Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 The Joseph and Moses narratives 4: narratives about the origins of Israel
- 2 Historical notes on Israel's conquest of Palestine: a peasants' rebellion
- 3 The background of the patriarchs: a reply to William Dever and Malcolm Clark
- 4 Conflict themes in the Jacob narratives
- 5 History and tradition: a response to J. B. Geyer
- 6 Text, context, and referent in Israelite historiography
- 7 Palestinian pastoralism and Israel's origins
- 8 The intellectual matrix of early biblical narrative: inclusive monotheism in Persian period Palestine
- 9 How Yahweh became God: Exodus 3 and 6 and the heart of the Pentateuch
- 10 4Q Testimonia and Bible composition: a Copenhagen Lego hypothesis
- 11 Why talk about the past? The Bible, epic and historiography
- 12 Historiography in the Pentateuch: twenty-five years after Historicity
- 13 The messiah epithet in the Hebrew Bible
- 14 Kingship and the wrath of God: or teaching humility
- 15 From the mouth of babes, strength: Psalm 8 and the Book of Isaiah
- 16 Job 29: biography or parable?
- 17 Mesha and questions of historicity
- 18 Imago dei: a problem in the discourse of the Pentateuch
- 19 Changing perspectives on the history of Palestine
- Index of biblical references
- Index of authors
19 - Changing perspectives on the history of Palestine
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 The Joseph and Moses narratives 4: narratives about the origins of Israel
- 2 Historical notes on Israel's conquest of Palestine: a peasants' rebellion
- 3 The background of the patriarchs: a reply to William Dever and Malcolm Clark
- 4 Conflict themes in the Jacob narratives
- 5 History and tradition: a response to J. B. Geyer
- 6 Text, context, and referent in Israelite historiography
- 7 Palestinian pastoralism and Israel's origins
- 8 The intellectual matrix of early biblical narrative: inclusive monotheism in Persian period Palestine
- 9 How Yahweh became God: Exodus 3 and 6 and the heart of the Pentateuch
- 10 4Q Testimonia and Bible composition: a Copenhagen Lego hypothesis
- 11 Why talk about the past? The Bible, epic and historiography
- 12 Historiography in the Pentateuch: twenty-five years after Historicity
- 13 The messiah epithet in the Hebrew Bible
- 14 Kingship and the wrath of God: or teaching humility
- 15 From the mouth of babes, strength: Psalm 8 and the Book of Isaiah
- 16 Job 29: biography or parable?
- 17 Mesha and questions of historicity
- 18 Imago dei: a problem in the discourse of the Pentateuch
- 19 Changing perspectives on the history of Palestine
- Index of biblical references
- Index of authors
Summary
1991–2011
Since the mid-1970s, the conviction among scholars has steadily grown that the biblical archaeological agenda of creating a historical synthesis of the biblical narrative with archaeological results is no longer viable. A convergence of the biblical tradition with historical and archaeological remains is very limited, and progress in historical reconstruction follows closely our ability to develop historical questions, which are independent of the allegorical world of biblical narrative. The problems of reading the Bible as a history of Palestine's past are today well known. Nevertheless, there are still many biblical scholars and archaeologists who unfortunately continue to work within the biblical archaeological agenda in their efforts to develop what Megan Bishop Moore insists on calling ‘a critical history of ancient Israel,’ but which is rather an essentially tendentious biblical history that has at best been rationalized rather than corrected and confirmed through extra-biblical sources. The agenda itself is no better than that furthered in the work of William Foxwell Albright throughout the 1940s and 1950s. Indeed, most of the efforts to develop what is often called a ‘middle ground’ in the current debate about Palestine's history – in recent books such as those by Mario Liverani, Nadav Na'aman, Israel Finkelstein, Amihai Mazar and others – share the goal of creating a synthesis of historical and biblical studies by correcting the Bible's story, but, nevertheless, make little effort to understand the biblical discourse from within its own context.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Biblical Narrative and Palestine's HistoryChanging Perspectives, pp. 305 - 342Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2013