Wednesday, August 7, 2024

Identifying King Arioch who ruled Elam

by Damien F. Mackey “In those days King Nebuchadnezzar fought against King Arphaxad in the great plain that is on the border with Ragau. And many people joined him—everyone who lived in the highlands, everyone who lived along the Euphrates, the Tigris, the Hydaspes, and on the plain of Arioch, king of the Elymeans. Many nations joined forces with the Assyrians”. Judith 1:5-6 Commenting on this text in my postgraduate university thesis (2007), I double-identified the otherwise unknown “Arioch, king of the Elymeans”, as follows (Volume Two, pp. 46-47): Verses 1:6: “Arioch, king of the Elymeans” In [Book of Judith] 1:6, which gives a description of the geographical locations from which Arphaxad’s allies came, we learn that some of these had hailed from the region of the “Hydaspes, and, on the plain, Arioch, king of the Elymeans”. I disagree with Charles that: “The name Arioch is borrowed from Gen. xiv. i, in accordance with the author’s love of archaism”. This piece of information, I am going to argue here, is actually a later gloss to the original text. And I hope to give a specific identification to this king, since, according to Leahy: “The identity of Arioch (Vg Erioch) has not been established …”. What I am going to propose is that Arioch was not actually one of those who had rallied to the cause of Arphaxad in Year 12 of Nebuchadnezzar, as a superficial reading of [Book of Judith] though might suggest, but that this was a later addition to the text for the purpose of making more precise for the reader the geographical region from whence came Arphaxad’s allies, specifically the Elamite troops. In other words, this was the very same region as that which Arioch had ruled; though at a later time, as I am going to explain. But commentators express puzzlement about him. Who was this Arioch? And if he were such an unknown, then what was the value of this gloss for the early readers? Arioch, I believe, was the very Achior who figures so prominently in the story of Judith. He was also the legendary Ahikar, a most famous character as we read in Chapter 7. Therefore he was entirely familiar to the Jews, who would have known that he had eventually governed the Assyrian province of Elam. I shall tell about this in a moment. Some later editor/translator presumably, apparently failing to realise that the person named in this gloss was the very same as the Achior who figures so prominently throughout the main story of [Book of Judith], has confused matters by calling him by the different name of Arioch. He should have written: “Achior ruled the Elymeans”. [Book of Tobit] tells us more. Some time after the destruction of Sennacherib’s armies, he who had been Sennacherib’s Rabshakeh was appointed governor (or ‘king’) of Elymaïs (Elam) (cf. 1:18, 21: 2:10). This was Tobit’s very nephew, Ahikar/Achior. But the latter ruled Elam, not in Nebuchadnezzar’s Year 12, or at about the time when he himself was a high officer in the Assyrian army, but (approximately a decade) later, during the reign of Ashurbanipal - as previously determined - when the king of Assyria sent him to Elam. From there it is an easy matter to make this comparison: “Achior ... Elymeans” [BOJudith]; “Ahikar (var. Achior) ... Elymaïs” [BOTobit]. [End of quote] An important note: Anyone engaging in a serious study of Elam and its history, will now need to (my opinion) take well into account Royce (Richard) Erickson’s article, that has so stunningly re-located the ancient land of Elam (Elymaïs): A PROBLEM IN CHALDAEAN AND ELAMITE GEOGRAPHY (2) A PROBLEM IN CHALDAEAN AND ELAMITE GEOGRAPHY | Royce Erickson - Academia.edu Figure 6 – Consensus Versus Proposed Route of Flight to Nagite And now for a note on historical chronology that will be vital for this present article: Sennacherib’s successor, Esarhaddon, I have also multi-identified, as Ashurbanipal, and as Nebuchednezzar ‘the Great’. In Esarhaddon, we get a small, but vital, part of Ashurbanipal/Nebuchednezzar’s long 43-year reign: his re-building of Babylon; his dreadful illness; and the beginnings of his campaign against Egypt-Ethiopia: Esarhaddon a tolerable fit for King Nebuchednezzar (2) Esarhaddon a tolerable fit for King Nebuchednezzar | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu Other alter egos for this mighty king are: Ashur-bel-kala; Ashurnasirpal; Nabonidus; Cambyses (suffers madness; conquers Egypt; also named “Nebuchednezzar”). Esarhaddon, Ashurbanipal and Cambyses can all be drawn together, in fact, through the agency of their association with the one same “Crown Prince” of Egypt/Ethiopia: Esarhaddon and Nes-Anhuret, Ashurbanipal and Usanahuru, Cambyses and Udjahorresne (2) Esarhaddon and Nes-Anhuret, Ashurbanipal and Usanahuru, Cambyses and Udjahorresne | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu So, according to the above, Arioch, who ruled Elam, was also Tobit’s nephew, Ahikar, and was the Achior of the Book of Judith. And Esarhaddon was also Ashurbanipal and Nebuchednezzar ‘the Great’. This will give us a better scope for filling out King Arioch. It needs to be noted that governors of a region for Assyria - such as Arioch was of Elam - were regarded as “kings”. Thus the boastful Sennacherib declares (Isaiah 10:8): ‘Are not my commanders all kings?’ The Historical Arioch Arioch may well appear under that very name during the reign of King Nebuchednezzar. I wrote about this in my article: Did Daniel meet Ahikar? (2) Did Daniel meet Ahikar? | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu therein greatly enlarging the biblical character, Ahikar, as follows: The Vizier (Ummânu) With what I think is a necessary merging of the C12th BC king of Babylon, Nebuchednezzar so-called I, with the potent king of neo-Assyria, Esarhaddon (or Nebuchednezzar ‘the Great’), we encounter during the reign of ‘each’ a vizier of such fame that he was to be remembered for centuries to come. It is now reasonable to assume that this is one and the same vizier. I refer, in the case of Nebuchednezzar I, to the following celebrated vizier [the following taken from J. Brinkman’s A Political History of Post-Kassite Babylonia. 1158-722 B.C. Roma (Pontificium Institutum Biblicum, 1968, pp. 114-115]: … during these years in Babylonia a notable literary revival took place …. It is likely that this burst of creative activity sprang from the desire to glorify fittingly the spectacular achievements of Nebuchednezzar I and to enshrine his memorable deeds in lasting words. These same deeds were also to provide inspiration for later poets who sang the glories of the era …. The scribes of Nebuchednezzar’s day, reasonably competent in both Akkadian and Sumerian…, produced works of an astonishing vigor, even though these may have lacked the polish of a more sophisticated society. The name Esagil-kini-ubba, ummânu or “royal secretary” during the reign of Nebuchednezzar I, was preserved in Babylonian memory for almost one thousand years – as late as the year 147 of the Seleucid Era (= 165 B.C.)…. To which Brinkman adds the footnote [n. 641]: “Note … that Esagil-kini-ubba served as ummânu also under Adad-apla-iddina and, therefore, his career extended over at least thirty-five years”. So perhaps we can consider that our vizier was, for a time, shared by both Assyria and Babylon. Those seeking the historical Ahikar tend to come up with one Aba-enlil-dari, this description of him taken from: http://www.aakkl.helsinki.fi/melammu/database/gen_html/a0000639.php: The story of Ahiqar is set into the court of seventh century Assyrian kings Sennacherib and Esarhaddon. The hero has the Akkadian name Ahī-(w)aqar “My brother is dear”, but it is not clear if the story has any historical foundation. The latest entry in a Seleucid list of Seven Sages says: “In the days of Esarhaddon the sage was Aba-enlil-dari, whom the Aramaeans call Ahu-uqar” which at least indicates that the story of Ahiqar was well known in the Seleucid Babylonia. Seleucid Babylonia is, of course, much later removed in time from our sources for Ahikar. And, as famous as may have been the scribe Esagil-kini-ubba – whether or not he were also Ahikar – even better known is this Ahikar (at least by that name), a character of both legend and of (as I believe) real history. Regarding Ahikar’s tremendous popularity even down through the centuries, we read [The Jerome Biblical Commentary, New Jersey (Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1968), 28:28]: The story of Ahikar is one of the most phenomenal in the ancient world in that it has become part of many different literatures and has been preserved in several different languages: Syriac, Arabic, Armenian, Greek, Slavonic, and Old Turkish. The most ancient recension is the Aramaic, found amongst the famous 5th-cent. BC papyri that were discovered at the beginning of the 20th cent. on Elephantine Island in the Nile. The story worked its way into the Arabian nights and the Koran; it influenced Aesop, the Church Fathers as well as Greek philosophers, and the Old Testament itself. Whilst Ahikar’s fame has spread far and wide, the original Ahikar, whom I am trying to uncover in this article, has been elusive for some. Thus J. Greenfield has written: http://ebooks.cambridge.org/chapter.jsf?bid=CBO9780511520662&cid=CBO9780511520662A012 The figure of Ahiqar has remained a source of interest to scholars in a variety of fields. The search for the real Ahiqar, the acclaimed wise scribe who served as chief counsellor to Sennacherib and Esarhaddon, was a scholarly preoccupation for many years. He had a sort of independent existence since he was known from a series of texts – the earliest being the Aramaic text from Elephantine, followed by the book of Tobit, known from the Apocrypha, and the later Syriac, Armenian and Arabic texts of Ahiqar. An actual royal counsellor and high court official who had been removed from his position and later returned to it remains unknown. E. Reiner found the theme of the ‘disgrace and rehabilitation of a minister’ combined with that of the ‘ungrateful nephew’ in the ‘Bilingual Proverbs’, and saw this as a sort of parallel to the Ahiqar story. She also emphasized that in Mesopotamia the ummânu was not only a learned man or craftsman but was also a high official. At the time that Reiner noted the existence of this theme in Babylonian wisdom literature, Ahiqar achieved a degree of reality with the discovery in Uruk, in the excavations of winter 1959/60, of a Late Babylonian tablet (W20030,7) dated to the 147th year of the Seleucid era (= 165 BCE). This tablet contains a list of antediluvian kings and their sages (apkallû) and postdiluvian kings and their scholars (ummânu). The postdiluvian kings run from Gilgamesh to Esarhaddon. …. Merging Judith’s ‘Arioch’ with Daniel’s ‘Arioch’ With my revised shunting of the neo-Assyrian era into the neo-Babylonian one, and with an important official, “Arioch”, emerging early in the Book of Daniel, early in the reign of “Nebuchednezzar”, then the possibility arises that he is the same as the “Arioch” of Judith 1:6. Previously, I multi-identified the famous Ahikar (var. Achior), nephew of Tobit, a Naphtalian Israelite, with Sennacherib’s Rabshakeh; with the Achior of the Book of Judith; and with a few other suggestions thrown in. Finally, my identification of Ahikar (Achior) also with the governor (for Assyria) of the land of Elam, named as “Arioch” in Judith 1:6, enabled me to write this very neat equation: “Achior … Elymeans” [Judith]; “Ahikar (var. Achior) … Elymaïs” [Tobit]. Arioch in Daniel Arioch is met in Daniel 2, in the highly dramatic context of king Nebuchednezzar’s Dream, in which Arioch is a high official serving the king. The erratic king has firmly determined to get rid of all of his wise men (2:13): “So the decree was issued to put the wise men to death, and men were sent to look for Daniel and his friends to put them to death”. And the king has entrusted the task to this Arioch, variously entitled “marshal”; “provost-marshal”; “captain of the king’s guard”; “chief of the king’s executioners” (2:14): “When Arioch, the commander of the king’s guard, had gone out to put to death the wise men of Babylon, Daniel spoke to him with wisdom and tact”. This is the customary way that the wise and prudent Daniel will operate. Daniel 2 continues (v. 15): “[Daniel] asked the king’s officer [Arioch], ‘Why did the king issue such a harsh decree?’ Arioch then explained the matter to Daniel”. Our young Daniel does not lack a certain degree of “chutzpah”, firstly boldly approaching the king’s high official (the fact that Arioch does not arrest Daniel on the spot may be testimony to both the young man’s presence and also Arioch’s favouring the Jews since the Judith incident), and then (even though he was now aware of the dire decree) marching off to confront the terrible king (v. 16): “At this, Daniel went in to the king and asked for time, so that he might interpret the dream for him”. Later, Daniel, having had revealed to him the details and interpretation of the king’s Dream, will re-acquaint himself with Arioch (v. 24): “Then Daniel went to Arioch, whom the king had appointed to execute the wise men of Babylon, and said to him, ‘Do not execute the wise men of Babylon. Take me to the king, and I will interpret his dream for him’.” Naturally, Arioch was quick to respond - no doubt to appease the enraged king, but perhaps also for the sake of Daniel and the wise men (v. 25): “Arioch took Daniel to the king at once and said, ‘I have found a man among the exiles from Judah who can tell the king what his dream means’.” The famous vizier of the Assyrian empire, Ahikar, will later be re-presented most unrealistically as a great sage and polymath, and he will even be reproduced as a handful of sages of encyclopaedic knowledge of the so-called Golden Age of Islam: Melting down the fake Golden Age of Islamic intellectualism (3) Melting down the fake Golden Age of Islamic intellectualism | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu Historically in Elam We should also be able to find a trace of Arioch as ruler of Elam for the Assyrians. Although we appear to have little to go on, there was a somewhat obscure ‘king’ of Elam right at the appropriate time (in my revised setting), the reign of Esarhaddon/ the early reign of Ashurbanipal. And he had the appropriate name, Urtak (var. Urtaki), which - if we simply substitute the t for an i - renders for us, Uriak (Arioch). Similarly, the Greek text of Tobit has taken Tobit’s Hebrew name, Obadiah (עֹבַדְיָה), and has replaced the first letter, ‘ayin (עֹ), with a tau (τ), Τωβίτ. {Obadiah is, in fact, the same as the Arabic name, Abdullah. Most interesting that Mohammed’s supposed parents, Abdullah and Amna, have the same names, respectively, as Tobit and his wife, Anna. The Nineveh connection, so fitting in the case of Tobit, becomes a complete anachronism with its re-emergence in association with Mohammed} D. T. Potts has provided this brief account of the obscure Urtak, one-time ruler of Elam (I do not necessarily accept the BC dates given here): https://e-l.unifi.it/pluginfile.php/664124/mod_resource/content/2/Testi%20in%20pdf/Potts%20DT%201999%20The%20Archaeology%20of%20Elam%209780521563581.pdf Cambridge world archaeology THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF ELAM FORMATION AND TRANSFORMATION OF AN ANCIENT IRANIAN STATE (2016) Pp. 275-276 …. The Babylonian Chronicle relates that Humban-haltash II ‘died in his palace without becoming ill’ (iv 11–12) and was succeeded by his brother Urtak (thus contra Dietrich 1970: 37, the letter ABL 839, which speaks about a king of Elam who suffered a stroke, cannot refer to Humban-haltash II; see Brinkman 1978: 308, n. 27), whose Elamite name was probably Urtagu (Zadok 1976a: 63). This occurred in the sixth year of Esarhaddon’s reign and was soon followed by a treaty between the Assyrian and Elamite kings (Borger 1956: 19) involving the return of some plundered cult statues, for in Esarhaddon’s seventh year, according to the Babylonian Chronicle, ‘Ishtar of Agade and the gods of Agade left Elam and entered Agade . . . ’ (iv 17–18; Brinkman 1990: 88; 1991: 44). This must have taken place c. 674 BC (Gerardi 1987: 12–13). Urtak is not attested in original Elamite inscriptions. He was still in power when Esarhaddon died in 669 BC and in the early years of the reign of his son and successor,Assurbanipal, grain was sent to Elam to relieve a famine which, according to Assurbanipal (ABL 295), was so bad that ‘there wasn’t even a dog to eat’ (restoration acc. to Malbran-Labat 1982: 250). Furthermore, Elamite refugees were allowed to settle in Assyria until such time as the harvest improved in Elam (Piepkorn 1933: 54). Assurbanipal was explicit in justifying his gesture of aid as a by-product of Urtak’s treaty with his father Esarhaddon (Nassouhi 1924–5: 103). But in 664 BC Urtak attacked Babylonia (for the date see Gerardi 1987: 129), apparently at the instigation of an antiAssyrian trio including Bel-iqisha, chief of the Gambulu tribe, Nabu-shum-eresh, governor of Nippur; and Marduk-shum-ibni, an Elamite official in Urtak’s administration. After receiving news of the Elamite invasion and checking it by sending his own messenger to Babylonia, Assurbanipal says, ‘In my eighth campaign, I marched against Urtak, king of Elam, who did not heed the treaty of (my) father, my sire, who did not guard the friendship’ (Gerardi 1987: 122). Assurbanipal’s account of the events which followed is very brief, noting only that the forces of Urtak retreated from their position near Babylon, and were defeated near the border of Elam. Later, Urtak himself died and according to Edition B of Assurbanipal’s annals, ‘Assur . . . , (and) Ishtar . . . , his royal dynasty they removed. The dominion of the land they gave to another; afterwards TeUmman, image of a gallû demon, sat on the throne of Urtak’ (Gerardi 1987: 133), whereupon the remaining members of both Urtak’s family and those of his predecessor, Humban-haltash II, fled to Assyria (Gerardi 1987: 123–4; Brinkman 1991: 52). If this is the same event referred to in the Shamash-shum-ukin Chronicle, according to which ‘the Elamite prince fled [to] Assyria’ on the 12th of Tammuz in the fourth year of Shamash-shum-ukin’s regency over Babylonia, then it can be placed around June-July 664 BC (Millard 1964: 19; Gerardi 1987: 128). ….

Thursday, August 1, 2024

Shechem and its Oak Tree

by Damien F. Mackey “Covenantal promises first given to Abram at Shechem, first acknowledged then fully committed to by Jacob at Shechem, guarded by Simeon and Levi at Shechem, possibly symbolized by Joseph's bones at Shechem, were twice ratified in Joshua's time, in modified form, by Israel at Shechem, where the emphasis was placed on 'fullness of faithfulness'. Shechem was also where Joshua placed the massive, covenantal 'law stones' as God had commanded”. http://www.dawntoduskpublications.com/html/oak_shechem_long.htm In the following article, “The oak tree of Shechem”, the vital covenantal importance of this ancient site is discussed with relation to the famous oak tree there: SEE, PEOPLE ARE COMING down from the center of the land, and another company is coming from the Diviners' Terebinth Tree. Judges 9:37 …. The couple from Ur Though two thousand years had passed since Adam and Eve had tended the Garden of Eden, and untold millions had been born and died, barely a handful had ever known the true God. With Abram and Sarah, the time had come for God to set in motion a process that would forever change that situation, relatively speaking, creating a people fit to be called His own. God initiated this momentous new phase with a disarmingly unrevealing act. He gave order to Abram and Sarah to get up and go, promising them great things if they obeyed: Now the LORD. said to Abram: "Get out of your country, from your family and from your father's house, to a land that I will show you" (Gen. 12:1). God gave command to this faithful couple to depart from their secure, comfortable, cozy existence to venture into what was possibly the great unknown. …. Shechem and the oak tree Abram passed through the land to the place of Shechem, as far as the terebinth [oak] tree of Moreh (Gen. 12:6). Abram and Sarah set off on the long journey without dithering or dickering. Their route probably took them through Damascus, along the shore of the Sea of Galilee where, two thousand years later, the One to come would teach the crowds, and then on to Shechem, a very important centre in the second millennium BC. There the first stage of their journey came to an end at the great tree of Moreh. Shechem and its tree were destined to play a vital role in God's dealings with Abram and his descendants. The story of Shechem, its oak, and of incident after incident played out in their shadow exposes the vital organs of God-man covenant relationships to view, showing clearly the key to covenantal success. Shechem and its tree were destined to play a vital role in God's dealings with Abram and his descendants. Sadly, failure more than success makes the lesson. Let's now tell the fascinating tale of Shechem and its oak. Shechem, the first city in the Promised Land to be mentioned in the Bible, is located approximately 45 kilometers directly north of Jerusalem. Scholars agree the tree was almost certainly an oak. As if to send up a flare alerting us to its special significance, there, by the tree, three 'firsts' occurred: • In the past, God had only spoken to Abram (12:1); here by the oak tree He appeared to him — the first of three recorded appearances in his life. (See also 17:1 and 18:1.) Describing this event, Hamilton (1990, p. 377) says, "Here the mode of revelation shifts to a theophany, Yahweh appeared to Abram. The shift is not incidental." Such an appearance reinforces the assurance that a divine intervention of great significance has occurred. • The first declaration made in the Promised Land of history's most amazing promises occurred here. In fact, the announcement of these promises was the very purpose of God's appearance to Abram; • The first of seven altars built by the patriarchs was erected here. The urgent way the text reads gives the impression that barely had God disappeared than Abram built an altar to worship Him. The oak tree, as we will see, is special; definitely not your average, every day agglomeration of trunk, branches and tracery covered with green leafy bits. For the time being let us simply note its importance, as revealed by the meaning of 'Moreh' which, translated, means teacher. The most reputable conservative commentary available today on Genesis says that it "suggests a place where divine oracles could be obtained" (Wenham 1987, p. 279). That explanation certainly fits the facts. Were this episode the only "oak of Shechem" one, we'd quit right now. But let's continue; as the record unfolds over time, Shechem became the venue for more than its share of happenings had chance alone set the rules. Shechem next pops into the record at the return of Abram's grandson, Jacob, after many years in Mesopotamia as Laban's some-time dupe. Mackey’s comment: Judith would later recall the trials endured by Abraham and by Jacob under Laban’s trickery as if the Bethulians’ present trials under hard Assyrian siege were almost inconsequential by comparison (Judith 6:26-27): ‘Recall how [God] dealt with Abraham, and how he tested Isaac, and all that happened to Jacob in Syrian Mesopotamia while he was tending the flocks of Laban, his mother’s brother. He has not tested us with fire, as he did them, to try their hearts, nor is he taking vengeance on us. But the Lord chastises those who are close to him in order to admonish them’. Jacob returns from abroad Jacob, the original composer of "If I Were a Rich Man", forever in his parlor counting out his money, had fled from home to escape death by his brother, Esau, after deceiving his own father Isaac and thereby swindling his brother out of a special powerful blessing. That was on top of an earlier episode in which Jacob had taken advantage of Esau's hunger to snatch his birthright from him. Forty years later, at about the age of ninety, Jacob returned. His journey home from Mesopotamia was filled with dread over how his brother Esau would receive him. Jacob's relief when Esau embraced him warmly upon meeting again was palpable. After catching up on old times, they parted company again, and that's where Shechem comes into the story: Then Jacob came safely to the city of Shechem, which is in the land of Canaan, when he came from Padan Aram; and he pitched his tent before the city. And he bought the parcel of land, where he had pitched his tent, from the children of Hamor, Shechem's father, for one hundred pieces of money. Then he erected an altar there and called it El Elohe Israel (Gen. 33:18-20). Jacob builds an altar at Shechem next to a large oak tree and there worships God Though some argue almost persuasively (e.g. Wenham 1994, p. 300) that Shechem here is the name of the crown prince of the area rather than the name of the city to which Jacob came, we believe the evidence shows otherwise. (Wenham is wrong when he says that "nowhere else in the OT is it [salem] used in this way as an adverb qualifying a verb". It is indeed used that way in 1 Samuel 16:4. Also, a study of Joshua 24:32 shows that the land Jacob bought was by Shechem.) But even if their contention is correct, the alternative town that is spoken of (Salem, translated in NKJV as 'safely') was located only three miles from Shechem anyway, and would have come under the city of Shechem's regional control. Mackey’s comment: For the importance of Salem, see e.g. my article: Judith’s City of ‘Bethulia’ (5) Judith’s City of 'Bethulia' | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu Nobody can explain why Jacob chose to settle in Shechem upon his return after a house-building detour in Succoth. Shechem did not lie on the major route from Mesopotamia into the Promised Land, yet it was strategically placed from a trading point of view. Perhaps his reason to settle there was entirely based on mercenary considerations. What can we deduce from this account with its many salient features? One feature — the purchase of real estate — is most intriguing. Was doing so an act of honoring God by securing the spot where Abram built his altar, or was it an act of disobedience, going contrary to God's will that they live their lives as disenfranchised strangers in the land of promise, as possibly indicated in Genesis 28:4? But let's focus on those items closer to certainties. To begin with, one cannot help but note Jacob's unhesitating resolve to build an altar in the same place, probably within eyeshot, of grandfather Abram's altar. But even more eye-opening is the unheralded, untrumpeted act of naming the place el Elohe Israel. For the first time, Jacob actually calls the God of creation the God of Israel. For the first time, Jacob actually calls the God of creation the God of Israel. And guess who Israel was. Himself! He was saying that God was now his God. Don't let the significance of this fact be lost on you. Note what Wenham says, In calling the altar "El, the God of Israel," Jacob acknowledges that the creator God who had changed his name at the Yabbok to Israel was now his God. He had vowed at Bethel that if the Lord brought him back to his father's house in peace, "the Lord will be my God" (1994, p. 301). Pillar promises To getter a better grip on what's going on, we really need to fill in some detail about the Bethel deal Wenham refers to here. While fleeing Canaan with his brother Esau in hot pursuit, Jacob had a dream at Bethel in which he saw angels ascending and descending upon a ladder whose top reached up into heaven. Then God Himself appeared at the ladder's apex, and made a number of glowing promises laden with assurances of blessings unrivalled, blessings that would make the biggest prize in lottery's history blanch visibly (28:13-15). Jacob, showing no hint of remorse over his chicanery, responded with unfeigned self-concern laced with a dash of skeptical reserve: Then Jacob made a vow, saying, "If God will be with me, and keep me in this way that I am going, and give me bread to eat and clothing to put on, so that I come back to my father's house in peace, then the LORD shall be my God. And this stone which I have set as a pillar shall be God's house, and of all that You give me I will surely give a tenth to You (Gen. 28:20-22)". Jacob's vow that God would be his God if He brought him back safely from Mesopotamia needs to be seen in context. First, when God spoke to him from the top rung, He had promised to be with Jacob wherever he went, implying that He, God, would stand ever-watchful over Jacob and his family. On top of that, God had many years earlier made his grandfather Abram the following staggering promise: Also I give to you and your descendants after you the land in which you are a stranger, all the land of Canaan, as an everlasting possession; and I will be their God (Gen. 17:8). We are not drawing a long bow here to suggest that Jacob, a 'descendant' of Abram, and thus one of those of whom God was declaring He would be his God, was simply not going to meekly, willy-nilly let God be his God. (Oh, how short-sighted!) He was not going to naively believe God's magnanimous, munificent, magnificent claims. In essence, he was putting God to the test, declaring that if God really wanted to be his deity, then He had better come up with some good reason for it, He had better come up with the goods; Jacob specifically reiterated God's implied promise of a peaceful (safe) return to Canaan. At the same time, Jacob obligated himself to certain good deeds in return — to build a 'house' out of the pillar he had erected at the same spot, and to commence regular tithing on all his earnings. Jacob, procrastinator extraordinaire God fulfilled all his ladder promises, even though only in germ form compared with their long-term outworking, including bringing Jacob and his family safely back to Canaan. Jacob was stuck. Unless he was mad enough to tempt God, he knew he had to fulfill his side of the deal and return to Bethel to build a state-of-the-art altar, implied by his vow to build a 'house' there, and to start tithing. …. But Jacob was Jacob. Instead of going on to Bethel to fulfill his obligations, he dragged his feet at Shechem. Perhaps, in building a ruder altar there, and accepting God as his own personal God, he thought he had divested himself of any further obligation. Though the inner workings of Jacob's mind can not be known with any certainty, subsequent events prove that his Shechem dithering and lingering did not impress God at all …. Calamity at Shechem The next episode must surely go down in history's log book of treachery as a classic. Jacob's daughter, Dinah, went gallivanting around the district with the result that someone ended up with her in the kitchen where things got a little out of hand. His name happened to be Shechem, crown prince of the district. When they heard about it, Dinah's brothers were so incensed they hatched a diabolical plot. Feigning friendship, they offered Shechem Dinah's hand in marriage on one condition — that every male in town be circumcised. Shechem agreed. On the third day after the mass operation, when all the patients were in the direst of discomfort, Dinah's two brothers Simeon and Levi strapped on their keenly-honed swords, entered town, and pierced every grown male through virtually without resistance. Jacob was flabbergasted, angry, and smitten with terror, expecting reprisals from all quarters. God took advantage of his vulnerability under such duress, ordering him to go to Bethel and fulfill his vows: Then God said to Jacob, "Arise, go up to Bethel and dwell there; and make an altar there to God, who appeared to you when you fled from the face of Esau your brother" (Gen. 35:1). He went, and did it. But the Shechem story is nowhere near ended. Let us continue. If trees could talk …. So Jacob said to his household and to all who were with him, "Put away the foreign gods that are among you, and purify yourselves, and change your garments; then let us arise and go up to Bethel, that I may make there an altar to the God who answered me in the day of my distress and has been with me wherever I have gone." So they gave to Jacob all the foreign gods that they had, and the rings that were in their ears; and Jacob hid them under the oak which was near Shechem (Gen. 35:2-4). One strongly feels that this oak tree was not just any old tree, the use of the definite article suggesting such a conclusion. What other inference does the inspired text want us to draw than that it was the same one under which Abram built his altar, probably where Jacob had also erected his own? So at the very spot where Abram had demonstrated his conviction that God would one day faithfully fulfill His covenant promises, where Jacob himself first called God his God at the dedication of his altar, Jacob buried all remnants of pagan influence among them. Now there would have been untold thousands, if not millions of oak trees in Canaan where they could have buried their household idols. But no. Now there would have been untold thousands, if not millions of oak trees in Canaan where they could have buried their household idols. It had to be the same oak as that under which Abram built his altar. At the same oak tree in Shechem where Jacob first aspired to faithfulness by a mere show of it, now he sincerely repented and turned wholeheartedly to God. Dem bones, dem bones In an easily-overlooked verse, Joseph commanded his great-great-grandsons that they ensure his wish to have his bones returned to the Promised Land be permanently perpetuated until the day of Israel's departure from Egypt, as prophesied, should come: Then Joseph took an oath from the children of Israel, saying, "God will surely visit you, and you shall carry up my bones from here" (Gen. 50:25). Only one reason can be seen as lying behind Joseph's wish — the covenant promises of God that Israel would inherit the Promised Land. Joseph wished to lie in death among his own descendants. He obviously believed in God's faithfulness to those promises without reservation. Where were his bones eventually stowed when his descendants finally inherited the Promised Land? The bones of Joseph, which the children of Israel had brought up out of Egypt, they buried at Shechem, in the plot of ground which Jacob had bought from the sons of Hamor the father of Shechem (Josh. 24:32). One could take the stance that the only reason his bones found their final resting place in Shechem was that it lay in the territory Joseph's descendants occupied. Maybe. However, lots of other cities and towns lay in their territory. Why Shechem? One could, of course, ascribe the location to the normal human tendency to hallow places where important events had occurred, such as Shechem. Indeed, quite possible. But as we will see, the deed also fits into a matrix of deeds-events having a vital common denominator. Dem stones, dem stones Hundreds of years later, Joseph's descendants departed Egypt carrying his bones, in readiness to fulfill the promises God had made to the patriarchs. For forty years they wandered in the Sinai Peninsula. En route, Moses commanded them what they must do when finally they entered the Promised Land. The account is given in chapters 27 and 28 of Deuteronomy. The vital points are contained in 27:2-13: And it shall be, on the day when you cross over the Jordan to the land which the LORD your God is giving you, that you shall set up for yourselves large stones. You shall write on them all the words of this law. Therefore it shall be, when you have crossed over the Jordan, that on Mount Ebal you shall set up these stones. and you shall whitewash them with lime. And there you shall build an altar to the LORD your God, an altar of stones. Take heed and listen, O Israel: this day you have become the people of the LORD your God. Therefore you shall obey the voice of the LORD your God, and observe His commandments and His statutes which I command you today." And Moses commanded the people on the same day, saying, "These shall stand on Mount Gerizim to bless the people, when you have crossed over the Jordan. and these shall stand on Mount Ebal to curse. The law of God lay at the heart of the Sinaitic covenant inasmuch as it outlined in detail the terms of the covenant the people had to observe. As becomes clear in both Deuteronomy and later in the book of Joshua where the fulfillment is spoken of (8:30-35), between Ebal and Gerizim the people ratified the covenant made with God at Sinai. An altar of huge stones with the law of God inscribed on them was erected on Ebal, Shechem's sentinel mount, as a token of that covenantal commitment. Now. Guess where Mounts Ebal and Gerizim are located. They are the hills in whose valley Shechem lay! The vibrating, thundering chorus of millions of voices shouting 'Amen' in unison to the terms of the covenant, from hill to hill, echoed powerfully in the streets of Shechem below; nothing like it has ever been seen (better, heard) again in all history. The vibrating, thundering chorus of millions of voices shouting 'Amen' in unison to the terms of the covenant, from hill to hill, echoed powerfully in the streets of Shechem below Covenant ratified — yet again At the end of his life, Joshua called for Israel to assemble again — at Shechem. The solemnity of the occasion cannot be expressed better than by its simple yet inspired biblical description: Then Joshua gathered all the tribes of Israel to Shechem and called for the elders of Israel, for their heads, for their judges, and for their officers; and they presented themselves before God (Josh. 24:1). Joshua recounted God's faithfulness from the time of Abram's calling until He gave them the Promised Land. He solemnly impressed on them the importance of keeping faithfulness with God and his covenant. The following statement captures the sum and substance of the gathering's purpose: Now therefore, fear the LORD, serve Him in sincerity and in truth, and put away the gods which your fathers served on the other side of the River and in Egypt. Serve the LORD! (24:14) The phrase "sincerity and truth" is translated "sincerity and faithfulness" in the RSV. The real meaning of the phrase is best expressed by NIV's "with all faithfulness". Joshua told them that they must, in observing the covenant made with God, honor it with fullness of faithfulness. The people responded, equally solemnly, that they would do so: We also will serve the LORD, for He is our God (24:18). God was their God because He had promised to be the God of Abram's seed. They ratified the covenant with shouted professions of faithfulness. Little did they realize that the charge of faithfulness they accepted would later turn into a charge against them. When all was over, Joshua, … took a large stone, and set it up there under the oak that was by the sanctuary of the LORD (24:26). Eight hundred years had elapsed since Abram first built an altar under the Shechem oak tree. Could this possibly be the same tree? Eight hundred years had elapsed since Abram first built an altar under the Shechem oak tree. Could this possibly be the same tree? It's doubtful, though oaks can live for many hundreds of years. But its proximity to the "sanctuary of the LORD", which was probably the altars built by Abram and Jacob, indicates it was now taken to be the official substitute. Can we not picture Joshua pointing to the altars and the tree, can we not hear him rehearsing their stories? Can we not imagine him pointing to the ground, declaring "somewhere down there are the pagan gods your father Jacob buried; do the same, bury your false gods, and serve the one true God only." The stone was to witness to their promise to be true. On that day, under Abram's tree of promise, Israel ratified her covenant with God, the covenant she had made at Sinai about one hundred years earlier. The charge against About three hundred years later, a staggering event occurred in Shechem, one which gave the lie to the people's profession made at that city in Joshua's day that they and their descendants would forever be faithful. God was king From the very outset, God was king over Israel. The clearest exposition of this truth is found in 1 Samuel 12:12: And when you saw that Nahash king of the Ammonites came against you, you said to me, "No, but a king shall reign over us," when the LORD your God was your king. This truth received little in the way of enunciation in the Law simply because every moment of Israel's history renders it obvious. He created her as a people. He delivered them from annihilation in Egypt. Israel's covenant with God amounts to nothing less than a suzerainty treaty that finds its meaning only when made between a great king and subject peoples. His regal reign over Israel is evident in such passages as Exodus 15:18, Numbers 23:21; 24:7, Deuteronomy 17:14 and 33:5. But Israel rejected God in the days of Samuel, the last of the judges: And the LORD said to Samuel, "Heed the voice of the people in all that they say to you; for they have not rejected you, but they have rejected Me, that I should not reign over them" (1 Sam. 8:7). Such treason would ipso facto amount to rejection of the Sinaitic covenant whose central stipulation entailed loyalty to God. Nevertheless, God in His mercy did not call it quits right then. He endured hundreds of years of more active rejection of His proprietary rights over Israel before He brought into play the covenant sanctions of cursing as rehearsed at Shechem. Significantly, this official rejection of God's rule was preceded hundreds of years earlier by an abortive popular uprising against God, and guess where its locus was — yes, Shechem. This earlier act of treason set the scene for the later. The key player was a man by the name of Abimelech, whose father was the well-known judge Gideon, of fleece-and-dew fame. The book of Judges recounts how the people had approached Gideon, after God had used him to save Israel from Midianite oppression, and pleaded with him to be their king. Note his response, showing faithfulness to Israel's covenant with God: Then the men of Israel said to Gideon, "Rule over us, both you and your son, and your grandson also; for you have delivered us from the hand of Midian." But Gideon said to them, "I will not rule over you, nor shall my son rule over you; the LORD shall rule over you" (Judg. 8:22-23). Treason A greater contrast between father and son has rarely been witnessed in history as that between Gideon and Abimelech. Shortly after his father died, Abimelech went into treachery mode. Like the consummate politician he was, he lobbied hard in his town of Shechem (yes, that's right) to gain support. Feeling he had it, he murdered all seventy of his own brothers, barring one who escaped, on one rock in one day! Immediately, … all the men of Shechem gathered together, all of Beth Millo, and they went and made Abimelech king beside the terebinth tree at the pillar that was in Shechem (Judg. 9:6). Did you catch that? If you did, it probably caught your breath. At the very spot where, under the very tree where (Hamilton, p. 377), next to the very pillar where, three hundred years earlier, all Israel had sworn faithfulness to God and His covenant, where one thousand years earlier God first made the covenantal promises to Abram, where Jacob later buried the vestiges of his false gods, the populace of Shechem declared that a mere, evil man, was now their king. God, they proclaimed, was no longer even a puppet ruler. The outcome was utter disaster, perhaps even greater than that which had occurred in the same city hundreds of years earlier when Simeon and Levi slaughtered the entire male population. The outcome was utter disaster, perhaps even greater than that which had occurred in the same city hundreds of years earlier when Simeon and Levi slaughtered the entire male population. Read the entire account for yourself in Judges 9:1-20. In short, the honeymoon between Abimelech and the Shechemites was short-lived. God set animosity between them, resulting in Abimelech's massacre of the entire population. One thousand people perished in one incident when Abimelech set fire to the temple of Baal in which they were cringing in fear. That one thousand people could fit inside testifies to its considerable size. Why did this disaster occur? Listen carefully to what Jotham, Abimelech's lone surviving brother, had to say to the citizens of Shechem days before the massacre: Now therefore, if you acted in good faith and honor when you made Abimelech king, and if you have dealt well with Jerubbaal and his house, and have done to him as his deeds deserved. if you then have acted in good faith and honor with Jerubbaal and with his house this day, then rejoice in Abimelech, and let him also rejoice in you (Judg. 9:16-19). Twice in one short diatribe Jotham tells the people to judge themselves, whether or not they have acted in 'good faith and honor'. This phrase begs to be noted, for it is identical to that which Joshua used by the oak at Shechem in charging the people to serve God faithfully, a charge which the people accepted enthusiastically. Here, in exactly the same spot, the people cast aside their ancestors' voluble promises to serve God loyally and launched on a course of rebellion. These facts must not pass unnoticed. They provide a key to the proper understanding of biblical history, and of the meaning of covenants in particular. Interpreting the story What appears to be the three-stranded tip of a golden thread waves beckoningly around right from the beginning of the Shechem account. All three 'firsts' — a theophany, a pronouncement and an altar — share one common denominator, God's promises to Abram. One might wonder how Abram's building of an altar fits in with those promises. As soon as one starts looking for meanings to actions, the art of interpretation is called for. But Wenham doesn't blush at all in interpreting Abram's act: Abram built an altar to show that he believed the promise of the land. In building it, he symbolically demonstrated his conviction that one day it would belong to his descendants (1987, p. 280). Let us state right here the conclusion come to after studying the various clues relating to Shechem and its oak tree: Shechem serves as a mechanism for concentrating the theme of covenantal faithfulness to a sharp focal resolution. Topical connections are so strong that we can be confident God intends us to see an umbilical link between them all. At Shechem God began to unveil His special covenant with Abram and his descendants, and it was there that Abram responded with believing commitment. … it appears to have brought Jacob to genuine spiritual conversion and faithfulness to God, demonstrated by burying his household idols in the very patch of Promised Land soil where Abram first worshiped God. One could ascribe the act of Simeon and Levi in destroying Shechem as showing loyalty to the covenant promises. For if the marriage had gone ahead, it would have been the thin edge of the wedge. Israel was to preserve an unmixed blood line. Had intermarriage occurred, the very fulfillment of the promises that Abram's seed would inherit the land would be jeopardized. Thus, Simeon and Levi could well have done the "right thing". Wenham says, … the narrative hints at the multidimensional aspects of conduct, at the mixed motives that make it impossible either to condemn any of the actors absolutely or to exonerate them entirely (p. 317). Mackey’s comment: Judith will, in her magnificent prayer to God at the time of the evening offering in the Temple - and quite contrary to Jacob’s angry reaction to Simeon’s and Levi’s violent deed at Shechem (Genesis 34:30) - express nothing but admiration for what her ancestor Simeon (and Levi) had done, even using this as an incentive for her own move upon a new pagan Shechem-like offender, the Assyrian commander-in-chief “Holofernes” (Judith 9:1-10): Judith fell prostrate, put ashes upon her head, and uncovered the sackcloth she was wearing. Just as the evening incense was being offered in the temple of God in Jerusalem, Judith cried loudly to the Lord: ‘Lord, God of my father Simeon, into whose hand you put a sword to take revenge upon the foreigners … who had defiled a virgin by violating her, shaming her by uncovering her thighs, and dishonoring her by polluting her womb. You said, ‘This shall not be done!’ Yet they did it. Therefore you handed over their rulers to slaughter; and you handed over to bloodshed the bed in which they lay deceived, the same bed that had felt the shame of their own deceiving. You struck down the slaves together with their masters, and the masters upon their thrones. … Their wives you handed over to plunder, and their daughters to captivity, and all the spoils you divided among your favored children, who burned with zeal for you and in their abhorrence of the defilement of their blood called on you for help. O God, my God, hear me also, a widow. It is you who were the author of those events and of what preceded and followed them. The present and the future you have also planned. …. Whatever you devise comes into being. The things you decide come forward and say, ‘Here we are!’ All your ways are in readiness, and your judgment is made with foreknowledge. …. Here are the Assyrians, a vast force, priding themselves on horse and chariot, boasting of the power of their infantry, trusting in shield and spear, bow and sling. …. They do not know that you are the Lord who crushes wars …. Lord is your name. Shatter their strength in your might, and crush their force in your wrath. …. For they have resolved to profane your sanctuary, to defile the tent where your glorious name resides, and to break off the horns of your altar with the sword. See their pride, and send forth your fury upon their heads. Give me, a widow, a strong hand to execute my plan. By the deceit of my lips, strike down slave together with ruler, and ruler together with attendant. Crush their arrogance by the hand of a female’. Covenantal promises first given to Abram at Shechem, first acknowledged then fully committed to by Jacob at Shechem, guarded by Simeon and Levi at Shechem, possibly symbolized by Joseph's bones at Shechem, were twice ratified in Joshua's time, in modified form, by Israel at Shechem, where the emphasis was placed on 'fullness of faithfulness'. Shechem was also where Joshua placed the massive, covenantal 'law stones' as God had commanded. Hundreds of years later, the citizens of Shechem discarded every vestige of loyalty to the covenant and embarked on a course of treachery, rejecting God as king in preference for a wicked blob of Abimelech flesh. Hundreds of years later, the citizens of Shechem discarded every vestige of loyalty to the covenant and embarked on a course of treachery Jotham's discourse included a reference to 'fullness of faithfulness' that his listeners would almost certainly have taken as alluding to Joshua's warning. Adding insult to injury but strength to the thesis, Shechem was one of only six cities of refuge and of numerous Levite cities (see Joshua 21:1-3, 21), cities inhabited by that tribe set aside for special service to God. Such a city should have stood a bastion of squeaky-clean holiness to the bitter end; instead, the depth of its traitorousness is indelibly stamped on history's record in the stark shape of its large temple of Baal. Horror of horrors, the city had become a centre of Canaanite worship. Further, after the death of King Solomon, the epochal split of the one kingdom of Israel into two separate kingdoms occurred when the people turned, admittedly under provocation, against the legitimate Davidic successor and followed the upstart usurper Jeroboam (see 1 Kings 12:1-19). The event occurred at Shechem, which also became Jeroboam's first capital. All these facts underscore as plainly as can be imagined the very essence of covenantal relationships. Though the form of the covenants God made with Israel may have imitated standard ancient practice, the Bible's repeated Shechem incidents highlight the heart and core of healthy relationships between God and man — mutually-observed faithfulness — as well as its opposite, perfidious unfaithfulness. The Shechem type teaches what it is that keeps a covenant robust and healthy; the glue that holds two parties together in covenantal bliss consists of the vital attribute of faithfulness. Without faithfulness on the part of both parties, covenants are ultimately doomed. This marvellous history of Shechem typically lacks a wonderful later chapter, which is the apocalyptical Judith incident. The tale of Judith, a heroine virtually forgotten to Israel in terms of her historicity, has resonated down through the centuries in ancient pagan tales of vague reminiscence, and has even been projected into pseudo AD ‘history’. “W. Ross in Palestine Exploration Quarterly (1941), p.22-27 reasoned, I believe correctly, that the Bethel of Jeroboam must be Shechem, since it alone fills the requirements”. Dr. John Osgood I finally got around to accepting Shechem (rather than the far less significant Mithilia, or Mesilieh) as the strategically important city of “Bethulia”, the home of the Simeonite heroine, Judith, whose womanly intervention would lead to the rout of Sennacherib’s 185,000 strong Assyrian army. Now, was Achior of the Book of Judith taken captive to the same approximate place where Rebekah’s nurse, Deborah, had long ago been buried? (Genesis 35:8) For it, too, was beneath or “below Bethulia [= Bethel]”, that is, Shechem (Judith 6:10-13): Then Holofernes ordered his slaves, who waited on him in his tent, to seize Achior and take him away to Bethulia and hand him over to the Israelites. So the slaves took him and led him out of the camp into the plain, and from the plain they went up into the hill country and came to the springs below Bethulia. When the men of the town saw them, they seized their weapons and ran out of the town to the top of the hill, and all the slingers kept them from coming up by throwing stones at them. So having taken shelter below the hill, they bound Achior and left him lying at the foot of the hill, and returned to their master. If so, the place was full of biblical significance. F. Olojede tells us all about it in “THE “FIRST DEBORAH” – GENESIS 35:8 IN THE LITERARY AND THEOLOGICAL CONTEXT: https://www.ajol.info/index.php/actat/article/viewFile/146010/135522 Deborah’s burial under the oak near Bethel not only resonates with two other burials in the chapter, but also echoes a fourth (in fact, the first) “burial” in 35:4. Jacob is said to have buried all the foreign gods and jewels that belonged to his household. Although the Hebrew word translated as “bury” (טָמןַ) in verse 4 is different from קָּבֵ֛ר in verses 8, 19, and 29, the “burial” of those gods and rings seems to be a token of the real burials that would inevitably follow. It is interesting to note that the burial in verse 4 took place near Shechem, like Deborah’s, under the terebinth. Hamilton (1995:378-379) reckons that Deborah’s burial under the oak tree is used deliberately to act as a parallel to the internment of the false gods under the terebinth (cf. Fretheim 1994:586). Whereas the burial of Deborah resulted in the naming of the oak, the burial of the gods did not (Janzen 1993:140). More importantly, the association of Deborah’s burial with Bethel echoes the reference to Bethel in verses 1-7 and 9-16. Whereas some scholars tend to regard Genesis 35:8 as an intrusion in the chapter, the reference to Bethel in the verse as in the preceding and following verses points to the contrary. Rather, it alludes to some underlying harmony between the verse and its context, at least from a literary standpoint. Coats’ (1983:238) insight in this regard is especially crucial to this discussion. He notes that, although Deborah plays no role in the narrative, the unit in which she is mentioned has contact with the rest of the narrative only on the basis of a catchword, Bethel (cf. Gomes 2006:88)! Therefore, the significance of Bethel in the unit will be explored later in the discussion. In addition, the naming of the oak in remembrance of Deborah corresponds with the setting up of the pillar over Rachel’s tomb, as Blum rightly noted. Both were to serve as monuments to these unforgettable women who both died on the way. Overall, the intratextual references in verse 8 to other portions of the chapter point to some textual unity within the chapter. ….

Judith’s City of ‘Bethulia’

Part One: Setting the Campaign Scene by Damien F. Mackey The massive, all-conquering Assyrian army, led by “Holofernes”, having brought into subjection the coastal Mediterranean cities, now turns its sights upon Israel. Early in my university thesis (2007): A Revised History of the Era of King Hezekiah of Judah and its Background AMAIC_Final_Thesis_2009.pdf I had anticipated that (Volume One, p. 8): “Some important geographical revisions will also be proposed in this thesis”. One of these pertained to Bethulia”: “The most significant of these will be: ‘ASHDOD’, featuring prominently in Sargon II’s records as a fort leading a western rebellion against him, usually identified with the coastal Philistine city of that name (the latter now to be now identified with the ‘Ashdudimmu’, or maritime Ashdod, of the neo-Assyrian records), will be re-identified with the mighty Judaean fortress of LACHISH. ‘CONDUIT OF THE UPPER POOL, WHICH IS ON THE HIGHWAY TO THE FULLER’S FIELD’ (cf. 2 Kings 18:17 & Isaiah 7:3; 36:2) …. ‘BETHULIA’: Judith’s home town, to be identified with the northern BETHEL, that Jeroboam II of Israel had formerly turned into a pagan cult centre (e.g. Amos 7:10-13)”. Then in Volume Two (“Identification of Bethulia”, pp. 69-71), I would embrace C. R. Conder’s identification of Bethulia with the village of Mithilia (or Mesilieh). Whilst I am still holding to only the first of these, I have had cause to re-think the location and identification of Bethulia, about which I had written (Volume Two, p. 71): “I find quite satisfying this site (Mithilia/Meselieh), which appears to fit Bethulia in regard to its location, description, name (approximately) and apparent strategic importance”. The Book of Judith is, in its present form, replete with personal and geographical name difficulties, a situation that has led scholars - particularly in more recent times - to relegate the book to the level of “pious” or “historical fiction”. As I noted in my Preface (p. x), I would try to sort things out by locating the drama to a very precise historical period: The full resolution of this complicated matter though, as I see it, will not be found until Part II, with my merging of the Book of Judith with the Books of Kings, Chronicles and Isaiah for the era of Hezekiah (Chapter 2 and Chapter 3). I have nowhere read where this particular historical scenario for Judith has been attempted; though, in retrospect, the C8th BC Hezekian era for the Judith drama, with Sennacherib ruling in Assyria, now seems to me to be rather obvious. Be that as it may, I know of virtually no current historians who even consider the Book of Judith to be anything other than a ‘pious fiction’, or perhaps ‘historical fiction’, with the emphasis generally on the ‘fiction’ aspect of this. Thus I feel a strong empathy for the solitary Judith in the midst of those differently-minded Assyrians (Judith 10:11-13:10). Earlier in Volume Two (p. 27), I had quoted C. Moore regarding difficulties that commentators have encountered concerning the geographical account of the Assyrian campaign: Moore tells of some of the problems associated with this particular campaign account: …. Chaps. 2 and 3 of Judith continue to offer serious errors in fact but of a different kind, namely, geographical. Holofernes’ entire army marched from Nineveh to northern Cilicia, a distance of about three hundred miles, in just three days (2:21), after which they cut their way through Put and Lud (usually identified by scholars with Libya in Africa, and Lydia in Asia Minor, respectively …), only to find themselves crossing the Euphrates River and proceeding west through Mesopotamia (2:24) before arriving at Cilicia and Japheth, facing Arabia (2:25)! Either something is now missing from the itinerary, or the author knew nothing about Mesopotamian geography …. Once Holofernes reached the eastern coastline of the Mediterranean, his itinerary becomes more believable even though a number of cities and peoples mentioned are unknown, e.g. Sur and Okina (2:28) and Geba (3:10). Just exactly what route Holofernes’ army took to get from the coastal cities of Azotus and Ascalon (2:28) to the place where they could encamp and besiege Bethulia is unknown. The LXX seems to suggest that Holofernes’ attack on Bethulia came from the north (cf. 4:6; 8:21; 11:14, 19). … According to verse 4:4: “So [the Israelites living in Judaea] sent word to every district of Samaria, and to Kona, Beth-horon, Belmain, and Jericho, and to Choba and Aesora, and the valley of Salem”. Moore finds this highly problematical also: …. Starting with chap. 4, the problem shifts from the author’s errors and confusion over geographical names and locations to the reader’s ignorance and confusion as to the geographical locations of sites near Bethulia. For instance, of the eight Israelite places named in 4:4, five are totally unknown, namely, Kona, Belmain, Choba, Aesora, and the valley of Salem. … Craven though, whose purpose will be rather a literary assessment of [the Book of Judith], has no qualms therefore in dismissing as insignificant the historical and geographical problems of [the Book of Judith] with which other commentators of the book have tried to grapple: …. “The Book of Judith simply does not yield literal or even allegorical data. Instead, its opening details seem to be a playful manipulation of both historical and geographical facts and inventions”. Charles C. Torrey will, on the other hand, in his article back in 1899, “The Site of 'Bethulia'” (JAOS 20, pp. 160-172), take far more seriously the geographical details. It is this particular article that actually prompted my re-think of Bethulia. Thus Torrey wrote, for example (p. 161): “But in the frequent descriptions with which the writer gives of the region where the principal action of the story take place, the geographical and topographical details are introduced in such number and with such consistency as to show that he is describing localities with which he was personally familiar. Nor is it difficult to determine, in general, what region he had in mind. Beyond question, the discomfiture of the ‘Assyrian’ army is represented as having taken place in the hill country of Samaria, on the direct road from Jezreel to Jerusalem”. Two key places for defence were, apparently, “Bethulia and Betomesthaim” facing Esdraelon (or Jezreel). For it was to these two towns that the high priest Joakim wrote from Jerusalem (thesis, Volume Two, p. 53): The High-Priest, Joakim Instead of a king to stir up the people, as Hezekiah had done at the commencement of Sennacherib’s invasion (2 Chronicles 32:2-8), for his Third Campaign, [Judith] 4:6-7 introduces us to: “The high priest, Joakim, who was in Jerusalem at the time [who] wrote to the people of Bethulia and Betomesthaim, which faces Esdraelon opposite the plain near Dothan, ordering them to seize the mountain passes, since by them Judaea could be invaded …”. For more on the high priest, Joakim, see e.g. my article: Hezekiah's Chief Official Eliakim was High Priest https://www.academia.edu/31701765/Hezekiahs_Chief_Official_Eliakim_was_High_Priest and: https://www.academia.edu/31701911/Hezekiahs_Chief_Official_Eliakim_was_High_Priest._Part_Two_Eliakim_points_to_Saint_Peter Continuing on now with the “Assyrian Advance on Bethulia” (Volume Two, p. 61), I wrote: [Judith] 7:1: “The next day Holofernes ordered his whole army, and all the allies who had joined him, to break camp and to move against Bethulia, and to seize the passes up into the hill country and make war on the Israelites”. The Assyrian fighting forces, “170,000 infantry and 12,000 cavalry, not counting the baggage and the foot soldiers handling it” (v. 2), now numbered that fateful figure of 180,000 plus. …. “When the Israelites saw their vast numbers, they were greatly terrified and said to one another, ‘They will now strip clean the whole land; neither the high mountains nor the valleys nor the hills will bear their weight’.” (v. 4). One can now fully appreciate the appropriateness of Joel’s ‘locust’ imagery. [The Book of Judith] provides the reader with a precise location for the Assyrian army prior to its assault of the fortified towns of Israel facing Dothan. • I give firstly the Douay version of it (7:3): All these [Assyrian footmen and cavalry] prepared themselves together to fight against the children of Israel. And they came by the hillside to the top, which looketh toward Dothain [Dothan], from the place which is called Belma, unto Chelmon, which is over against Esdraelon. • Next the Greek version, which importantly mentions Bethulia (v. 3): They encamped in the valley near Bethulia, beside the spring, and they spread out in breadth over Dothan as far as Balbaim and in length from Bethulia to Cyamon, which faces Esdraelon. The combination of the well-known Dothan (var. Dothain) and Esdraelon in both versions presents no problem, and fixes the area where the Assyrian army massed. The identification of Bethulia will be discussed separately, in the next chapter (section: “Identification of Bethulia”, beginning on p. 69). The only other geographical elements named are ‘Belma’ (Douay)/ ‘Balbaim’ (Greek); and ‘Chelmon’ (Douay)/ ‘Cyamon’ (Greek). Charles has, not illogically, linked the first of these names, which he gives as ‘Belmaim’ (var. Abelmain) … with the ‘Belmaim’ listed in 4:4. …. And he tells that, in the Syrian version, this appears as ‘Abelmeholah’. …. But both this location, and “Cyamon, Syr Kadmûn, VL Chelmona”, he claims to be “unknown”. …. Leahy and Simons, on the other hand, have both ventured identifications for these two locations. And they have each in fact arrived at the same conclusion for ‘Belbaim’ (‘Belma’) … though Simons will reject the identification of ‘Cyamon’ (‘Chelmon’) that we shall now see that Leahy has favoured. Here firstly, then, is Leahy’s account of it, in which he also connects ‘Belbaim’ with the ‘Balamon’ of 8:3 (pertaining to the burial place of Judith’s husband, Manasseh): …. Holofernes had given orders to break up camp and march against Bethulia. Then, according to the Gk, the army camped in the valley near Bethulia, and spread itself in breadth in the direction over against Dothan and on to Belbaim (Balamon of Gk 8:3, Belma of Vg, Jible´am of Jos 17:11, the modern Khirbet Bel´ame), and in length from Bethulia to Kyamon (Chelmon of Vg, Jokne´am of Jos 12:22, the modern Tell Qaimun). Simons will instead prefer for ‘Cyamon’, modern el-jâmûn. …. Here is his geographical assessment of the final location of the Assyrian army as given in the Greek version: …. Judith vii 3b describes the location of BETHULIA more closely. The clause is easily understandable on the condition that two changes are made, viz. “breadthwise ‘from’ … DOTHAIM unto BELBAIM and lengthwise from ‘BELBAIM’ (LXX reads “BETHULIA”. However, the besieged city itself cannot have been at the extremity of the besieging army) unto CYAMON which is opposite (the plain of) Esdrelon” or in terms of modern geography; from tell dôtân unto hirbet bel’ameh and from hirbet bel’ameh unto el-jâmûn. The disposition of Holofernes’ army thus described is perfectly comprehensible, if BETHULIA was situated between the upright sides of a triangle, the top of which was the twice mentioned site of hirbet bel’ameh, while its base was a line from tell dôtân to el-jâmûn. According to Moore (above), “… of the eight Israelite places named in [Judith] 4:4, five are totally unknown, namely, Kona, Belmain, Choba, Aesora, and the valley of Salem”. But we have just found that “Belmain”, for instance, may not be “totally unknown”. Moreover, there was apparently a northern “Salem” in the region of Shechem (Genesis 33:18 KJV): “And Jacob came to Shalem, a city of Shechem, which is in the land of Canaan, when he came from Padanaram; and pitched his tent before the city.” “It is certainly a remarkable fact, supporting the King James Version, that about 4 miles East of Shechem (Nablus), there is a village bearing the name Salem”. http://biblehub.com/topical/s/shalem.htm The Valley of Salem deserves far closer attention (see next section), because there is a Psalm, purportedly pertaining to the time of King Hezekiah and the defeat of the Assyrians, in which there occurs a reference to “Salem”. Even, according to M. D. Goulder, “a battle at Salem”: “Selah Psalm 76 is widely seen as a companion to Psalm 75. ... victory in war, and celebrates the divine deliverance of Israel in a battle at Salem near Shechem” (The Psalms of Asaph and the Pentateuch: Studies in the Psalter, III, p. 86). Salem Important “So they sent a warning to the whole region of Samaria and to the towns of Kona, Beth Horon, Belmain, Jericho, Choba, and Aesora, and to Salem Valley. They immediately occupied the mountaintops, fortified the villages on the mountains, and stored up food in preparation for war”. Judith 4:4-5 Previously I had noted that “… there was apparently a northern “Salem” in the region of Shechem (Genesis 33:18 KJV): “And Jacob came to Shalem, a city of Shechem …” …. It is certainly a remarkable fact … that about 4 miles East of Shechem (Nablus), there is a village bearing the name Salem”. One really needs to take seriously what may seem at first like insignificant geographical clues. Salem or Shalem The mysterious “Salem” in the Bible inevitably gets connected with Jerusalem. For example (https://www.biblicaltraining.org/library/valley-shaveh): SHAVEH, VALLEY OF (shā'vĕ, Heb. shāwēh, a plain). Also called “the king’s dale”; a place near Salem (i.e., Jerusalem, Ps.76.2), where, after rescuing his nephew Lot, Abraham met the king of Sodom (Gen.14.17). It is identified by some as the same place where Absalom erected a memorial to himself (2Sam.18.18). In the Psalm referred to here, 76 (Hebrew), or 75 (Douay), the word Shalem (שָׁלֵם) seems to be - in typical Hebrew parallelistic fashion - juxtaposed with Zion (צִיּוֹן), as if identifying the two (76:3): “In Salem also is set His tabernacle, and His dwelling-place in Zion”. But, as we have gleaned from the OT books of Genesis and Judith, there was apparently also a northern Salem. And indeed some, for example “… the list of earlier scholars … identified Melchizedek’s Salem with Shechem …” (Studies in the Pentateuch, Volume 41, edited by John Adney Emerton, p. 53). The NT also refers to a place named “Salim”, which some think may have been partly in the vicinity of Shechem (http://biblehub.com/topical/a/aenon.htm): “[Aenon] Springs, a place near Salim where John baptized (John 3:23). It was probably near the upper source of the Wady Far'ah, an open valley extending from Mount Ebal to the Jordan. It is full of springs. A place has been found called `Ainun, four miles north of the springs”. M. D. Goulder had, as noted, referred to “a battle at Salem” near Shechem, in the north, in relation to: “Selah Psalm 76 is widely seen as a companion to Psalm 75. ... victory in war, and celebrates the divine deliverance of Israel in a battle at Salem near Shechem”. This - whilst not according entirely with my previous acceptance of Judith’s “Bethulia” as Mithilia (much closer to Dothan) - does accord very well, however, with my firm conviction that the Battle of the Book of Judith had occurred in the north, and not in the south at Jerusalem. The Douay version of the Psalm (there numbered as 75) connects it explicitly to King Hezekiah (“Ezechias”) and “the Assyrians”, which is precisely where I have located it historically. Thus: …. God is known in his church: and exerts his power in protecting it. It alludes to the slaughter of the Assyrians, in the days of king Ezechias. [1] Unto the end, in praises, a psalm for Asaph: a canticle to the Assyrians. [2] In Judea God is known: his name is great in Israel. [3] And his place is in peace: and his abode in Sion: [4] There hath he broken the powers of bows, the shield, the sword, and the battle. [5] Thou enlightenest wonderfully from the everlasting hills. [6] All the foolish of heart were troubled. They have slept their sleep; and all the men of riches have found nothing in their hands. [7] At thy rebuke, O God of Jacob, they have all slumbered that mounted on horseback. [8] Thou art terrible, and who shall resist thee? from that time thy wrath. [9] Thou hast caused judgment to be heard from heaven: the earth trembled and was still, [10] When God arose in judgment, to save all the meek of the earth. [8] "From that time": From the time that thy wrath shall break out. [11] For the thought of man shall give praise to thee: and the remainders of the thought shall keep holiday to thee. [12] Vow ye, and pay to the Lord your God: all you that are round about him bring presents. To him that is terrible, [13] Even to him who taketh away the spirit of princes: to the terrible with the kings of the earth. Ramses II and Salem Rohl goes even further than that, and - whilst rightly rejecting Champollion’s old identification of the 22nd dynasty’s pharaoh Shoshenq I with the biblical “Shishak king of Egypt” … proceeds to identify Ramses II as “Shishak”. Given the strategic importance of “Salem” in the environs of Shechem during the massive Assyrian invasion of Syro-Palestine, as discussed in Part One with reference to Judith 4, then I must reconsider my former acceptance of the view of some that the pharaoh Ramses II, when conquering the “city of Shalem”, was actually attacking Jerusalem itself. Previously we noted that “… there was apparently a northern “Salem” in the region of Shechem (Genesis 33:18 KJV): “And Jacob came to Shalem, a city of Shechem …” …. It is certainly a remarkable fact … that about 4 miles East of Shechem (Nablus), there is a village bearing the name Salem”. That Shalem was Jerusalem, though, is the view argued by, for instance, Dr. David Rohl in his book, A Test of Time. The Bible: - From Myth to History (Century, London 1995). Rohl goes even further than that, and - whilst rightly rejecting Champollion’s old identification of the 22nd dynasty’s pharaoh Shoshenq I with the biblical “Shishak king of Egypt”, who sacked the Temple of Yahweh after the death of king Solomon - proceeds to identify Ramses II as “Shishak”. And Peter van der Veen will firmly back up Rohl on this: http://www.bga.nl/en/discussion/engveen.html VII. Did Ramesses II conquer Jerusalem? In my view, the city of Shalem conquered by Ramesses II in his Year 8 cannot be identified with any other city in Palestine other than Jerusalem ('city of Shalem'). The inscription on the north pylon of the Ramesseum probably does not list the cities in geographical sequence but rather as highlights of the campaign. Ramesses did indeed take the cities of Merom, Kerep, etc, but this does not mean that he could not have taken a city in the south on his way back to Egypt or during his expedition against Moab. …. [End of quote] My own view is that pharaoh Ramses II was by no means “Shishak”, but was Thutmose III of the Eighteenth Egyptian Dynasty. See e.g. my article: The Shishak Redemption (5) The Shishak Redemption | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu So, I now think that Dr. Rohl was not only wrong about his choice of pharaoh for “Shishak”, but possibly also for his identification of the “Shalem” in the Egyptian records with the city of Jerusalem. Blown into oblivion Blown away like autumn leaves, as Lord Byron had poetically written - so have the winds of time erased even the memory of the Assyrian rout. I have often marvelled at how thoroughly has the memory of the destruction of the Assyrian king Sennacherib’s massive army disappeared from the records of history. “Like the leaves of the forest when Autumn hath blown”, as Lord Byron wrote: “And the eyes of the sleepers waxed deadly and chill”. And: “Hath melted like snow”. Apart from the occasional general, only, references to the fact of the incident, say in Sirach (48:21): “The Lord struck down the camp of the Assyrians, and his angel wiped them out”, or I Maccabees 7:41: “There Judas prayed, ‘Lord, the Scriptures tell us that when a king sent messengers to insult you, your angel went out and killed 185,000 of his soldiers’” (cf. 2 Maccabees 15:22), we have to turn to the classical sources for any glimpse of the drama. Herodotus, for instance, pitted the event at “Pelusium” (the eastern extremity of the Nile Delta), at the time of a pharaoh “Sethos”. And he attributed the disaster to a plague of mice (2:141): “ when Sanacharib, king of the Arabians and Assyrians, marched his vast army into Egypt, the warriors one and all refused to come to his [i.e., the Pharaoh Sethos'] aid. On this the monarch, greatly distressed, entered into the inner sanctuary, and, before the image of the god, bewailed the fate which impended over him. As he wept he fell asleep, and dreamed that the god came and stood at his side, bidding him be of good cheer, and go boldly forth to meet the Arabian host, which would do him no hurt, as he himself would send those who should help him. Sethos, then, relying on the dream, collected such of the Egyptians as were willing to follow him, who were none of them warriors, but traders, artisans, and market people; and with these marched to Pelusium, which commands the entrance into Egypt, and there pitched his camp. As the two armies lay here opposite one another, there came in the night, a multitude of field-mice, which devoured all the quivers and bowstrings of the enemy, and ate the thongs by which they managed their shields. Next morning they commenced their fight, and great multitudes fell, as they had no arms with which to defend themselves. There stands to this day in the temple of Vulcan, a stone statue of Sethos, with a mouse in his hand, and an inscription to this effect - "Look on me, and learn to reverence the gods."[2] The only detailed account of the incident (including the all-important geographical data) that I had ever been able to find, and it is a most substantial one, is that set out in the Book of Judith. Here we are provided with the why, the when, and the whereabouts of the disaster – all of it encompassed within a magnificently readable drama which has rightly become famous. But there are Judith echoes to be found everywhere, from BC time through to supposed AD time, as I pointed out e.g. in my article: Ancient tales inspired by Judith of Bethulia (5) Ancient tales inspired by Judith of Bethulia | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu in the “Lindian Chronicle”; in parts of Homer’s The Iliad; Tomyris and Cyrus; Beta Israel’s Gudit the Semienite, c. 1000 AD (matching Judith the Simeonite): Judith the Simeonite and Judith the Semienite (5) Judith the Simeonite and Judith the Semienite | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu Whilst I was already aware that Douay Psalm 75 was considered to refer to King Hezekiah and the Assyrian defeat, I had not picked up on – until now – that crucial “Salem” (or Shalem) connection between the Psalm and the “Salem Valley” of Judith 4:4. ‘Salem’ in the Psalm (76, Hebrew) I had considered to be a parallelism with ‘Zion’ (Jerusalem). King Sennacherib had, of course, successfully attacked Jerusalem and its environs during his Third Campaign, which could not, however, have been the ill-fated Assyrian one that had resulted in the complete rout of the Gentile army. This is quite apparent from the sequence in Isaiah 37. According to the prophecy (v. 33): ‘Therefore this is what the LORD says concerning the king of Assyria …’, all the things that Isaiah said the “king of Assyria” would not do, he had already managed to do during his highly successful Third Campaign (vv., 33-35): ‘He will not enter this city or shoot an arrow here. He will not come before it with shield or build a siege ramp against it. By the way that he came he will return; he will not enter this city’, declares the LORD. ‘I will defend this city and save it, for my sake and for the sake of David my servant!’ [,] this followed immediately by (v. 36): “Then the angel of the LORD went out and put to death a hundred and eighty-five thousand in the Assyrian camp. When the people got up the next morning—there were all the dead bodies!” Psalm 76 (Hebrew) may finally be that missing connection for which I had been searching, providing that all-important detail of the location of the battle and rout: viz., “Salem Valley”. In Byron’s poem there is, happily, no mention of a disaster in the vicinity of Jerusalem, with only “Galilee” (north) being referred to: The Destruction of Sennacherib (1815) George Gordon Byron The Assyrian came down like the wolf on the fold, And his cohorts were gleaming in purple and gold; And the sheen of their spears was like stars on the sea, When the blue wave rolls nightly on deep Galilee. Like the leaves of the forest when Summer is green, That host with their banners at sunset were seen: Like the leaves of the forest when Autumn hath blown, That host on the morrow lay withered and strown. For the Angel of Death spread his wings on the blast, And breathed in the face of the foe as he passed; And the eyes of the sleepers waxed deadly and chill, And their hearts but once heaved, and for ever grew still. And there lay the steed with his nostril all wide, But through it there rolled not the breath of his pride: And the foam of his gasping lay white on the turf, And cold as the spray of the rock-beating surf. And there lay the rider distorted and pale, With the dew on his brow and the rust on his mail; And the tents were all silent, the banners alone, The lances unlifted, the trumpet unblown. And the widows of Ashur are loud in their wail, And the idols are broke in the temple of Baal; And the might of the Gentile, unsmote by the sword, Hath melted like snow in the glance of the Lord! Part Two: Not Mithilia (Mesilieh) but Shechem Modern Mithilia, formerly my choice for the site of Judith’s “Bethulia”, may not actually be significant - or strategically important - enough. In retrospect, I may have been swayed to some extent in my former choice of Mithilia (or Mesilieh) by the fact that Claude Reignier Conder, who had thus identified Judith’s site of Bethulia, had appeared to believe in the reality of the whole thing. For he had written: “In imagination one might see the stately Judith walking through the down-trodden corn-fields and shady olive-groves, while on the rugged hillside above the men of the city “looked after her until she was gone down the mountain, and till she had passed the valley, and could see her no more” (Judith x 10)” – C. R. C., ‘Quarterly Statement’, July, 1881. Those, on the other hand, who had opted for different sites for “Bethulia”, such as the strong fort of Sanur, for instance, or for Shechem, did not appear to give the impression of believing that the Book of Judith was describing a real historical incident. For instance Charles C. Torrey, who favoured Shechem for “Bethulia”, would brush off the overall story of Judith in the following dismissive fashion (“The Site of 'Bethulia'”, JAOS 20, 1899, p. 160): “The author of the story brings into it an unusual number of geographical and topographical details; names of countries, cities, and towns, of valleys and brooks. With regard to a part of these details, especially those having to do with countries or places outside of Palestine, it can be said at once that they are merely literary adornment, and are not to be taken seriously”. And, a bit further on, Torrey will continue in the same vein: “These are all just such details as we expect to see employed by a story-teller who, without being very well informed, wishes to make his tale sound like a chapter of history …”. But could the village of Mithilia, Conder’s choice, be significant enough for the original site? Admittedly, it seemed to fit some of the details of the Book of Judith. Thus Conder wrote: “?Meselieh? A small village, with a detached portion to the north, and placed on a slope, with a hill to the south, and surrounded by good olive-groves, with an open valley called W鈊y el Melek (“the King’s Valley’) on the north. The water-supply is from wells, some of which have an ancient appearance. They are mainly supplied with rain-water. In 1876 I proposed to identify the village of Meselieh, or Mithilia, south of Jenin, with the Bethulia of the Book of Judith, supposing the substitution of M for B, of which there are occasional instances in Syrian nomenclature. The indications of the site given in the Apocrypha are tolerably distinct. Bethulia stood on a hill, but not apparently on the top, which is mentioned separately (Judith vi. 12) There were springs or wells beneath the town (verse 11), and the houses were above these (verse 13). The city stood in the hill-country not far from the plain (verse 11), and apparently near Dothan (Judith iv. 6). The army of Holofernes was visible when encamped near Dothan (Judith vii. 3, 4), by the spring in the valley near Bethulia (verses 3-7).’The site usually supposed to represent Bethulia – namely, the strong village of Sanur – does not fulfill these various requisites; but the topography of the Book of Judith, as a whole, is so consistent and easily understood, that it seems that Bethulia was an actual site. Visiting Mithilia on our way to Shechem? we found a small ruinous village on the slope of the hill. Beneath it are ancient wells, and above it a rounded hill-top, commanding a tolerably extensive view. The north-east part of the great plain, Gilboa, Tabor … and Nazareth, are clearly seen. West of these are neighbouring hillsides Jenin and Wady Bel’ameh (the Belmaim, probably of the narrative); but further west Carmel appears behind the ridge of Sheikh Iskander … and part of the plain of ‘Arrabeh, close to Dothan, is seen. A broad corn-vale, called “The King’s Valley”, extends north-west from Meselieh toward Dothan, a distance of only 3 miles. There is a low shed formed by rising ground between two hills, separating this valley from the Dothain plain; and at the latter site is the spring beside which, probably, the Assyrian army is supposed by the old Jewish novelist [sic] to have encamped. …”. But, against the choice of both Mithilia (“Mithilīyeh”) and Sanur (“Ṣānūr”), C. Torrey would write rather convincingly (op. cit., pp. 162-163): “… the city which the writer of this story [Judith] had in mind lay directly in the path of Holofernes, at the head of the most important pass in the region, through which he must necessarily lead his army. There is no escape from this conclusion. This absolutely excludes the two places which have been most frequently thought of as possible sites of the city, Ṣānūr and Mithilīyeh, both midway between Geba and Genin [presumably Jenin]. Ṣānūr, though a natural fortress, is perched on a hill west of the road, and “guards no pass whatsoever” (Robinson, Biblical Researches … iii. 152f.). As for Mithilīyeh, first suggested by Conder in 1876 (see Survey of Western Palestine, Memoirs, ii. 156f.), it is even less entitled to consideration, for it lies nearly two miles east of the caravan track, guarding no pass, and of little or no strategic importance. Evidently, the attitude, hostile or friendly, of this remote village would be a matter of indifference to a great invading army on its way to attack Jerusalem. Its inhabitants, while simply defending themselves at home, certainly could not have held the fate of Judea in their hands; nor could it have ever occurred to a writer of such a story as this to represent them as doing so”. The author reconsiders his former choice for “Bethulia”, of Mithilia, now in favour of the more well-known and strategic city of Shechem. The Jewish Encyclopedia (“Judith, Book Of”) tells of the appropriateness of Shechem for Judith city of “Bethulia”: http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/9073-judith-book-of “… Identity of Bethulia. As Torrey first pointed out, in the "Journal of the American Oriental Society," xx. 160-172, there is one city, and only one, which perfectly satisfies all the above-mentioned requirements, namely, Shechem. A great army, with its baggage-trains, breaking camp at Geba in the morning (vii. 1), would arrive in the afternoon at the springs in the broad valley (ib. 3) just under Shechem. This, moreover, is the city which occupies the all-important pass on this route, the pass by which "was the entrance into Judea" (iv. 7). Furthermore, each one of the details of topography, which the writer introduces in great number, finds its unmistakable counterpart in the surroundings of Shechem. The valley below the city is on the west side (vii. 18; comp. ib. verses 13, 20). The "fountain of water in the camp" (xii. 7) is the modern Bait al-Ma, fifteen minutes from Shechem. The ascent to the city was through a narrowing valley (xiii. 10; comp. x. 10). Whether the words "for two men at the most" (iv. 7) are an exaggeration for the sake of the story, or whether they truly describe the old fortifications of the city, it is impossible to say with certainty. At the head of this ascent, a short distance back from the brow of the hill, stood the city (xiv. 11). Rising above it and overlooking it were mountains (vii. 13, 18; xv. 3). The "fountain" from which came the water-supply of the city (vii. 12 et seq.) is the great spring Ras el-'Ain, in the valley (ἐν τῷ αὐλῶνι, ib. 17) just above Shechem, "at the foot" of Mount Gerizim. The abundant water-supply of the modern city is probably due to a system of ancient underground conduits from this one spring; see Robinson, "Physical Geography of the Holy Land," p. 247, and Guérin, "Samarie," i. 401 et seq. Further corroborative evidence is given by the account of the blockade of Bethulia in vii. 13-20. "Ekrebel" is 'Aḳrabah, three hours southeast of Shechem, on the road to the Jordan; "Chusi" is Ḳuza (so G. A. Smith and others), two hours south, on the road to Jerusalem. The identity of Bethulia with Shechem is thus beyond all question. …”. Against this, we read in The Book of Judith: Greek Text with an English Translation, ed. Morton Scott Enslin, p. 80): “Shechem may well have been known to the author, but if he utilized it as the site of his Judean Thermopylae, he has allowed himself full liberty in his description. Bethulia is high on the mountain; Shechem was not”. Though, on the other hand, we read in Joshua 21:21: “… they gave them Shechem with her suburbs in mount Ephraim …”. And I Kings 12:25: “Then Jeroboam built Shechem in mount Ephraim …”. ‘O Lord, the God of my ancestor Simeon, remember how you armed Simeon with a sword to take revenge on those foreigners who seized Dinah, who was a virgin, tore off her clothes, and defiled her; they stripped her naked and shamed her; they raped her and disgraced her, even though you had forbidden this’. Judith 9:2 Since Judith here recalls an unsavoury incident that had occurred at the city of Shechem, then this would add force to the location of her town of ‘Bethulia’ as Shechem. That the rape of Dinah had occurred at Shechem is apparent from the geographical lead-in of Genesis 33:18-20: After Jacob came from Paddan Aram, he arrived safely at the city of Shechem in Canaan and camped within sight of the city. For a hundred pieces of silver, he bought from the sons of Hamor, the father of Shechem, the plot of ground where he pitched his tent. There he set up an altar and called it El Elohe Israel. The pagan Canaanite, Shechem, who defiled the virgin, turns out to be somewhat more honourable than, later, David’s eldest son, Amnon, who, having raped his half-sister, Tamar, then abandons her as “a desolate woman”. See my article: The vicissitudinous life of Solomon's pulchritudinous wife (2) The vicissitudinous life of Solomon's pulchritudinous wife | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu But none of that ‘honourableness’ is about to impress the vengeful brothers Simeon and Levi. In the following Genesis 34:1-31 account of the incident one will notice a stark contrast between Jacob’s reaction to it and that of Simeon and Levi – and how different is Jacob’s estimation of Simeon (and Levi) when compared to Judith’s glowing account of her ancestor: Dinah and the Shechemites Now Dinah, the daughter Leah had borne to Jacob, went out to visit the women of the land. When Shechem son of Hamor the Hivite, the ruler of that area, saw her, he took her and raped her. His heart was drawn to Dinah daughter of Jacob; he loved the young woman and spoke tenderly to her. And Shechem said to his father Hamor, ‘Get me this girl as my wife’. When Jacob heard that his daughter Dinah had been defiled, his sons were in the fields with his livestock; so he did nothing about it until they came home. Then Shechem’s father Hamor went out to talk with Jacob. Meanwhile, Jacob’s sons had come in from the fields as soon as they heard what had happened. They were shocked and furious, because Shechem had done an outrageous thing in Israel by sleeping with Jacob’s daughter—a thing that should not be done. But Hamor said to them, ‘My son Shechem has his heart set on your daughter. Please give her to him as his wife. Intermarry with us; give us your daughters and take our daughters for yourselves. You can settle among us; the land is open to you. Live in it, trade in it, and acquire property in it’. Then Shechem said to Dinah’s father and brothers, ‘Let me find favor in your eyes, and I will give you whatever you ask. Make the price for the bride and the gift I am to bring as great as you like, and I’ll pay whatever you ask me. Only give me the young woman as my wife’. Because their sister Dinah had been defiled, Jacob’s sons replied deceitfully as they spoke to Shechem and his father Hamor. They said to them, ‘We can’t do such a thing; we can’t give our sister to a man who is not circumcised. That would be a disgrace to us. We will enter into an agreement with you on one condition only: that you become like us by circumcising all your males. Then we will give you our daughters and take your daughters for ourselves. We’ll settle among you and become one people with you. But if you will not agree to be circumcised, we’ll take our sister and go’. Their proposal seemed good to Hamor and his son Shechem. The young man, who was the most honored of all his father’s family, lost no time in doing what they said, because he was delighted with Jacob’s daughter. So Hamor and his son Shechem went to the gate of their city to speak to the men of their city. ‘These men are friendly toward us’, they said. ‘Let them live in our land and trade in it; the land has plenty of room for them. We can marry their daughters and they can marry ours. But the men will agree to live with us as one people only on the condition that our males be circumcised, as they themselves are. Won’t their livestock, their property and all their other animals become ours? So let us agree to their terms, and they will settle among us’. All the men who went out of the city gate agreed with Hamor and his son Shechem, and every male in the city was circumcised. Three days later, while all of them were still in pain, two of Jacob’s sons, Simeon and Levi, Dinah’s brothers, took their swords and attacked the unsuspecting city, killing every male. They put Hamor and his son Shechem to the sword and took Dinah from Shechem’s house and left. The sons of Jacob came upon the dead bodies and looted the city where their sister had been defiled. They seized their flocks and herds and donkeys and everything else of theirs in the city and out in the fields. They carried off all their wealth and all their women and children, taking as plunder everything in the houses. Then Jacob said to Simeon and Levi, ‘You have brought trouble on me by making me obnoxious to the Canaanites and Perizzites, the people living in this land. We are few in number, and if they join forces against me and attack me, I and my household will be destroyed’. But they replied, ‘Should he have treated our sister like a prostitute?’ Later, a dying Jacob will ‘curse the anger’ of the fiery pair of brothers (49:5-7): ‘Simeon and Levi are brothers— their swords are weapons of violence. Let me not enter their council, let me not join their assembly, for they have killed men in their anger and hamstrung oxen as they pleased. Cursed be their anger, so fierce, and their fury, so cruel! I will scatter them in Jacob and disperse them in Israel’. No such negative sentiment as this will arise from Judith, however. Had not God himself “armed Simeon with a sword to take revenge on those foreigners who seized Dinah …”? And now Judith will reverse the ancient crime of the pagan Shechem by personally overcoming the god-less “Holofernes” who wishes to take sexual advantage of her. She, like Simeon, will be ‘armed with a sword’ to accomplish the deed (Judith 13:14-16): Judith shouted, ‘Praise God, give him praise! Praise God, who has not held back his mercy from the people of Israel. Tonight he has used me to destroy our enemies’. She then took the head out of the food bag and showed it to the people. ‘Here’, she said, ‘is the head of Holofernes, the general of the Assyrian army, and here is the mosquito net from his bed, where he lay in a drunken stupor. The Lord used a woman to kill him. As the Lord lives, I swear that Holofernes never touched me, although my beauty deceived him and brought him to his ruin. I was not defiled or disgraced; the Lord took care of me through it all’. In this heroic action, Judith - as the faithful have long recognised - prefigures the Virgin Mary: https://icxcmary.wordpress.com/2011/09/18/esther-judith-mary/ Another Old Testament heroine is Judith. The way she prefigures Mary is somewhat different. As we know from Genesis, God put enmity between the woman and the serpent, who represent Mary and the devil, respectively, and through the power of her Son, the Woman would crush the serpent’s head. Well, Judith is an image of this mystery, for she saved her people by cutting off the head of the evil and tyrannical general, Holofernes. Judith, like Esther and like Mary, was exceedingly beautiful and devout, and was held in high honor by her people. When their faith wavered in the face of the threats and power of the enemy, she counseled them to trust in God, and not put Him to the test by placing a limit on how long they would wait for Him before they would surrender to their enemies. For God would deliver them at the proper time by the hand of a woman. After Judith had killed the enemy leader and returned victorious to her people, they sang to her (and this is used in the Latin Rite on certain feasts of Our Lady): “You are the exaltation of Jerusalem; you are the great glory of Israel; you are the great pride of our nation! You have done all this single-handedly; you have done great good to Israel, and God is well pleased with it. May the Almighty Lord bless you forever! … The Lord Almighty has foiled them by the hand of a woman!” (Jdt. 15:9-10; 16:6). Our Lady is the Woman at whose hand (or rather, under whose foot) God has foiled the designs of our evil enemy, the devil. God has chosen her to bring the Savior into the world and to stand with Him and to wield the power He has given her to protect us from evil and to neutralize its power and influence in our lives. There is much more that can be said about Old Testament prefigurings of the Mother of God, but let this suffice for now. Let us realize that just as the mystery of Christ was known in Heaven for all eternity, the mystery of his Mother was known as well—for how could there be an incarnate Son considered in isolation from the one who gave flesh to Him? So the mystery of both Mother and Son was intimated in the stories of salvation history, until their complete revelation in the fullness of time—and the ever-deepening understanding of these divine mysteries in the ongoing life of the Church, until the Lord returns in glory.