Journal of Hebrew
Scriptures - Volume 4 (2002-2003) - Review
Ziony Zevit, The Religions of Ancient Israel: A Synthesis of
Parallactic Approaches (London and New York: Continuum, 2001),
Pp. xx, 821. ISBN 0-8264-4728-7. $ 150.
This is by far the most comprehensive and interdisciplinary approach
to the subject of religion in Iron Age Israel ever undertaken. It is
deep, synthetic, even-handed, often provocative, and at ever turn of
the page, appropriately self-conscious with respect to the author's
perspectives, biases, and methodologies. Throughout Zevit combines a
close study of biblical texts, epigraphic remains, and archaeological
data, and configures all of the evidence within a conceptual matrix
that draws heavily upon methodological advances and models more
commonly known to scholars at home in the comparative study of
religions, and in the humanities generally. Its exhaustiveness and
methodological sophistication make it an important reference work and
its timeliness marks it as representing a turning point in biblical
scholarship.
One of the most appealing aspects of this book is its accessibility.
Zevit has intended it for a diverse, but informed, audience.
This book is written for the undergraduate and graduate students
studying Bible, archaeology, and history, for seminary graduates, and
for scholars. All students. It presupposes at least
introductory-level knowledge of the methods used by biblicists in
their research and archaeologists in their field-work, a sense of
Israelite history and religion as these subjects have been taught
since the 1980s, and familiarity with some of the ongoing discussions
about Israelite religion (p. xiii).
Since Zevit intends to be fiercely self-critical with respect to his
own assumptions and approaches to the material, he first sets out to
provide the reader with a definition of what he means by "Israelite
religions."
Israelite religions are the varied, symbolic expressions of, and
appropriate responses to the deities and powers that groups or
communities deliberately affirmed as being of unrestricted value to
them within their worldview (p. 15).
This definition then informs the remainder of the tome which attempts to
...determine what may be known about Israelite religions during
the Iron Age, c. 1200-586 BCE, through an integration of classified
archaeological, epigraphic, and literary data usually considered in
isolation, and... to synthesize these within the structure of an
Israelite world view and ethos involving kin, tribes, land,
traditional ways and places of worship, and a national deity (p.
xiv).
In the first chapter Zevit lays the groundwork for his later analyses
by providing the methodological and theoretical contexts into which
to place the study of the Hebrew Bible and Israelite religions. He is
extremely aware of historically shifting definitions and paradigms
and of their utility (and limits) for understanding the topic at hand
(though the section on "pithy definitions" of religion is somewhat
selective in its representation and lacking in depth [pp. 15-16], and
therefore, less useful). Zevit's self-critical style helps to clarify
for the reader where he positions himself in the sociology of
knowledge.
In Chapters Two, Three, and Four, Zevit sets out to investigate the
archaeological evidence for Israelite cult places and material
culture suggestive of cultic use. Far from being merely a descriptive
treatment, Zevit attempts to interpret the textual and artifactual
remains as "material texts" (p. 84). Zevit's eminently sensible
interdisciplinary analysis of the archaeological data demonstrates a
discontinuity between the Late Bronze Age and Iron Age populations
strongly suggestive of a new ethnic group. He effectively removes
from further consideration the argument that Israelites derived from
the local Canaanite populations.
...the dominant ethnic group in Cisjordan, Iron Age Palestine was
not descended from its Late Bronze inhabitants. Arguments that Iron
Age Israelites derived from the Late Bronze Age, Cisjordanian
Canaanite population as ideological rebels or as semi-nomadicized
peasants are not supported by available archaeological evidence (p.
85).
His close analyses and critical treatment of these "texts" provides a
useful survey, especially with regard to the archaeological and
methodological claims for the historicity or ahistoricity of biblical
accounts of Israelite history.
Throughout, Zevit is sensitive also to the architectural environment
of the cultic places he investigates and careful to apply this
information to his interpretation of how these sites were used. Such
an approach allows him to include evidence for cultic sites not
usually discussed at length in works on Israelite religion, such as
fields and caves. He also discusses several sites often neglected in
the study of Israelite religious architecture, for example, the
twenty-five tumuli discovered west of Jerusalem.
Indeed, his comparative approach often leads him to break new
interpretive ground. For example, Zevit uniquely and persuasively
argues for the two-stage development of Israelite altars. He also
cautiously suggests that the Hebrew word hammanim (with dotted
h) mentioned in the Bible (e.g., Ezek 6:4, 6:6, 2 Chron 34:4-7, etc.)
refers to model shrines, the likes of which have been found at Arad,
Hazor, Gezer, etc., and which Zevit discusses in his book (see,
especially, p. 340). Zevit also offers a new interpretation of the
archaeological evidence for the Temple of stratum XI at Arad which
suggests that two separate deities were worshiped there (pp.
168-169). Zevit also opines that the temple's placement on the
northern side of Arad, Hazor, Dan, and Jerusalem suggests the
possibility that they were positioned there for "religious, mythic
reasons..." or "constructed on public land usually allocated on the
north side of a site" (p. 250). His treatment of figurines, various
types of altars, fenestrated and plain cultic stands, model shrines,
as well as scarabs and seals is as comprehensive as it is sensitive
to archaeological context and literary parallels.
Zevit is careful not to read too much into the evidence. In fact, he
more frequently prefers not to interpret the evidence when the data
is insufficient. Indeed, such an approach leads him to conclude that
a number of sites hitherto labeled as "cultic sites" do not provide
sufficient evidence to qualify them as cultic including the complex
from Arad stratum XII; the eighth century room at Ein Gev; the
seventh century complex from Jerusalem; the ninth century complex
from Makmish; the Tel Michmal complex (ninth to eighth centuries);
the tenth century gate installation at Megiddo; the complex at
Samaria dating from eighth to seventh centuries; and the tenth
century structure at Ta`anach (p. 247). His survey and analyses of
the archaeological data lead him also to conclude:
Large, open-air cult complexes within a temenos with a primary
cultic focus exemplified at the Bull site and Mt. Ebal are features
of the twelfth-century Israelite landscape. Qitmit indicates that
this type of place continued into the sixth century, but it is not
attested at Israelite sites. Cult caves appear to be an eighth to
seventh-century phenomenon. Cult rooms appear concentrated in the
tenth and ninth centuries, whereas temples span from the eleventh to
the end of the eighth century (p. 247).
From the archaeological evidence, Zevit then proceeds to
textual data, turning his attention to the epigraphic remains that
bear on Israelite religion (Chapter Five), and then to Israelite and
Judaean historiography and historiosophy as found in the biblical
texts (Chapter Six). These two chapters, and those that follow, offer
in-depth examinations of the texts, and provide the texts themselves
in Hebrew and in English translations. In them Zevit examines the
inscriptions and artistic remains discovered in the Judaean desert
cave, as well as at Khirbet el-Qom, Kuntillet `Ajrud, and the cave at
Khirbet Beit Lei, as well as a host of biblical data that place the
Deuteronomistic writer in his ancient Near Eastern context. Of the
many conclusions reached by Zevit in the latter chapter is that
Israelite religion (as opposed to Judahite religion):
...was essentially a matter dependent only nominally on the king
who may have provided some support personally for a few important for
favorite shrines and much support for a few: e.g., Dan, Bethel, and
the house of Baal in Samaria. Such institutions in the north may have
been politically important but were not particularly powerful
elements. This situation is paralleled by that in contemporaneous
Egypt. By the end of the twentieth dynasty (1196-1070 BCE), the kings
shared power and wealth with priestly temple establishments and
sought legitimation from the priests and through divine oracles (p.
457).
Zevit also concludes that the Deuteronomistic writer "employed the
same sort of historigraphy in writing about the Judahite kings as he
did in writing about Israelian ones" (p. 479), and that "Judahite
kings were not dependent on cultural institutions for their
authority; on the contrary, they had authority over cultic
institutions," (and sometimes served a coercive role over the cultic
life of Judahites "beyond the confines of the temple" (p. 479).
Nevertheless, "they were consistent supporters of the Yahwist cult,
but not necessarily to the exclusion of other cults" (p. 479). Zevit
also observes that some religious institutions and practices in Judah
"functioned independently of the monarchy" (p. 479).
Chapters Seven and Eight broaden the discussion and provide literary,
social, and historical contexts for the inscriptions as well as for
the biblical texts that reflect on Israelite mantic practices. Here
Zevit demonstrates that "no distinction can be made between the
so-called 'ecstatic' and the so-called 'rhapsodic' prophets as
religious types" (p. 511). Zevit's objectives in this chapter,
however, are different and four-fold:
...first, to compile, translate, and annotate all relevant
passages bearing on the non-Yahwistic cults celebrated by Israelites
mentioned in the body of literature; second, to comment on these
passages focusing on the cultic phenomena that underlie them...
third... to identify a preliminary interlocking series of matrixes
within which the hundreds of individual data may be analyzed further,
and... fourth... to venture preliminary observations contributing
toward such an analysis (p. 513).
Though the examination is thorough and fascinating, the biblical
texts are organized according to their "canonical" order (p. 513, by
which Zevit undoubtedly means the Jewish canon). Given the emphasis
that the author has placed on methodology, one would much rather see
this information organized chronologically (though Zevit does provide
a table to assist such an approach on p. 514). In this chapter Zevit
also provides a number of categories of Israelite religious practices
which collate the biblical texts by citation according to Baal
rituals, birds, Baal/Yahweh worship, bowing to the East, caves,
underground chambers, and tombs, child sacrifice, covenants with
gods, cults of the dead, divination, dogs, extending life, fertility
in nature, garden rituals, incense rituals, the manufacture of
images, the marzeah, pigs, phylacteries, protection, purification
rituals, the queen/host of heaven, rituals for exposing bones, cultic
sexual activities, thanksgiving, tophet rituals, trapping
souls, trees/stones, women's rituals, and worship in artificial or
natural stone chambers (pp. 583-584).
Based on his collected categories Zevit observes that "those that
involve rituals presuppose traditional lore about the qualifications
for the rituals and the choreography of their various prescribed,
sanctioned acts" (p. 584). He also notes that "most of the rituals
did not necessitate a recognized or sanctioned priesthood" and that
"the perceived 'rights'; of the performers, must have been common
knowledge and commonly performed" (p. 584).
In Chapter Nine Zevit turns his attention to the names of Israelite
gods (besides Yahweh) as attested in theophoric personal names and
toponyms, both of which he also lists according to their tribal
affiliations. This information is then compared with archaeological
data and epigraphic remains (mostly from seals), which allows Zevit
to break down the evidence again according to its tribal distribution
and also by archaeological period.
Zevit's tenth and concluding chapter synthesizes the
preceding material in order to provide a cogent portrait of Israelite
religions. Among the many fascinating conclusions that Zevit reaches
are that: 1) the worship of non-Yawhistic deities often corresponds
to tribal or clan identity (p. 649); 2) "the view that somehow
Jerusalem was the seat of official religion occupying a select
trend-setting position is supported neither by textual nor
archaeological data" (p. 658); 3) "Israelite religions in general
were characterized by tolerance" (p. 667); and that 4) Yahweh was
worshiped in a variety of manifestations as "the prime deity of the
Israelite tribes, occupying in their pantheon the position that Qos
occupied in that of the Edomite tribes, Kemosh in that of the Moabite
tribes, and Baal in different manifestations among the cities of the
Phoenicians and Aramaeans of the Iron Age" (p. 651). Thus, the
picture of Israelite religions that emerges is one characterized by
diversity and complexity Zevit remarks:
These data demand a dynamic picture of Israelite religions
allowing for polydoxies and polypraxises within Yahwism, significant
local variations, as well as the worship and adoration of other gods
and goddesses. They also argue that in ancient Israel, however that
the sacred may have been encountered by individuals alone or in
collectives, the society as a whole esteemed the visual experience of
seeing the sacred (p. 349).
In sum, this book is a formidable tour de force, a magnum
opus. It rewards the interested reader with a wealth of information,
new insights, and a number of directions for future research. It
clarifies in many definitive ways the complexities involved with
studying the religions of ancient Israel and provides a greater
appreciation for the sheer diversity of forms of Israelite devotion
and rituals. Its numerous charts, diagrams, maps, drawings, photos,
tables, and copious footnotes, as well as its exhaustive indices and
bibliography only add to its value. Doubtless, it will be a valuable
scholarly resource for years to come, one that also will be the focus
of much discussion and debate in a number of disciplines.
Scott B. Noegel
University of Washington