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By William G. Dever
This is the first time that I have ever
used the Internet because most of what I’ve been shown looks like
“electronic gossip” to me. I write now for two reasons: first,
because colleagues urge me not to miss any opportunity for dialogue
with biblical revisionists like Davies, and secondly, because this
website is not a standard electronic discussion group -- it uses
peer review and does not allow uncritical or unprofessional postings
that I am told characterize most discussion groups on the Internet.
Let me take up several issues in response to Davies’ recent
statement on this website.
(1) Ideology. Davies and the other
revisionists seem to think that they have “smoked out” the ideology
of opponents like me when they declare that “for some people, more
than scholarship is at stake.” Of course—but only for us?
Virtually everything that Davies writes is heavily ideological and
laden with personal polemics. Here again, as previously, he
characterizes me as a devotee of “Albright’s temple”; a member of a
“Harvard conspiracy”; a sort of crypto-Fundamentalist; a poser of
“simple-minded questions of ‘is the Bible true or not?’” a
“so-called scholar;” and, in effect, a McCarthyite.
Elsewhere, in a recent review of my book
What Did The Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It?
(Eerdmans, 2001), Davies has called me a “one-time ‘biblical
archaeologist’ of relatively little field experience, who once went
hunting for patriarchs and later sought Solomon’s city at Gezer”
(see Davies’ review in Shofar, Fall 2002). He says I later
“recanted” but have now returned to this agenda. Davies had
circulated similar comments earlier in Internet discussion groups.
In response, I wrote to him to point out that: (a) I had never
connected the biblical patriarchs with EBIV or any of Albright’s
views; (b) I had had more than 30 seasons of field experience; and
(c) our well-known Gezer methods depended on stratigraphy and
ceramic chronology, not biblical presuppositions. I challenged him
to review the published record. Davies wrote back: “I have read what
you say about yourself, but I choose not to believe it
automatically, since your capacity for reinventing your past (and
Israel’s) is well known” -- so much for objective scholarship,
careful documentation, and constructive dialogue. As Anson Rainey
has pointed out, Davies is the “mirror-image” of the fundamentalists
he so furiously decries: “Don’t confuse me with facts; my mind is
made up.”
As for “Albrightianism,” I happen to agree
with Davies’ critique; and if he had bothered to read my “What
Remains of the House That Albright Built?” (BA 56, 1993), he would
know that my answer was “Nothing except the ruins of some of the
foundations.” But making Albright a whipping boy 30 years after his
death does nothing to advance the present discussion.
(2) On “schools.” Here again Davies
bristles at my notion that he and the other revisionists constitute
a “school”—yet he immediately invents a homogenous “Albright/Harvard
school” to which we covertly belong! Davies says that we lack
only a name. But we—that is, I and other opponents of
“revisionists”—have a name: it is “mainstream scholarship.” So
hereafter, perhaps I should refer to “mainstream” and “marginal”
scholars; surely the revisionists must recognize, indeed, should
celebrate, their idiosyncratic stance. As for other possible terms,
I point out that “revisionist” is a term I took from Lemche and
Thompson’s own early statement in 1974 in JSOT. I also claim
that in some sense all good historians are “revisionists.” And
furthermore, nowadays, we archaeologists, with our new
archaeologically driven histories of ancient Israel, are the
real “revisionists.” As for “minimalists vs. maximalists,” I
agree with Davies that these are not helpful terms, and typically, I
do not use them. The issue is not “revisionism,” but whether our
revisions are based on established facts or ideological fancies.
(3) “History.” What kind? How much?
When? Davies says his is an effort at “understanding the Bible,”
of knowing “what the stories mean.” But that is precisely my
agenda as well—that, and nothing else. That is why I titled my
recent book, What Did The Biblical Writers Know and When Did They
Know It? Yet, when I ask the question, Davies declares
that it “is both impossible and misguided.”
Years ago I wrote to Davies to allay his
suspicions that I am some sort of “credulist,” stating, as I have
now in my book, that I am not reading the Bible as Scripture, that I
am in fact not even a theist. He stated later that nevertheless I
espouse “a view of history that is theistic” (in Grabbe 1997, p.
117, n. 20; he says Marx, too, was theistic.) Again, one can hardly
win.
My view all along—and especially in the recent
books—is first that the biblical narratives are indeed “stories,”
often fictional and almost always propagandistic, but that here and
there they contain some valid historical information. That
hardly makes me a “maximalist.” Secondly, I use abundant
archaeological evidence to demonstrate that the context, within
which alone these stories are intelligible, is not that of the
Persian much less the Hellenistic era, but that of the Iron Age,
i.e., pre-exilic. No one denies late editing; but the essential
composition, not to mention underlying oral traditions, of J, E, D,
and even some of P must antedate the fall of Jerusalem. When Davies
claims that his late date (Persian period) is “mainstream,” he is
misrepresenting the case at the very least (he says “either”
composed or canonized.) Only a few mavericks like Van Seters would
date J and E that late. As for Lemche and Thompson’s “Hellenistic”
date, the only real documentation they have ever offered is a single
footnote in Lemche’s 1993 SJOT article, declaring without
evidence that the historiography of the biblical writers’
historiography is closest to that of Pliny!
Incidentally, “understanding” the texts is
possible only by placing them in context, and by definition
only external data like archaeological evidence can provide that. If
J, E and Dtr had been written in the Persian period, as Davies
claims, surely they would reflect conditions of that era, and some
anachronisms would give them away. I challenge Davies to show
any “Persian” features -- ideas, institutions, Aramaic terms,
material culture items, etc. -- that fit anything we know
archaeologically of the Persian era in the provenance of Palestine.
If Davies really wants to reconstruct a plausible Persian-period
context, he must master the archaeological data. Yet in his 1992
book, he cites the basic handbook, Ephraim Stern’s The Material
Culture of the Land of the Bible in the Persian Period 538-332
B.C. (1982), once, without discussion.
In defense of his own efforts at history
writing, Davies claims that his 1992 book has an “entire chapter
devoted to the historical Israel.” I can’t find it in my well-worn
copy. Does he mean Chapter 4, “A Search for Historical Israel”? This
14-page, largely negative prolegomenon is hardly a “history.” And
the only archaeological evidence Davies cites is Finkelstein’s
idiosyncratic views on Israelite origins, denying any “ethnic
identity.” Elsewhere Davies concludes that “our ‘ancient Israel’ is
a (sic) not the biblical literary entity, nor a historical
one. It is a scholarly creation…” (1992:31). Since I first charged
that Davies denies the existence of an “ancient” or a “historical”
Israel, he has been on the defensive. Obviously, he denies any
historical “biblical” Israel. Readers can easily judge for
themselves. Davies’ claim that Thompson’s 1992 book “deals
extensively with the states of Judah and Israel as historical
entities” is absolutely inaccurate. Davies should know that Thompson
himself has repudiated this entire 400-plus page “history” except
for its Persian date (cf. in Grabbe 1997, pp. 178-79).
(4) Archaeological Data. Davies claims
that he “relies partly on archaeology”; he even mentions
post-processual archaeology. Yet, the reader who goes back to the
sources will find that in Davies’ 1992 book he cites Mazar’s widely
used handbook, Archaeology of the Land of the Bible only
once, in a footnote (1992:24)—and that is to dismiss it since it
ends before Davies’ “Israel” in the Persian period. This is
typical of Davies. When he and I were to face off some years ago at
Northwestern University, I sent him in advance my paper on
archaeology and Israelite origins; he replied by circulating a
“white paper” in which he declared that Dever’s archaeological data
were “irrelevant.” Davies’ recent review of my book in Shofar
does not confront a single one of the dozens of “convergences”
between texts and artifacts that I document. This is not a review at
all, but a personal attack that he would not have dared to print in
his own JSOT or any other peer-reviewed journal.
(5) Archaeology, Bible and Politics.
Davies might be surprised that I agree entirely with his
statement about the politicization of scholarship. But I have
not been guilty of it. If Davies wants to paint me as a “Zionist,”
as Lemche has done, let him quote anything from my
publications over 30 years that would sustain that charge.
(6) On the Issue of Anti-Semitism. I
have never called any of the revisionists, and certainly not Davies,
anti-Semites, saying only of Whitelam that “in my opinion his work
borders on anti-Semitism.” Other reviewers such as Baruch Levine,
Avraham Malamat, and Benjamin Sommers have made similar
observations. What is “anti-Semitism”? It is not criticism of
individual scholars who happen to be Jewish, that is legitimate
scholarship, but rather an indictment of all Jews as untrustworthy,
denying their legitimacy because they are Jews. Let readers
go through Whitelam’s The Invention of Ancient Israel
word-for-word, as I have repeatedly. Again and again, the conspiracy
of those who have been engaged in “retrojective imperialism… an act
of dispossession” of Palestinians from their land (1996:222) are
Israelis -- all Jews, of course -- and those American Christian
scholars who share in the “Judeo-Christian tradition”
(passim). Elsewhere, Whitelam absolutely caricatures Israeli
archaeological surveys in the West Bank, asserting that “the focus
has been upon the Iron Age,” the period of the essential Israel”;
“the practical effect has been to establish the presence of ancient
Israel in the past, thereby creating a real presence in terms of its
‘historic right’ to the land.” Such rhetoric goes on and on. But
what are the facts? (a) Finkelstein and many of the other
Israeli archaeologists are “post-Zionists,” if anything, with no
other motives in the survey except salvage work. (b) In the
publication of the West Bank database in English in 1997, the Iron I
or “Israelite” pottery is scant and barely discussed, while only the
Islamic pottery is subjected to extensive analysis. What
“bias”? Either Whitelam is ignorant of the archaeological data, or
it is he who is biased. Whitelam’s book is certainly a political
manifesto, heavily pro-Palestinian. It is only the writing of their
history that Whitelam thinks legitimate. Whether he is responsible
or not for the book’s translation into Arabic, it is sold in East
Jerusalem bookstores as the “Palestinian Bible” used as a school
text, and quoted by Arab intellectuals. At the very least,
Whitelam’s book easily lends itself to these uses, and he must be
held responsible.
As for Lemche, at a symposium at Bar Ilan
University where he and I squared off, he began his remarks by
stating that he would not trust any Israeli to write a history of
Israel because they, i.e., Jews, “could not be objective.” Recently,
Lemche declared that “from a historian’s point of view, ancient
Israel is a monstrous creation.” When challenged by a reader, Lemche
tried to define the Danish word “monstrous” that he hand in mind as
meaning simply “not of this world,” i.e., “fictitious.” But the
reader, Angus Cook, consulted several authorities and learned that
the word never means this in Danish, but rather “unnaturally
large and ugly; grotesque; deformed.” It is precisely such
inflated language that betrays the ideologue. As for
Thompson, he scarcely deigns to use the name “Israel,” speaking
consistently as some Assyrian texts do of “the house of Omri” (whom
he thinks unhistorical; cf. Myth, p. 13); or else he treats
ancient Palestine and Israel as “southern Syria’s marginal fringe”
(cf. in Grabbe 1997, pp. 179-86; Myth, passim). Elsewhere he
utilizes a questionable hypothesis: denying the existence of a
people. Thompson declares, “It may perhaps appear strange that so
much of the Bible deals with the origin traditions of a people that
never existed as such” (Mythic Past, p. 34). Is this just
rhetoric? What is one to make of such nonsense?
(7) The Hebrew Bible as “Idealistic.”
The only point I think Davies and others have made is that the
portrait of a “biblical Israel” in the texts does not fit the actual
Israel that we might construct from other sources. Of course not!
And who thinks it does? The simple, obvious fact is that the
biblical writers and editors portray Israel as it should have
been, in their estimation, not as it actually was. Yet in their very
polemics, they give away many aspects of the true situation. Davies
simply states the obvious: the two “Israels” are not the same. But
that is not only banal, it is irrelevant.
(8) Demonizing one’s opponents. All the
revisionists claim to abhor personal polemics (most recently
Thompson in “A View from Copenhagen: Israel and the History of
Palestine”), but they constantly demonize their opponents—the surest
evidence that they cannot oppose the contrary facts. Earlier they
sought to destroy the credibility of Iain Provan, one of the first
to expose their ideology (cf. the exchange in 1995 in the Journal
of Biblical Literature). He has now documented their slander at
length in Long, Baker, and Wenham, Windows into Old Testament
History: Evidence, Argument and the Crisis of “Biblical Israel”
(2002). An even more devastating recent indictment is that of James
Barr in History and Ideology in the Old Testament: Biblical
Studies at the End of a Millennium (2000). Barr, Regius
Professor of Hebrew, Emeritus, at Oxford University, says that
Davies’ views are “too absurd to be taken seriously”; that
Whitelam’s arguments are without any “factual evidence”; and that
one observes “the alacrity with which hostile ideology is adopted as
the obvious explanation.” Barr devotes some 70 pages to
documenting what I have argued from the beginning: the
revisionists are ideologues, not disinterested scholars.
I began by being skeptical about any useful
dialogue with Davies, on the Internet or elsewhere. I end on the
same note and do not think that I will venture again onto the
Internet. Let Davies answer me in peer-reviewed journals where I
will continue to publish. And let him confront the archaeological
evidence, if he dares. Name-calling is not sufficient.
See
Minimalism, "Ancient Israel," and Anti-Semitism by Philip R.
Davies.
Look for academic tools and books for biblical studies
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