Barrois Christ in The Old Testament
Barrois Christ in The Old Testament
Barrois Christ in The Old Testament
Content:
1. Reading From the Old Testament.
2. Preparation to the Gospel.
3. The Gospel in the Old Testament.
4. In The Beginning.
5. The Protevangel.
6. The Promise to the Fathers.
7. The Revelation to Moses.
8. Royal Messianism.
9. Immanuel, God with us.
10. Servants and the Servant.
11. Christ of the Latter Days.
12. The Mirror of the Psalms.
13. The Books of Divine Wisdom.
Concluding Postscript.
Notes.
4. In The Beginning.
"In the beginning, God created heaven and earth." According to Hebrew tradition —
emphatically not a live recording — the appearance of man on earth took place on the "sixth day" of
creation, preceded by a period of preparation during which God sorted out the elements of this
world1 and disposed all things in orderly fashion, mustering them like His army (Gen 2:1). 2 The
frame of sea and land, adorned with vegetation and teeming with living things, would be ready for
Adam and Eve to dwell and multiply in it, managing the resources it offered according to the design
of God. In this first creation account Adam is not a personal name, 3 but a generic term, man,
matching the categories of living creatures already mentioned: the fish (dagah), the birds (of), and
the cattle (behemah), designated in Hebrew by collective nouns in the singular form. No concrete
detail here about the creation of the woman; it is only said that God made the first two humans male
and female, and that they would have dominion over the entire creation.
It is difficult to see in this narrative, or in the more relaxed story that is told in the following
chapters of Genesis, a realistic description of the origin of the human race. What we read is rather a
series of statements about the Creator and His economy regarding mankind, as reflected in the
traditions of the Hebrew people. We would be very ill-advised to equate the Biblical data with
scientific hypotheses concerning the formation of the cosmos and the successive stages of its
evolution. Tentative harmonizations are, to say the least, premature, and would result in artificial
con-cordism: poor science, and poor exegesis.
There is a general agreement among sober-minded scholars with regard to the composition and age
of the Biblical narratives on the creation. 4 The fact that they are given in the first three chapters of
Genesis is no clue to their antiquity. Their attribution to Moses rests on the mere fact that the Book
of Genesis was considered as the normal introduction to the description of the Mosaic institutions in
their historical setup. In fact, the Book of Genesis, as we read it today, results from the compiling,
probably during the post-exilic period, of local traditions, oral or partly written, originating in
various districts of the Hebrew land, and conventionally distributed by the final redactor in a sort of
genealogical framework, the "generations," toldoth, of heaven and earth (2:4), of Adam (5:1), of
Noah (6:9), of the sons of Noah (10:1), of Shem (11:10), of Terah (11:27), of Ishmael (25:12), of
Esau "who is Edom" (36:1), and of Jacob (37:2).
The opening narrative (Gen 1 to 2:4), attributed by the critics to a post-exilic theologian, is shaped
as a logical, exhaustive classification of created things, which make their appearance on each day of
the "first week" from the inanimate creatures, the celestial bodies, the ocean and the dry land, to the
living things, fish and fowl, wild beasts and cattle, and up to man, who occupies a unique position
between God and the world. It is interesting to compare the first creation story with Psalm 104, and
it is not immaterial that the latter was appointed, in Byzantine usage, as the opening Psalm of
Vespers, at the liturgical beginning of each new day. A footnote in the Jerusalem Bible remarks that
Psalm 104 follows generally the order of the Genesis account. However, the laborious
classifications of Genesis 1 stands in sharp contrast with the freer lyricism of the Psalm. Both may
well have drawn from a common source.
It may be pure impressionism on my part. I visualize, when the Psalm is read in the church, the
unique landscape of Mount Carmel, the lightning and thunder amidst the clouds running low along
the range; the fragrant pine trees, the oleanders, the thickets of laurel, ilex and dwarf oaks, offering
a shelter to birds and to wild game; the caves and clefts in the limestone cliffs, a refuge for the
conies (v. 18); to the west, like the prow of a galley, the sharp profile of the "Sacred Cape,"
the Rosh qadosh of the Phoenician mariners, the jagged rocks battered by the waves of the sea;
toward the rising sun, the villages and the golden fields of the fertile 'Emeq; and above all, the
memory of Elijah the wonderworker, champion of the true God over against the priests of Baal.
A thematic similarity between the Biblical narrative and some ancient Near Eastern cosmogonies
cannot be denied. Much attention was given during the early decades of the twentieth century to the
mythological texts from Mesopotamia, which were considered by some scholars, too hastily, as the
sources of the Hebrew stories on creation. More recently, the religious epics discovered at Ras
Shamra on the Syrian coast, in the language and the script of Ugarit, 5 have made us more fully
acquainted with the religion of the Phoenicians, thus far known only through the secondhand
reports of the Greek mythographers.
The Oriental cosmogonies describe the organization of our world by supernatural, personal beings,
the gods; the creation of man out of material elements animated by a vital fluid; and man's station as
intermediary between the gods and the animal world. Reduced to these generic elements, the theme
of these cosmogonies can be compared with the Biblical theme of the origins.
The resemblance, however, stops here and soon gives way to essential differences: the major gods,
who appear from nowhere, having themselves been created, their messengers and satellites, are in a
continuous struggle, as they strive to bring order in an eternally preexisting chaos, and vie against
each other to gain control of the various departments of the universe and to lord it over men, their
creatures, whom they greatly need, for who would offer sacrifices?
When the heaven above had not been named,
the land below, its name had not been called;
the primordial abyss, their begetter;
the tumultuous Tiamat, mother of them all,
their waters all mixed in one.
No bulrush in the marshland, no reed to be seen.
Of the gods, none had been caused to be;
no name yet had been called, no destiny fixed;
Then were the gods created.6
In short, a theogony, within the general framework of a cosmogony, the stage being built for the
apparition and growth of primitive mankind. Topical features differentiate slightly from the Oriental
and the Phoenician varieties; early Mesopotamian civilization arose from the Chaldaean plains: a
landscape of sea, canals, marshes, the uncertain contours of alluvial flats perpetually altered by the
spring floods of the twin rivers, Euphrates and Tigris, the tidal waves from the Persian gulf, from
which strange fish-gods brought arts and techniques to the first inhabitants of the land, the
advancing delta.7 Towns, temples, and cities were established on higher ground, protected by dikes
and levies, the building material being the ubiquitous bricks of sun-dried clay, and the first brick
mould serving as a convenient divider between the primaeval chaos and the humanization of the
cosmos.8 The Phoenician landscape, by contrast, is clear-cut: the mountain rising steep above a
narrow coastal strip, and the Tyrian seas swelling against the rocky shores of the Lebanese coast,
are the stage set for the conflict of the gods: Aleyn Baal, the storm-god, who reigns on high and
rides the clouds, against the forces of the deep, to which he assigns inviolable limits, and who
restores life to a land cursed by Mot, his arch-enemy, god of death and drought.9
The opposition between the Biblical doctrine and the Eastern cosmogonies, no matter how much the
latter may differ among themselves, is radical. It has even been suggested that the scheme of
Genesis 1 to 2:4 may have been intended as a polemic statement over against the pagan
cosmogonies, an hypothesis not lacking scriptural support.10 At any rate, the religion of the Old
Testament cannot be understood otherwise, than as a straight monotheism. The uniqueness of God
is the first dogma of the Biblical faith. We need not be alarmed by the fact that God is referred to in
the very first verse of Genesis as Elohim, a plural noun, which has been explained by the
grammarians as a plural of majesty. I n fact, Elohim is not a name, but rather a Semitic idiom for the
supernatural beings, the gods, of whom El is the father. The God of the Old Testament is and will
remain unnamed, because no human mind, no human word can possibly grasp nor express His
essence. He reveals Himself as transcendent, not merely first among other gods. He can have no
equal, no rival. He is, in truth and super-eminently, κατ’ αληθειαν, κατ’ εξοχην, God.
He is Creator. Creation is a free act of the Eternal who is neither limited nor conditioned by the
inertia or the resistance of matter. It means absolute beginning; "before" the creation, God is,
nobody and nothing is; when mediaeval theologians speak of God creating the world from
nought, ex nihilo, we are not to understand "nought" as a pseudo-being, out of which something
would be produced. Something that was not, now is, by God's will and word. This we can
understand somehow, for it involves no contradiction, but men need images drawn out of time and
space in their attempt to give an account of that which is humanly unaccountable. To that effect, the
authors of the Old Testament had to demythologize the cosmogonies of their pagan neighbors and to
exorcize their polytheism and its pantheistic implications.
Traces of this cathartic process abound in Scripture. When we read that "the earth was without form
and void," in Hebrew tohu wabohu (Gen 1:2),11 this does not refer to the eternally preexisting chaos
in which the pagan gods were allegedly created, but to the theoretical stage of the world as
produced by God, prior to the distinction and organization of its constitutive elements. It does not
designate an actual state of the material universe, which was never without a form, even though that
form defies imagination. The Biblical authors did not, or cared not, to eliminate all mythological
features, ingrained in the common literary habits of Near Eastern poetry, but these were, so to
speak, deactivated. The abyss, tehom in Hebrew, over which darkness reigned, is no longer
identified with the "tumultuous Tiamat" of the Babylonian epic, 12 but with the face of the sea, set in
perpetual motion by the Spirit of God (Gen 1:2). The demythologization of the heavenly bodies
created on the fourth day is complete. Sun and moon, the highest cosmic deities of the Babylonians,
respectively Shamash and Sin, have become "two great luminaries in the skies," dividing the day
from the night (Gen 1:14-18). As for the phases of the moon, they are much appreciated by the
Hebrews for fixing their calendar of months, when the lunar crescent appears in the sky, and the full
moon shines over the Passover night. No trace remains of the detailed instructions which Marduk,
supreme god of Babylon, gives to the divine NANNAR (Sin), who is ordered, first, to show two
horns, then the half of his circular crown, and then to turn himself full-face. 13 On the fifth day of
creation, God makes the huge sea monsters, tanmnim gedolim (Gen 1:21), impressive enough as
zoological species (and also as mariners' yarns), but destitute of the semi-divine personality of the
linguistically related Tnn of the Ugaritic poems, or of Ltn, which corresponds to the Hebrew
Leviathan. The Tannin and the Leviathan have retained some of their mythological flavor in such
poetical texts as Isaiah 27:1, "Leviathan the elusive, crooked serpent, Tannin, the dragon of the sea,"
(cf. Ps 74:14 and Job 3:8). It is interesting to note, however, that Job, in spite of his hyperboles,
downgrades Leviathan to the rank of a vulgar crocodile (41:1), just as he does Behemoth, the
hippopotamus (40:15 ).14
Creation, for the Old Testament writers, is not the battlefield of the gods, nor a meaningless turmoil
of elements, but a mirror in which we may see, under certain conditions, a reflection of the Face of
God. It is therefore possible, on the basis of Genesis, to formalize the doctrinal contents of the
Hexaemeron as follows: All things were created by the power of the Word; God said, "Let there
be...," "and it was so." The world was created in hierarchic order, each creature being assigned its
rank and function. Through His Spirit, God is the author of life, so that the living species, each
according to its seed, has in itself the principle and pattern of growth and perpetuation. Man was
created last, with unique endowments, in the image and after the likeness of his Creator, unto the
fulfilling of his destiny. Theological sidelines are implied, rather than expressed; the author of
Genesis suggests indirectly, but clearly enough, that the scheme realized in the space of six days,
followed by the Creator's rest on the seventh, is connected aetiologically with typical Hebrew
institutions: the perpetual week, liberated from the phases of the moon for the reckoning of time, the
Sabbath and its derivatives.
Old Testament monotheism is not to be confused with philosophical monism, which would make
the Biblical concept of creation untenable. Either it would "freeze" God in His own essence and
make the universe part of his incommunicable being, or make God the supreme abstraction,
presiding impassibly over the interactions of individual monads having each one in itself the
principle and pattern of its existence and depending on none other for the furtherance of its aims.
Instead, the Bible represents God active in the world which He has created, entering in lively
conversation with Adam and Eve, Cain and Abel, with Moses and the Prophets, and visibly
intervening in world events toward the fulfilment of his goals. These, of course, are
anthropomorphisms, viz. figurative modes of speaking of God in human terms. But how else could
a human being express the fact of his entering into relation with his Creator?
Late Judaism had sensed this particular problem and tentatively thought of the possibility of a
contact between the transcendence of God and His creatures, being established by means of
intermediaries derived from the divine essence: the Shekhmah (Presence), the Kabhod (Glory),
the Shem (Name), the Metatron (Guidance),15 or by means of attributes conceptually distinct from
the Essence, and implying a relation with the creatures. There is a certain similarity between the
teaching of the mediaeval rabbis on the attributes of God and the Islamic doctrine of the Beautiful
Names of Allah.16
Exceptionally, a few Muslim thinkers, consciously or unconsciously influenced by Christian
thought, have been searching the Quran for possible analogies to the dogma of the Trinity: Allah;
Jesus, whom Muhammad acknowledged as preeminent among God's envoys; and a Holy Spirit,
life-giver and messenger of God's revealed truth. 17 There is, as a matter of fact, no solution to the
problem of communication between the absolutely transcendent and the world of men, except if we
conceive God as the Trinity of Persons, in accordance with the unanimous Tradition.
Unless there is found in the Old Testament a valid foundation for the dogma of the Trinity, we
would have to acknowledge that there is a theological break between the Old and the New
Testament. Such, however, is not the case. The Hebrews could rightly boast that there is no nation
whose god "makes himself so near to them as the Lord our God does to us, whenever we call upon
him" (Deut 4:7). However they could not penetrate the secret of God's life. The Scriptural passages
in which the nature of God's exclusive mystery is implied — not expressed — were due to remain
for them riddles, or limited to inadequate analogies, for only in the light of the full revelation of the
Gospel can these passages be truly understood; it is as if they had been written expressly for us,
who come after the Incarnation of the Son of God.
This should sober us, not make us arrogant. Nor does it mean two grades of revelation, but that God
discloses Himself according to what amount of truth men can profitably receive, in substantiated
circumstances of their cultural development. In fact, the Hebrews were continually threatened in
their monotheistic faith by the polytheism of their neighbors. There are secrets they could not bear
yet, and there are secrets which even Christ, according to his humanity — we are thinking here of
the date of the Parousia — was not given to share. St. Athanasius, referring to this economy of
delayed revelation, remarked that some logia were not pronounced "when the Logos, who was with
God, put all things together, nor at any time prior to His being made a man, but only after the Word
was made flesh."18
Extant in the Book of Genesis are a number of verses which have exercised the sagacity of the
exegetes, and which early Christian commentators have interpreted as implicit testimonies to the
trinitarian nature of the Divine Being. They tell of God creating the Universe and drafting a policy
toward His human creatures, just as men would do when they are about to attend to a matter of
importance, consider the pro and con, and decide on a course of action. Note the plurals and the
forms of the verbs: "Let us make man in our image, after our likeness" (Gen 1:26); "Man is become
as one of us, to know good and evil" (Gen 3:22); "Let us go down and there confound their
language" (Gen 11:7).19 There is here something more than plurals of majesty. Did God take
counsel of His angels, an interpretation suggested by the Greek of Isaiah 9:5, where one of the
Messiah's titles is "Angel of the Great Council"? Grammarians consider the formula "Let us" as a
cohortative, a technical label which in fact covers a whole philosophy of language: I (subject) bring
myself (object) to take such or such decision, and to pass to immediate action, as if the final
resolution were taken jointly by several responsible persons. It would be imprudent, of course, to
draw a full-fledged theology from these verses. It remains, however, that the Church Fathers, who
exploited the theme, did not indulge in a worthless allegorism, but discerned, under these
anthropomorphisms, a clue, however faint, of the societal nature of God.
Less striking at first glance, but perhaps more solid, is the fact, already noted in this chapter, that
God is said to have created the world by the power of His Word and Spirit, not by separate
instruments, not by commissioned agents, not by a Demiurge, not by intermediaries. God's Spirit
was "soaring" (merahefeth) upon the face of the deep (Gen1:1), as the universal principle of life.
God said the Word, and the world was made (Ps 33:6). Conversely, the world, because it was so
created, bears witness to the life of God in the Trinity of Persons.
It all means, then, that the Word, the Logos, who would, in the fulness of time, become man, was
present and active "in the beginning." The Gospel of St. John becomes the indispensable key to the
understanding of the first chapter of Genesis: "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was
with God, and the Word was God. All things were made by him, and without him was not any thing
that was made.... And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us" (John 1:1-3, 14). It is, of a
truth, the Face of our Christ which is mirrored in the story of the creation, when God broke the
silence of eternity,20and when the vision of God's eternal Wisdom became reality.21 The creative
Word is the same as the Incarnate Word, and when Zacharias prophetically hailed Christ as the
Rising Sun from on high, we were given to understand that He would run the race for us: as a man
goes forth to do his daily work (Ps 104:23), so will the Son of God, sallying forth from His chamber
(Ps 19:5), shine upon all who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death.
5. The Protevangel.
On the "sixth day" of creation, God said: "Let us make man in our image, after our likeness" (Gen
1:26). Shall we make a formal distinction between "image" (εικον) and "likeness" (ομοιωσις)? And
why is it that the Hebrew uses two different particles: be, "in," and ke, "after," "according to"? It
seems that a theological theory developed on the sole basis of such distinctions would be open to a
serious charge of artificiality. One thing is certain: the redundant formula, easily explained by the
fondness of Hebrew writers for parallelism, means at least that man is related to his Creator by a
unique kinship which sets him apart from all other creatures and points to his destiny.1
What this destiny will be, we learn from the second story on the creation and fall of Adam, and of
the first announcement of Salvation, the so-called Protevangel (Genesis 2 and 3). Here, the general
organization of the cosmos is taken for granted. A brief summary is given by way of introduction, or
rather as a transition between the elaborate scheme of chapter one and the story of Adam and Eve,
according to a popular tradition possibly committed to writing some time before the exile. It
abounds in picturesque features, as the narrator muses among seemingly irrelevant details. 2 But, let
this not deceive us; our storyteller makes his point at least, as well as, the systematic writer of the
Hexaemeron.
The action takes place in the "garden in Eden" (Gen 2:8). 3 It is described as a well-watered orchard
in the midst of an otherwise arid steppe, somewhere in Mesopotamia, as we may surmise from the
mention of the Tigris and the Euphrates, two of the four rivers of "paradise" (Gen 2:14). Imagine a
criss-cross of irrigation ditches, the greenery of shade and fruit trees, carefully tended beds of
vegetables, emerald patches of late cereals, long after a meager harvest has been gathered from the
sun-parched fields round about. Whatever water is left disappears in the sand, where a few reeds
absorb the last traces of moisture.
Dramatis personae: God, known from now on as Yahweh, usually rendered in English by "the
Lord," or, in composition with Elohim, "the Lord God." He is the master of the garden, in which He
loves to stroll in the cool of the evening (Gen 3:8).
Adam, fashioned out of red clay, the adamah — hence his surname — and made into a living
creature through God breathing the breath of life into his nostrils (Gen 2:7). Adam will never lose
his connection with the earth from which he came and to which he shall return (Gen 3:19). He is
appointed responsible caretaker of the garden (Gen 2:15). The entire district is teeming with all
sorts of animals; God brings them to Adam, who unerringly identifies them by name (Gen 2:19-20).
Obviously, Adam is perfectly attuned to the order of creation, which God has pronounced good,
even very good (Gen 1:31). No realistic painting here, nor abstract theologizing. The entire setting
reminds one of a Douanier Rousseau painting.
Eve, Adam's wife. God made her out of a rib of Adam, upon whom He had caused a deep sleep to
fall.4 Thus she is designated as ishah, a wo-man, from ish, man (Gen 2:21-24). She will be called
later Eve, Hawwah, because she will become the mother of all living (root h-y/w-h) (Gen 3:20).
The serpent, a strange beast, creeping out of nowhere, unpredictable, repulsive to humans, trying to
be persuasive, and described here as unusually crafty (Gen 3:1).
We find in the first three chapters of Genesis the rationale of man's destiny. It is suggested, in the
colorful narratives on creation, that man, in the person of Adam, the father of the race, 5 had been
endowed with everything he needed to enter the role assigned to him by the Creator, and to grow,
physically and spiritually, so that God's own features would become recognizable in his human
icon. Here is how St. Irenaeus, commenting on the text of Genesis, expresses this:
It behoved man, after he was born, to grow: growing, he would come of age; being of age, he would
multiply; having multiplied, he would grow strong; being strong, he would be glorified; glorified,
he would see his master, for God himself shall be seen of man; now the vision confers incorruption,
and incorruption brings one close to God.6
Irenaeus' climactic reasoning follows the chronological order, which is particularly germane to our
thinking: thus do we refer to Christ, following St. Paul, as the "second Adam"?, who came to
consummate the work undertaken at creation. This is the final objective in the light of which we are
called to honor the very charter of our existence as creatures, since "Christ, the Logos of God, our
Lord, out of overflowing love, has made us what we are, that he may dispose us to be that which he
is."7 In this consists our Salvation, which must be understood primarily as deification (θεωσις), a
participation in the very life of God,8 in the measure of our receptivity and of our response.
There seems to have been some confusion in the "stage directions" for the drama of the temptation
and of the fall of man: two trees are mentioned in the description of the garden in Eden: "the tree of
life in the midst of the garden, and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil" (Gen 2:9). Adam is
allowed to pick fruits from every tree, except one. But, which is the forbidden tree? Would it be the
tree of life? In the temptation scene, Eve seems to think so: there it stands in front of her, in the
midst of the garden, where God has planted it (Gen 3:3). Life belongs to God, and God is
understandably jealous of His prerogative. After the sin has been committed, he will ironize: "Does
that man think he is going to live forever?" (Gen 3:22). Or is the forbidden fruit growing on the tree
of the knowledge of good and evil. As a matter of fact, God had said to Adam: "Thou shalt not eat
of it, for in the day that thou eatest thereof, thou shalt surely die" (Gen 2:17). 9 The difficulty seems
to result from the fusion of two different traditions, as the conflate reading of verse 22 might
indicate. Taken as a whole, however, textual evidence points rather to the tree of the knowledge of
good and evil as the forbidden tree. Note the italicized words; the tree is not called simply tree of
good and evil, for obviously the same tree does not yield two kinds of fruit, some good, some bad.
Evil has no place in Eden, no more than in the kingdom that is to come. There can be no
experiential knowledge of evil except after sin; prior to the fall, evil can only be conceived as a
"possible," contingent upon a morally wrong choice. Adam and Eve in the garden are, in all the
senses of the word, two "innocents."
The action in chapter 3, takes the form of a psychological drama. Eve, beguiled by the serpent,
induces Adam in eating from the forbidden fruit; Adam blames the whole thing on his wife, and Eve
on the serpent. Having heard their statements, God pronounces His verdict in the reverse order: first
on the serpent, then on the woman, and last on Adam, who is held accountable for his wife and for
those who shall be born from their union (Gen 3:14-21).
The tempter is definitely to be identified with the Evil Spirit in the guise of the serpent. His
mysterious personality manifests itself from time to time in the course of the Old Testament under a
variety of aliases; Satan, the latest of his avatars, figures only in post-exilic writings, and this being
rarely. The pre-exilic writings refer to invisible beings whose hostile, vexatious character God
eventually uses for the punishment of evildoers. Oriental influences tend to make the Evil Spirit the
Adversary par excellence, the Accuser, the Calumniator, ο διαβολος, "he who takes a bite"
(Syriac okhel qarco). His impotent strife against God shall continue to the last day. The Bible,
however, shows no trace of the absolute dualism of Iranian thought, with its two coeternal
principles whose irreducible opposition rules the events of this world.
It is clear that the temptation which befalls Eve is of Satanic origin. The fall of the first human
couple is not presented by the author of Genesis as a natural failure due to ignorance, weakness or
common malice, but to downright rebellion: never mind what God ordered or forbade; there is the
fruit; they desire it, they bite into it, and that is that!
Some day, Christ, the second Adam, would also be tempted by the devil, after the forty days of His
fast (Mt 4:1-11). The strategy of the tempter is consistently clear: in the garden, he cavils on the
instructions which Yahweh gave to Adam, and confuses Eve, who does not wish for anything more
than to be persuaded, allured as she is by the appearance of the fruit. On the Mount of Temptation,
the devil argues from God's Words in the Scriptures — the weapons have been updated — rather
imprudently, for Jesus, the Logos, counters with other Words from Scripture, his own words, and
cuts short the discussion with a curt dismissal.
God would not have His servants exempt from temptation. Mary, the second Eve, was troubled at
the words of the Angel of the Annunciation, but did not allow her anxiety to grow into positive
doubt and, after a fleeting moment of indecision, pronounced the irrevocable fiat: "Be it unto me
according to thy word" (Lk 1:29, 38). 10 St. Joseph experienced what also amounted into a
temptation, when he was thinking of repudiating his bride, and it took the visitation of an angel to
make him overcome his doubt (Mt 1:18-21).11
The immediate consequence of the sin of Adam and Eve is the statutory penalty of death, to be
personally visited, as well as, their descendants for their own sins, for "the wages of sin is death"
(Rom 6:23). Conversely, death, through the apprehension and anxiety it causes in us, is frequently a
cause of doubt, despair and sin. Christ, because He is the second Adam, and because He was born to
fulfill man's destiny, which cannot be thwarted or forfeited, submitted Himself to death; Mary, His
mother, was not excepted; but death, through the death and Resurrection of Christ, has lost its sting
(1 Cor 15:55).
Death is not the only consequence. Sin, Adam's sin and our sins have thrown disorder into creation,
incoherence, contradiction, hostility. St. Augustine, referring to the world of his sinful youth, calls
it regio dissimilitudinis, a land where everything is topsy-turvy, nothing makes sense, nothing is
constructive. It looks as if we are witnessing a renewed outbreak of the forces of chaos; after our
hymns to progress, we suddenly realize the absurdity of our spiritual, economic, and ecological
predicament.
In all that gloom, a voice is heard; it was heard even before the Word of God came upon the
Prophets and before He was made man. In the very act of sentencing the culprits, the Judge made it
known that the Evil One would be curbed and ultimately defeated, even by those whom he had
deceived. "I will put enmity between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt
bruise his heel" (Gen 3:15, King James version). Instead of it for the Hebrew hu, indetermined as to
gender, the Revised Standard Version has the masculine him, following the Greek αυτος, viz. "a
descendant of the woman"; the precision of the Greek, anterior to the adoption of the LXX by the
Christian Church, is the basis of the messianic interpretation of the Fathers, in the strict sense.
According to the Latin Vulgate, it is the woman herself, ipsa, who shall crush the head of the
serpent, and the western Church as a whole has understood that Mary would avenge Eve. St.
Irenaeus, commenting on Eve being an Old Testament type of the Theotokos, explains how there
has been, so to speak, a "turning about" from Mary to Eve, recirculationem, recircumlationem,
seeing that "there is no other way to untie the knots (of sin) than by reversing what was done in
tying them."12 The reading of the Vulgate was used by a number of Roman theologians intent upon
developing a Marian theology methodologically autonomous, rather than as a part of the doctrine on
Christ.
Genesis 3:15 forms what has been called appropriately the "Protevangel," namely the glad tidings
of God pursuing the plan He had eternally conceived and which he would bring to conclusion, no
matter what the cost. The Protevangel is definitely not to announce in court of an eventual paroling,
contingent upon good behavior, of repentent sinners. It is rather a prophecy, soon to be followed in
the Book of Genesis by the symbols of a future deliverance: the dove which Noah let out of the ark
(Gen 8:9-12), and the rainbow (Gen 9:13).13 In fact, the Protevangel is the first genuine prophecy of
the Incarnation of the eternal Son of God, and the unconditional proclamation of his future victory
over Satan. The prophecy is long-range; later Prophets would be kept in suspense regarding the time
of the Second Coming, and the secret hour of the consummation would be revealed to no one, not
even to the Son (Mt 24:36, only in the Greek).
Nothing in the Protevangel is said about death, the penalty of sin, still hanging over us. Yet we hear
an accent of elation, the sound of a wild paean at the prospect of the monster's defeat, in spite of its
frantic efforts to get at the woman's heel. 14 She will tramp him under foot and crush his ugly head,
like the Son of Mary trampling down death by death, as we sing in triumph, θανατω θανατιν
πατησας, smertiu smert popravij.
The fourth chapter of Genesis is marked by a slight change in the mode of narration. The authors of
the first three chapters pictured the creation of the world, the appearance and the fall of man as they
could imagine it. We would not dare to label this as myth, lest we be misunderstood, since "myth"
has become, mistakenly, synonymous with pure fiction, a tale without reality. We are dealing here
with a literary form, no matter what we call it, the function of which is to give coherent expression
to truths and events of a religious nature which cannot possibly be enunciated or described in
empirical terms. A radical demythologization — Entmytbologisierung — a term coined by German
theologians, with a view of reaching the objective contents expressed by this medium, is neither
desirable nor possible, for there is an organic connection between contents and form; the latter
cannot be neglected or regarded as of little account without the doctrinal substance being
compromised. But it should always be possible to determine what is meant, if we consider
positively the figurative details which are the vehicles of truth. We believe that the formulae used by
the sacred writers working under the charism of inspiration ought to be interpreted in this way.
The style of the fourth chapter of Genesis is a variety of the literary form of the creation stories; it is
properly Urgeschichte, history of origins. Human inventions, institutions, techniques, are traced
back to eponym heroes of whom nothing is remembered, but through whom we are informed of the
presumed origin of realities which in many instances are still with us. Among the ancients, the
context was invariably mythological: thus arts and techniques had been taught to the Babylonians
by the messengers of Ea, who emerged successively from the Persian Gulf. In Egypt, Thot and his
satellites had instructed the scribes and the builders of temples.
The Biblical account shows nothing of this mythology. We are presented in chapter 4 with a
catalogue of all the firsts which occurred in the early generations of men: Cain, the first "tiller of the
ground" and Abel, the first "keeper of sheep" (Gen 4:2-3); Enoch, the first to "build a city," a man
who "walked with God, and he was not, for God took him" (Gen 5:24); Jabal, the first nomadic
herdsman, "father of such as dwell in tents" (Gen 4:20); his brother Jubal, the first musician (Gen
4:21); Tubal Cain "an instructor of every artificer in brass and iron" (Gen 4:22). Not only
achievements, but failures are also recorded: thus Cain is the first murderer, and there are a few
characters whom we have some difficulty to appraise: Lamech, the first bigamist, a bully bent upon
vengeance; now is this the natural violence of a fierce temperament, or the birth of an institution
designed to force arbitration on feuding clans? (Gen 4:19-23).
As a matter of fact, the two series do not run parallel: good men, and bad men; good and bad are
mixed, until the day when the wheat and the tares shall be separated. But God is at work, invisibly,
silently. His Word and Spirit are active in everything that is constructive, over against the recurring
forces of destruction. The early Christian apologists, little inclined to find some good outside
Christianity, credited the Logos with whatever they approved of among the pagans. 15 St. Justin:
"What the philosophers and lawgivers uttered or perceived correctly, this they did by perceiving and
contemplating something of the Logos.... Christ was in part known of Socrates, for Christ is the
Logos who was and is in all things."16 And Clement of Alexandria said of the philosophers that they
were "dreaming the Truth," οειρωττουσαν την αληθειαν.17
The description of the early generations of men according to Genesis 4, which we call a history of
origins, ought not to be placed on par with Prehistory, Anthropology, or what French scholars call
Human Palaeontology. What is common to these disciplines and with the first eleven chapters of
Genesis is merely that they deal with the predicament of early man. However, they consider their
common object from entirely different points of view. The scientist uses the concept of evolution as
a working hypothesis, and tentatively describes what the successive stages of that evolution were,
by analyzing and interpreting the prehistoric remains, which are his material. He traces back what
presumably is the biological ancestry of modern man, with a view to delimiting as narrowly as
possible the margin of passage from subhuman primates to homo.
Biblical scholars and theologians are not directly concerned with these preliminaries to mankind.
They take over where scientific procedure leaves off, and, short of blind prejudice, they should have
no quarrel with the scientist, nor the scientist with them. Their material is provided by the Scriptural
record. They consider man as actually in possession of all his natural endowments, fully
accountable for his acts and master of his fate; environmental factors, cultural progress or regress,
important though they be, remain incidental. A clue to this may perhaps be the fact that the Bible
represents Adam and Eve, in the very instant of their creation, as responsible adults; the human
species, in the ancestry which evolutionary theories attribute to it, had not come of age yet, and, as
such, is out of the normal range of theology.
Even if theology is kept within its proper bounds, it should not overdraw the distinction between the
successive covenants of God with mankind which are reported in the Bible; they are rather
modalities of a single economy. To be sure, the covenant with Abraham seems to reduce to the
proportions of an ethnic privilege the covenant with Noah, which was open to all mankind; but is it
not written that "in Abraham's seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed" (Gen 22:18) ? And
what is new in the New Testament, is not the covenant itself, but that the covenant was sealed in the
blood of Christ; therefore, the eucharistic anaphora of the Latin Church calls it "the new, and eternal
covenant."
Nor should the orders of creation and of redemption be so sharply distinguished as to suggest that,
due to the failure of the former, a radically new plan had been forced upon God in order to rescue
what could be salvaged of His work.18 God's eternal decision to associate man to His own
blessedness is irrevocable, and the Incarnation of His Son is seen as a means of promoting this
unique objective. Nevertheless the question has been raised whether, if it were not for sin, the Word
of God would have become incarnate? I must confess here that I am little inclined to hypothetical
speculations of the type: "What would have happened if ... the situation had been radically different
from what it actually was." Surely this is a shortcoming on my part. While the redemption from the
penalties due to sin, a ransom, the satisfaction of a debt toward God, what is called "atonement" in
the narrow sense, are indeed essential factors in the theology of the Incarnation and the doctrine on
the work of Christ, it remains that the Eastern Fathers of the Church generally considered that the
deification of man (θεωσις), whether He had sinned or not, justified abundantly that the Logos
would be made man. On this we may rest the case.
Concluding Postscript.
With each step of our journey through the Bible, we have tried to discern the Face of Christ amidst
the shadows of the past, in figure, in type, in prophecy, following in the steps trodden by the Fathers
of the Church. We read frequently in the footnotes of our English Bibles such sentences as:
"Christian tradition has understood this passage in such or such a way," or "This is what the Fathers
have read back into this saying of the Old Testament." I have used these formulae myself although,
frankly, I do not like them, for they may give the impression of some arbitrary interpretation, or
gratuitous assumption, or some artificial exercise in allegorism. This need not be. The Tradition we
are allegedly reading back into the Old Testament was there in the making, when anonymous
editors or compilers, Ezra perhaps, gathered together the records of divine revelation and made
them the Books of Scriptures which the Church puts in our hands as the source of our doctrine and
our worship.
A fact, insignificant in appearance, is indicative of the close ties of the liturgy with the general
economy of the revelation: in several uncial manuscripts of the Septuagint, the text of the Scriptures
according to the Greek canon is followed by a collection of liturgical \, Lat. cantica, from
the various Books of the Old and the New Testaments, and by the Great Doxology. These odes
unfold before us the entire mystery of God's economy of salvation; they have been chosen as the
basic theme of our Byzantine canons, or distributed among the Psalms of Laudes in various Latin
liturgies and in the Mozarabic breviary. They recapitulate the highlights of our Bible reading and
bring our study to its proper conclusion.
In the Byzantine liturgies, the first ode is the triumphal hymn of Moses and the Bene Israel after
their miraculous escape from Egypt (Ex 15:1-19), when Yahweh opened for them a path through the
waters of the sea and led them through the wilderness to the streams of the Jordan. Some day these
would be sanctified by the Baptism of Christ, and the Church rejoices, "that through water and the
Spirit sons have been born to her," and when the Israelites were about to enter the Promised Land,
Moses again sang to the Rock from which he had drawn water in the desert (Deut 32:1-43) : "Now,
they all drank from that spiritual Rock, and the Rock was Christ" (1 Cor 10:4).
The third ode is the hymn of thanksgiving which Hannah, the mother of Samuel, intoned on the day
when "she lent him to the Lord," in the sanctuary at Shiloh (l Sam 2:1-10), as Mary would do when
she presented the infant Jesus in the Temple of Jerusalem.
The Psalm of Habakkuk (3:1-19) provides the theme for the fourth ode of the canon. It attains to
cosmic amplitude: "Eloah comes from Teman, the Holy One from Mount Paran.... Before him goes
forth pestilence, a fiery plague before his feet. The everlasting mountains are scattered, the eternal
heights fall down.... Thou goest forth to save thy people, to save thy Messiah.... I hear, and my belly
shudders, my lips quiver at the voice.... Yet will I rejoice in the Lord, exult in the God of my
salvation." The Latin Vulgate has rendered these last words by: in Deo Jesu meo, "in God my Iesu"
no translation indeed, but a daring play on the etymology of the name: Jesus, cf. yesha, salvation
(Mt 1:21).
The fifth ode is taken from Isaiah 26:9-20, a song of hope: "For the dead shall live, their bodies
shall rise. O dwellers in the dust, awake and shout for joy, for thy dew is a dew of light, and on the
land of shadow thou wilt make it fall." The sixth ode is a further announcement of the Resurrection;
it tells the story of Jonah, who was rendered to light after three days in the belly of the fish, a sign,
nay the sign to an incredulous generation, and none other, but this sign would be given to them (Mt
12:40), seeing that Jesus would submit freely to the monstrous power of death, and the third day
rise victorious from the tomb.
The hymn of deliverance of the three young Hebrews in the furnace of fire, theme of the seventh
and the eighth odes, (Dan 3:26-45 and 52-88), brings to a close the series of Old Testament figures.
It is the answer of a redeemed mankind to the call heard from the midst of the burning bush, and it
voices the unceasing praise of the Church, amidst the fires of sin.
We stand now on the threshold of the Gospel. It behooved Zacharias, a priest of the order of Aaron,
to give thanks for the birth of his son, who would prepare the ways of the Savior, the Eternal Priest
after the order of Melchizedek (Lk 1:68-79), as it would belong to Mary, the Theotokos and Mother
of Light, to magnify the Lord in accents echoing the canticle of Hannah (Lk 1:46-55). And when the
day came for the Theotokos to bring her son to the Temple, two prophetic voices were heard: the
voice of Simeon, who came by the Spirit into the Temple, took the child in his arms and blessed
God, for he saw "Him who was set for the fall and rising again of many in Israel"; and the voice of
Ann the prophetess, "who spake of Him to all of them that looked for redemption in Jerusalem" (Lk
2:27-32).
The long vigil is ended. The day has dawned. Types, figures, and prophecies have ceased. The old
order has passed away. Immanuel was born, died, and rose from the dead. We have entered the new
aeon.
Saint Damien de Brandon (Quebec), the sixth day of August 1974, in the Feast of the Holy
Transfiguration of Our Lord God and Saviour Jesus Christ.
Notes.
Chapter I.
l In festo S. Caeciliae, ad vesperas (Breviarium S. Ord. Praed.)
2Concio 3 de Lazaro, PG 48:992.
7It should be remembered that we know Marcion only through the quotations and reports of his adversaries. For a summary
of his teachings, see H. Lietzmann, A History of the Early Church (New York, 1953) pp. 249-263.
8Authoritative presentation of the dualistic heresy in Armenia and Eastern Europe, Nina G. Garsoian, The Paulician
Heresy (The Hague and Paris, 1967). Summary information on the heretical groups in mediaeval Europe, Stephen
Runciman, The Medieval Manichee (Cambridge, 1947).
13Praefatio in Job.
15We fervently hope that the updating experiments of the churches in the Roman communion wil1 not radically depart from
the basic principles and the traditional patterns of their liturgies, which generally antedate the rupture between East and West.
Chapter II
1Cf. the so-called Rule of St. Augustine: Hoc versetur in corde, quod profertur in ore, "Let that dwell in your heart, which
your mouth utters." Epist. 211, PL 33:960.
2Confessiones 9:6.
4Cf. G. J. Renier, History, Its Purpose and Method (London, 1950) p. 49.
6This book, published in 1903, was re-edited with an updating preface by the late Pere de Vaux, Paris, 1966.
7I am thinking here of the late Fr. Lagrange, who regretted that "the imperious necessity of the times had confined him and
his early collaborators in the narrow field of critical exegesis." Cf. Henri de Lubac, S. J., L'Ecriture dans la Tradition (Paris,
1966) p. 291. The quotation is from a letter of the late Fr. Hugues Vincent to Mgr. de Solages.
8The contemporary revival of patristic studies in the Roman Church met at first with mistrust in Vatican circles, as some
theologians were concerned lest it might be interpreted as a downgrading of the dogmatic apparatus of Roman theology and
the official doctrine of Thomas Aquinas.
9The inspiration, θεοπνευστια, of the Scriptures guarantees proportionally the authority of the versions used in the Church,
as well as of the original texts in the Hebrew and the Alexandrian canon. The inspiration of the LXX recently has been
debated by Roman theologians. As a matter of fact, the Latin Church has always regarded the LXX as an "authentic version"
but has made no pronouncement regarding its inspiration. Cf. P. Benoit, "La Septante est-elle inspiree?" in Vom Wort des
Lebens (Max Meinertz' Festschrift; Muenster i. W., 1951).
Chapter III.
2Cf. the suggestive name of the Via degli formatori in Rome, where commercial artists and artisans have their workshops.
3A saying which belongs, like many others, in the agrapha of the professor, faithfully preserved in the memory of his
Princeton neighbors and friends.
4Inasmuch as we can speak of a system; at any rate it is not a closed system. Teilhard's theological works consist almost
entirely of short essays, often mimeographed for private distribution among his friends. For an overall presentation and a
concentrated bibliography, see F. Mooney, S. J., Teilbard de Chardin and the Mystery of Christ (New York, 1966). On the
Orthodox side, Teilhard's work has attracted the attention of another scientist specialized in biological and genetic research,
Professor Theodosius Dobzhansky, who insists on the unpredictability of evolution; he infers from this that there must be a
divine meaning to the mysterious development of living species.
5On form criticism, its use and abuse, see V. Kesich, The Gospel Image of Christ (Crestwood, Í. Õ., 1972) p. 14 ff.
6The Greek conjunctions used in these locutions introduce nuances of meaning foreign to Hebrew or Aramaic, which would
have used such vague particles as asher, she, ki; these merely indicate the fact of a connection between several propositions,
the exact nature of this connection being determined by the context. Passages referring to individuals or groups deliberately
blinded by God, "that seeing they may not see," represent an extreme case, which needs not be discussed here.
10Cf. H. de Lubac, op. cit., p. 24. In modern parlance, allegory has become synonymous with an arbitrary figure of speech,
loosely connected, or not connected at all, with the objective reality directly expressed by a literal statement.
11This mnemotechnic jingle dates from the late thirteenth century. On the methods of Biblical scholarship in the Western
Church during the Middle Ages, see Beryl Smalley, The Study of the Bible in the Middle Ages (Oxford, 1941).
12Thus Aquinas: "The literal sense is not the figure itself, but that which is expressed by means of the figure," Summa
Theologiae, Prima Pars, qu. 1, art. 10, ad 3m.
13Summa Theologiae, Prima Pars, qu. 1, art. 10. The realism of Aquinas in formulating these principles is akin to the
Dionysian conception of the hierarchic structure of the real, in contrast with Augustine's world of rhetorical symbols.
Chapter IV.
1Sorted out." Hebrew habdil, to separate, to distinguish; LXX: διαχοριζω. Cf. the
2Hebrew saba, pl. sebaoth; hence God's traditional title, "Lord of the armies."
3Without the article in the Hebrew text of verse 26; LXX: ανθρωπον.
4 On the sources of the Pentateuch, see Arthur Weiser, The Old Testament: Its Formation and Development (New York,
1961; reprinted last in 1968) pp. 69-99.
5Ugarit is the ancient name of the site, the exploration of which began in 1929 and has continued ever since.
6From the Assyrian text. A more literary rendering of the entire epic is found in James B. Pritchard, Ancient Near Eastern
Texts (Princeton, 1950) p. 60 ff.
7The advance of the shoreline toward the southeast, relative to the presumed shoreline in the Neo-Babylonian period, is of
approximately 160 miles.
8Cf. the Chaldaean cosmogony: "No brick mould had been made yet, no house built, no town founded."
9Texts in translation, with an introduction by Cyrus H. Gordon, Ugaritic Literature (Rome, 1949).
10David Neiman, "The Polemic Language of the Genesis Cosmology," in The Heritage of the Early Church (Festschrift
Georges Florovsky; Rome, 1973) pp. 47-63.
11"The Hebrew words have passed unchanged into the French locution tohubohu ,
12The "tumultuous Tiamat," a personification of the sea, tamtu. Cf. the Hebrew tehom, the deep.
14Job's descriptions may best be understood in relation to the curiosity for exotic animals manifested by the Egyptians, and
which reached a climax in the Ptolemaic period. See my Manuel d'Archeologie Biblique, vol. 2. (Paris, 1953) pp. 229, 307.
15J. Bonsirven, S. J., Les idees juives au temps de Notre Seigneur (Paris, 1934) pp. 40-43 and 52-54.
16Late Hellenistic speculation is the common source on which Christian and non-Christian authors are drawing.
19To these examples should perhaps be added the mysterious voices heard on the eve of the destruction of the Temple of
Jerusalem, as reported by Fl. Josephus, War 6:299: "Let us go out of there!" Μεταβαινωμεν ενταυθεν.
20Quoting the powerful formula of St. Ignatius of Antioch: Λογος από σιγης προελθων, Epist. ad Magn. 8, PG 5:669.
Ignatius refers here to the Incarnation of the Word, but the same could be said of the creative Word of God.
21 "The Wisdom embodied in Sophia is the design of God that preceded creation and called all celestial and earthly creatures
forth from non-being into being, out of the darkness of the night.... Sophia is what precedes the days of creation." Eugene
Trubetskoi, Icons: Theology in Color (Crestwood, Í. Õ., 1973) p. 52.
Chapter V
1We need not enter here into the discussions of scholasticism, whether the original image did show a complete likeness, or
would grow into likeness, or whether, once obliterated by sin, the likeness would be restored , all legitimate questions, but to
which the Biblical text offers no immediate answer.
2As, for instance, the fragment on the four rivers (Gen 2:10-14), a curious blend of geography and folklore.
3"A garden in Eden." The name is derived from the Assyro-Babylonian edinu, dry land, steppe.
4Hebrew tardemah, a supernaturally induced slumber. Cf. Gen 15:12; in both instances, the Greek has εκστασις. See also 1
Sam 26:12.
5The problem, whether Adam is the first human individual or man in general, as when we speak of "the twentieth-century
man," has been blown out of proportion. The Semites are fond of designating a clan or race by the eponym. In a different
perspective, the primacy of the universal idea over the individual reality in Platonic philosophy has strongly influenced
patristic and mediaeval theology. The expression Adam in genere humano is commonly used in western scholasticism with
the meaning: Adam, as type of the genus man
8This does not mean participation in the "Super-Essence," but in those essential aspects or active properties of the Divine
Being which are communicable ad extra; cf. the ενεργειαν of Palamite theology.
9"Thou shalt surely die" (KJ), "You shall die" (RSV): weak rendering of the Hebrew moth tamuth, "dying thou shalt die," "of
death thou shalt die." Similar constructions are found in French folktales: a manger mangeras-tu, a courir courras-tu.
10Scene pictorially represented in a small relief on the southern wall of the Duomo in Florence, opposite the campanile of
Giotto. The Virgin and the Angel Gabriel face each other on either side of a canopy, under which the dove of the Holy Spirit
hovers with its wings extended. Mary has not stepped under the canopy; she is still wondering at the angel's words; she has
not yet pronounced her fiat.
11Cf. E. Trubetskoi's suggestive remarks on the representation of the doubt of St. Joseph on some icons of the Nativity,
Icons: Theology in Color (Crestwood, N. Y., 1973) p. 59.
13Hugh of St. Victor (twelfth century) recensed them as the sacramenta naturae, prior to the "sacraments of the Law" and to
the mysteries of the Christian Church.
14E. Dhorme saw in the Hebrew text a play on the double meaning of the Semitic root sh-w-p, to tramp, crush (cf. the
Assyrian shepu, foot) or to sight, to aim at (cf. in Arabic shafa, yashuf). La Bible de la Pleiade, vol. 1 (Paris, 1956) p. 10-11.
15Conversely, the figures of Apollo and Orpheus as symbols of Christ in early catacomb paintings.
17Protreptikos 5, PG 8:164-172.
18The bifurcation of western soteriology in the late Middle Ages and in classical Protestantism originates in an excessive
contrasting of the two orders: on the one hand, an extrinsic gift of grace added to the natural powers of man and infused to
the repentant sinner unto healing; in Protestantism, the total depravity of a creature which is not healed, but can only be
forgiven through the atoning work of Christ.
Chapter VI
1"Sur quelques symboles de Iahve' in Melanges Syriens offerts a Monsieur Rene Dussaud (Paris, 1939) pp. 101-106. See my
Manuel d'Archeologie Biblique, vol. 2. (Paris, 1953) p. 340.
2This route of the Aramaean tribes, which cattle men prefer to the direct crossing through the steppe, has been appropriately
described in modern times as the "Fertile Crescent."
3Explained at a later date by means of an artificial etymology: ab hamon, "father of a multitude," generally retained in
patristic allegories.
4The well, originally dug out of the native rock and whose upper courses of masonry were added on account of the gradual
raising of the terrain, is being used by the Greek monks, guardians of the church commemorating the meeting of Jesus and
the Samaritan woman, near the village of Balata.
5The site is marked by the ruins of what seems to have been a monastic foundation. Cf. F. M. Abel, Geographie de la
Palestine, vol. 2, p. 270.
6Mount Moriyyah is idendified by 2 Chr 3:1 with the northern hill of Jerusalem, upon which the Temple was built.
7"Legend" is not synonymous with "fiction"; it means rather a narrative, fictitious or real, destined to be read or proclaimed
publicly.
8The entire fourteenth chapter seems to make use of an ancient source independent from the three "documents" regarded by
the critics as the main sources of the Book of Genesis.
9The story supposes that the Dead Sea did not exist. Cf. Gen 13:10, where the southern part of the Jordan rift is described as
a "garden of Yahweh."
10In the stories of Beersheba, God is called El-'Olam, in the versions Θεος αιωνιος, Deus aeternus, the Everlasting God.
Olam is in reality a broader concept, expressing universality of time and space. Cf. the first surat of the Quran, where Allah
is addressed as Rab il-alamin, "Lord of the worlds."
Chapter VII
1A political and cultural survey of the Near and Middle East in the time of Moses, and of the events of the exodus and of the
march toward Canaan, is found in John Bright, A History of Israel (Philadelphia, 1959) pp 97-127. The problem of the
formation of the Pentateuch is discussed by Artur Weiser, The Old Testament: Its Formation and Development (New York,
1961) p. 70 ff.
2The pharaoh of the oppression seems to have been Ramses II (1301-1234 B.C.). The date generally favored for the flight of
the Israelites is the latter half of the thirteenth century B.C. (between 1250 and 1230).
3Whether across ancient lagoons at the northern end of the Gulf of Suez, or in the region of the Bitter Lakes.
4I see no compelling reason for rejecting the traditional location of Mount Sinai. The alternatives proposed are based on
tenuous clues which do not compare with the bulk of evidence in favor of the generally accepted site, and show an almost
exclusive concern with modern theories on strategy and logistics, of a doubtful applicability to the case of Moses and his
people.
5We need not enter here into the history of that hypothetical vocalization of the consonantal Hebrew text.
Sukkoth, the great autumn festival, which tended to reduce the importance of Shabu'oth
10The Hebrew noun Torah, the Law, is derived from the verbal root y-r-h, to teach, to instruct.
11Elisha was credited with a similar miracle, when he cured the water of the spring of Jericho (2 Ki 2:19-22).
12Hellenistic Judaism attributes to a revelation of Divine Wisdom the miracle of the water from the rock (Wis 11:4; cf. Philo,
Comm. on Deut. 8:15); this may be the source of St. Paul's exegesis, via the multiple equation Wisdom = Logos = Christ.
13Origen, Horn, in Num. 7:2, PG 12:613. Any attempt at desacralizing radically the institution of the Eucharist is bound to
miss the point of the Gospel narratives, and any theology that rejects, or refuses to take into consideration the experience of
the altar under pretense of transcending tradition or culture, or of accommodating it to the mood of the time or the particulars
of a given denomination, is equally doomed to failure.
14We quote from the English translation of the Haggadah by Cecil Roth (London, 1934).
15The date of the Last Supper and its relation to the Passover of the Jews have been the object of many recent studies on the
part of Christian scholars. No consensus was reached on the question of whether the Eucharist was instituted within the
framework of the seder meal, or after the seder. See V. Kesich, The Gospel Image of Christ (Crestwood, N. Y., 1972) pp. 56-
60 and notes.
16There are many instances of this phenomenon of liturgical "conflation." Thus, the Feast of Weeks (shabu'oth), originally a
harvest festival, fifty days after the apparition of the first ears of wheat, was supplemented with the memorial of the giving of
the Law on Mount Sinai. Its counterpart in Christianity is Pentecost.
Chapter VIII
1The historical survey and the chronological tables which I drew for the Oxford Bible, respectively p. 1517 and p. 1532 ff,
although starting from a lower, and more likely, date for the migration of Abraham, does not materially alter the picture.
2See my note and chronological chart in the Interpreter's Bible, vol. 1, p. 145.
3The appellation "Hexateuch" or even "Heptateuch" for the five Books of Moses, plus, respectively, Joshua and Judges, can
be justified on these premises.
4An outstanding example is Jerusalem, which David conquered toward 1000 B.C. over the clan of the Jebusites, more than
two hundred years after the invasion of Palestine by Joshua.
5The "Judges," in Hebrew shophetim, the title given to the magistrates of the Phoenician colonies in western Mediterranean
lands. In Israel, the office of shophet is not permanent, but pro tempore, as the circumstances demand.
6Critics tend to regard the "royalist" source as primitive. The satire of Judges 9:1-6 fits conditions that prevailed under
Solomon and his successors and were stigmatized by the prophets.
7The Books of Chronicles (Paralipomena) reflect the traditions of the Temple scribes, and interpret the history of the kings of
Judah from the special point of view of the Jerusalem priesthood.
8Ostraca, the technical name given to potsherds used as labels or short notes and inscribed with ink and a reed pen.
9Founders of dynasties and usurpers in the kingdom of Israel: Jeroboam, Baasha, Zimri (7 days), Omri, Jehu, Shallum (1
month), Pekah, Hosheah.
10Hezekiah's preparatives were regarded by Isaiah as indifferent measures, which a lack of trust in God would render futile
(Is 22:9-11).
12The Qubbet es-Sakhra, improperly called "Mosque of Omar," covers the rock on which the altar of burnt-offerings had
stood. The memory of Solomon is preserved by the popular denomination Istablat Suleiman, "Stables of Solomon," given to
the substructions of the mosque el-Aksa at the southern end of the Haram esh-Sherif, a Holy Place of Islam, together with
Mecca and Medina.
13The interdiction of trespassing was engraved on marble tables. Cf. my Manuel d'Archeologie Biblique, vol. 2 (Paris, 1953)
p. 45If.
14The title of Psalm 72 attributes it to Solomon. On the nature and value of these notations, see chapter 12.
15Ps 110 is attributed to David. On the theme of the suffering messiah, see chapter 10.
Chapter IX
1This chapter and the following two incorporate the substance of a paper presented by the author at the Interorthodox Center
in Athens. It appeared in the following: Εισηγεις Α Ορθοδοξου Ερμινευτικου Συνεδριου, 17-21 Μαιου, 1972 (Αθηναι 1973);
and St. Vladimir's Theological Quarterly 16 (1972).
2The passive meaning seems primitive, as in nouns of the same formation. The cognate verb is used only in derivate
forms: nibba', to be seized by a spirit of prophecy; hithnabbi, to act as a nabi'.
3Also bozeh, the "gazer."
5According to Thiele's chronology of the Hebrew kingdoms, which is thus far the most satisfactory.
6It is generally agreed that the Book of Isaiah is composed of several collections: (1) a collection of Isaiah's own oracles
(eighth century B.C.); (2) fragments and prophecies relating to the Babylonian exile and announcing the imminent
intervention of Cyrus; (3) a collection of various post-exilic oracles. Allowance should be made for several fragments
incorporated in what appears to be a wrong context. The final redactor was keenly aware of the development of a unique
messianic theme which gives unity to his compilation and justifies to some extent the traditional ascription to Isaiah and his
disciples.
8"Shut their eyes lest they see" (Is 6:10); Hebrew pen, Greek μηποτε. God's prophetic warnings are a blessing to those who
are disposed to receive them and repent. Otherwise they are a curse, inasmuch as the unrepentent sinner, by rejecting God's
appeal, is, ipso facto, confirmed in his own blindness and obstinacy. See above, ch. 3, note 6.
9Prophetic names, like Immanuel, "God with us"; Shear yashtib, "A remnant shall return"; Maher shalal hash baz, "Prompt
plunder, ready loot," are deemed effective of what they signify in much the same manner as an acted prophecy is believed to
start an irreversible course of action.
12 Iliad 2:513-514: Astyoch£, παρθενος, gave sons to Ares, who visited her in secret. Sophocles, Trachiniai 1219 ff:
Hyllos shall take to himself the maiden (παρθενος) lole, his father's concubine.
13Cf. my essay on "Critical Exegesis and Traditional Hermeneutics," in St. Vladimir's Theological Quarterly 16 (1972), p.
110 and note 5, or in the acts of the Interorthodox Conference of Hermeneutics (see above, note 1).
15The RSV, following the Hebrew, reads: "Wonderful counselor" (without comma). The Greek had an obviously different
prototype: "And his name shall be called: messenger of the Great Council, μεγαλης βουλης αγγελος."
16If, as it is very probable, the young king bearer of the wonderful names is the same person as Immanuel, then the oracle in
9:27 is not the giving of a sign for the contemporaries of Isaiah, as in the prophecy of the 'almah, or the announcement of a
recovery from imminent disasters, as in the oracle of the names, but a prophecy the accomplishment of which will take place
in an indefinite, remote future.
18These expressions are borrowed from the spiritual opuscules of Bonaven-ture (Bonaventura da Fidanza), Itinerarium
mentis ad Deum (1259), and De plantatione paradisi (1270).
Chapter X
1"I have taken thee. . ." In the future in Greek: "I shall take thy hand and strengthen thee ," ενισχυσω σε. In Hebrew, "I have
formed thee," root '-j-r, to form, to model, as in Gen. 2:7.
2E. Dhorme, La Bible de la Pleiade, vol. 2 (Paris, 1959) p. 172, note 3. The words which make difficulty should not be
regarded as an interpolation. They are attested unanimously by the massoretic Hebrew, Qumran, and the versions.
3"At seeing thee" (Hebrew, LXX and Vulgate). A "difficult" lection, however preferable to the "easy" correction: "at seeing
him" (Targum and Syriac).
5"His destiny." Hebrew doro, which the versions have translated by "his generation" (γενεαν), generationem. Dhorme,
op. tit., p. 189, note 8, observes that the original meaning of the word dor is "circuit," "cycle"; by derivation, when speaking
of men, their life-cycle. Here, the destiny of the Servant; in colloquial English, the "turn" his life has taken.
6"The rich," in the collective sense. A difficult lection, but well attested. The prophets repeatedly denounce the insolent
riches of cities like Tyre and Babylon. The general meaning is that the Servant will be buried among sinners and unbelievers.
7The word "light" is lacking in the Hebrew and in the Latin Vulgate, but is attested by the LXX and the Qumran texts.
9Vincent and Abel, Jerusalem: recherches de topographie, d'archeologie et d'histoire, vol. 2 (Paris, 1926) p. 855 ff.
10The existence of a school of prophets in the tradition of Isaiah is a possibility, which might claim some support from Is
50:4 and 54:13.
11C. R. North, The Suffering Servant in Deutero-Isaiah (Oxford, 1948). Also Ç. Ç. Rowley, The Servant of the Lord and
Other Essays (London, 1952).
13Quite recently, by H. Orlinsky, "The So-Called 'Servant of the Lord' and 'Suffering Servant' in Second Isaiah," Studies on
the Second Part of the Book of Isaiah, Suppl. to Vetus Testamentum 14 (Leiden, 1967). In Acts 9:34, Philip asks of the
Ethiopian eunuch who was reading from Isaiah 53: "Of whom does the prophet speak? Of himself, or of someone else?" This
can be interpreted as an allusion to some ancient tradition identifying the Servant and the prophet. But is it not rather a mere
rhetorical question begging for the answer: "Someone else, of course."?
14"My anointed." A metaphoric anointing, indicating that Cyrus will play a providential role, like, in a former century,
Hazael of Damascus and Jehu of Samaria, both reported to have been "anointed" by Elijah (l Ki 19:15-16).
15Theodoret, anxious to save the reading "Thou art my servant, Israel" (Is 49:3), had recourse to an ingenious explication:
"Hear the words which the Lord of the Universe spoke to Christ the Master as a man, calling him Jacob and Israel according
to his visible nature." Graecorum affectionum curatio 10, PG 83:1081.
18H. Snaith, "Isaiah 40-66: A Study of the Teaching of the Second Isaiah and its Consequences," in Studies on the Second
Part of the Book of Isaiah, Suppl. to Vetus Testamentum 14 (Leiden, 1967).
19This is hardly the place to discuss the sweeping statements and cavils of some independent critics on the subject. See Fr.
R. Tournay's review of Orlinsky's essay, in Revue Biblique 75 (1968) p. 592.
20Professor Snaith, op. cit., stresses the triumph earned by the labors of the Servant, but deliberately limits his interpretation
to the horizon of the sixth century B.C., lest he be carried beyond the range of the historical method by the traditional-
liturgical insights of the Christian Church.
Chapter XI
l"Who did point." Literally; cf. the panel of the Isenheim altar in the cloister of the Unterlinden at Colmar (Alsace).
2St. Cyril of Alexandria, In Joannis Evangelium, PG 73:69.
3At the latest, prior to the version of the Septuagint and the scrolls of Qumran.
4La Bible de Jerusalem (Paris, 1956). See the "Introduction aux prophetes," especially p. 1124 ff. in the American edition.
5The religion of the city gates is a common theme in antiquity. Cf. the Assyrian descriptions of the gates of Nineveh,
Ezekiel's project of restoration of Jerusalem, and the vision of the heavenly Jerusalem in Rev 21:10ff.
6These words, taken out of context, have been abusively quoted in order to minimize or reject sacramentalism and the
function of ritual in worship.
7Verse 14 (Hebrew): "the product of Egypt and the profit of Kush." Our translation follows the Targum.
8This oracle refers to the messianic age, as was understood by the patristic and liturgical tradition. An allusion to Yahvistic
cults in the Diaspora, for instance to the Temple at Elephantine in Upper Egypt or at Leontopolis in the Delta, is rather
improbable.
9Zechariah's prophecy of the two shepherds, 11:3-17, which was certainly in the mind of Jesus, made a strong impression on
the Evangelists, who saw in it a clear announcement of the rejection of the Jews, and who related the anecdote of the thirty
pieces of silver, cast "into the treasury" (Hebrew) or "to the potter" (Targum), in connection with the episode of the remorse
of Judas (Mt 27:3-10).
10The uprising of the Maccabees, of patriotic and religious inspiration, was without a morrow. The successors of Judas and
Simon Maccabee could not withstand the dissolving influence of an all-pervading Hellenistic culture and the crafty politics
of Rome.
11The two themes, the ruin of Jerusalem and the Parousia, are intertwined, and it is difficult to tell them apart, especially in
Matthew and Mark.
12Athanasius, Adv. Arian. 3, PG 26:413. Basil, Ad Amph'il, PG 32:880. Gregory Naz., Or. 30:15, PG 36:124. Chrysostom, In
Matt. hom. 77:1, PG 58:702.
Chapter XII
2This is a matter of critical judgment. There has been a tendency to discount the attribution of the greater number of psalms
to David. The pendulum now seems to swing back the other way, and to give to the traditional position the benefit of
presumption.
3Similar indications, usually derived from the tunes of the Scottish Psalter, are found in modern Protestant hymnals.
4Their names are found in the genealogical tables of the Levites (1 Chr 25:1-7).
5Praefatio in Psalmos: "I know that some thought that the Psalter had been divided into five books.... However, following
the authority of the Hebrews, and above all of the apostles, who always speak of 'the Book of Psalms,' we claim it to be one
single volume."
6The Mishnah and the Talmud attribute to Ezra the final compilation of the Psalter.
7On the use of the Psalter in the Synagogue and in the Christian churches, see John A. Lamb, The Psalms in Christian
Worship (London, 1962).
8He-hag. Cf. the Arabic had], the pilgrimage, of which the essential rite is the circuit around the "House of Allah."
9Feast on November 3/16. "Anniversary of the Dedication of the church that is at Lydda" (notice of the Sluzhebnik).
10Most likely a reference to an ancient oil well; cf. the reports of the Greek and Roman geographers, and the "Greek fire" in
the Middle Ages.
11The "Feast of weeks" (Shebu'oth), viz. seven weeks plus one day: the fiftieth day after Passover (Pentecost). In the course
of time, this feast had declined, several of its features being transferred to the autumnal feast of Sukkoth. From the
Maccabaean period onward, the three popular festivals were Passover, Sukkoth, and the Hanukkah (Dedication of the
Temple).
12They form the eighteenth kaphisma in Byzantine usage. Under the name Psalmi Graduales, they were prescribed by Latin
Breviaries in connection with the votive office of the Virgin Mary on Saturdays.
13Seven psalms have been singled out by the Latin liturgies under the title Psalmi poenitentiales, viz. Ps 6, 32, 38, 51, 102,
130, 143.
14Drawn from Psalm 130, a pilgrim song of confident hope. It is one of the seven Psalmi poenitentiales of the Latin
liturgies, which use it profusely in the services for the dead. It is associated almost exclusively (and wrongly), by popular
imagination, with death, funerals and tombstone inscriptions: "de profundis."
15"Sacred meals," viz. ritual meals following votive sacrifices, shelamim, in which a portion of the victim was shared by the
persons who offered them.
16She'ol, etymology uncertain: the place of the dead. 'Abaddon, from the verbal root 'abad, to perish, to waste away.
Chapter XIII
1Catholic editions of the English Bible print the historical books of the post-exilic and intertestamentary periods immediately
after Kings and Chronicles.
2Cf. the radical exegesis of the early decades of the twentieth century, pitching the moral Yahvism of the prophets against the
legalism of Temple worship, under pretense of upholding the cult "in spirit and in truth."
3 A competent theological evaluation of the Sapiential Books is found in Gerhard von Rad, Wisdom in Israel (Nashville,
1972).
4On the personnel of the royal chancery, see my Manuel d'Archeologie Biblique, vol. 2 (Paris, 1953) p. 61. Similarities
between the sayings of the Book of Proverbs and the sentences of the scribe Amenemhope (ninth-sixth century B.C.),
support the thesis of the Egyptian origin of the Solomonic bureaucracy.
5A literary device employed in several psalms, for instance Ps 37, 111-112, 119, and in the Lamentations, by which the initial
letter of each verse, stich, or stanza of a poetic composition follows the order of the alphabet.
6The numerical pattern has been used repeatedly by some prophets, for instance Amos, ch. 1.
7The introduction, ch. 1-9, is certainly post-exilic. The final compilation is generally dated from the fifth century B.C. at the
earliest.
8 Ενεργεια, as St. Maximos the Confessor and St. Gregory Palamas have defined this term.
10Necromancy was strictly forbidden by the Law, cf. Lev 19:31; 20:6, 27; Deut 18:11, but it continued to be practiced in
Israel, cf. 1 Sam 28:8-25, 2 Ki 21:6, Is 8:19.
11The latter anecdote may be an amplified version of Elijah's miracle by the redactor of the Elisha stories.
12The translation of these terms by "body" and "soul" is misleading. It reads back into the Old Testament a dichotomy of
Greek origin.
13In Hebrew: "my go'el," a term of law: he who shall answer for me in justice or demand satisfaction on my behalf.
15This is being done by a number of modern theologians who have little use for the categories of Hellenism, the
traditionalism of the "Old Church," and who neglect or reject the deuterocanonical writings.