Religious Tradition and Cultic Practice in Judges 17–18
Jason S. Bray
NEW YORK • LONDON
Copyright © 2006 by Jason S. Bray
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Bray, Jason S. (Jason Stephen)
Sacred Dan: religious tradition and cultic practice in Judges 17–18 / Jason S. Bray.
p. cm.—(Library of Hebrew Bible/Old Testament studies; 449)
Based on the author’s thesis (Ph. D.)—University of Cambridge, originally presented under the title: The Danite cultic legend in its ancient Near Eastern context.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-567-02712-0 (hardcover: alk. paper)
1. Bible. O.T. Judges XVII–XVIII—Criticism, interpretation, etc. I. Title. II. Series.
BS1305.52.B73 2006
222′.3206—dc22
1. The Case of Dan: Judges 17–18
3. Historical and Textual Issues
a. Judges 17–18 and the History of the Danites
Sacred Tradition in Judges 17–18
2. Form-Critical Analysis of the Danite Story
3. Cultic Aetiologies in the Hebrew Bible
4. The Cultic Foundation Story in the Hebrew Bible
5. The Danite Story and the Jerusalem Stories
6. The Cultic Foundation Story in Judges
8. Cultic Foundation Stories in the Ancient Near East
9. Cultic Foundation Stories from Other Cultures
Cultic Practice in Judges 17–18
Image Worship in the Danite Story
1. The Image in the Danite Story
3. The פסל in the Hebrew Bible
4. The פסל of Micah and the Bull Image of Royal Dan
6. The Origins of Bull Iconography
Excursus: Bull Imagery in Ugaritic and Hebrew Texts
7. Image Worship in the Ancient Near East
8. The Cultic Image among the Hebrews and in the Ancient Near East
9. Image Worship and the Archaeology of Tel Dan
1. Priests in the Danite Legend
2. The Initiation Rites of the Priests in the Danite Story
3. The Priestly Functions in the Hebrew Bible
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About Sacred Dan: Religious Tradition and Cultic Practice in Judges 17–18This study uses the sacred traditions of Dan in Judges 17–18 as a springboard for an examination of the nature of the pre-exilic cult at Dan and in the Northern Kingdom in general, with particular reference its Ancient Near Eastern context. An introduction reviews previous scholarship, and concludes that the cultic aspects of Judges 17–18 have not been examined in any depth. It then goes on to deal with the historical and redactional issues which previous scholars have found interesting. The issues of provenance and dating are then examined with the conclusion that the text was written down in the immediate aftermath of the Assyrian conquest of Dan in an attempt to preserve its sacred traditions. The text therefore reflects the self-understanding of the priests of Dan in the period immediately prior to its fall. The text of Judges 17–18 is then subjected to a rhetorical critical examination, followed by a more traditional form critical study. The next section is a comparison of similar cultic foundation stories from other cultures. Three major chapters examine the three major cultic issues raised by the text itself: images, priests and divination. Each chapter draws on evidence from the Hebrew Bible and its environment in an attempt to clarify the nature of the cult of Dan. Broadly, each chapter concludes that although there were some features peculiar to the cult reflected by Dan, in general, the Danite cult was not greatly different from that of its neighbors. A final chapter deals with what the text says about the tribe of Levi, with the conclusion that according to Judges 17–18, there was once a secular tribe of Levi. The conclusion draws a brief picture of cultic life in Dan in its final years. |
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