“We Are the Homeowners”: Sacred Textuality and the Social Structure of Jewish Religious Nationalism in Israel and the West Bank
Abstract
:1. Introduction: “We Are the Homeowners”!
2. Homecoming and Other Anthropological Concerns
3. A Tale of Two Biblical Seminars
4. The Bible in Israeli Religious Zionism
5. Two Forms of Biblical Study
5.1. Revolutionary and Intellectual
For Bin-Nun, one of the original proponents of the “Bible at Eye-Level” methodology, this fear of new interpretations is nullified (perhaps can only be nullified) through the Jewish national renewal in the Land of Israel. As he further notes.The flowering of Torah and faith in the Land of Israel is conditioned on the ability to vanquish fear…. In the study house there exists a fear of “new readings”, and other dangers, a fear that silences every new and fresh thought.
Here, a metaphysical relationship exists between homecoming (“our feet stand in the and of prophecy”) and the sacred scriptures. The argument here is not that the return to the Land of Israel gives adherents access to prophetic insight. Rather, for Bin-Nun, a return to the land of Biblical prophecy creates the conditions for an intellectual revolution in Biblical studies. The study of the sacred scriptures can take on new horizons and can become more authoritative only within the Land of Israel.We found ourselves with the renewed ‘Torah of the Land of Israel’. With what the creator of the world graced us with his wisdom, foresight, grace and knowledge, and … in the wondrous miracle of our resurrection as a people, and so we were able to discover great and hidden insights and innovations that could not be imagined by previous generations that were much stronger than us. It is not that we are greater than they were—god forbid we should think that—but rather they lived “amidst the exile” (Ezekiel 1:1), and their whole world was subject to the whims of evil nations … and for us, in the merit of those persecuted generations, our feet stand in the land of Biblical prophecy and we see before our eyes the wondrous works of God in the ingathering of the exiles…
5.2. Mystical and Prophetic
For Tau, idol worship, and perhaps polytheism in general, emerges out of what he sees as a pure desire for an unmediated relationship with the divine. Notably, the same is true for monotheism. Idol worship then served as the context through which prophetic monotheism emerged within the Bible and ancient Israel. Then, the study of these sacred texts becomes not just an intellectual pursuit but also a mystical push towards uncovering that “hidden” and instinctive state of prophecy that was lost after the destruction of the First Temple (Shai 2003, p. 106). Yet, this effort is always impartial and incomplete. An adherent —no matter how pious—cannot truly and fully experience prophecy, and thus is barred from truly understanding the sacred texts.The desire for idol worship with all its dark results operates on the same instinct as faith. At the moment when she is shinning forth in all her naturalness and power, she also loses the ability to train for wisdom and justice and all of the feelings of life both in morals and in actions. In such a state, this instinct devolves and turns into ugly idol worship. But that same instinct of the soul when it lands on a ground of purity and sanctity … can reach prophecy, which is a hidden sanctity.
Rabbi Tau goes on to highlight the mysterious, hidden, and irrational aspects of Jewish sacred texts that cannot easily be divorced from biblical study. “There are those”, he continues,We can just take a general understanding from the Torah and prophecy, just what is possible to understand at our level of wisdom. We nevertheless study and explicate for ourselves, but truly one who is not a prophet, cannot grasp prophecy … one who is lacking that supernal light, cannot reveal the true light of prophecy.
Who believe that it is possible to approach the study of the Bible with human rationality, with a mind that is devoid of all faith and sanctity, with a dry secular academic perspective, where the researcher stand above the matter … This is a mistake [such a researcher] will not gain anything from this.
This rabbinic tradition is the closest one can arrive to that hidden prophecy which is a marker of a mystical and instinctive Jewish return to the Land of Israel.Even though we are not prophets, we have merited the rabbinic sages who were close to prophecy … the knowledge that through the rabbinic sages one sees the depth [of the Bible], is an essential understanding.
The author here is making a play on the Hebrew word Govah—literally height. He is claiming that someone who follows the Bible at Eye Level approach is little more than a mental midget. On the other side, those who teach the Biblical texts using an ‘eye-level’ approach tend to look askance at the ways in which some contemporary rabbinic figures can be so uncritical, not just of the ancient sages but of the current rabbinic power structures within Israeli religious Zionism itself. As one Bible teacher said in a recent interview,In our generation, one that disguises a knowledge of torah with searches on internet databases, allow themselves to embarrass the great and wise elders of the nation, requires a sharp response. Whoever thinks there is a place for the ‘Bible at Eye-Level’ signals about himself that he has eyes, but cannot see. A [kind of] spiritual bat and shows that he has no height.
This is especially present in Rabbi Tzvi Tau and his students, that they are the only legitimate way of reading Rav Kook and [his son] Rav Tzvi Yehuda and anyone else is just not authoritative, therefore don’t learn them. It’s sort of a cult as far as I can see, the inner circle is sort of a cult and act like a cult.
Interestingly, by focusing on their lack of beards, Rabbi Aviner even implicitly defends their more “modern” philosophical outlook along with their more modern appearance.They aren’t [just] called “rabbi”, but rather wise sages [talmidei chachamim]. By the way, apparently, they are wise sages without beards. And it’s not permissible to disgrace them God Forbid just because we think they are mistaken about biblicalstudy. That is also an error. Rather, Rabbis sometimes say things which are incorrect.
6. Sacred-Textual Interpretation as Homecoming
For Aviner, the Bible and its heroes represent the pietistic kernel of the Jewish national consciousness. As he goes on to describe these heroes, “Their sublime character is embedded within us, it is a national, psychological, spiritual, [and] hereditary treasure for our people” (Aviner and Bazak 2012). In this way, reading the Biblical texts through the lens of the rabbinic tradition of interpretation works to safeguard that inherent, mystical kernel of national consciousness.Perceiving the Bible at eye-level belies the possibility of rising above [eye-level] and to cleave to the sanctity of our national heroes. In order to criticize them, one must be pure, sacred, and without blemish … It is not a coincidence that the master of the universe decreed in his wisdom that they were the first to constitute the nation, that is to say that our history begins with worldly giants…
Here, Rabbi Tau is referring to how some religious Zionist Teacher’s colleges make use of archaeological data—in this case, the Mesha Stela’s references to ancient Israel—in their readings of biblical texts. For him, such evidence, even if it were to strengthen the biblical narrative, is simply irrelevant. In his view, it is disgraceful to use immoral and hateful individuals (like Mesha, King of Moab, or Arafat, for that matter) to cultivate spiritual and pietistic experiences.They [academic scholars] bring a corrupt and drunk goy [Mesha the Moabite King], who glorifies himself with some writing that describes how he killed Jews … that’s considered an extremely important historical source?! That’s what we have to bring to study the scriptures?! … Even if these kinds of archaeological findings were to coincide with what is written in the Bible, so what? Arafat said something, is that supposed to interest us? Maybe in another thousand years they will bring his words as an important historical source … they will say with wonder, “here was an important man, one of the leaders of the area…” What do we have with them?! This is just going off the path, a disgrace and a humiliation.
For Cherlow, there is a moral price to pay for a style of learning that places Biblical heroes on pietistic pedestals. In this way, the propensity to whitewash the character flaws of Biblical figures has the capacity to teach individuals to whitewash other ethical aspects of their lives. From this perspective, the rational ability to revolutionize Biblical study in the Land of Israel through eye-level textual analysis bears its own kind of pietistic impetus.Not just that, what is even worse however is that it [the style of study] habituates the individual to whitewash, to deceive, to cut corners, to do anything else, just so our forefathers will come out unblemished [in our study]. And your obligation to the truth, to honesty, to fairness, to [one’s ability to] cleaving [to God] to all those things are impaired. And your sensitivity to your other relations, to a man and his friend, which are [also] problematic are [also] impaired. It’s not good to study Torah like this.
For Rabbi Kashtiel, the Bible, in a very practical sense, is supposed to impart to students’ lessons of piety and morality. Perhaps echoing Maimonidean negative theology—as well as his teacher Rabbi Tau—Kashtiel argued that while one cannot fully experience prophecy, the contemporary reader can understand piety and morality (Benor 1995; Seeman 2008, p. 205). It is on the level of piety that adherents can garner a taste of the mystery of biblical prophecy. A return to that direct, unmitigated, and pure era of biblical prophecy is the ultimate goal of this kind of pietistic homecoming. Rabbi Bazak, in his response, departed from this trajectory, however,And certainly not to consider how a prophet erred … secondly when I study bible and when I teach the bible the center of the weight that I think is important, is what happens to us, what happens to me. I don’t like and don’t think that I can talk about Elisha, but what can I learn. I want to learn from the Shunamite woman her innocence, and her fear of heaven. I want to learn, from Elisha that he has a great desire to give, but one always has to remember the source [of that desire] to give.
Here, Bazak argues for an interpretive approach that places the meanings implicit in the biblical text itself at the center of analysis. In a recent interview, Rabbi Bazak described himself as the ‘second generation of [rabbinic] Bible scholars, for whom a distinct focus on the centrality of the ‘Land of Israel’ is less important than a faithful and straightforward reading of the scriptures. Yet, resting behind this almost academic outlook is the near revolutionary capacity to approach the biblical text free from the pietistic burden of rabbinic stricture. It is not that Rabbi Bazak is especially opposed to piety; rather, it is that piety must emerge out of an unmitigated intellectual engagement with the text itself. For him and his colleagues, pietistic homecoming emerges out of a straightforward, rational, and intellectual experience with the Biblical texts, one that is unburdened by traditional diasporic rabbinic interpretation.This is the main point. When we approach an article of the Bible, what are we doing? Do we ask, like Rabbi Kashtiel says, How can I improve myself? What can I learn from Elisha? Or, do I approach the Bible without any preconceived notions about what I’ll find there, and I approach the article and read it and learn it and try to ask not what I want—that’s a problematic word—but what the bible wants to tell me.
7. Conclusions
For Diamond, the Jewish engagement with texts was a mark of a lack of cultural ‘holism’. Jewish experiences were a series of theological abstractions which lacked a real-world material quality. The implication here is that—in Diamond’s analysis—Jewishness escapes anthropological investigation precisely because Jewish texts cannot properly stand in for material culture. It follows that if texts cannot serve as the basis of “culture” (and thus a basis of anthropological interest), then text-based societies (like Judaism, though not exclusively so) can never be fully represented within the anthropological cannon. By contrast, this article sees notions of homecoming, authenticity, and landedness as a sacred textual category, one that is albeit linked to geography (in this instance, Israel and the West Bank) but not reduced to it.What is a Jew? Who am I? The answer: A people without a culture (a text is not a culture), without a society, haunted by archaic references, trying to live in abstractions.
In this way, Appadurai stresses the importance of engaging with the local cultural minutiae, which are so influential to new digital forms of communication. This article has looked at how Jewish religious Zionists in Israel and the West Bank use sacred Biblical texts to define what it means to return to an ancient, mystical, and mythical homeland. Following Appadurai, I argue that to view sacred texts as operating to mediate between visions of national homecoming, means structurally delving into the specific minutiae of how those texts are actually interpreted within social contexts.It will always have some discontinuities, some heterogeneities, which is what always underlies the need for mediation and communication of any type. If we understood each other perfectly face-to-face, presumably we would cease to speak: in the end we would just look understandingly at each other … But the question of how these things shape real life worlds is, I think, still critical.
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Bible Study is also a mandated educational component in both secular and religious state-mandated Jewish high schools |
2 | From the Hebrew term Ba’ul which also means ‘deflowered’, or the opposite of ‘virginity’. |
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Stern, N. “We Are the Homeowners”: Sacred Textuality and the Social Structure of Jewish Religious Nationalism in Israel and the West Bank. Religions 2023, 14, 746. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14060746
Stern N. “We Are the Homeowners”: Sacred Textuality and the Social Structure of Jewish Religious Nationalism in Israel and the West Bank. Religions. 2023; 14(6):746. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14060746
Chicago/Turabian StyleStern, Nehemia. 2023. "“We Are the Homeowners”: Sacred Textuality and the Social Structure of Jewish Religious Nationalism in Israel and the West Bank" Religions 14, no. 6: 746. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14060746
APA StyleStern, N. (2023). “We Are the Homeowners”: Sacred Textuality and the Social Structure of Jewish Religious Nationalism in Israel and the West Bank. Religions, 14(6), 746. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14060746