Between History and Theology—Zerubbabel and Nehemiah as Governors of Judah from the Perspective of Literary History
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Historical Context: Jewish Constitution and the Persian Period
3. The Persian Office of Governor in the Context of Jewish Tradition
3.1. Zerubbabel as Governor in Hag and Zech 1–8
3.2. Nehemiah as Governor in Neh 5 and Neh 13
4. The Persian Governorship and Jewish Identity
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | In addition to seals and coins from Yehud that bear the inscription “governor” and prove that the governor controlled the Judean economy, the correspondence between the Diaspora Judeans on the Nile peninsula Elephantine and the authorities in the home provinces is instructive in this regard (esp. TAD A4.7//A4.8). In it, the Judeans from Elephantine address the authorities in Yehud and the neighboring northern province of Samaria with the request that they send a letter to the responsible Persians in Egypt recommending the rebuilding of the Temple of Yahweh, which had been destroyed shortly before. While a first letter to the province of Yehud, mentioned in one of the documents but not preserved, had still gone to the governor Bagohi and a whole range of Jerusalem authorities, the Elephantine Judeans addressed their petition exclusively to the governor at the documented later stage of the proceedings. This proves that even in matters involving the Jewish cult, the governor ultimately had the greatest authority and decision-making authority. |
2 | Besides the safe testimonies of a governor of Yehud in the Elephantine correspondence (Bagohi) and on some of the so-called Yehud coins (Yehezkija), which date back to the advanced Persian period and the early Hellenistic period (TJC 22–25), respectively, the stamp seals from Yehud should be mentioned. They can be divided chronologically into three groups, whereby already in the group of the oldest seals, from the late 6th or early 5th centuries BCE, three types bear the inscription “governor.” Two of the governors are even attested by their names: Achzai and Yehoezer. Cf. Lipschits and Vanderhooft (2011); Kratz (2004, p. 99). |
3 | Certainly of non-Jewish origin is the name of the governor Bagohi mentioned in the Elephantine correspondence. |
4 | Particularly prominent is the statement in Isa 45 that the Persian king Cyrus takes the place of the former Davidic king as Yahweh’s anointed one. This transformation of Jewish royal ideology ensures the continuation of the relationship between Yahweh and his people beyond the end of the monarchy by adapting it to the new, universal context. |
5 | Elaborated literary-historical analyses were presented above all by (Schöttler 1987; Kratz 2004; Wöhrle 2006; Hallaschka 2011). |
6 | Cf. the detailed analysis of Hag and Zech 1–8 in (Schulz 2023, p. 21ff.). |
7 | The basic layer of the second prophetic saying comprises Hag 2:3, 4*(, 5aβ, b?), 9a; (cf. in detail Schulz 2023, p. 34ff.). |
8 | The reference to Joshua in Hag 2:4 is a later addition. Already the mention of filiation and title in the address is strange. Structurally, the passage is also out of place because the formula “declares Yahweh” that otherwise structures the verse is missing. Joshua was added here to adapt the statement to the framing verses, according to which both Zerubbabel and Joshua are responsible for the building of the temple. |
9 | Despite its editorial character, there is nothing to prevent us from assuming an early development of this epexegesis. It could have arisen in the context of the connection of the thematically related, but literarily independent traditions in Haggai and Zechariah to a two-prophet book. It can be considered whether parts of the sayings, e.g., v.7, go back to an oral tradition. (Cf., in detail, Schulz 2023, p. 49ff.). |
10 | האבן הראשה means the initial and not the keystone; cf., most recently, (Schott 2019, p. 26f.), with reference to (Rignell 1950, p. 157f.; Laato 1994, p. 59.63; Hanhart 1998, p. 248f.; Pola 2003, pp. 118–122; Hallaschka 2011, p. 225, note 425). Against, for example, (Wöhrle 2006, p. 339f.) |
11 | On the redactional history of Zech 3 and the literary-historical relationship to Zech 6:9–15, (see Schulz 2023, p. 57ff.91ff.). The basic layer of Zech 3 comprises v.1–4, 5bα2, β, 6f. It was first supplemented by v.5a, bα1, 9 (expansion of the political authority of the high priest) and then again by v.8 (correction of the idea of a politically oriented high priestly office by the promise of a Davidic sprout). |
12 | Verse 12a distinguishes itself from v.12b, 13, which are coherent with the people’s fear and Yahweh’s promise of help; cf., also, the terminological differences: Verse 12a speaks of “all the remnant of the people” (כל שארית העם); v.12b, on the other hand, is content simply with “people” (עם). While Haggai in v.12a (as elsewhere) is Yahweh’s prophet, v.13 calls him a messenger of Yahweh. Verse 12a is also in tension with v.14. Verse 14 names Zerubbabel’s title of governor, which is odd following v.12a and cannot be explained intentionally. Verse 12a may be older than v.12b, 13 on the one hand and v.14 on the other. On the redactional history of Hag 1:12–15a (see in detail Schulz 2023, p. 29ff.). |
13 | The Davidic descent of Zerubbabel, already established in Hag 1:12a, may have favored this transmission. |
14 | These are certainly Fortschreibungen and not to be considered as originally independent texts. Cf., however, (Reinmuth 2002, p. 328ff.); against (Williamson 1985, pp. xxiv–xxviii; Wright 2004, p. 163ff.; Oswald 2009, p. 230f.; Rothenbusch 2012), denies an editorial character. |
15 | The title is otherwise encountered only in Neh 12:26 in the context of a list at the end of which Ezra, the priest and scribe, and Nehemiah, the governor, form a double leadership. On the secondary character of this verse, see, for example, (Kratz 2004, p. 104; Oswald 2009, p. 253ff.). In the similarly late chapters Neh 8–10, Nehemiah bears the (enigmatic) title התרשתא in two instances. |
16 | Sometimes further literary-critical distinctions are made within Neh 5:1–19. (Wright 2004, p. 171ff.), for example, considers 5:14ff. to be older than 5:1–13. The opposite view is taken by (Kratz 2000, p. 70), who assumes that the cancellation of the debt was added to the context of the memorandum “before or at the same time as 5:14–19.” The basis for this is the observation that the social reforms in vv. 1–13 are only loosely related to Nehemiah’s selflessness in the office of governor in vv. 14–19, and that the correspondences with Neh 13 within Neh 5 are conspicuously concentrated in vv. 1–13. The question of the literary history of Neh 5 can be left aside here, since it is not relevant to the assessment of the office of governor in Neh. In principle, all options are conceivable: Verses 14–19 may be of the same age, older, or even younger than v.1–13. In the case of a literary-historical differentiation, then, Nehemiah would either have been made governor first and subsequently the office would have been further idealized, or Nehemiah would have been more strongly idealized first and subsequently made governor. With regard to the profiling of the office of governor, the question is beside the point: in the end, Neh presents the office of governor as an ideal, Torah-compliant political leadership office. |
17 | On the Aramaic documents in Ezra and the question of their authenticity, see (Schwiderski 2000; Grabbe 2006). |
18 | While the governor texts in Hag and Zech as well as in Neh may have been written in the late Persian period, Ezr 1 and Ezr 7 are assumed to have been written in the Hellenistic period. |
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Schulz, S. Between History and Theology—Zerubbabel and Nehemiah as Governors of Judah from the Perspective of Literary History. Religions 2023, 14, 531. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14040531
Schulz S. Between History and Theology—Zerubbabel and Nehemiah as Governors of Judah from the Perspective of Literary History. Religions. 2023; 14(4):531. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14040531
Chicago/Turabian StyleSchulz, Sarah. 2023. "Between History and Theology—Zerubbabel and Nehemiah as Governors of Judah from the Perspective of Literary History" Religions 14, no. 4: 531. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14040531
APA StyleSchulz, S. (2023). Between History and Theology—Zerubbabel and Nehemiah as Governors of Judah from the Perspective of Literary History. Religions, 14(4), 531. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14040531