅读完,想下次继续接着阅读,可使用上方 "收藏到我的浏览器" 功能 和 "加入书签" 功能!
Israelitic Decalogue; in which only a specific kind of
untruthfulnes is forbidden。
If; as the story runs; Moses was adopted by a princess of the
royal house; and was instructed in all the wisdom of the
Egyptians; it is surely incredible that he should not have been
familiar from his youth up; with the high moral code implied in
the 〃Book of Redemption。〃 It is surely impossible that he should
have been less familiar with the complete legal system; and with
the method of administration of justice; which; even in his
time; had enabled the Egyptian people to hold together; as a
complex social organisation; for a period far longer than the
duration of old Roman society; from the building of the city to
the death of the last Caesar。 Nor need we look to Moses alone
for the influence of Egypt upon Israel。 It is true that the
Hebrew nomads who came into contact with the Egyptians of
Osertasen; or of Ramses; stood in much the same relation to
them; in point of culture; as a Germanic tribe did to the Romans
of Tiberius; or of Marcus Antoninus; or as Captain Cook's Omai
did to the English of George the Third。 But; at the same time;
any difficulty of communication which might have arisen out of
this circumstance was removed by the long pre…existing
intercourse of other Semites; of every grade of civilisation;
with the Egyptians。 In Mesopotamia and elsewhere; as in
Phenicia; Semitic people had attained to a social organisation
as advanced as that of the Egyptians; Semites had conquered and
occupied Lower Egypt for centuries。 So extensively had Semitic
influences penetrated Egypt that the Egyptian language; during
the period of the nineteenth dynasty; is said by Brugsch to be
as full of Semitisms as German is of Gallicisms; while Semitic
deities had supplanted the Egyptian gods at Heliopolis and
elsewhere。 On the other hand; the Semites; as far as Phenicia;
were extensively influenced by Egypt。
It is generally admitted that Moses; Phinehas (and perhaps
Aaron); are names of Egyptian origin; and there is excellent
authority for the statement that the name Abir; which the
Israelites gave to their golden calf; and which is also used to
signify the strong; the heavenly; and even God; is simply
the Egyptian Apis。 Brugsch points out that the god; Tum or Tom;
who was the special object of worship in the city of Pi…Tom;
with which the Israelites were only too familiar; was called
Ankh and the 〃great god;〃 and had no image。 Ankh means 〃He who
lives;〃 〃the living one;〃 a name the resemblance of which to the
〃I am that I am〃 of Exodus is unmistakable; whatever may be the
value of the fact。 Every discussion of Israelitic ritual seeks
and finds the explanation of its details in the portable sacred
chests; the altars; the priestly dress; the breastplate; the
incense; and the sacrifices depicted on the monuments of Egypt。
But it must be remembered that these signs of the influence of
Egypt upon Israel are not necessarily evidence that such
influence was exerted before the Exodus。 It may have come much
later; through the close connection of the Israel of David and
Solomon; first with Phenicia and then with Egypt。
If we suppose Moses to have been a man of the stamp of Calvin;
there is no difficulty in conceiving that he may have
constructed the substance of the ten words; and even of the Book
of the Covenant; which curiously resembles parts of the Book of
the Dead; from the foundation of Egyptian ethics and theology
which had filtered through to the Israelites in general; or had
been furnished specially to himself by his early education;
just as the great Genevese reformer built up a puritanic social
organisation on so much as remained of the ethics and theology
of the Roman Church; after he had trimmed them to his liking。
Thus; I repeat; I see no a priori objection to the
assumption that Moses may have endeavoured to give his people a
theologico…political organisation based on the ten commandments
(though certainly not quite in their present form) and the Book
of the Covenant; contained in our present book of Exodus。
But whether there is such evidence as amounts to proof; or; I
had better say; to probability; that even this much of the
Pentateuch owes its origin to Moses is another matter。
The mythical character of the accessories of the Sinaitic
history is patent; and it would take a good deal more evidence
than is afforded by the bare assertion of an unknown writer to
justify the belief that the people who 〃saw the thunderings and
the lightnings and the voice of the trumpet and the mountain
smoking〃 (Exod。 xx。 18); to whom Jahveh orders Moses to say; 〃Ye
yourselves have seen that I have talked with you from heaven。
Ye shall not make other gods with me; gods of silver and gods of
gold ye shall not make unto you〃 (ibid。 22; 23); should;
less than six weeks afterwards; have done the exact thing they
were thus awfully forbidden to do。 Nor is the credibility of the
story increased by the statement that Aaron; the brother of
Moses; the witness and fellow…worker of the miracles before
Pharaoh; was their leader and the artificer of the idol。
And yet; at the same time; Aaron was apparently so ignorant of
wrongdoing that he made proclamation; 〃Tomorrow shall be a feast
to Jahveh;〃 and the people proceeded to offer their burnt…
offerings and peace…offerings; as if everything in their
proceedings must be satisfactory to the Deity with whom they had
just made a solemn covenant to abolish image…worship。 It seems
to me that; on a survey of all the facts of the case; only a
very cautious and hypothetical judgment is justifiable。 It may
be that Moses profited by the opportunities afforded him of
access to what was best in Egyptian society to become
acquainted; not only with its advanced ethical and legal code;
but with the more or less pantheistic unification of the Divine
to which the speculations of the Egyptian thinkers; like those
of all polytheistic philosophers; from Polynesia to Greece;
tend; if indeed the theology of the period of the nineteenth
dynasty was not; as some Egyptologists think; a modification of
an earlier; more distinctly monotheistic doctrine of a long
antecedent age。 It took only half a dozen centuries for the
theology of Paul to become the theology of Gregory the Great;
and it is possible that twenty centuries lay between the
theology of the first worshippers in the sanctuary of the Sphinx
and that of the priests of Ramses Maimun。
It may be that the ten commandments and the Book of the Covenant
are based upon faithful traditions of the efforts of a great
leader to raise his followers to his own level。 For myself; as a
matter of pious opinion; I like to think so; as I like to
imagine that; between Moses and Samuel; there may have been many
a seer; many a herdsman such as him of Tekoah; lonely amidst the
hills of Ephraim and Judah; who cherished and kept alive these
traditions。 In the present results of Biblical criticism;
however; I can discover no justification for the common
assumption that; between the time of Joshua and that of
Rehoboam; the Israelites were familiar with either the
Deuteronomic or the Levitical legislation; or that the theology
of the Israelites; from the king who sat on the throne to the
lowest of his subjects; was in any important respect different
from that which might naturally be expected from their previous
history and the conditions of their existence。 But there is
excellent evidence to the contrary effect。 And; for my part; I
see no reason to doubt that; like the rest of the world; the
Israelites had passed through a period of mere ghost…worship;
and had advanced through Ancestor…worship and Fetishism and
Totemism to the theological level at which we find them in the
books of Judges and Samuel。
All the more remarkable; therefore; is the extraordinary change
which is to be noted in the eighth century B。C。 The student who
is familiar with the theology implied; or expressed; in the
books of Judges; Samuel; and the first book of Kings; finds
himself in a new world of thought; in the full tide of a great
reformation; when he reads Joel; Amos; Hosea; Isaiah; Micah;
and Jeremiah。
The essence of this change is the reversal of the position
which; in primitive society; ethics holds in relation to
theology。 Originally; that which men worship is a theological
hypothesis; not a moral ideal。 The prophets; in substance; if
not always in form preach the opposite doctrine。 They are
constantly striving to free the moral ideal from the stifling
embrace of the current theology and its concomitant ritual。
Theirs was not an intellectual criticism; argued on strictly
scientific grounds; the image…worshippers and the believers in
the efficacy of sacrifices and ceremonies might logically have
held their own against anything the prophets have to say; it was
an ethical criticism。 From the height of his moral intuition
that the whole duty of man is to do justice and to love mercy
and to bear himself as humbly as befits his insignificance in
face of the Infinitethe prophet simply laughs at the idolaters
of stocks and stones and the idolaters of ritual。 Idols of the
first kind; in his experience; were inseparably united with the
practice of immorality; and they were to be ruthlessly
destroyed。 As for sacrifices and ceremonies; whatever their
intrinsic value might be; they might be tolerated on condition
of ceasing to be idols; they might even be praiseworthy on
condition of being made to subserve the worship of the true
Jahvehthe moral ideal。
If the realm of David had remained undivided; if the Assyrian
and the Chaldean and the Egyptian had left Israel to the
ordinary course of development of an Oriental kingdom; it is
possible that the effects of the reforming zeal of the prophets
of the eighth and seventh centuries might
快捷操作: 按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页 按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页 按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!