Thursday 21 February 2013

Exegesis: Babel Narrative

As with many Biblical stories that people do not know what to do with, the Babel narrative has often been associated with stories told to children at Sunday school or before they fall asleep in their beds. However, a closer reading of the passage considering its content and context reveals a narrative concerned with: providing an etiology for language plurality, satirical mockery, and the final installment of the events that transpire due to the fall. Just because there is no graphic violence or explicit sexuality, does not mean that this passage should be swept under the rug. People are rarely concerned with the Babel narrative, perhaps because it is seen as a simple etiology, or perhaps because its content is not as fantastic as the flood narrative, there are no pervading unanswerable questions, did God really create everything out of nothing? It is perhaps for this reason that we can truly draw out some fresh perspectives, not only on the individual passage but also on humanity as a whole. The argument this paper is attempting to state is that Genesis 11:1-9 is speaking of more than just the etiology of language, but also how society as a whole, with all our accomplishments and attempts to re-establish our relationship with God, without His guiding lovingkindness, are fruitless. 
The Babel narrative is the final installment of the primeval history section, that is the section that does not deal specifically with the nation that is Israel. In attempting to find structure in the primeval history, J. Blenkinsopp argues that “[g]enesis 1-11 reflects the structure of the Atrahasis Epic, with an introduction (Gen 2:1-3; cf Atrahasis Epic 1.1-351), three threats (Genesis 2:4-3:24; 4:23-24; 6:11-9:29; cf. Atrahasis Epic 1.352-415; 2.1.1-5.21; 2.5.22-3.6.4) and a conclusion (Gen 11:1-32; cf. Atrahasis Epic 3.6.5-8.18), a sequence that he calls the ‘ancestor epic pattern.’”# Even though all of the individual stories can function independently, the genealogies act as a literary sinew that connects all of the narratives together. The lack of human character development allows the reader to focus on the character of God and on the subject matter of Genesis, telling us who we are and God’s disposition towards us. The primeval history is introduced by the blessings and commandments issued in Genesis 1 to be fruitful and multiply, fill the earth and subdue it, and have dominion over the animals. The three threats in some way or another are antonyms of these blessings, with the exception of the command to multiply, humanity has apparently no inkling of desire to disobey that directive. All of the threats build up in anticipation to the conclusion brought together in the Babel narrative, which finally sets the stage for God’s decisive action in calling on Abram through whom He will bless all the nations.   
It is of first importance to understand the context of the passage at hand. The two genealogies that bookend the Babel narrative are important both individually and together. The genealogy found in chapter 10 explains humanity’s connection together, that all came from Noah. God desired to use Noah as a new Adam for creation, with the brief episode of Ham’s debasement of his father the story is quick to convey that even when God starts over again, creation and specifically humanity is stilled riddled with the effects of the fall. The genealogy we find here is what is referred to as a segmented genealogy, which is intended to “fill out the families of characters who no longer will play a central role in the pentateuchal story.”# This leads us to understand that the people in this genealogy are no longer of importance to the narrative, and indeed with the proceeding genealogy in 11:10-26 being linear, that is it “connects characters at the center of the unfolding of the plot.”# However, what is of interest to us here is the preceeding genealogy, in that it provides us with an explanation of the surrounding cultures in the mesopotamian area, not to be taken literally necessarily, but this being the final installation of the primeval history, there are notes of transition from out-of-time accounts to real life situations. One scholar suggests that we understand the segmented genealogy in chapter 10 to be an explanation of the surrounding cultures. The genealogy is first concerned with the genealogy of Japheth, after this account there is little or no reference of the descendants of Japheth. For instance Tarshish is used in the book of Jonah to reference the place Jonah was escaping to, the notion is that he was fleeing from the call of God to a place as far away as any, Jonah might as well have been trying to get to the moon. The point is that Tarshish is a place far from Israel/Nineveh, so in Genesis 10, it is an explanation of cultures and nations far from Israel, ones that are ultimately of no consequence to Israel. The descendants of Ham however include people like Canaan. The obvious significance of the land of Canaan to the people of Israel is rather axiomatic, this signifies that the people who derive from Ham are those who are of immediate concern to the people of Israel. This correlates with the proceeding curse applied to Ham after the debacle in the tent with his father Noah. Finally, the genealogy gets to Shem who was the recipient of a blessing from Noah. It is with Shem that we are most concerned with because in 11:10-26 we read of the connection between Shem and Terah, the father of Abram. The Shem genealogy is divided in both accounts at Peleg for in vv25 we read, the name of the one was Peleg, for in his days the earth was divided. the account goes on then to describe the descendants of Joktan, the brother of Peleg. It is with this division that chapter 11 speaks of. Although, chapter 11 is not the first mention of Babel. In the account of the sons of Ham, we read that Cush was the father of Nimrod, who established the kingdoms of Babylon(or Babel), Erech, Accad and Calneh, which are in the land of Shinar which is the area that Genesis 11 is concerned with. Nimrod’s name literally means “we shall rebel,”# indicating the rebellious example that we are to unpack in chapter 11. With this background information in mind, we can now approach the text at hand.
 Chapter 11 opens up with the word ‘Now’ indicating a literary break from the previous section. This phrase shows up continually after genealogies and narratives to pronounce a new direction in the text. We see this all throughout the primeval section of Genesis in the garden(2:5, 10), in the fall(3:1, 20), with Cain and Abel(4:1) and with Noah(5:29, 6:1, 11). It is a common literary marking found all over the Old and New Testaments, so in that commonality there is nothing particularly unique in its use in this passage, only that we know we are dealing with a narrative break in the text. The text continues that the whole earth or world used one language and the same words. This draws our attention to the unity of the people of the earth at a time before the diversifying of Noah’s family. Genesis 10:5, 20, 31-32 all indicate that the diversification of language had happened already. However, the ambiguity of verse 2 regarding who these people are who built this city is perhaps pointing to the fact that this truly is an etiological explanation for the development of language at a time before Noah’s sons scattered, but after the flood.
Verse 2 tells us that they found a plain in the land of Shinar and settled there, the land where Nimrod in 10:10 is said to have established the great cities and civilizations of Babylon and Assyria. The NASB says as they journeyed east, whereas the NRSV says as they migrated from the east. Regardless of where they were coming from, they found themselves at the plains of Shinar. Hamilton notes that whether they are going east or coming from the east is moot, “they are east of Canaan, east of Eden, this is the judgment bestowed upon Adam and Eve.# Whoever these people are they are travelling in the greater Mesopotamian area and they are under God’s judgment. They come to this land of Shinar and they decide to settle there, the correlation of travelling east of Eden and settling at this place they have come to cannot be overlooked. This is, ultimately is the primary threat of the text, that they are congregating at one place, disobeying God’s command to fill the earth and subdue it. From this disobedience comes the idea to build a tower and a city which we will see momentarily. The focal point is not the city or the tower ultimately, they are only bi-products of this initial act of disobedience.
Verse 3 really begins the satirical discourse regarding the decisions of these people who settle at Shinar. The key phrases here ‘they said’ and ‘come’ are part of the chiastic emphasis that we will unpack after the exegete, for now it is good enough to identify it as an echo of God’s speaking creation into existence. But as a father might construct banks and buildings of residence in the coordination of city planning, these people are attempting something like what a toddler might dream up as he plays with his lego. They use tar for mortar and burnt brick instead of stone. Hamilton mentions that “Even the means for building the structure is reference to humanity’s impotence, they couldn’t even use good Palestinian stone, they had to use man made brick.”# Verse 4 we read their intention, “They said, ‘Come, let us build for ourselves a city, and a tower whose top will reach into heaven, and let us make for ourselves a name, otherwise we will be scattered abroad over the face of the whole earth.’” This is most likely referring to the Babylonian Ziggurat, the temple of Marduk. This is an attempt to reverse the effects of the fall, that humanity would try and build for themselves a way into God’s rest. We read some type of man made tree of life, one that would allow their name to live forever, and their name does indeed live forever but not in the way they expected. “The making a name,” says Hamilton, “and the prevention of scattering cannot be separated.”# Perhaps this is telling us that humanity wanted to provide for themselves a way of re-entering righteousness without the help of God, or perhaps they so desperately wanted to re-enter relationship with God that this was the only way they could think of, a self provision of the mountain of God, a type of synthetic Sinai. In the NIV the name for themselves is predicated on the building of the tower and so that they will not be scattered. In NASB and NRSV the making the name for ourselves is separated from the action of construction, the name they make for themselves is not necessarily due to the building of the tower. Regardless, the language indicates that if they don’t do either of these things, they will be scattered. So the emphasis in the NIV is on making a name for themselves while in the NASB/NRSV it is on them not wanting to be scattered. This also lends to the chiastic structure of the passage in that the fears of the people echo the judgment that is about to be bestowed upon them.
Verse 5 is the hinge of the passage, changing from human endeavour to the response of God and as such, it brings to mind a number of significant concepts. First, continuing with the satirical commentary, “Despite man’s attempt to build a tower to the heavens, God must still come down to see.”# Man’s greatest achievement when set alongside God’s omnipotence makes man look quite impotent. Second, when we read that God came down, we must think of this in two senses. The image of God coming down presents us with the pretense of judgment just as we see in the case of Sodom and Gomorrah, God is about to act in response to the sinfulness of man. However the idea is also similar to those instances of God coming down to mount Sinai, God coming down to Aaron and Miriam at the tent, God coming down to humanity through the incarnation. God coming down to see on one hand it is a response to humanity’s rebellion and on the other hand God’s action is an antidote rather than punishment, always provisional, never retributive. It is God’s way of providing for humanity, a way of restricting the effects of sin, just as we have see with the mark of Cain. God is coming down to see, He is about to do something.
In verse 6 we see how God reacts to what humanity is up to. The phrase ‘the Lord said’ echoes the actions of those who built the tower in verses 3 and 4. Here there is discrepancy in the text regarding complete/incomplete language. The NIV says If as one people speaking the same language they have begun to do this, then nothing they plan to do will be impossible for them. NASB states, They are one people, and they all have the same language. And this is what they began to do, and now nothing which they purpose to do will be impossible for them. NRSV, They are one people,... and this is only the beginning of what they will do. There seems to be some translation disagreement going on here. Regardless, the unification of one nation and tongue means limitless possibilities. If we look forward we see God covenants with Abram, bringing blessing through Abram to all the nations. That He will bless all nations indicates that this unification is not the best situation for humanity, at least not through the means that they are attempting. Looking at the one people with the one language, God says this is only the beginning of what they will do; nothing that they propose to do will now be impossible for them. This is not a fear, that what they strive to achieve is in some way threatening God, rather it shows more of a concern for humanity. In a sense we see God worried not for Himself but for humanity, just as a parent shows concern for a wayward child.
The solution to humanity’s rebellion is again brought to bear through God’s action. The antidote lies in verse 7, “Come, let us go down, and confuse their language there, so that they will not understand one another’s speech.” Brueggemann points out that this should be understood as “They do not listen to one another,” rather than “They cannot understand.” Just as in Genesis 42:21, “failed speech is linked to the disappearance of trust. Not listening is related to death in relationships.”# To which Kidner adds, “It makes it clear that unity and peace are not ultimate goods: better division than collective apostasy.”#
The result of God’s judgment is found in verse 8, So the LORD scattered them abroad from there over the face of the whole earth; and they stopped building the city. Here we read that the very thing that they were hoping to avoid in building the city is brought to them through the building of the city. And in verse 9, the bestowment of the name, therefore its name was called Babel, because there the LORD confused the language of the whole earth; and from there the LORD scattered them abroad over the face of the whole earth. Here the connection is made to Babel, that is Babylon. Through this we understand that Babylon was under the judgment of God and that Babylon’s greatest accomplishment was really their greatest downfall, a final satirical blow to the national powerhouse.
As I had mentioned before, the entire passage has a marked chiastic emphasis to it, with verse 5 being the hinge looking like this:
A - vv. 1 The whole earth used the same language
    B - vv. 3b Come, let us
        C - vv. 4a Build for ourselves a city, and tower
            D - vv. 5a The LORD came down
        C1 - vv. 5b the city and the tower which the sons of men had built
    B - vv. 7 Come, let Us
A - vv. 9 the language of the whole earth
With every action that is made, there is a response issued from God in order to correct humanity’s blunders or reinstitute God’s decree.
The last question we must address is what theological insights in this passage can we apply ourselves to? In his introduction to the commentary on the primeval history Victor Hamilton directs our minds to the underlying, overarching narrative saying,
Babel is a demonstration of the folly of the most illustrious civilization and religious system of the day, the indication that without God’s blessing on the human situation, humanity is without hope... If it (the primeval history) wants to show us that man’s plight is the product of his own disobedience and indeed is bound to worsen without divine intervention, Genesis 1-11 is providing a picture of the world at odds with mesopotamia and modern understanding.
The entire story of Babel builds up to the pronouncement of Babylon. Although the effect is lost in English translations, many of the words have this alliteration escalation of babbling Babylon. The narrative, operating on an isolated plain proves to show that man’s greatest achievements are vanity, but Babylon’s more so. Hamilton also makes note that, “unlike creation and flood, no good correlating story exists in other Near Eastern societies.” However, as we have already pointed out, the concept of building a tower that reaches to the heavens is similar to what the Babylonians attempted to do with their Ziggurats. The passage’s place within the primeval history as the concluding episode of humanity’s attempts to frustrate God’s creative efforts even after the flood is a continuation of the theme of creation, decreation, recreation. Regardless of man’s attempts to achieve independent dominion over creation and even God, God will continue to provide divine antidotes to the human problem. The primeval history seeks, especially with the genealogy that follows the Babel narrative, to connect Abraham and eventually Israel with the rest of creation, making the assertion that Israel is really nothing special in comparison to the rest of creation. God does not choose to establish Israel for any reason other than that He loves them and the rest of His creation. Within it’s place in the rest of the canon, the primeval account tells us more about God’s disposition towards humanity than it does about God’s creative acts. The primeval history connects the reader to a time when no one was around, relaying divine knowledge about the etiologies of things people might ask of themselves, through mythological language. As the concluding account of the primeval history, Babel plays a more prominent role than many would give it credit.
For Luther, the root of this passage is in Nimrod, the story ultimately begins with him. Luther draws a parallel between Nimrod and Cain, in that Nimrod establishes a city for himself the way that Cain establishes a ‘false church.’ Luther does not draw conclusions about the actual tower, for this is mere conjecture, however, Luther is interested in understanding the sins of the people who build the tower. “I believe their motive is expressed in the words: ‘Come, let us build ourselves a city and a tower.’ These words are evidence of smug hearts, which put their trust in the things of this world without trusting God and despise the church because it lacks all power and pomp.”# Ultimately their sin is extraordinary smugness and contempt for Yahweh. We should keep in mind that for Luther, everything in the Bible has a worldly equivalent in his time. For him, the sons of Ham who establish the city are likened to the Turkish people and the Papacy. Luther also comments on the fact that God allowed the men to build, or begin to build this tower, “[b]ut after the sin has been committed, God ‘comes down’; that is, then at last it is realized that He is at hand and is angry.”#  Finally, it is good to understand how Luther understands the consequences of the punishment brought through God’s judgment. He observes that the church of his day and the government are not untouched by these consequences. For the Western church is cut off from the East, and the German nation is slowly being taken by the Turks. “Thus we also are punished by the confusion of languages, and ever since Babel was built all kingdoms have felt this plague.”#
Unfortunately, the Babel account is often overlooked when people refer to the primeval account. The juicy bits involve bringing order out of chaos, and creating material things from nothing. People rarely want to hear about the time some folks tried to build a tower but couldn’t because God confused them. That story is  just for children. While on the surface it may seem like just an ancient, prescientific etiology of language, there is more going on in the text than many realize. Satirical jabs at ruling powerhouses, the undoing of creation by man. We have seen again, the efforts that God goes through in trying to re-establish His relationship with us. Perhaps the greatest part is that you can now tell your kids the beautiful story of Babel.


Opere Citato

Alexander, T. Desmond, and David W. Baker, eds. Dictionary of the Old Testament: Pentateuch. Downers Grove, Ill: InterVarsity Press, 2003.

Brueggermann, Walter. Genesis. Interpretation: A Bible Commentary for Teaching and Preaching. Atlanta: John Knox Press, 1982.

Hamilton, Victor P. The Book of Genesis: Chapters 1-17. New International Commentary on the Old Testament. Grand Rapids: W.B. Eerdmans, 1990.
   
Kidner, Derek. Genesis: An Introduction and Commentary. Tyndale Old Testament Commentaries. London: Tyndale, 1967.

Pelikan, Jaroslav and Daniel E. Poellot, eds. Lectures on Genesis Chapters 6-14, vol. 5 of Luther’s Works. Saint Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1960.

Book Review: Peter Enns, Inspiration & Incarnation


In his book Inspiration and Incarnation: Evangelicals and the problem of the Old Testament, Peter Enns addresses three primary questions that evangelical circles concern themselves with: the historicity of the primeval account, the concern of biblical contradiction, and the New Testament author’s use of the Old. From the outset, Enns states, “I want to contribute to a growing opinion that what is needed is to move beyond both sides by thinking of better ways to account for some of the data, while at the same time having a vibrant, positive view of Scripture as God’s word.” An effort that I feel he accomplishes. The problem I face is critically interacting with what Enns says, without repeating everything the way he says it. Thus I will employ the critique provided by G.K. Beale, and explain why this approach to raising objections is misguided. However, since this paper is being written for a class concerned with the Pentateuch and given the lack of space I am afforded, I will limit my observations to Enns’ first chapter on the historicity of the Old Testament.
Enns is ultimately concerned with helping evangelicals understand some of the difficulties that come with reading the Old Testament. The book is divided into three sections dealing with three primary questions. First, Enns explains why so much of the Old Testament, especially the Pentateuch, looks so similar to other documents that come from the Ancient Near East. His concern in digging deeper on this issue is that many evangelicals understand that for Scripture to be Holy or inspired, it must be unique. Enns argues that what the Old Testament is saying is closely linked to how it is being said. Second, Enns labels as diversity, what look like contradictions to others. Claiming the way these various occurrences operate cannot be pigeon holed or merely swept under the rug, Enns argues that in those cases where the Bible seems to be saying two opposing things, one must understand that, “the question is not whether they are correct, but when.”# The author points out that two opposing statements can both be correct, perhaps not in the same sense at the same time, but there are various times when either could be true. Third, the author focuses on how the New Testament writers sometimes seem as though they are misrepresenting the Old Testament. It sometimes seems out of place for the New Testament writers to take the Old Testament so far out of context. However, Enns argues that what many of the writers are doing here is utilizing the ambiguity of language to draw out profound theological statements about what God has done. Doing such a thing with the Old Testament witness does not mean that the interpretation now stands on weak ground, rather the referred passage now has a deeper more profound meaning.
Enns is offering us responses to common contemporary questions that have more often than not been answered by brash drastic arguments or dismissal. Many of these alternative responses that Enns provides appear to be fuller arguments than what have been commonly offered. Rather than the Hodgian hermeneutic of plain text reading which assumes the necessity of historical veracity of the text and leads many to immature understandings of the Scriptural witness, Enns offers us an incarnational hermeneutic that is biblically consistent with the incarnation of Christ. The Hodgian explanation of such issues that Enns addresses look like this: there must have been an historical Adam because the Bible is true, there are no inconsistencies in Scripture because God’s revelation is perfect, the New Testament interpretation of the Old Testament is sometimes different than what we would expect because they were inspired and we are sinful. In the end, these are not really answers at all but ways of shirking the responsibility of ripened exegesis.
    Enns’ underlying argument is that reading the Old Testament through an incarnational lens is more attune with who we know God to be. Since God chose to save us through human means, it would be safe to say that Christ would also choose to relay the news of that salvation to us through human means as well. While it is impossible to read the Bible free of objective opinion, it is important to make sure we are not shoe-horning Scripture into a 21st century modern interpretation. We often take the limited witness of Scripture and derive modern day answers for modern day questions, which is a desperately poor way of reading Scripture. It is as though we expect a microwave to keep our food cold, or a bricklayer to install our cabinets.
    I am much more willing to accept Enns’ thesis, if only because I came to the table with a broad understanding of these types of arguments. Some of the things He said are bold and tricky points to make, especially in Peter Enns’ position at a neo-conservative school such as Westminster Theological Seminary, where he taught at the time of the book’s publication. Since then Enns has been suspended and fired for the content in this book. Such action is perhaps an indication of what is at stake, or of some people’s reaction, regardless of how over dramatized said action is, when people feel backed into an intellectual corner. Although, this is not a paper on Peter Enns but on his book. Since I would be in agreement with what he says already, I will solicit the help of Enns’ critics in understanding the implications of what Enns is saying for the neo-conservative G.K. Beale.
Following the publication of the book, the response of the evangelical academic community was drastic, pop criticism was ruthlessly biased and scholarly reaction was concerning. One such example of the latter is voiced in G.K. Beale’s article Myth, History, and Inspiration: A review article of Inspiration and Incarnation by Peter Enns. In his article, Beale makes it quite quite clear that he is concerned with whether or not Enns believes that the biblical witness refers to historical events. In a sense, Beale circumvents what Enns is trying to say by forcing Enns to answer what he is not trying to answer. Enns is not concerned with the question, is it true? But, rather how is it true? Despite the fact that Beale recognizes what Enns is saying, Beale continues to force Enns’ response onto uncovered ground.
It appears fairly clear that the distinction between the ANE mythical accounts of creation and the flood and those of the Genesis accounts is not in the former containing non-history and the latter representing reliable historical events, but the difference is to highlight the biblical God as true in contrast to the false ANE gods.#
This is precisely why I agree with Enns. Our concern in biblical scholarship is not to force theological propositions onto the text, molesting it for our own purposes, rather it is to stand in what the text is stating and respond theologically as honestly as we can. Beale seems to be more concerned with upholding evangelical doctrine and reading Scripture through the lens of established man made assumptions about the text, than he is about what Scripture is trying to say and why.
    I am far more concerned with understanding what the Old Testament has to say than I am concerned with understanding it through the lens of evangelicalism. Enns is offering us a hermeneutic that does just this. While Beale’s concern of what the implications of Enns’ argument has on important questions regarding such things as the resurrection, this seems to me to be a distracted concern. If I were to be having a conversation with a friend about my fiance but my friend was more concerned about whether the colour of a particular bicycle was blue or red, this would be not only frustrating but puzzling. What relationship does my view of my fiance have on the colour of a bicycle? This is the confusing reality of what Beale is saying. Enns makes no comment on the historical veracity of the resurrection, in the same sense that I am implying no concern for the colour of the bike.
    In the same way, if I make a statement about my fiance regarding whether she is beautiful like the sun rise, it would not be fair to my statement if the argument derived from me was that the sun rises. This is why I am convinced by Enns’ argument regarding what questions the Pentateuch is attempting to answer. Furthermore, I find Enns’ argument to be convincing because when we as Christians believe through faith that the resurrection was a historical event, we affirm the truth of what Genesis is saying, because we find that the way in which God has continued to act in history through Christ is consistent with the knowledge we derive from the creation account. That is if we accept that knowledge from the basis of what Enns is saying.
    God is different than how the surrounding ANE cultures understand him, which when we see in the incarnation, crucifixion, and resurrection of Christ is true. If our concern of the primeval Genesis account is whether or not it depicts historical accounts, what does this tell us about Christ? Or even, what does Christ tell us about the historicity of Adam? Nothing.
    Perhaps what is most disconcerting about the reaction of the evangelical community to Enns’ book is that it reveals just how immature and scared many in the evangelical community are of honest readings of Scripture. It is unfortunate that people like Enns fall subject to the fear of evangelical institutions such as Westminster Theological Seminary. Regardless of how some people react, it doesn’t change reality, a reality that Enns reminds us of, that the beauty of the Scriptural witness is that it speaks to humanity in a way that we can understand. It speaks to us in a way that is incarnational, just as Christ became incarnate by becoming human, so too does God’s revelation come to us in human ways.


Opere Citato

Beale, Gregory K. "Myth, history, and inspiration: a review article of Inspiration and Incarnation by Peter Enns." Journal Of The Evangelical Theological Society 49, no. 2 (June 1, 2006): 287-312.