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The Yahwist's Landscape - Nature and Religion in Early Israel (Hardcover)
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The Yahwist's Landscape - Nature and Religion in Early Israel (Hardcover)
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The ecological crisis has created new interest in the ideas about
nature found in the Bible, which is often depicted as the source of
attitudes that have led to the destruction of our environment. The
Hebrew Scriptures, for example, are seen as enshrining oppositional
views of nature, because it is assumed that the earliest Israelites
were living in a hostile desert environment. In this book Theodore
Hiebert re-examines these assumptions, and offers a new
understanding of the role of nature in biblical thought. Hiebert
stresses the importance of reading the Hebrew Scriptures in their
ancient Near Eastern context. He concentrates on the Bible's
earliest account of origins: the narratives of the Pentateuch, or
Torah, usually attributed to a single author, the Yahwist. His
analysis incorporates evidence from recent work in archaeology,
history, anthropology, and comparative religion concerning the
ecologies, economies, and religions of the ancient Levant. Hiebert
shows that the Yahwist's formative landscape was actually hill
country with a mixed agrarian economy. The view of God and the
kinds of religious ritual described in the Yahwist's narratives are
closely linked to this agricultural landscape and reflect the
challenges of human survival within it. Rather than posing a
problem for biblical religion, the world of nature is seen to play
a foundational role in the shape and content of that tradition.
Hiebert concludes that the Yahwist's ideology is relevant to
contemporary efforts to frame a theology of ecology. Particularly
useful to these efforts are the Yahwist's views of reality as
unified and non-dualistic, humanity as limited and dependent,
nature and humanity as interrelated andof sacred significance, and
agriculture as a context for an ecological theology.
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