Comments, additions, suggestions, and corrections are welcome.  
Please send them to 
Michael Kagan
Le Moyne College Department of Philosophy
Syracuse, NY 13214
Email: KAGAN@maple.lemoyne.edu

Lecture notes related to first lectures

Here are my notes from a presentation I gave on "Hebrew Theologies" in 1989 (minor formatting changes, spring 2003). Since I still use a similar approach, I thought you might find them helpful (along with R. Kraft's Time Chart, which is available through selecting this link).

These notes should help you track of some of the background material we will be covering during the first three weeks of this course. Those interested in my major sources should see section IX (below) and also investigate Ellis Rivkin's three books, The Shaping of Jewish History, The Hidden Revolution, and What Crucified Jesus.

                                          

                   "Hebrew Theology/ies"

I. The task and workers
    A. My background as rabbi/philosopher so they know where
    I'm coming from
        1. point out that if they want to talk to an
        archaeologist there's Father O'Connell; and that
        there is the entire religion department;
        furthermore, a different Jewish perspective will
        likely be found from other Jews (other reform Jews,
        as well as Jews from  other "denominations" or
        philosophical schools of Judaism.
    B. My goal today to give you one additional way of
    approaching scripture as evidence for certain kinds of
    relationships to and concepts of God related to concepts
    of authority, revelation, epistemology, and salvation.
    --Not to give answers, but to give ways of questioning
    and searching that will help you seek your own answers
    as you ponder scripture and try to relate it to your own
    insights and the teachings of your own traditions.
    C. Various points.
        1. "Old Testament" does NOT equal Judaism.
        2. Hebrew does not equal "Jewish"
        3. Title should be Hebrew theologies or varieties of
        Hebrew Theology or some such.
        4. Judaism is a developmental religion and the Jews
        a developmental people.  [I am here following ideas of 
        Rivkin and Whitehead.]  So though how we became is
        constitutive of who we are, we do not equal one
        phase or one school in our history, and at a given
        moment one cannot always tell which Judaism will
        turn out to be mainstream.
        5. I am not an historian, though I've studied some
        of this history.
II. Historiography--constructing and reconstructing the past
and philosophical problems and insights involved
    A. How we view the past is part of how we view things in
    general and the assumptions we bring to bear on it
    (e.g., the 1st century Jewish historian Josephus'
    minimal interest in early Christianity as opposed to his
    great concern with other Jewish philosophical schools
    and the Jewish war against Rome).
    B. If, e.g., we're orthodox Jews, or fundamentalist
    Christians, we will have different concerns and be more
    able to see different features in the texts which are
    our primary sources for information about our topic
    (Hebrew theology/ies).  As a matter of fact, depending
    who we are, we will even choose different texts, we will
    begin with different evidence.  E.g., the canons vary,
    the midrash might be data for one and not another, the
    New Testament data for one group and not another.  Where
    we seem to have overlapping agreement is that the "Old
    Testament" is a legitimate source.
        1. Then there is the problem of how we view "Old
        Testament" revelation
            a) Infallible
            b) Dynamic
            c) Natural
                1. I go for "dynamic"
                    1. This dynamic view influences  the
                    kind of history I find plausible, i.e.,
                    is involved with my preference for the
                    "higher criticism"


III. Seek out our own historical presuppositions lest they
trip us up unduly
    A. E.g., "progress" which tells us that more
    sophisticated ideas must come later, that later ideas
    are more sophisticated, that later forms of religion
    more advanced, etc.,  The reductio of this [if we took
    it too seriously] would be, e.g., that Islam is
    automatically superior to Christianity since it came
    later and incorporates some of its insights.
    B. Beware of assumptions
        1. about ordering (e.g., that the first book written
        first, the last last, etc)
        2. the danger of distinguishing concessions from
        permissions--e.g.,
            a) eating meat
            b) divorce
            c) polygamy
            d) slavery
            e) marriage
            f) prayer
            g) praising God
            h) sacrifices----all of which have been seen by
            some religionists as concessions, by others as
            permissions.
    C. Also the fallacies of historical investigation
    isolated by Vico:  [Use  Collingwood's
    Idea of History
, the section on Vico.
    D. Sensitivity to the imposition of concepts thru the
    necessary imposition of language and standards:  e.g.,
    Torah does not equal law.  The agenda behind the names
    "Old Testament" and New Testament.
        1. Seek out those whom the study of the text and the
        text seem to support
            a) Kings
            b) Blacks,
            c) Prophets
            d) Aaronide priests
            e) Levitical priests
            f) Scribes
        2. Be aware of different cultural paradigms of
        heroism (e.g., Abraham who lies to Kings and argues
        with God]
IV. Basic questions to be asked while reading scripture and
trying to tease out the "theology"--the "logos of theos" the
perspectives on God.
    A. Authority--what/who is the authority here
    B. Revelation--what counts as the revelation here, what
    is its content
        1. Are there stylistic peculiarities to the text
        related to possible purposes, sources, etc?
    C. Epistemology--how do we know, what is the evidence
    D. Relationships--who is in contact with God?  What kind
    of relationship do they have
    E. Salvation--how is salvation attained, for whom,
    where, any special intermediaries
V. The text as evidence
    A. Note that the Pentateuch taken as Moses' work by all
    later forms of Judaism until Reform Judaism
VI. Where to begin for Hebrew theology
    A. Not also the absence of philosophical theology of a
    certain kind for some kind since God did NOT seem to be
    a philosophical problem, but rather a partner in
    relationship.
    B. With genesis creation stories
    C. With the first Hebrews-Abraham & Sarah.
VII. An outline of Hebrew Theologies
    A. Creations and covenants (briot and brits)--God as
    creator and commander, preserver and destroyer; superior
    partner in a contract/and source of timely revelation--
    human authority the receiver of God's word.
        1. Exile from the garden
        2. Cain and Abel
        3. Babel
        4. Noah--Noahide laws
    B. Abraham--the covenant of circumcision--the Bedouin
    ideal--God as superior partner in a contract/and source
    of timely and some enduring revelation; HUMAN AUTHORITY
    ONE PATRIARCH
        1. Isaac
        2. Jacob
        3. Joseph and his brothers
    C. Moses and Aaron--the covenant "at Sinai" (/Horeb/and
    in the wilderness)--God as superior partner in a
    contract/and source of timely and much enduring
    revelation and ENDURING LAWS.  Depending on the
    particular narrative, the human authority is a prophet,
    a priest, or a king; or a combination thereof.
        1. Egypt and the exodus
        2. The different wilderness experiences
            a) Deuteronomy and the Levitical priest (altar
            rights for Levites)--the finding of the book
            taken to be Deuteronomy in 2 Kings 22ff
            (621BCE).
            b) Exodus & Leviticus and the Aaronide priests
            (No altar rights for Levites; THE REBELLION OF
            Korach--Numbers 16)
    D. JUDGES (E.G., SAMSON, DEBORAH)--A KIND OF PROPHETIC
    AUTHORITY
    E. MORE PROPHETS (ISAIAH, JEREMIAH, AMOS, MICAH)
    F. PRIESTS--THE WISDOM OF BEN SIRA
        1. Job
        2. Ecclesiastes
        3. Maccabees
        4. Esther
        5. The problem of pseudepigrapha
    G. SAGES
VIII. Some questions to ask:
        1. What is God like?
        2. What is God's role in the account?
        3. Who has a special relationship to God
        4. Who is in charge of the people and how is this
        related to God?
            a) How, if at all,  is God's authority justified
            [related question of why narrative before law]
        5. How do they and others know that they and God
        have this kind of relationship?
        6. Who is entrusted with the religious  fate of the
        individual?
                7. At this stage of Judaism, what is
        revelation/Torah?
            a) What is its justification
            b) Are there stylistic peculiarities to the text
            related to possible purposes, sources, etc?
        8. At this stage of Judaism, what are the different
        forces and schools among the people?
IX. My sources
    A. My religion
    B. Scripture
    C. Rabbinic training
        1. Reines
        2. Rivkin
        3. Petuchowski
    D. philosophical training
        1. logic
        2. philosophy of science
        3. philosophy of religion

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