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Surpassing wonder : the invention of the…
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Surpassing wonder : the invention of the Bible and the Talmuds (edition 1998)

by Donald H. Akenson

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1803150,314 (3.43)17
Akenson describes Surpassing Wonder as a long love letter to Tanakh, the "New Testament," and the Talmuds. Readers are well advised to approach the book with something of a lover's patient indulgence: it is not a casual encounter. At the heart of Akenson's approach is a focus on texts, not sects. Specifically, he details the formation of four sets of texts that lie behind two surviving offspring of the ancient Yahweh-faith, rabbinic Judaism and Christianity. He argues that the first nine books of Hebrew Scripture (using, he notes, "the Jewish, not the Christian arrangement of the scriptures and ignoring the early medieval division of both Samuel and Kings into double volumes") are a unified invention in the form of historical writing, the product of a single great mind, gifted at once as editor and writer, working between the beginning of the Babylonian exile and before the return to the Holy Land (mid-sixth century BCE). The formation of this text is associated with the triumph of "Judahist" religion (a term intended to distinguish the practice from both northern religious practice of the same period and from modern Judaism). Genesis-Kings, is the foundation upon which both Christianity and modern Judaism are built. There is a grammar of religious invention evident in the formation of this text that is applied with variations in formation of the other three sets of texts with which Akenson is concerned-those of Second Temple Judahism, the "New Testament," and the Talmuds. In this grammar, creativity is not acknowledged, new ideas and recent occurrences are presented as being old, and all is enfolded in historical narrative (even if, as in apocalyptic literature, the history is yet to occur). Based on careful reading of the Dead Sea Scrolls and the variety of the Qumran material, Akenson argues that there is no "normative" Second Temple Judaism. There is, instead, a breathtaking variety of texts, communities, and practicises in which Messianism is mostly peripheral. Akenson describes this period in three chapters as "Siloam's Teeming Pool," a creative ferment in which conditions were right for multiplication of religious life. The destruction of the Temple in the seventh decade of the Common Era entered this teeming pool like a lightning strike: suddenly, it was necessary to invent a Temple religion for a religion without a Temple. Akenson notes that this situation was not unprecedented. The invention of the Chosen People after the Babylonian Exile was a precursor, and both events illustrate the extent to which a common religious grammar made almost infinite inventive variation possible. Akenson proposes a heuristic device parallel to his inventor of Genesis-Kings, in this case an editor-inventor of the "New Testament," a reinvention of Tanakh in which Matthew-Acts is to Christian scripture what Genesis-Kings is to Hebrew. Modern Judaism, Akenson argues, arises out of the same lightning strike over a longer period of time. It initially abandons the historical narrative characteristic of Tanakh in favor of a legal document, the Mishnah, which is gradually tempered by narrative in the Babylonian Talmud. In the end, Akenson argues that modern Judaism and Christianity are sister religions, born out of the volatile mix of Second Temple Judahism, sole surviving children whose mother did not survive the destruction of the Temple. This argument is clearly motivated both by a passion for the texts and a concern for the relationship between two communities and two practices that have often been at odds. Akenson's passion for the texts translates into an eloquent plea to appreciate them as organic wholes rather than dissecting them with progressively sharper scholastic scalpels. This leads to running criticism of Biblical scholarship, including particular criticism of the Jesus Seminar that is expansive enough to require its own appendix. Akenson's concern for Jewish/Christian relationships translates into an extended discussion of the transformation of Anti-Judaism into Anti-Semitism (not unlike Dominic Crossan's discussion of the same theme in Who Killed Jesus?). The book is written for non-specialists, but it is not for a casual audience. Patient readers will be rewarded with a deeper understanding of the common textual roots of Christianity and modern Judaism as well as the close sibling relationship that has often deepened the historical struggle between the two communities.
2 vote stevenschroeder | Jul 30, 2006 |
Showing 3 of 3
Akenson's book is a lively and substantial exploration of the process of religious canonization of texts in the Biblical tradition. The author is an historian by trade, and has no preexisting partisan status in the interminable feuds of biblical origins scholarship. In particular, he spurns the entire "source critical" procedure of reifying postulated proto-texts, preferring to focus on the inseparable literary and ideological motives of the compiler/author(s) of the texts that we do have.

Akenson recognizes that the Temple scheme, along with its metaphoric precursors and its supplementary successors, is the core of the tradition: "a concentric architecture of holiness, one that is also a genealogy of legitimacy."

Although the word "invention" may be a little alarming to those who fear that the book will treat the Bible as fiction, it instead denotes the creative element in composing historical text, the divine creativity that was expressed in the human effort to contribute these texts to posterity. But Akenson neither coddles nor argues with Biblical inerrantists and their fundamentalist kindred. In his only condescension to acknowledge that intellectual position, he remarks: "This sort of thing cannot be fought, so it is best ignored."

There is a fairly happy amount of invention in Surpassing Wonder itself, and the reader may be swept up in the fascination of the meta-historical narrative to the point where there is an expectation for some grand resolution of the story. But all that Akenson offers in closing is some ecumenist sentiments regarding commonality between Jews and Christians. To my mind, a compelling "conclusion" would emphasize the journey, rather than a destination. There is no reason to suppose that what the author terms the "Re-Invention of the Species" of sacred literature has come to a halt. Some nods to the Quran and The Book of Mormon could demonstrate how the old foundations of Hebrew scripture continue to serve as a rule and guide in the development of texts which inscribe an ongoing relationship between the human and the divine.
3 vote paradoxosalpha | Feb 6, 2007 |
Akenson describes Surpassing Wonder as a long love letter to Tanakh, the "New Testament," and the Talmuds. Readers are well advised to approach the book with something of a lover's patient indulgence: it is not a casual encounter. At the heart of Akenson's approach is a focus on texts, not sects. Specifically, he details the formation of four sets of texts that lie behind two surviving offspring of the ancient Yahweh-faith, rabbinic Judaism and Christianity. He argues that the first nine books of Hebrew Scripture (using, he notes, "the Jewish, not the Christian arrangement of the scriptures and ignoring the early medieval division of both Samuel and Kings into double volumes") are a unified invention in the form of historical writing, the product of a single great mind, gifted at once as editor and writer, working between the beginning of the Babylonian exile and before the return to the Holy Land (mid-sixth century BCE). The formation of this text is associated with the triumph of "Judahist" religion (a term intended to distinguish the practice from both northern religious practice of the same period and from modern Judaism). Genesis-Kings, is the foundation upon which both Christianity and modern Judaism are built. There is a grammar of religious invention evident in the formation of this text that is applied with variations in formation of the other three sets of texts with which Akenson is concerned-those of Second Temple Judahism, the "New Testament," and the Talmuds. In this grammar, creativity is not acknowledged, new ideas and recent occurrences are presented as being old, and all is enfolded in historical narrative (even if, as in apocalyptic literature, the history is yet to occur). Based on careful reading of the Dead Sea Scrolls and the variety of the Qumran material, Akenson argues that there is no "normative" Second Temple Judaism. There is, instead, a breathtaking variety of texts, communities, and practicises in which Messianism is mostly peripheral. Akenson describes this period in three chapters as "Siloam's Teeming Pool," a creative ferment in which conditions were right for multiplication of religious life. The destruction of the Temple in the seventh decade of the Common Era entered this teeming pool like a lightning strike: suddenly, it was necessary to invent a Temple religion for a religion without a Temple. Akenson notes that this situation was not unprecedented. The invention of the Chosen People after the Babylonian Exile was a precursor, and both events illustrate the extent to which a common religious grammar made almost infinite inventive variation possible. Akenson proposes a heuristic device parallel to his inventor of Genesis-Kings, in this case an editor-inventor of the "New Testament," a reinvention of Tanakh in which Matthew-Acts is to Christian scripture what Genesis-Kings is to Hebrew. Modern Judaism, Akenson argues, arises out of the same lightning strike over a longer period of time. It initially abandons the historical narrative characteristic of Tanakh in favor of a legal document, the Mishnah, which is gradually tempered by narrative in the Babylonian Talmud. In the end, Akenson argues that modern Judaism and Christianity are sister religions, born out of the volatile mix of Second Temple Judahism, sole surviving children whose mother did not survive the destruction of the Temple. This argument is clearly motivated both by a passion for the texts and a concern for the relationship between two communities and two practices that have often been at odds. Akenson's passion for the texts translates into an eloquent plea to appreciate them as organic wholes rather than dissecting them with progressively sharper scholastic scalpels. This leads to running criticism of Biblical scholarship, including particular criticism of the Jesus Seminar that is expansive enough to require its own appendix. Akenson's concern for Jewish/Christian relationships translates into an extended discussion of the transformation of Anti-Judaism into Anti-Semitism (not unlike Dominic Crossan's discussion of the same theme in Who Killed Jesus?). The book is written for non-specialists, but it is not for a casual audience. Patient readers will be rewarded with a deeper understanding of the common textual roots of Christianity and modern Judaism as well as the close sibling relationship that has often deepened the historical struggle between the two communities.
2 vote stevenschroeder | Jul 30, 2006 |
Showing 3 of 3

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