The Hebrew God by Bernhard Lang
Miles, Jack
FOLLOW THAT WINNEBAGO The Hebrew God Portrait of an Ancient Deity Bernhard Lang Yel University Press. $32.50, 246 pp. Jack Miles Imagine yourself on vacation. Ahead of you on the road to Mount...
...Lang wishes the history of this God could be written...
...From these, though you cannot quite assemble a history of the hippo's wanderings (who knows in what order the stickers were affixed...
...Just as its travels are really its owners' travels, so God's history and even his character are really those of his worshippers...
...None of this is impossible, but none of it is proved or remotely provable...
...and reads its concentration on fertility rather than war as the reaction of a defeated Israel to the failure of the Israelite monarchy...
...but like you behind that RV, he realizes that the stickers- the fragmentary evidence that has survived to our day-permit only a fragmentary history...
...The result, page by page, is a syn-chronic, topical exposition-Lang's "structural description"-dense at every point with diachronic, historical reference...
...To choose just one illustrative example, Lang's description of the Hebrew God as a weather god refers in one passage of fewer than five hundred words to: a ninth-century B.C...
...literary commentary, treating the protagonist as real for the purposes of the story, is another...
...Some of your guesses about the itinerary of the RV may also be right...
...There are alternatives, of course, to the Hamlet-without-the-prince methodological atheism of history and social science: theological commentary, taking the real existence of God as a matter of faith, is one...
...The categories, borrowed from the anthropologist Georges Dumezil, are wisdom, war, and (in all imaginable forms) wealth...
...People became conscious of the fact that the state, with its emphasis on the Divine Warrior and the wisdom god, had been responsible for the national disaster of 586 B.C...
...In a passage that offers a fair sample of this author's English style, he concludes that "structural description" is the most we can hope for: "The ideal study of this God would consist of two parts: the first on his nature and character, and the second on his history, resulting in a monograph that would be entitled The Hebrew God: His Character and His Story.' The second part of such a work would tell the history of the Hebrew God as it developed in biblical times and perhaps beyond...
...you can at least analyze its owners' taste in tourism...
...Alfred A. Knopf...
...Written about 500 B.C.-that is, after the Babylonian exile-they echo that period's vital interest in restoring the material basis of Israel's existence and its spiritual identity...
...Instead of feasting on the noble landscape, your eye feasts upon the stickers that festoon this hippo's rear end...
...Its cultivation reminded them of God's curse" in the Garden of Eden...
...You begin by dividing their destinations into major categories: historical-Jefferson Davis Memorial...
...Lang asserts as much himself yet repeatedly abandons his own skepticism...
...Historical-critical scholars do sometimes employ the methods of social science, but they invariably subordinate the results to the overriding interest of history...
...The focus thus is on ancient Israel for the Old Testament or Tanakh and on the early church for the New Testament...
...geological-the Wisconsin Dells...
...In classic historical-critical Bible scholarship, the focus is on the believers rather than on him in whom or that in which they believe...
...Lang has a way of settling historical debates en passant or implying that they are settled when they are not...
...These three categories might well suffice...
...Although canonical works are studied even when they yield little historical information (testimony to the continuing influence of religious belief), the goal remains the extraction from the Bible-as gold from ore-of the intellectual and political history of these two communities...
...In the title that Lang gives his ideal study, the truly problematical word is "His" inasmuch as, whether for the purposes of character analysis or storytelling, Lang allows God no more subjectivity than you would allow that RV ahead of you on the road...
...Some of his many guesses may well be right...
...Only rarely is it possible to add historical detail to the structural description...
...Noting that God is not a warrior in the Book of Genesis, Lang dates that book to around 500 B.C...
...Each of these objects could take its place, obviously, in a separate history, but Lang's intention is not history but structural description...
...History is the master, social science the servant...
...Lang can be thought-provoking even when a reader thinks him mistaken...
...I like this...
...Three categories suffice for Bernhard Lang in this portrait of the God of the Old Testament (to which a mini-portrait of "Christ as Second God" is appended in the final eight pages of the epilogue...
...But Lang is without either theological or literary inclination...
...But due to the absence of reliable sources, only the first part, the one dealing with the deity's essential character traits, can actually be written...
...Hit-tite rock relief, a fourth-century B.C...
...Thus, partly on the basis of the references just listed, he writes: "The Israelites apparently disliked cultivating grain, even though it was the most important element in their diet...
...One example among many must suffice...
...The Hebrew God," as Lang chooses to call the God of Israel, combines all three functions and thus personifies human kingship...
...athletic-Indianapolis 500...
...For Bernhard Lang, by contrast, social science is the master, and history the servant...
...On the whole, however, the merit and the appeal of this book will be strongest for those of a taxonomic cast of mind...
...a movement of cultural regression in which people remembered the archaic Lord of the Animals...
...Jewish temple as described by Josephus, and the Roman Ara Pacis (altar of peace) of 13-9 B.C...
...Lang's erudition produces its best results in flashes of ad hoc illumination...
...I find it intuitively right, but I predict that historians will find Lang's way with words like "apparently" in the quote above little short of infuriating...
...Ahead of you on the road to Mount Rushmore is a large "recreational vehicle," slowing the traffic and blocking the view...
...More striking is the fact that, although he has methodological atheism in common with historical-critical scholarship, he has little else in common with it...
...Assyrian cylinder seal, an eighth-century B.C...
...Now, after the destruction of the military-bureaucratic complex, there was...
...Lang's premise is that divinity, anthropologically understood, is the personification of humanity in one or more of these three functions...
...In other words, if you find literary criticism superficial and historical reconstruction improbable and so would prefer a topical organization of a good deal of what the Bible says about God, this may be just the book for you...
...Jack Miles, a recent Mac Arthur fellow, is the author of God: A Biography and Christ: A Crisis in the Life of God (both Alfred A. Knopf...
...Palmyrene relief, the first-century a.d...
...Arboriculture and viticulture, by contrast, seem to enjoy divine blessing....'They shall sit under their own vines and under their own fig trees, and no one shall make them afraid (Micah 4:4...
...Phoenician coin, a first-century a.d...
...Though Lang is right that "some scholars" (he does not name them) "have come to consider Genesis the latest part of the Pentateuch," he does not report anything approaching a consensus when he writes: "Apparently Genesis and Job belong to the same cultural milieu...
Vol. 129 • October 2002 • No. 17