Deuteronomy
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Deuteronomy |
Deuteronomy is the fifth book of the Hebrew Bible. It is part of Judaism's Torah - the first segment of the Tanakh. It later became part of Christianity's Old Testament. Its Hebrew name is Devarim דברים ("words"), which comes from the opening phrase "Eleh ha-devarim" ("These are the words..."). The term can also stretch to mean "discourses" or "talks", as is generally the case with the Greek word "logos".
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[edit] Origin of the name Deuteronomy
The English name, "Deuteronomy", comes from the name which the book bears in the Septuagint (ִוץפוסןםליןם) and in the Vulgate (Deuteronomium). This is based upon the erroneous Septuagint rendering of "mishneh ha-torah ha-zot" (xvii. 18), which grammatically can mean only "a repetition [that is, a copy] of this law," but which is rendered by the Septuagint פὸ ִוץפוסןםליןם פןῦפן, as though the expression meant "this second-giving of the law." While, however, the name is thus a mistranslation, it is not inappropriate; for the book does include, by the side of much new material, a repetition or reformulation of a large part of the laws found in the non-priestly sections of Exodus.
[edit] Summary of the book
Deuteronomy consists chiefly of three discourses said to have been delivered by Moses a short time before his death, given to the Israelites, in the plains of Moab, in the penultimate month of the final year of their wanderings through the wilderness.
The first discourse (1-4) is a historical recollection, recapitulating the chief events of the past forty years in the wilderness, with earnest hortatory exhortations to obedience to the divine ordinances, and warnings against the danger of forsaking the God of their fathers.
The second discourse (5-26) is, in effect, the main body of the whole book, and is composed of two distinct addresses. The first of these (5-11), forms a second introduction, expanding on the Ethical Decalogue given at Mount Sinai. This other, second, address (12-26) is the Deuteronomic Code, a series of mitzvot (commands), forming extensive laws, admonitions, and injunctions to the Israelites, regarding how they ought to conduct themselves in Canaan, the land they regard to have been promised by God as their permanent home. This code includes laws that:
- Demand the death penalty for evangelists from other faiths, for practicising other faiths, and for males who disobey their parents
- Mandate dietary principles
- Demand a Tithe for the Levites and charity for the poor
- Demand that there be a regular Jubilee Year during which debts are cancelled
- Demand that slavery of an individual lasts no more than 6 years.
- Mandate the keeping of Passover, Shavuot, and Sukkot
- Regulate the office of Judge, King, Kohen (temple priest), and Prophet
- Ban the planting of trees, dedicated to Asherah, next to altars dedicated to God, and the erection of sacred stones.
- Ban children either from being immolated or from passing through fire (the text is ambiguous as to which is meant), divination, sorcery, witchcraft, spellcasting, and necromancy
- Ban blemished animals from becoming sacrifices at the Temple
- Protect the perpetrators of manslaughter by mandating the existence of three cities of refuge
- Allow the betrothed, newly married, owners of new houses, planters of new vineyards, and cowards, to leave an army
- Demand that an enemy be offered peace terms before battle - the terms being that they enter slavery
- Mandate genocide against the Amalekites
- Protect fruit trees in war time, the mother of newly born birds, and beasts of burden which have fallen over, or are lost
- Regulate Marriage, and Levirate Marriage, and allow divorce
- Prohibit the mixing of fabrics, of crops, of beasts of burden under the same yoke, and transvestitism
- Mandate the use of Tzitzit
- Prohibit people from Ammon, Moab, or who are Mamzers, and their descendants, from entering the assembly of God, as well as imposing this restriction upon those who are castrated (but not their descendants)
- Regulate ritual cleanliness, general hygiene, and the treatment of Tzaarath
- Ban religious prostitution
- Regulate slavery, servitude, vows, debt, usury, and permissible objects for securing loans
- Prohibit wives from making a groin attack on their husband's adversary.
The concluding third discourse (27-30) is hortatory, relating almost wholly to the solemn sanctions of the law, the blessings to the obedient, and the curse that would fall on the rebellious. In this discourse, the Israelites are solemnly adjured to adhere faithfully to the covenant between them and God, and so secure for themselves, and for their posterity, the promised blessings.
After the final discourse, the text describes Moses preparing himself to die. As the main part of preparation, Moses is described as conditionally renewing the covenant between God and the Israelites, the condition being the loyalty of the people, and at the same time, Joshua is also appointed by Moses as heir, a leader to lead the people into Canaan.
These addresses to the people are followed by what are generally regarded as three short appendices, namely:
- The Song of Moses, which the text states was created by Moses upon the request of God (Deuteronomy 32:1-47).
- The Blessing of Moses, which is pronounced upon the individual tribes of Israel (33)
- The story of the death of Moses (Deuteronomy 32:48-52), and subsequent burial (34).
[edit] Analysis of authorship
[edit] Early Jewish analysis
The Talmud was the first to discuss a problem concerning the assumed premise that Moses wrote the entire five books of the Torah. Based on this premise, it is difficult to understand how Moses could possibly have written the text recording his own death and burial, as well as describing, after his own death, that ... there arose not a prophet since in Israel like unto Moses. While some contended that he wrote these verses prophetically, the dominant opinion in the Talmud is that Joshua wrote the final verses of the Torah.
Later Jewish biblical exegetes, notably Abraham ibn Ezra (c.1093 - 1167) also noted the distinctly different meditative style and language of Deuteronomy and stated that a number of verses must have been written by a later author, again probably Joshua. Similarly, in his introduction to Deuteronomy, Don Isaac Abravanel (1437 - 1508) suggested that Deuteronomy had a different author to the rest of the Torah.
Later textual scholars identified a period for the text to have been written within. At the end of the 2 Kings there is a narrative concerning the religious reform conducted during the reign of King Josiah, also recounted more briefly in the Chronicles&verse=34:3&src=! 2 Chronicles 34:3. After eradicating the rival cultic centres to Jerusalem, Josiah purged the Temple in Jerusalem of pagan influences (621 BC). During the process of cleansing, Hilkiah the High Priest found a lost scroll of the Torah, the contents of which were co-incidentally in complete accord with the reforms then being instituted.
The biblical story continues that Josiah and Hilkiah went to Huldah the Prophetess to confirm that this was indeed a lost book of the law. She did so, adding that failure to comply would result in the fulfillment of the curses described in the book. As a result, a ceremony only otherwise mentioned in Deuteronomy was arranged. In this ceremony, the king read the entire scroll that was found to the people assembled for Sukkot in order to renew the covenant between them and the Law in a re-enactment of the events at Mount Sinai.
Several rabbis in the Talmud cite a longstanding tradition, echoed by most modern researchers, that the scroll discovered by Hilkiah was none other than Deuteronomy, lost but now recovered by Hilkiah. Deuteronomy is the only book of the Pentateuch to impose the centralisation of worship into a single location where sacrifices were permitted to be offered; in effect, this was the very essence of Josiah's reform[1].
These rabbis also point to various aspects of the story, which are somewhat enigmatic, in their efforts to understand what had actually happened. For example, they ask why the king and high priest chose to go to an otherwise unknown prophetess for confirmation of the text, when there were two major prophets, Jeremiah, and Zechariah, living at that time; the somewhat unsatisfactory answer they give is that Zechariah must have been home that day due to sickness, and that Jeremiah was away on business[2].
In fact, this answer may actually be an indication of the historical importance of the Reform and the conflict it would have generated among the masses. Rather than have it originate with overly zealous religious leaders (the prophets), it came from the king and high priest, both of whom were political. By attributing the book to Moses, it could have the same authority as the other books, and its precepts would be similarly observed and respected.
[edit] Apologetics
Most Orthodox Judaism scholars and Jews and many evangelical Christians believe, despite the ideas raised by the Talmudic rabbis, that the original author of the book was Moses, and that the book really was lost and recovered (e.g. [1]). Their apologetics argues that:
- The book itself claims to have been written by Moses (Deuteronomy 1:1; Deuteronomy 29:1; Deuteronomy 31:1; Deuteronomy 31:9-11, etc.), and, as everyone agrees, was obviously intended to be accepted as his work.
- The frequent references to it in the later books of the canon (Joshua 8:31; Kings&verse=2:3&src=! 1 Kings 2:3; Chronicles&verse=23:18&src=! 2 Chronicles 23:18; Chronicles&verse=25:4&src=! 2 Chronicles 25:4; Chronicles&verse=34:14&src=! 2 Chronicles 34:14; Ezra 3:2; Ezra 7:6; Nehemiah 8:1; Daniel 9:11-13) prove its antiquity.
- Orthodox Jews point to testimony, within the Mishnah and Talmud, that Moses authored nearly all of Deuteronomy.
- Christians identify further testimony of Mosaic authorship from the New Testament. Matthew 19:7-8, Mark 10:3-4, John 5:46-47, Acts 3:22 and Acts 7:37, and Romans 10:19, all establish the same conclusion.
[edit] Modern critical analysis
Despite the apologetics of many religious thinkers, modern academic criticism completely rejects Moses as the work's author. While the book claims to have been written by Moses, such a claim could be made by any author. While there are frequent references to the book in later works of canon, this can simply be explained as the works being later. In particular, while the books from Joshua to Kings reference Deuteronomy at points prior to the finding of Deuteronomy by Hilkiah, this can simply be explained by those books too not being fully written before the reign of Josiah.
Although Israel is represented as being about to enter Canaan, at an early stage in its nationhood, the language details laws for a state that is highly developed, has the institutions of a king, priesthood, central criminal tribunal, and so forth. Similarly the language within the discourse refers to the land east of the Jordan as being on the other side of the Jordan, implying the author is on the west of the Jordan, a location that Moses supposedly never entered[3].
The style and method of this book, and its peculiarities of expression, show that it came from a school of thought separate from the rest of the Torah. In fact, Deuteronomy often refers to itself as a separate code of law (1:5, 8:26, 27:3, 31:26), distinct from the four preceding books of the Bible. Scholars have also noted differences in language and style, the laws themselves, and some anachronisms in the text, such as the variations in the text of the Ethical Decalogue, compared to the version at Exodus 20.
The text is most reminiscent of Jeremiah, with whom the style, and laws, of Deuteronomy have extreme influence. In fact, the style is so strongly similar to Jeremiah, that several scholars have posited him, or his scribe, as the real author. Similarly, it is extremely notable that neither Amos, nor Hosea, nor the undisputed portions of Isaiah, show even the remotest familiarity with Deuteronomy. These facts can easily be explained if Deuteronomy was written after these three prophets, and before Jeremiah, placing its creation squarely in the seventh century BC.
Modern bible scholarship therefore identifies the work as being created in the seventh century BC, in, or very close to, the reign of Josiah. Further study of the other books of the torah has led over 90% of the academic community of biblical scholars to support the documentary hypothesis. This hypothesis identifies multiple authors for the torah, Deuteronomy mostly being considered the work of the deuteronomist ("D"). The Deuteronomist's work is believed to have also included the editing together of earlier histories into the books of Joshua, Judges, Kings, and Samuel.
According to such critical scholarship, the origin of almost 100% of Deuteronomy is as the Shiloh priesthood's response to the Priestly Code, the law code created by the Priestly source ("P"), their Aaronid rivals. It is believed that the original element of Deuteronomy, the portion found in the temple, is the central core, the Deuteronomic Code, at Deuteronomy 12-26. Having been pronounced to the public, it is believed that two alternative editions were created, potentially by the same author, and published simultaneously:
- one containing the core, as well as the historical introduction, Deuteronomy 1-4, as well as a simple hortatory conclusion, with a list of curses, Deuteronomy 27
- the other containing the core, as well as the theological introduction, Deuteronomy 5-11, and a more extensive hortatory conclusion, Deuteronomy 28-30
While the first of these editions would present the law as the remembrance by Moses of the events at Sinai, the second presents it in the form of a suzerain-vassal treaty, of a form similar to the Covenant Code. As the Covenant Code is thought, in critical scholarship, to be the much older basis of the Deuteronomic Code, this second edition simply reflects a fuller adherence to its structure.
While the purpose of separate editions could have various reasons, for example one being for the priesthood and the other for the people, it is generally agreed, by textual critics, that at some point, shortly after these versions were written, they were combined together ("Dtr1") mostly in the manner in which they are now found. Subsequently, the great hero of the reform, Josiah, was killed at Megiddo, and the Babylonians conquered and dispersed the kingdom of Israel.
Consequently the positive attitude of the code thus far became less appropriate, and so critical scholarship identifies a second edition of the combined work (known as "Dtr2"), containing additional warnings about obliteration and exile, as well as promises of restoration in the event of repentance. This second edition is believed to also have inserted two originally independent documents, and framings for them, which now comprise the two poems at Deuteronomy 31-33. The account of Moses' death is believed to simply have been moved to where it lies now, Deuteronomy 34, to make way, and accordingly, after the torah was later redacted together, Deuteronomy 34 also gained verses describing the death of Moses from both the Jahwist and the Priestly source.
[edit] See also
- Torah
- Tanakh
- Torah portions in Deuteronomy: Devarim, Va'etchanan, Eikev, Re'eh, Shoftim, Ki Teitzei, Ki Tavo, Nitzavim, Vayelech, Haazinu, V'Zot HaBerachah.
[edit] External links
Online versions and translations of Deuteronomy:
- Jewish translations:
- Deuteronomy at Mechon-Mamre (Jewish Publication Society translation)
- Deuteronomy (The Living Torah) Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan's translation and commentary at Ort.org
- Devarim - Deuteronomy (Judaica Press) translation with Rashi's commentary at Chabad.org
- דְּבָרִים Devarim - Deuteronomy (Hebrew - English at Mechon-Mamre.org)
- Christian translations:
- Online Bible at GospelHall.org
- Deuteronomy at The Great Books (New Revised Standard Version)
- Deuteronomy - Chapter Indexed (King James Version)
- Deuteronomy at Wikisource (Authorised King James Version)
- Translations identifying sources according to the documentary hypothesis:
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