DECLINE
Soon after Solomon, however, great changes occurred. Following
his reign, which had already betrayed manifest marks of decline in foreign
relations, Egypt's interference helped separate the northern kingdom
(Israel or Samaria) from the southern (Judah). From the beginning of
Asa's reign until the time of Josiah, a weakened Egypt ceased sending
armies into Palestine....
For
a century before Tiglath-pileser reached Palestine, Assyria cast its shadow
over the shores of the Mediterranean... These international developments found
corresponding expression in domestic social and economic conditions. After
a long peace, continuous warfare prevailed. Instead of receiving tribute,
Israel and Judah had to send from time to time, heavy loads of precious metals
to foreign overlords. Sometimes foreign invaders ransacked the country and
its central treasuries and carried off rich spoils. The economic situation
became worse and worse. The population, which under vigorous leadership in
times of peace, with foreign indemnities pouring in, had achieved a measure
of well-being, was increasing impoverished.
General economic
decline was accompanied by a steady process of differentiation. Some of the
rich grew richer at the expense of their fellows under the prevalent pre-capitalistic
forms of exploitation. Each catastrophe, national or international, affected
largely the poor peasant. Foreign invasions, earthquakes, alternating droughts
and floods or, worst of all agricultural plagues, the locusts, repeatedly
destroyed the accumulated fruits of years of labor.... Political clashes arising
from the clash of interests and traditions added to the social instability.
Neither in Israel nor in Judah after Solomon, was there a strong government
for any length of time....
SEEKING
THE REDEEMER
The central figure in messianism, the "anointed of the Lord" or the "redeemer,"
clearly shows the interdependence of social and religious features. More than
one vigorous imperialistic king of mighty Egypt and Babylonia flattered himself,
and was often told by obsequious courtiers, that he would extend his boundaries
of his realm to the ends of the known world and thereby restore the Golden
Age. Israel could not hope for world conquest in these centuries of decline.
God himself was to accomplish this feat in a superhuman way.
Experience, however,
had taught that God performs miracles only through men, for example, Moses
and Elijah. The new miracle would also have to be accomplished through some
one man. The levitical priests probably looked for a return of Moses. The
prophets of the north seem to have been so much impressed by the vivid memories,
embellished by legends, of the striking demeanor and personality of Elijah.
that they hoped for his miraculous return in the same manner as when he "went
up by a whirlwind into heaven."

Messiah,
the son of David
For
the Judean prophets it was natural to expect that the Messiah would
be a scion of David, whose house had ruled the country for centuries
and in its early years had been blessed by God with power and prosperity.
Despite the dynasty's later corruption, there was still a hope that
the exalted poet-king would reappear and and establish an age of unrivaled
glory. The priests of that age left little, if any writings, and Samaria
had vanished as an independent state at the very beginnings of written
prophecy. The ideology of the southern prophets, therefore, soon overshadowed
all others. The Davidic Messiah became the apotheosized figure on which
all later Jewish eschatology centered. Moses, Elijah, and even the Messiah
of the house of Joseph so prominent in later times, were relegated to
secondary positions.
HOPE
This idealization of the past was a general characteristic of the
age; in a sense it eclipsed the messianic hope. Eschatological passages,
strange as it may seem, are not foremost in the prophetic writings.
Some of the prophets never refer to the end of days. Those who do, speak
of it as a well-known popular idea and limit themselves to cryptic allusions.
It is the glorification of bygone days which fills their writings and
the other poetical and legal works of the Old Testament... Thoughtful
Israelites were growing more and more disgusted with the conditions
of the day; they naturally turned increasingly to the past.
There
was so much vitality left in the Israelitic, and even more so the Judean
people, that they simply refused to throw up their hands in despair
of resolving the social conflicts and the unending national frustrations.
They turned to ancestral lore not only for comfort but for a way out
of difficulties... These ancient historians... were all aware that not
extravagant exaltation, but a discriminating glorification of the past
could teach a lesson to the over-civilized, sophisticated citizens of
Jerusalem and Samaria. Thus the glorified past was to combine with an
exalted future to serve as a psychological buoy for a drowning people
which refused to die....
History thus
became more than an escape. It became the dominating principle in the national
and religious life. The present may appear to be desperately bad —
the people became accustomed to hearing — but it
is only a moment in history, a transitory link between an ideal past and a
still more perfect future.
|
From:
Salo Wittmayer Baron A Social and Religious History of the
Jews, volume 1; Columbia University and JPS ISBN 0-231-08838-
|
|
Salo
Wittmayer Baron (b. Galicia, Austria-Hungary 1895; d.1989), American
Jewish historian and educator, taught for several decades at Columbia
University (New York), holding the first professorship of Jewish
history in a U.S. university. His major work is the monumental Social
and Religious History of the Jews. |
KING
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