![]()  | 
        READING HALL THE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
        ![]()  | 
      
![]()  | 
        ![]()  | 
      
![]()  | 
      
             CHAPTER
            VII
                   I.
             THE
            HISTORICAL OUTLINES
                   
             THE little that
            is known directly of Syria and Palestine during I the Persian age is almost
            wholly concerned with the Jews. Although these lands, constituting, as they
            did, part of the fifth of the twenty satrapies of the Achaemenids, were
            involved in the larger history of Persia and the West, the Jews alone preserved
            their national consciousness, and formed a link between the Assyrian and
            Babylonian age and the events leading up to the rise of Christianity.
            Jerusalem, so sequestered as not to command the attention of the curious
            Herodotus—who does not name the Jews—stands out by reason of an achievement
            which sealed the long development of the religion of Israel: the inauguration
            of ‘Post-exilic Judaism.’ This event, remote though it is from the main
            historical theme of the present volume, was destined ultimately to shape the
            world’s history, and an account of it, so far as our scanty and difficult
            sources allow, must be given in this place.
                 A period
            which once seemed somewhat dull and lifeless is now found to be one of great
            permanent changes; and its most conspicuous monument is the Pentateuch. For, in
            the view of modern scholars, ‘the Mosaic history is not the starting-point for
            the history of ancient Israel, but for the history of Judaism.’ What was really
            a new stage in the religious development of Israel has been carried back and
            ascribed to the beginning of the tribal history, before the Davidic monarchy;
            and the Persian age is now the vantage ground from which the Old Testament
            viewed in the light of modern research becomes more intelligible.
                 The books of
            Ezra and Nehemiah, our main source, are an integral part of the ‘Chronicler’s
            History’, which passes from the capture of Jerusalem by the Babylonian Nebuchadrezzar (586 BC) to the return of Jewish exiles by
            the permission of Cyrus the first ruler of the Persian dynasty (538 BC). This
            history is that of the men who returned each to his own city, the rebuilding of
            the Temple in spite of continued opposition—the help of Samaritans being
            rejected—and the establishment of a distinctive community separated from the
            Samaritans and other strangers. The reader is looking at events through the
            eyes of uncompromising reformers whose horizon is strangely circumscribed. On
            the internal history of Palestine as a whole during the exile, on the
            prominence of the new Davidic scion Zerubbabel, and on the Messianic hopes of
            his supporters the ‘Chronicler’ maintains silence; though from the independent
            writings of the contemporary prophets Haggai and Zechariah (c. 520 BC) two
            facts emerge: (1) that no considerable or influential body of exiles could have
            returned, and (2) that Zerubbabel stands for a religious and political movement
            far more significant than our scanty narratives record. A renewal of the
            Davidic monarchy was evidently in the air. But some sixty years pass before the
            curtain is lifted again, and the Chronicler records that in the seventh year of
            Artaxerxes (458 BC) Ezra, a priest and scribe, receiving royal permission,
            returned accompanied by a body of priestly, temple and lay followers, with rich
            gifts for the temple, and extensive powers. His task was to inquire into the
            religious conditions, to instruct the people in accordance with the Law
            (Torah), and to appoint judges for all the Jews ‘beyond the River’. His mission
            is represented as the first step in the inauguration of post-exilic Judaism.
   This
            benevolent action of the Persian king is the outstanding fact in the
            inauguration of Judaism. It is in contrast to the inveterate jealousy and
            hostility of the neighbours of the Jews, and to the story of Esther and the
            escape of the Jews from massacre in the reign of the preceding king Ahasuerus
            or Xerxes. How far such favour—which was also enjoyed by the colony at
            Elephantine—was influenced by merely political considerations it is difficult
            to say. Judah—Palestine in general—had traditional political relations with
            Egypt (whence the presence of the military colony in Elephantine), as also with
            Babylonia. Presumably it was affected by the revolts in Babylonia which
            compelled Xerxes to adopt a less conciliatory policy, as also by the intrigues
            of Inaros and Megabyxus in
            Egypt. The foreign policy of the petty peoples was rarely if ever unanimous and
            the revolts outside their doors were usually accompanied by serious dissensions
            within. Yet, however that may be, it appears that Ezra’s far-reaching plans
            with all the political consequences involved in them were frustrated, not by
            any political opposition, but by the internal conditions among the Jews
            themselves. There had been extensive intermarrying with strangers and,
            according to the narrative, almost his first step, instigated by the leading
            men in Judah, was to purge the community by the summary expulsion of the
            non-Jewish wives and their children (Ezra X).
   At this point
            our narrative suddenly introduces us to quite another situation—the vivid story
            of Nehemiah’s vigorous efforts to revive a prostrate and defenceless Jerusalem.
            Thirteen years have passed. It is the twentieth year of Artaxerxes (445 BC; or
            twenty-fifth year, so Josephus) and Nehemiah the cup-bearer of the Great King
            at Susa is overwhelmed with grief at the news of the lamentable condition of
            the city of his fathers’ tombs—he was perhaps of royal ancestry. He gained the
            ear of the king—and of the queen: harem rule prevailed in Persia, and it is
            thought possible that he was a eunuch. Leave was granted him to return to
            rebuild Jerusalem. Like Zerubbabel he firmly refused aid from outside, and
            succeeded in arousing his disheartened and indifferent brethren. Despite
            continuous intrigue and opposition, he sufficiently strengthened the walls in
            the short space of fifty-two days, and then the blow fell. Opposed to him was a
            strong party, Sanballat, the Ammonite Tobiah, Gashmu the Arabian, and their supporters and kinsmen among
            the Jews. It was alleged that Nehemiah had bribed prophets to hail him king—a
            charge which recalls the enthusiastic anticipations of Haggai and Zechariah for
            Zerubbabel. No doubt there were fears of some fresh political aggrandizement,
            and specimens of the utterances of patriotic prophets may perhaps be recognized
            in Is. LX—LXIIl, where, though there is no Messianic
            figure, the supremacy of the holy city of Zion is awaited. But it was an empty
            city and Nehemiah’s task was to fill it. At this point the story breaks off;
            and Ezra suddenly reappears on the stage.
   Now at last
            the Law is read, and in accordance with its prescripts the ‘seed of Israel’
            observed the national Feast of Tabernacles as never before ‘since the days of
            Joshua.’ They separated themselves from strangers, and a covenant was solemnly
            drawn up. Its chief terms were the avoidance of intermarriage with the heathen,
            no Sabbath trading, the observance of the Sabbatic year, the remission or rather suspension of debts every seventh year, and
            various regulations for the maintenance of the Temple. That the remarkable
            powers conferred upon Ezra by Artaxerxes were fully utilized does not appear;
            but the occasion, as is shown by the list of those who signed it, was regarded
            as epoch-making, and it culminated in the determination never to forsake the
            ‘house of our God’ (Oct. 445 BC).
   Again there
            is an abrupt change in the narrative—the city is being repopulated, the newly
            built walls are dedicated, and Nehemiah makes arrangements for the temple
            ministrants. On the strength of the Deuteronomic law the Jews separated
            themselves from Ammon, Moab and other strangers. In some way twelve more years
            have passed, and Nehemiah, who had returned to Persia, obtained leave in the
            thirty-second year of Artaxerxes to revisit the city (433 BC). Grievous sights
            met his eyes. The sanctity of the Sabbath was being profaned by Jewish and
            Tyrian traders, the Hebrew language was dying out owing to intermarriages, the
            temple service was crippled, the high priest Eliashib was allied by marriage with the Ammonite Tobiah whom
            he had installed in one of the temple-chambers, and a son of Eliashib’s son Joiada was
            son-in-law to Sanballat. The zealous governor remedied matters in his own
            vigorous way, and with his work in purging the priesthood and re-establishing
            the temple organization, his lively story ceases with the prayer: ‘Remember me,
            O my God for good.’ A place must be found somewhere in the history for a
            striking narrative, now strangely inserted in the midst of the hasty rebuilding
            of the walls of the city, where he tells of his generous measures on behalf of
            his poorer brethren, and his integrity and hospitality during a twelve years’
            governorship. The solidarity of the people had been broken by class-differences
            and reckless divorces (denounced by the evidently contemporary ‘Malachi’), and
            a new social covenant also stands to his credit. Thus does the personality of
            Nehemiah stand out, more clearly than most characters in the Old Testament; and
            although, as will have been seen, the chapters relating to him do not furnish a
            simple outline of events, they afford the starting-point for any discussion of
            the history of the reign of Artaxerxes.
   Certain facts
            can be clearly recognized: the fortification of Jerusalem, the reorganization
            of the Temple, its personnel and cult, the importance attached to the Sabbath;
            the introduction of the Law, the divorce of foreign wives and the separation
            from strangers, and the formation of an exclusive Judaean community, almost an
            ecclesiastical community. But difficult problems at once arise. Thus Nehemiah’s
            last step—the purging of the priesthood— appears to have some reference to the
            great Samaritan schism, when the intermittent hostility between Judah and
            Samaria led to the subsequent enmity of two closely-related though rival sects.
            So at least the Jewish historian Josephus understood the schism, although in
            his version it is placed about a century later, in the days of Joiada’s grandson Jaddua and the
            invasion of Alexander the Great. According to this writer, at a time of fierce
            animosity between Samaria and Jerusalem, Sanballat, then an old man, sought to
            win over the Jews by marrying his daughter Nikaso to
            the priest Manasseh, the brother of Jaddua. This was
            bitterly resented in Judah, and at last Manasseh, with sundry priests and
            Levites who had married strangers, migrated to Samaria where Sanballat built a
            temple for them on Mt Gerizim. The story is circumstantial, but such was the
            ignorance which came to prevail concerning the Achaemenid dynasty that it is
            not easy to decide when the final separation actually occurred. Certainly the
            slumbering jealousy between north and south readily burst into flame as
            occasion offered, but the acceptance by the Samaritans of the Pentateuch, together
            with other evidence, points to one or more periods of rapprochement.
   Some light
            has more recently been thrown upon the age by the Jewish papyri discovered at
            Elephantine (mainly in 1904—8), and in particular by the appeals sent to
            Jerusalem and Samaria after the destruction of the local temple of Yahu (Yahweh) by the Egyptians in the reign of Darius II
            (411 BC). For some reason no notice was taken of the first appeal addressed to Jehohanan (John) the high-priest of Jerusalem and to Ostanes, whose brother Anani is
            specially mentioned, and may therefore have been Zerubbabel’s descendant of
            that name. On the other hand, a sympathetic reply was received from one of the
            two sons of Sanaballat (a more correct spelling of
            the name) and from the Judaean governor Bagohi. The
            events belong to the generation after Nehemiah. Sanballat is presumably
            represented by his sons, and these would be brothers-in-law of the renegade son
            of Joiada (the son of Eliashib)
            or of Manasseh the son of Johanan (so Josephus) the
            leading figures in the two versions of the Samaritan schism. It is of course
            possible that there were two Sanballats, and
            certainly the name Bagohi was not a rare one.
            Further, Josephus tells of a Bagoses a military
            commander, evidently of the time of Artaxerxes II (404-358 BC.), who proposed
            to replace the high-priest John by his brother Joshua (Jeshua);
            and who, when John slew the latter within the sacred precincts, severely
            punished the crime, enslaving the people and imposing heavy tribute upon the
            daily sacrifices in the temple. Josephus, while condemning Bagoses for having ‘polluted’ the temple by entering it, does not conceal his
            abhorrence of the fratricide, which he places immediately before the Samaritan
            schism. Such an incident must reflect far-reaching political and religious
            differences between the governors and priests of Judah. The more exclusive
            policy of Nehemiah, like the failure of the Jerusalem high-priest to respond to
            the appeal from Elephantine, thus stands in contrast to the action of Sanballat
            and his two sons—both of whom have distinctly Jewish names—and of the Persian
            governor Bagohi. It would be tempting to speculate
            further upon the attitude of the Jews of Elephantine to Persia, and upon both
            the more exclusive and the more conciliatory tendencies which can so easily be
            recognized; but it is difficult to frame a consistent chronological
            reconstruction of the course of events and of the relations between Jews and
            Samaritans.
   The Jewish
            Canonical History ended with the significant reforms of Nehemiah, aimed at
            Samaritans and other non-Jews. But at a much later date the series of
            documents, Chronicles-Ezra-Nehemiah, was artificially divided and the halves
            transposed, so that in the Hebrew Bible Chronicles now stands after its sequel
            in Ezra-Nehemiah. In consequence of this division, the Bible of the scattered
            Jews of subsequent centuries ended appropriately on a happy note, with the rise
            of a new and friendly empire and the opportunity to return to Jerusalem to
            rebuild the Temple. On the other hand, the incomplete First Esdras of the
            Apocrypha—which breaks off in the middle of a sentence—has an order of its own,
            and represents the increasing tendency to place Ezra’s work before Nehemiah’s.
            This tendency grew, and Josephus places Ezra wholly before Nehemiah, and Ezra’s
            work very fittingly ends, as has been seen, with the vow to cherish the Temple.
            Thus there are different tendencies and arrangements in order to give the first
            position to Ezra or to find some suitable climax, and in giving effect to this
            or the other intention alterations have been made sometimes of a very intricate
            character.
                 While
            Josephus has concentrated the chief events upon the coming of Alexander the
            Great, other late Jewish writers made Ezra the predominating figure. Not only
            is he supposed to rewrite the Sacred Books which had been burnt with the
            temple, but others besides (24 canonical and 70 esoteric works). He also
            introduces a new script, the Aramaic ancestor of the ‘square’ Hebrew in the
            place of the older which was retained by the Samaritans. To him is also
            ascribed (by a dubious interpretation of Neh. VIII, 8) the Targum or popular
            Aramaic version. In fact Ezra becomes a hated figure among the Samaritans for
            his activity in intensifying the differences between them and the Jews1. Here
            tradition has concentrated on one figure and on one age changes which were
            spread over a considerable interval; and the same possibility applies to the
            earlier tradition preserved in the biblical books.
                 In contrast
            with this exaltation of the priest Ezra the layman Nehemiah is the more
            important figure in earlier tradition, and Ezra is not named by Ben Sira in his
            list of post-exilic heroes. Nehemiah, it was said, actually built the Temple
            and the altar, he resumed the sacrifices, and collected ‘writings concerning
            the kings and the prophets, and the books of David and letters of kings about
            sacred gifts’. He is thus a forerunner of Judas Maccabaeus who collected the
            books that survived the ravages of war; and it is noteworthy that even in the
            Old Testament some building or repair of the temple is ascribed to the reign of
            Artaxerxes I (Ezra VI, 14). There is a growing consensus of opinion that the
            account of the work of Ezra presupposes that of Nehemiah: the soil has been
            prepared, the city is populous, conditions are more stable, the political
            opposition has been put down; religious changes alone remain to be carried out,
            and they are willingly effected. The work of Nehemiah, in turn, presupposes
            more disturbed conditions; the energetic layman seems to precede the priest. It
            is very generally agreed, therefore, that Ezra did not return before Nehemiah,
            though it is disputed whether to place the priestly scribe between the first
            and second visits of Nehemiah, or after Nehemiah and under the Second
            Artaxerxes, or even to reject the story of Ezra as a later invention.
                 Whichever of
            these views be adopted, we have still to seek the cause of the scenes of
            desolation and despair which confronted Nehemiah—must we look back nearly a
            century and a half to the Fall of Jerusalem (586 BC), or was it more recent ? A
            valuable Aramaic fragment, now out of place in the account of the rebuilding of
            the temple by Zerubbabel in the time of Darius, tells of an important
            return of Jews in the reign of Artaxerxes to rebuild the walls, though
            curiously enough the version in 1 Esd. II, 18, 2.0
            refers to the temple. Bishlam, Mithredath, Tabel and other
            officials, it is said, wrote to the King to protest that these Jews were
            rebuilding a city which had a reputation for its intransigence, and that if
            this were done it would be a danger to the empire; Artaxerxes, having
            ascertained that Jerusalem had indeed been rebellious and the seat of powerful
            kings, gave orders for the work to be stopped forcibly until instructions were
            sent. So runs the fragment, which has been utilized to explain the cessation of
            the building of the temple between the reigns of Cyrus and Darius. By some it
            is thought to explain the unhappy conditions which confronted Nehemiah. But a
            better place for it would be after Nehemiah’s return, at the point where the
            story abruptly ceases. The opposition probably reached its height with the
            allegation that political aims were on foot, and Nehemiah himself states, ‘Tobiah sent letters to put me in fear’. Fortified though
            Nehemiah was with the King’s authority, the accusation of disloyalty and
            rebellion might well alarm the King; and Tobiah,
            whose letters so disturbed the honest governor, has a name which is the Hebrew
            equivalent of  the Aramaic Tabel who was among those who formally complained to
            Artaxerxes. Nehemiah himself was obliged to return to the King; and since he
            reappears on his second visit in a stronger position, it may be assumed that
            Artaxerxes satisfied himself of the governor’s loyalty. But it is also possible
            that the fears of Artaxerxes were aroused and that care was taken to preclude
            any monarchical aspirations: certainly the later governor Bagohi seems far less of a Jew than either Zerubbabel or Nehemiah.
   In any case,
            the story of Ezra represents the sort of ecclesiastical movement that could
            follow the more primitive activities of a Nehemiah who—if only perhaps by
            reason of his ancestry— laid himself open to the suspicion of nationalistic
            activities: contrast Bagohi’s association with the
            son of Sanballat. The story of Ezra is also the prelude to the subsequent
            theocracy. It is virtually the description of the inauguration of Judaism; and
            when Ezra reads the Book of the Law, the narrator is evidently referring to the
            Pentateuch as a whole, even as it was Deuteronomy which, according to an
            earlier writer, had been ‘rediscovered’ in the reign of Josiah.
   All the main
            traditions converge upon the reign of Artaxerxes I. Thenceforth there is
            silence, unless, as some scholars urge, the account of the favour shown by the King
            of Persia to Ezra belongs to the reign of Artaxerxes II, in which case his
            return should be dated to 397 BC. The latter king is, however, notorious for
            his recognition of Mithra and the goddess Anahita by the side of the supreme
            god Ahura-mazda, and images of the goddess were set
            up in the larger Persian cities, in Damascus, and as far afield as Sardes. While there was much in the character of the
            ethical and imageless All-Creator Ahura-mazda with
            which Jews could sympathize, the addition of an intermediary and redeeming god
            Mithra, and, in particular, the religious prostitution associated with Anahita,
            a goddess of the Ishtar type, would inevitably provoke the Jews who had come
            under the influence of the prophets and the Deuteronomic reforming movement,
            and fierce opposition is only to be expected. Direct evidence is wanting,
            although mention should perhaps be made of the view that the religious changes
            led to a crisis in Judaism which forms the historical basis of the highly
            embellished traditions of Jewish persecution and reprisals in the book of
            Esther.
   Later, the
            separatist movements in Egypt and the West shook the Persian empire. The revolt
            of Evagoras (389 BC) extended to Phoenicia and Palestine,
            and the unrest of c. 366—60 BC, like the Phoenician revolts and the
            re-organization of Egypt 343—2 BC, doubtless had their repercussion in
            Palestine. According to a late and rather dubious tradition, recorded by
            Eusebius, Jericho was captured and Jews carried off to Hyrcania and elsewhere. In the romance of Judith, too, traces of historical events of
            the time of Artaxerxes Ochus (358—38) have been
            conjectured. Not unnaturally has it been thought that those Old Testament
            passages which relate to the sufferings of the Jews and to the anticipations of
            deliverance, and which, on internal grounds, appear to be later than the sixth
            century BC and the time of Zerubbabel, really belong to this later period. In
            this way the age of Artaxerxes III and the advent of Alexander the Great, with
            all its promise of a new epoch, can, in the opinion of some scholars, be
            illustrated by passages which otherwise might seem to belong to the rise of the
            Persian Empire itself, when Cyrus was the expected saviour. In default of
            contemporary external evidence the most valuable criteria are to be found in
            the history of religious ideas and the literary growth of the Old Testament,
            although intricate problems of the development of thought are involved. But
            something will have to be said on these, so vital and suggestive are they; they
            serve to fill the gaps in the narrative, and the nature of these gaps will be
            realized when one looks back to the Fall of Jerusalem in 586 BC, the scanty
            facts of Zerubbabel and the Second Temple (520—16 BC), and, travelling over the
            obscure history of Nehemiah and Ezra, passes through some two or three blank
            centuries before the historical narrative is resumed in the days of the
            Maccabees (Antiochus Epiphanes, 175 BC).
   
             II.
             THE
            JEWS AND THEIR NEIGHBOURS
                   
             Leaving the
            historical narratives we turn, first, to a consideration of the general
            conditions. The satrapy of which Palestine was part included Syria, Phoenicia
            and Cyprus; Arabia was independent. ‘Transpotamia,’
            to give it a name, extended from Posidium on the
            Orontes to the border of Egypt, and this single political unit, after the late
            writer in 1 Kings IV, 24, would correspond to Solomon’s realm from Tiphsah to Gaza. The constituent provinces enjoyed a
            certain freedom; each had its prince (nasi) or governor appointed by Persia,
            and one of the Jewish families is even named after the governor of Moab (Pahath-Moab). The feelings of native states were so far
            considered that Zerubbabel, and possibly Nehemiah, were of the old dynasty;
            and, as was usual, for example in the Amarna age, the states would have their representatives
            at the suzerain’s court. Samaria was in several respects of greater political
            importance than Jerusalem; but still more powerful was the north, e.g.
            Damascus, the seat of the satrap, Aleppo, and Hierapolis-Mabbog,
            famous later for its temple. The satrap, who travelled around maintaining order
            (like Tattenai in Ezra), seems to have had a seat at
            Mizpah, like Gedaliah of old. There was an elaborate organization for the
            collection of taxes, toll and tribute, and to control the supplies (e.g. wheat,
            wine, oil, salt). Babylonian and Persian names are conspicuous among the
            officials, whose titles become increasingly Persian. It is noteworthy that Shimshai, the Samaritan scribe or secretary in the time of
            Artaxerxes has, like the scribes at Elephantine, a Babylonian name, and that it
            is only an older form of that given to David’s scribe. Although the tribute
            paid by Palestine was perhaps not heavy relatively, the land lay too near
            scenes of revolt and warfare to escape other burdens; the frequent passage of
            armies and warring-bands, taxation, debt, and bad harvests would crush the
            unfortunate peasants, forcing them to sell their children as slaves to their
            richer brethren. The officials were maintained by the royal purse, and a
            generous governor would refrain from exacting supplies and would entertain a
            large body of pensioners. Garrisons, as at Elephantine, received monthly
            payments in money or kind; passports and troops would guarantee a safe journey;
            letters of recommendation were in use, and special permits were necessary, for
            example, before timber could be obtained. There was an elaborate system of
            reports, and the formal procedure of the satrap Tattenai at the suspicious conduct of the Jews stands in marked contrast to the
            realistic account of the intrigues against Nehemiah. If Artaxerxes did indeed
            grant Ezra supplies of money, wheat, oil and salt, free the temple-personnel
            from taxes, and even permit him to set judges over all the Jews in Transpotamia, it is at least obvious that such remarkable
            generosity to the Jews and their temple at Jerusalem would provoke the keenest
            resentment and bitterness among their opponents. Needless to say the Persian
            administration was not without red tape, and the meticulousness, of which the
            Elephantine papyri give an extraordinary example, repeats itself in the
            fondness for specifications, attested by Ezra VI, 3, 17; VII, 22, and in
            certain portions of the biblical narrative and law now ascribed to the
            ‘Priestly’ source, commonly known as ‘P’).
   The army was
            under a separate administration, and although aristocratic and landed families
            formed the governing class, a military type of settlement can be traced—at
            least in Elephantine. Here the garrisons lived a settled life, with land and
            houses of their own; and, as in P’s accounts of the Israelite journey into the
            Promised Land, men were distributed by ‘flags’ (degel,
            cf. Num. II) which, in the former case, are known by Persian or Babylonian
            names. The province (medinah) was, as the word
            shows, the unit of jurisdiction; and although in Judah the priestly Levites
            come to be regarded as lawgivers, religious and civil cases (and in Elephantine
            military cases) would be kept separate. The Jews had their edah,
            a ‘Congregation’ with superior powers; but the supremacy of the priestly over
            the secular officials is relatively late. Each had its own sphere; Nehemiah, as
            it would seem from Neh. VI, 10, had no right to enter the Temple, and Bagoses by his presence there was held to have polluted it
            (see above). The King and the governors would recognize and control the cults,
            as is evident from the acts of Nehemiah, Bagohi and Bagoses (if the last two are not identical); and it is in
            the name of no less than Darius himself that a document is sent in 419 BC to Arsames, and thence by one Hananiah to the priest Yedoniah at Elephantine, instructing them to keep the Feast
            of the Unleavened Bread. Consequently even the more extravagant decrees in the
            Old Testament which purport to come from Cyrus, Darius or Artaxerxes, may have
            behind them genuine decrees of a more modest character; and the extent to which
            the cults were or could be patronized, regulated or controlled, however
            profitable to the Jews at times, would also strike at the religious freedom
            claimed by a community so proud of its religious prerogatives as was the seed
            of Israel.
   Fragments of
            two copies of the Aramaic version of the inscription of Darius at Behistun have been found at Elephantine: a striking
            illustration of a procedure, utilized by the romantic writer of Esther, which
            was calculated to weld together a vast empire. Aramaic was the lingua franca,
            it was becoming the language of the people. As an international language as far
            as Sardes and Elephantine, it united the disparate
            elements of the Persian Empire, and not least the widely-severed Jews; these
            were not lost sight of, and prophets could look for the return of exiles alike
            from Sardes and Syene.
            Everywhere local types of culture would persist, but the fact that even at
            Elephantine the legal usages betray distinct Babylonian ancestry suggests that
            the Persians took over the judicial system of their predecessors. Moreover,
            Palestine itself would doubtless have similar laws for contracts, loans,
            building rights, dowries, etc., and consequently their almost complete absence
            from the ‘Mosaic’ legislation—in contrast to their presence in Talmudic
            literature—does not mean that they were unknown among the Jews of the homeland.
            In all the more important towns the population was mixed (for Samaria see Ezra IV,
            9), and at Elephantine the ‘Judaeans’ (the older form of the word ‘Jew’)—or
            ‘Aramaeans,’ as they are more widely called—mingle with Babylonians, Persians
            and Egyptians. The actual conditions in the towns and the inevitable
            intermarriages would be detrimental to the growth of Jewish exclusiveness, and
            the keen bitterness provoked in such circumstances by the forcible acts of
            separation that mark the inauguration of Judaism can be readily imagined. In
            fact the hostility would be the stronger in view of the free social intercourse
            and the distinctly higher position of women under the Persians.
   At
            Elephantine the women hold and convey property, and carry on business, like the
            ‘Virtuous Woman’ of Proverbs. In the marriage contracts provision was made for
            divorce by either party, and the woman can formally ‘divorce’ (the word is
            ‘hate’) her husband in the ‘Congregation.’ The prophet’s denunciation of the
            common divorce of the evidently less protected Jewish wives in Judah—sometimes
            in order that the husband could marry a stranger—will point to a rather
            different social environment; while the abhorrence for the ‘Canaanite’ and
            other traders—such as the husband of the Virtuous Woman was—reflects a very
            characteristic feeling, but it is only a partial aspect of the many-sided life of
            the Palestinian world.
                 To judge from
            the personal names as a whole, the Jews in both Elephantine and Nippur formed a
            self-conscious community: it is worth noticing that at the former the custom of
            naming a child after the grandfather was already in vogue. The Egyptian priests
            are described, even in contracts, as Kemarim,
            a term which, however inoffensive primarily, came to have a derogatory
            application among the Jews. Whatever the cause of the outbreak leading to the
            destruction of the temple of Yahu, the religion of
            the colonists was not uninfluenced by its environment. Fervent worshippers of Yahu, the ‘god of heaven,’ they none the less freely
            recognized ‘the gods,’ and the personal names include foreign gods, like the
            local Khnub (Khnum), the famous potter-god, creator
            of the world. A woman, prominent in the business documents, in separating from
            her Egyptian husband, swears by Sati the great consort of Khnum; but the
            witnesses do not have Jewish names—the Jews perhaps held aloof. But the Jews
            themselves took oaths by Herem-bethel, by ‘the shrine
            (masgeda) and by Anath-Yahu’,
            and a unique document of 419 BC divides the contributions to the Temple between Yahu, Ashima-bethel and Anath-bethel,
            in the ratio of I2’5, 7 and 12. It is a remarkable triad, and it corresponds
            precisely to the local Egyptian triad Khnum, Anuki and Sati, where the last two were respectively mother-goddess and nurse (or
            concubine), representing the same social conditions as Abraham with his Sarah
            and Hagar. This not unexpected syncretism is enhanced when a late local Greek
            inscription identifies the Egyptian triad with Ammon (Zeus), Hera (Sati) and
            Hestia (Anuki), inasmuch as a tendency to equate
            Yahweh with Zeus arose under Greek influence, and a unique drachma (probably of
            Gaza) in the British Museum represents a solar Zeus who is explicitly styled ‘Yahu’ in Aramaic lettering of about 400 BC. But whereas the
            ready identification of Zeus and Yahweh came to prevail in the Greek period,
            now it is that of Yahu (Yahweh) and Khnum which might
            well have provoked the Jews in Elephantine, even as the prominence throughout
            the Persian Empire of the majestic Ahura-mazda would
            cause resentment among the more nationalistic Jews. The marked favour shown to
            the Jews by the Persians must be regarded as of exceptional importance for the
            inauguration of Judaism, but the exalted character of the supreme Persian god
            brought new and difficult problems into the religion of Israel.
   
             III.
             EDOM
            AND SAMARIA
                   
             Phoenician
            sea-power gave the coast-lands a political importance of which they were not
            slow to take advantage, although rivalry among the ports precluded any lasting
            achievements. The rivals Tyre and Sidon differed temperamentally. Tyre had its
            age-long connections with Jerusalem; Sidon—temporarily eclipsed when it paid
            the penalty for revolt in 345—4 BC— was now the leader: wealthy, cosmopolitan
            and philhellene. The influence of Phoenicia readily extended southwards along
            the Philistine coast, and by Sea to the Delta; and Phoenician jarhandles, indications of the Sidonian wine-trade, have
            been found as far south as Elephantine. From time to time the closer political
            interrelations between Phoenicia, Philistia and the South of Palestine (Edom,
            etc.) had vital consequences for Israel and Judah, whose security depended upon
            the goodwill of these dangerous neighbours. Gaza held an important position as
            the meeting-place of trade-routes to Syria, the Levant, Egypt and Arabia. The
            ‘Arabs’ were always a force to be reckoned with; but the precise application of
            the term is sometimes doubtful, as in the case of the ‘king of the Arabs’ who
            aided Evagoras against Persia. More is now being
            heard of Arab tribes and states (Dedan, Sabaeans, Minaeans, etc.), and various Old Testament passages testify
            to a steady pressure upon, if not rather a penetration into, Southern Palestine
            and Transjordania.
   In the Greek
            age the Nabataeans held sway in Transjordania from
            Petra northwards to Damascus; and, like other Semitic states with convenient
            bases (Jerusalem, Palmyra, etc.), were able to exercise influence far beyond
            their own territory. Such are the natural advantages of the Edomite area
            between Egypt, Palestine and Arabia, and so established the valuable trade in
            gold, incense and spices, that after the decay and downfall of the powerful
            Judaean monarchy and before the age of the Nabataeans—who come before us as the
            heirs of an old tradition—the Edomite area must have played a prominent part in
            the political history. The Minaeans and Sabaeans of
            South Arabia traded with Egypt and Gaza, and at a Minaean colony of el-Ola, some 400 miles south of Gaza,
            inscriptions of uncertain date refer to the male and female temple-servants of
            the god Wadd, and their name strikingly resembles that
            of the Levites who are explicitly connected with the South of Palestine.
            Farther north of el-Ola lay Tema (Teima), also on a trade-route; it was the home for a
            few years of the Babylonian antiquarian king Nabonidus, and its Aramaic
            inscriptions, of the sixth or fifth century BC, manifest the influence of both
            Babylonia and Egypt upon a culture which has an individuality of its own.
   Thus it was
            in a busy world that Judaism grew up as an exclusive if not intolerant faith
            with its undying hatred of Edom and of Samaria. Relations between Judah and her
            neighbours naturally varied from time to time, periods of alliance and of
            enmity alternated. But it is difficult, as already seen in the case of the
            Samaritans, to trace with any precision the history of these ‘canonical’
            animosities as they might be called. Now it is noteworthy that Nehemiah’s Judah
            is remarkably circumscribed: Jericho, Mizpah, Keilah and Beth-sur are roughly its limits. The land has been stripped by envious
            rivals, and the question is a vital one—whether this was Judah’s normal
            condition after the fall of the Monarchy. Its desolation is commonly ascribed
            to the destruction of Jerusalem no less than some 140 years previously. Much
            more probable, .however, is the view that there was some quite recent disaster,
            although the incident in Ezra IV, 7—23 can hardly be cited in explanation.
            About three centuries later there was some extension of Judaean territory, into
            Hebron and Lod or Lydda; and under the ambitious Hasmonaeans the old glories of
            Israel seemed likely to revive. Certain late writings manifest a keen interest
            in a larger Israel; and traditions in Chronicles and the story of Judith
            suggest that Judah was politically not unimportant. On occasion the Samaritans
            would seize Judaean territory, and even the Maccabees appear to regain in
            Gilead and Galilee districts where Judaean influence had not had time to die
            out. The Jews of the time of Alexander the Great were an influential body; and,
            after all, the wealth and importance of the Temple at Jerusalem point to an
            authority which was not merely spiritual. Whether or not Ezra was actually
            authorized by the Great King (Artaxerxes I or II) to appoint judges over the
            Jews throughout Transpotamia, Jerusalem had a
            reputation for unruliness, and extensive political combinations arise and fall
            with equal suddenness in the East. We may be sure that the Jews were as prompt
            to seize an opportunity for the extension of power as their enemies were ready
            to combine and crush them. In a word, the fall of the Monarchy (586 BC), the
            time of Nehemiah (445 BC) and the Hasmonaean period are too widely severed and
            the facts too scanty for us to base our conceptions of the fortunes of Judah
            upon them alone.
   Whatever the
            internal conditions in Palestine after the Fall of Jerusalem in 586, later we
            may recognize closer relations between Judah and Israel—a new all-Israel, such
            that the subsequent bitterness between Judah and Samaria was the reaction after
            a closer alliance. Direct evidence is wanting, but even the little that can be
            seen of the age of Zerubbabel is sufficient to emphasize the gap between the
            triumphant completion of the Sacred Temple under what seemed to be the
            beginning of a Second Monarchy and the desolation that overwhelmed the
            patriotic Nehemiah. Not unnaturally, therefore, has it sometimes been
            conjectured that there was a fresh disaster to Jerusalem arising out of the
            political and priestly rivalries of the time of Zerubbabel.
                 The view that
            Nehemiah’s Jerusalem was suffering from some recent catastrophe seems to be
            borne out by the ‘Trito-Isaiah’. This group of
            chapters reflects a disillusionment after earlier hopes. We have pictures of
            anguish and humiliation; there had been a new outburst of Yahweh’s wrath: a
            short affliction. Yahweh’s attitude, as has been well remarked, is now less
            eager and enthusiastic, it is more reserved. There was sectional or sectarian
            strife, though it is difficult to identify the parties with certainty. There is
            poignant grief, which we may date, not at the Fall of Jerusalem, but after some
            later disaster. To the laments of the people comes the reply that their
            sins—their failure, for example, to observe the Sabbath—have severed them from
            Yahweh: there is a ritualistic note in the Trito-Isaiah.
            The people’s confession leads up to Yahweh’s intervention and the promise of a
            Redeemer, even as the Chronicler’s History places the people’s penitence for
            intermarrying with foreigners and Ezra’s marriage reforms before the visit of
            Nehemiah. If the people are in despair, the approaching vengeance upon Edom is
            foreshadowed; if they feel neglected, the punishment of Edom proves that Yahweh
            hated Esau and loved Jacob. Edomite aggression is the keynote in several
            undated passages which seem to refer to events later than 586. Edomites even
            seized Judaean cities, and Edom’s hostility to Israel is the more treacherous
            by reason of the traditional brotherhood of Esau and What this kinship means is
            clearly seen from the genealogies of Judah, where a sadly decimated tribe,
            before the Monarchy—? not of David but of Zerubbabel—has been largely
            reconstructed by means of Caleb, Jerahmeel and other
            more or less Edomitic clans of the South of
            Palestine. Such a Judah could not afford to throw stones at the mixed
            population of Samaria, and whereas the Chronicler’s History tells of the work
            of re-organization by those of the old Judaean kingdom who returned to their
            cities, traces of the Calebite or semi-Edomitic infusion can be found in the independent lists of the men who helped Nehemiah
            to rebuild the wall and to repopulate the city. On the other hand, very few of
            the names in these lists can be identified with the families who are supposed
            to have returned from Babylon. That is to say, just as the sons of Jacob
            (Israel) go down into Egypt and return as the Israelite tribes, so Judah and
            Jerusalem are carried off into exile in 597 and 586, and their descendants are
            supposed to return and restore the continuity of history—and in each case the
            people of Palestine are ignored. Here are explicit artificial theories which
            give a onesided conception of the history, and
            allowance has to be made for them. They obscure the importance of the native
            population; and we should probably recognize that it was a semi-Edomitic Judah, rather than the pre-exilic Judaean state,
            upon which the attack by the Edomites—perhaps forced by the pressure of the
            Nabataeans —would leave so lasting a memory of unbrotherly conduct.
   Edom, it
            would seem, had taken advantage of Judah’s extremity, and if Judah’s sufferings
            were the consequence of a revolt against Persia and a punitive captivity it is
            possible to explain why characteristically Jewish names appear more or less
            suddenly in the Nippur contract-tablets of Artaxerxes I and Darius II. In any
            case, the Trito-Isaiah depicts an oppressed Judah and
            Jerusalem, hemmed in on all sides and deserted. Neglected by Israel (Jacob) and
            by Abraham—the ancestral figure at Hebron, now in Edomite hands—they appeal to
            Yahweh. For ‘a little while’ only had Yahweh’s holy people possessed their inheritance
            and now he had cast them off as those that had never been his. How different
            had he been when he brought them up out of Egypt, and ‘the angel of his
            presence’ saved them. Had he hardened their hearts as he had hardened
            Pharaoh’s? Jerusalem was, as Nehemiah learns, ‘in great reproach,’ and well did
            the saviour of the city of his fathers’ graves deserve his significant name of
            ‘Yahweh comforteth’.
   This Edomitic-Judaean phase in the history upon which we can lay
            our finger, thanks to the genealogical lists, is not wholly unique—a few
            centuries later the Idumaean Antipater founded the Herodian dynasty. But it is
            of the greatest significance, because all the evidence suggests that it belongs
            to a crucial stage in the growth of the Old Testament. It seems to explain
            various specifically South Palestinian features in the biblical narrative. At
            the outset, it is to be observed that, although the internal social changes due
            to captivity and immigration in and about the sixth century BC can hardly be
            reconstructed in detail, traces are to be found not only of aristocratic and
            military social organization, but also of local communities (as for instance
            Jericho, Neh. III, 2) and, what is more noteworthy, of guilds. Trades and
            professions were largely hereditary, and the scribes, to judge from their
            names, were Babylonian in Samaria and Elephantine, whereas in Judah there were
            families of scribes of Kenite, Calebite and semi-Edomitic origin. How far such facts would account for the Babylonian and for the South
            Palestinian lore in the Old Testament can scarcely be determined, but the
            presence of the latter can easily be seen. Thus, an Edomitic figure Othniel has been placed at the head of the ‘judges’ of Israel, and South
            Palestinian features are conspicuous in the accounts both of the patriarchs
            (Abraham and Isaac) and of the journey into Palestine. Moreover, in the Cainite
            (Kenite) and related traditions we can discern traces of an ambitious account
            of the origins of culture: Cain the first builder, Tubal-Cain the metal smith,
            Jabal probably the herdsman, Jubal the inventor of musical instruments, and Na'amah (‘beloved’), probably a reference to the
            temple-women. We have a far-reaching view of the rise of civilization—for the
            name Tubal refers to the Tabal and other iron-working
            tribes of Asia Minor—and although analogies to the scheme can be found in late
            Phoenician and, to a less degree, in Babylonian lore, it is a South Palestinian
            version of origins, which presumably owes its presence in our Old Testament to
            the prominence of clans and guilds from southern Palestine who were
            subsequently settled in and around Jerusalem. A Calebite Bezaleel is commemorated as the chief metal-worker in the Tabernacle in the wilderness,
            and not only would the Second Temple as naturally require skilled workmen as
            did the First, but portable sanctuaries were known, and the late Post-exilic
            and Priestly account of the Tabernacle may, amid much that—since the days of
            Bishop Colenso—has been found untrustworthy, reflect an acquaintance with
            actual usage among the desert peoples outside Palestine.
   The interest
            in guilds and in the origins of culture is in accord with what we know of the
            Temple-personnel. The Chronicler’s lists closely connect the Levitical classes
            of the Temple with South Judah and South Palestine, and they ascribe their
            origin to David, who himself is spoken of as a famed maker of musical
            instruments. The Chronicler takes a peculiar interest in the Temple musicians
            and singers; and some of these guilds (e.g. Korah, Ethan) can be traced back to
            the south. Nor is this true only of music and psalmody; to the Kenite
            father-in-law of Moses was due a judicial system, and the Levites were also
            reputed teachers. Indeed, to the desert itself belongs all that was best in the
            sphere of wisdom; so that, although Palestine had a cultural history going back
            to the Amarna period and beyond, the influence of South Palestine, which was of
            course not confined to any one age, is most explicitly associated with the
            account both of the beginnings of Israel and of the Davidic monarchy and
            temple, and with the new developments of about the sixth century BC. That is to
            say we have to deal with a literary phenomenon which can be co-ordinated with
            the vicissitudes of that age: and the problem of the literary analysis of the
            biblical narrative and the problem of the actual history in the sixth century
            are essentially one.
                 David and
            Levi—the monarchy and the temple—are coupled in the Chronicler’s account of the
            rise of the first monarchy, and in the prophet’s anticipations of the Messianic
            restoration; but, on various grounds, there is reason to suppose that this very
            interesting combination is a late one. It is not the one that prevails in the
            Old Testament. The evidence throughout is extremely intricate, it reflects
            struggle and defeat, victory and compromise between those responsible for this
            southern and Edomitic phase and their rivals and
            opponents. The Edomitic Caleb, once connected with
            Hebron—which becomes increasingly prominent in the later accounts of the
            patriarchs—must have played a far more important part than is allowed by those
            writers who have subordinated him to the Ephraimite Joshua, and Joshua to the
            High-priest. For his faith Yahweh’s ‘servant,’ Caleb, was promised the land he
            had once entered, whereas to the exiles—who plumed themselves on their
            superiority—the new inhabitants of the land, (presumably these southern
            immigrants) were pagan interlopers. The latter, proud of their new inheritance,
            felt themselves to be the heirs of Abraham—though other writers denounce their
            irreligion. But the time came when those who had looked to their ancestors,
            Abraham and Sarah of Hebron, were overwhelmed with disasters, and felt that
            even Abraham had forgotten them.
   Other
            vicissitudes are suggested by other details. The supremacy of the Jerusalem
            priesthood of Zadok over the faithless Levites is set forth in the priestly
            prophet’s scheme, and is evidently reflected in the story of the degradation of Abiathar in favour of Zadok in the days of Solomon.
            But a compromise can be recognized when a list of the priestly courses allows
            eight to the family of Abiathar (Ithamar)
            as against the sixteen of the Zadokites (, and Zadok is made a descendant of
            Aaron. Aaron, however, is hardly prominent in the older narratives; the
            Levitical families are Mosaite, and the tendencies to
            make them Aaronite and to elevate the ‘priestly’ Aaron over the more
            ‘prophetic’ figure Moses belong to the later stages in the growth of the Old
            Testament.
   Meanwhile
            there are varying attitudes to the northern tribes and Samaria which are as
            difficult to interpret as those just noticed. The prominence of Shechem and the
            all-Israelite standpoint of the book of Deuteronomy are in marked contrast to
            the antiIsraelite and anti-Samarian treatment of the
            history of the divided monarchies in the books of Kings, where ‘Israel’ is used
            in a restricted sense. The prophets’ interest in (north) Israel contrasts both
            with the harsh repudiation of the Samaritans who desired to assist in
            rebuilding the Temple and with the insistence in later Deuteronomic literature
            upon Jerusalem as the only place where Yahweh could be worshipped. Bethel and
            its priesthood naturally gained increased authority when Jerusalem was weak,
            and Aaron himself, as has been conjectured, was perhaps a Bethelite figure who came to be placed even above the Jerusalem Zadok. But this is not
            the place to enter into details, and it must suffice to remind the reader that
            prolonged analysis of the internal difficulties of the Old Testament has proved
            that important historical facts, on the nature of which one can only speculate,
            account for the complexity of our evidence. Much is quite uncertain and
            obscure, but the extreme exclusiveness which marks the isolation of Jerusalem
            and the inauguration of Judaism, though it has shaped the biblical narrative,
            did not have the last word.
   
             IV.
             RELIGIOUS
            TENDENCIES
                   
             At its worst,
            Israelite or Jewish exclusiveness manifests an intolerance and vindictiveness
            illustrated in stories of Rechabite and Levitical reformers, the Deuteronomic
            theory of the invasion of Palestine and the destruction of its inhabitants, the
            story of the campaign against Midian, certain prophecies against the
            ‘Gentiles,’ and in Luther’s bugbear Esther, with its ‘too much heathen naughtiness.’
            But this megalomania always had its opponents, especially the prophets, the
            most uncompromising of anti-Semites, with their conviction that Israel had
            neither merits nor claims but depended upon Yahweh’s grace. So too the
            beautiful idyll of Ruth the Moabitess, the ancestress of David, is best
            understood and becomes most telling when its conclusion is read in the light of
            the uncompromising aversion from foreign marriages. Also the Midrash, or
            didactic story, of Jonah culminates in an impressive question which a
            self-centred Judaism had to answer. No religion develops consistently. The
            merchants and foreign caravans that helped to enrich Jerusalem and its Temple
            also brought much that was distasteful to the stricter Jew, and Persian
            patronage itself, which was so powerful—and perhaps, as some scholars think, so
            indispensable—a factor in the growth of Judaism was not an unmixed boon.
                 The Persian
            Empire and its centralizing policy, and the widespread recognition of a God of
            Heaven, or Sky-god, combined to foster the belief in a Universal Deity. And
            Jewish universalism, indeed, shows itself in the conviction that Yahweh was not
            the god of Israel alone, and that his name was great among the Gentiles. The
            supremacy of the Persian Ahura-mazda meant the supremacy
            of many fine ethical ideas, and in this syncretizing age there would be a
            tendency to relate one to another all the great gods—Yahweh, Khnum of
            Elephantine, Baal of Phoenicia, Hadad of Syria and
            others. But whether there was one God with many names or many gods depended
            upon one’s standpoint. Universalism has its price. A universal God cannot have
            a narrowly national history, and the wider became Yahweh’s supremacy outside
            the Jews, the more were Jewish prerogatives endangered, and the weaker became
            the old characteristic bond between the worshipper and his god. The Jew would
            find that his God had no particular distinctive attributes, and there was the
            risk that the God who had hitherto been indissolubly connected with his nation
            would soon be fused with other gods.
   The Jews,
            like the Semites in general, were virile, passionate, intense—men of great
            driving power. They prospered even in exile. Their financial ability was bound
            up with their religion, and religion inculcated loyalty to their new homes.
            Their prosperity and their extreme selfconscious claims provoked bitterness even in pre-Christian times. The Semite, more
            self-conscious than the Indo-European, tended to dogmas of exclusive rather
            than of universal gods; and the only natural compromise was a religious
            imperialism which led the Jews—especially (? or only) those of Judah—to see in
            Jerusalem the world’s religious centre, an inviolable Zion whither should
            resort tribute-bearing monarchs and pilgrims in search of divine truth. So
            there are dreams of an Israel served by aliens, of a priestly people performing
            priestly service on behalf of the world. Jerusalem is a mystical centre—one
            might almost say a magical one: ‘whoso of all the families of the earth goeth not up unto Jerusalem to worship the King, the Lord
            of hosts, upon them there shall be no rain’. In harmony with this is the theory
            of the priestly ritual and its remarkable efficacy. It is true that a prophet
            might dream of a grand alliance—Israel, Egypt and Assyria, a triple blessing to
            the world; but this would destroy the unique status of a people, the ‘peculiar
            (i.e. personal) treasure’ of its god, and the versions with one consent
            paraphrase the sentiment away. Yet as a protest and a protection against
            contemporary religion a vigorously self-centred and self-conscious Judaism was
            as intelligible and as necessary then as it was later in the Maccabaean age. Isolation and concentration were necessary
            if Israel was to fulfil her destiny.
   Licentious
            cults apparently continued to be practised at the ‘high places’ and under the
            trees. The cult of Anath, evidently still alive at
            Elephantine, was strengthened when Artaxerxes II officially recognized Anahita
            (Anaitis, Nanaea), a
            goddess like Ishtar and Astarte, whose name, only accidentally as it would
            seem, resembles that of Anath. Near
              by, Askalon was to become famous for the
            fish-goddess Derceto (Atargatis),
            and the cult of Semiramis was perhaps already familiar (? in the Levitical name Shemi-ramoth). The recognition of the redeeming solar
            god Mithra by both Artaxerxes II and Artaxerxes III would strike at Jewish
            monotheism as surely as the Assyrian cult of Marduk had done. Tables were spread, not to Yahweh, but to Gad, the god of Luck; and
            wine was poured out to Fortune (Meni), the equivalent
            of the later Greek Tyche. Children were slain—perhaps to the grim Molek or Melek, the king-god; and
            there were mysterious cults in gardens (‘behind one in the midst’), and strange
            rites connected with dogs and swine. If the reference is to mystic brotherhoods,
            it is tempting to recall the contemporary guild organization, the evidence for
            animal cults at the Temple, and the recurrence of animal names in South
            Palestine (for example Caleb, the ‘ dog ’). In any case, the picture is one of
            remarkable cults, and a religiosity which laid the emphasis upon ritual
            ‘holiness,’ thus justifying those who denounced a ritual which was illegitimate
            or indifferent, or which gave the second place to ethical demands. So the
            faithless are rejected, and a new community of ‘Yahweh’s servants’ are to
            possess the land and be rewarded for their faith.
   The
            ‘prophetical’ teaching of the Deutero-Isaiah enhanced
            ideas of Yahweh’s supremacy and paved the way for the more ‘priestly’ endeavour
            to ensure his transcendent holiness. Through the elevation of the national god,
            intermediary beings were more prominent; the ‘angel of Yahweh’ became a less
            intangible conception, and in time an elaborate angelology was developed. Here
            and elsewhere Judaism may have been influenced by Zoroastrianism, though the
            most striking examples occur in the literature after the Persian age.
            While  Zoroastrianism as a practical
            religion was for a pastoral and agricultural people, a general influence may be
            expected, and in particular we may point to the emphasis which that religion
            laid upon Moral Right (Ashah), of which Ahura-mazda was the source. Asha was an eternal principle
            working in the Universe, and in the form Arta—e.g. Artaxerxes means ‘the
            true kingdom’—the term can be traced back some eight or nine centuries to the
            age when interrelated ideas of law and order and right can be recognized over a
            wide area in South-west Asia. But the idea of an inflexible law, now as then,
            could take other than distinctively ethical forms, of far-reaching consequences
            for religious and other thought. Moreover the very transcendence of the god
            Yahweh led to the avoidance of the ineffable Name, and the use of the less
            distinctive El and Elohim—names compounded with El becoming more
            frequent—tended to alter the tone of the religion.
   The
            universalizing tendencies encouraged a rather colourless theism and a somewhat
            international type of literature, distinctive as regards neither age nor place,
            and inculcating practical worldly wisdom in the conviction that good conduct,
            humanity and prosperity went hand-in-hand. Thus, in the famous Story of Ahikar, to which reference is made in the Apocryphal book
            of Tobit, the absence of any specific religious or national background is most
            marked. In the Old Testament, Wisdom is especially connected with tribes and
            places which, though outside Palestine proper, were, as has already been seen,
            not necessarily remote from the culture of Egypt and Babylonia. Indeed, the
            recent discovery of the teaching of an Egyptian sage Amen-em-ope has revealed what was evidently the origin of a small
            section of the book of Proverbs. But the Hebrew scribe has ignored the Egyptian
            gods and such distinctive Egyptian ideas as the Judgement of the Dead, and he
            has adapted his material to Hebrew metre and thought, as also did the original
            author of Psalm civ who was perhaps acquainted with Ikhnaton’s hymns. A similar
            free use of borrowed material characterizes alike the formation of the North
            Semitic alphabet, and the Mesopotamian (Babylonian) myths of Creation and Deluge,
            etc., in the Old Testament.
   Typical of
            the many-sidedness of an age which was preparing the way for Greek rationalism
            is the book of Job, noteworthy for its desert atmosphere. In this, one of the
            masterpieces of the world’s literature, disillusionment and scepticism reach
            their depth, and Semitic religious intimacy takes its most striking form. The
            once rich and fortunate Job, suffering beyond endurance, and unconscious of
            offence, despite his friends’ conviction that he is being punished for his
            sins, arraigns his God. It is not that there is no God—Job is no atheist—it is
            God’s dreadful unfairness which overwhelms him. Yahweh’s absolute and neutral
            ‘righteousness’ as taught by the great ethical monotheists, has become to the
            sceptic an amoral ruthlessness. Job had acted up to his ethical principles—and
            they compel admiration; but God is not merely unfair, His government of the
            world is non-moral. He shoots His arrows at Job as at a target, and there is no
            escape from his vindictiveness. Job’s old fellowship with the Almighty is in
            bitter contrast to His determined hostility; God is Job’s terrible friend.
            There is—there can be—no mediator or ‘daysman’ between God and man. If only God
            would be judge and not accuser; for though there is no justice on earth, there
            is justice! Yet the vindictive God is not the God: and behind Job’s present
            unhappy experiences of God’s ways there is the God of his early days, who would
            vindicate him in the future. Job’s God is a twofold one—as in the Koran:
            ‘there is no refuge from God but to Him.’
                 The solution
            of Job’s problem recalls that of Paradise Lost—man’s insignificance before
            God’s omnipotence. The Semite has no selfless interest in the Universe; nature
            and history are interesting only from a narrowly personal point of view. And
            when God answers Job, it is to ask him what part had he taken in the creation
            of the world or in the processes of nature? What knowledge had he of the
            mysteries of the world about him, or of the growth of the herbage on which the
            wild animals lived? Did he feed the lions or give the cubs their food? Could he
            do what God did? Had he the right to condemn a Universe in which he was so
            insignificant and helpless?
                 A Job whose
            ‘righteousness’ might be expected to benefit others was ranked with Noah and
            Daniel; and in the prose Prologue and Epilogue his acquiescence in his lot is
            followed by his successful intercession on behalf of his friends and a twofold
            recompense. But the great drama is not content with so simple a solution. It
            does not inculcate the caution of the sage praying for neither poverty nor
            wealth, nor has it the patience of the Psalmist: it is not that death will
            redress misfortunes, but that, even as the Psalmist’s visit to the sanctuary
            brought home to him the justice of divine rule, so Job gained some new insight
            into God’s power in the world, and, no longer self-centred, found his
            consolation in his new knowledge. The book of Job has points of contact with
            the Deutero-Isaiah, and especially with the problem
            of the Suffering Servant: but the emphasis is different, and Job’s drama may be
            interpreted as that of an Israel, once basking in the favour of Yahweh,
            unconscious of fault, and now unable to find a place in religion or philosophy
            for grievous misfortune. It is, it may be conjectured, an Israel for whose
            benefit all the processes of history are guided, a rather self-centred and
            spoilt Israel, with that narrowness of outlook that is rebuked in the story of
            Jonah. Both Job and Israel judge the world from their private conditions—it was
            incredible that a God who so loved his ‘servant’ or his ‘son’ should give him
            up to death! It is the oldtime problem, which began
            with Amos. But if this interpretation be right and if Job be a type for an
            Israel, lamenting, as was her wont, her truly grievous disasters, the teaching,
            like that of the ‘Servant of Yahweh’ itself, can hardly be said to have been
            woven into the texture of early Judaism, and even ‘Yahweh’s servants’ are
            promised most tangible blessings, while their enemies will fall by the sword
            and leave their name for a curse
   
             V.
             THE
            PRIESTLY SOURCE (‘P’) AND THE PENTATEUCH
                   
             The
            outstanding feature of the age, one which set its mark upon the history of the
            religion of Israel, is ‘P.’ It is the work of a priestly body which succeeded in
            impressing itself upon contemporary life and thought. By P we mean the series
            of narratives and the groups of laws which can be readily distinguished in the
            Pentateuch, the narrative itself extending to the book of Joshua. P’s record,
            from Creation to the settlement of the tribes in Palestine, is distinguished by
            a fondness for stereotyped phrases and formulas, by tables, numbers and
            specifications which give it a certain monotony. It is methodical and apt to
            fall into repetition, the worst examples being Num. VII, and Exod. XXXV—XXXIX
            compared with XXV—XXXI. With an imposing and circumstantial chronological
            system and a schematic view of events, P is the ‘groundwork’ giving unity to
            the Pentateuch. History is divided into stages marked by the figures Adam,
            Noah, Abraham, Jacob (Israel) and Moses, and by steps in the self-revelation of
            God (Elohim, El Shaddai, Yahweh). It leads up to the Sinaitic legislation, the
            formation of the Israelite congregation and the ‘theocracy.’ The standpoint
            differs from, and the details often conflict with, the earlier sources. The patriarchal figures become somewhat abstract types
            and their imperfections are ignored. Anthropomorphic features are reduced to a
            minimum, and are incapable of being misunderstood in a material, physical
            sense. Theophanies are not described. God ‘speaks,’ He creates by the ‘word,’
            and things have a divine origin—like the pattern of the Tabernacle. None the
            less, God abides in the midst of the people. He is the God of the individual,
            there are no intermediaries, no dream or angel; but He is transcendent, apart,
            and hedged around. He is a Holy God amid a Holy People, and this holiness must
            be secured. Of supreme value, therefore, are the religious institutions, the priests
            and the sacrificial system; the immense claims of the priesthood and the
            elaborate sacrifices are characteristic of the period.
                 The interest
            in the priestly ritual was partly theoretical, partly practical, and it is due
            to this that there are noteworthy differences between the book of Ezekiel and P
            (e.g. as regards the Levites), and of a kind that seriously perplexed the
            Rabbis of old. But while Ezekiel offers a programme for the future, the
            tendency reflected in P throws its ideas back into the past. The festivals are
            now due to divine commands, dates and quantities are fixed, and they are
            associated with the traditional history. The Sabbath is especially holy, and of
            immemorial antiquity. Circumcision is more symbolical than before; and here as
            elsewhere the teaching of the prophets has borne fruit. Uncleanness and
            purification are of fundamental significance, and moral and ritual offences are
            one. ‘Morality was not indifferent to our legislating priests, but it was not,
            if one may say so, upon their agenda paper’. No secular ruler is contemplated,
            the High Priest stands at the head of the people, a priest with almost kingly
            powers, an echo of the former monarchy. The post is unique, much sought after,
            and, on occasion, the centre of intrigue; but it was not secured by any
            dynastic idea, except in so far as the holder was an Aaronite. A rigid line
            comes to be drawn between priestly and non-priestly Levites, and this
            development, like Ezekiel’s elevation of the Zadokites, which P simply presupposes—it
            is a conspicuous difference between the two authorities—is only one of very
            complex vicissitudes in the later history of the priesthood, the details of
            which are still obscure.
                 Judaism is a
            ‘theocracy’ which had its authority, partly—but not always—in the secular arm,
            but more especially in the impressive convictions of the power and value of the
            sacrificial system as a whole. The system had an almost magical potency. To
            withhold the tithes and temple offerings was dangerous; the temple-ritual removed
            sin, and sin—ritual or ethical—precluded prosperity. The sacrifices are
            centralized, and are less of a communal character. The burnt-offerings, which
            are made wholly to Yahweh, have a new importance; it is on this account that
            they were perhaps wanting at the new temple at Elephantine. Sin and atonement
            hold a place that is not merely prominent, but, in a sense, even exaggerated.
            The High Priest replaces the earlier king as representative of the people, he
            bears the people’s guilt, and his sin brings guilt on the people. The great Day
            of Atonement becomes the supreme day of the year, and there developed a more or
            less mechanical systematization as well as a deeply spiritual treatment of the
            ideas of sin and forgiveness. The problem of sin has been solved: God will no
            more destroy a wicked world, He has an eternal covenant with man, and sacrifice
            is ‘the divinely appointed means for the preservation and restoration of that
            holiness in virtue of which alone the theocratic community of Israel can
            realize its true ideal as the people of a holy God’. Israel belongs to Yahweh,
            everything is already his: hence the offerings of first-fruits, the surrogates
            for the first-born, the separation from the heathen—though proselytes are
            welcomed—and a practical socialreligious organization which gave room for profound spirituality, extreme ritual
            scrupulosity, and a religiosity which, as among other Semites, permitted most
            incongruous types of conduct.
             The priestly
            religion is, on the whole, rather shallow and abstract; we miss the depth,
            immediacy and warmth of the prophets and Deuteronomy. Revelation is written
            rather than oral, as will be seen by a contrast of Ezekiel III, 1 with Jeremiah
            I, 9. We have the religion of the book; and while the emphasis on ritual and
            the written word led easily to magic, and exclusiveness and spiritual arrogance
            had their dark sides, the priestly regime preserved Jewish monotheism even as
            Zoroaster’s teaching may be said to have been secured by the ritual of the
            Vendidad.
                 The spiritual
            superiority claimed by the Jewish exiles in Babylonia and their return to raise
            the level of a population of mixed blood, living on what they regarded as a
            lower religious plane, are the outstanding factors in the rise of Judaism. It
            is possible that life in some ‘Congregation’ remote from actual Palestinian
            conditions—like the colony of Levites in Ezra VIII, 1—will account for the
            rather doctrinarian character of some of the ideas of the priestly
            revolutionaries. But precisely what literature Ezra, or other exiles, brought
            back from Babylon is uncertain. The book of Ezekiel, for example, is marked by
            a certain scholarliness, and distinctive Babylonian traits have been noticed in
            it. Others also recur in the book of Job; and, although features of apparent
            Babylonian origin (e.g. the mention of months by their number instead of by
            their name) are more prominent in the sixth century and later, we have no right
            to assume that all Babylonian parallels necessarily come direct from Babylonia
            or belong only to this late period. It is easy to exaggerate the debt of
            Judaism to Babylonia, or Egypt, or Persia; an antipathy to external culture may
            be said to characterize Judaism, and the differences prove more essential than
            the points of contact.
                 It is
            impossible, indeed it would be unjust, to attempt to limit Judaism by a
            formula. Not P but the Pentateuch is its charter, and the difference between
            the two is that between a caste religion and the religion of a people. ‘ The
            general principle of the priestly legislation surrounds the holy things of
            Israel by fence within fence, and makes all access to God pass through the
            mediation of the priesthood’ (Robertson Smith). P is the true ancestor of the
            much later Book of Jubilees, which goes farther in carrying back the origins of Mosaism, or rather of Judaism, but won little favour
            and soon fell out of use. On the other hand, P, which of itself could hardly
            live apart from the Temple of Jerusalem and its priesthood, and as such was of
            local and temporal value, was preserved by the fact that it was combined with
            those earlier and fresher sources that have always been read with delight and
            edification. The resultant Pentateuch with its diverse and even discordant
            elements was, intentionally or not, a compromise representing different needs,
            interests and attitudes, and corresponding to the many-sidedness of Judaism as
            a working institution. P’s characteristic legalism was certainly a decisive
            phase, and legalizing tendencies persisted; yet, on the one hand, the Law was a
            joy and delight to its devotees, inspiring many Psalms, and, on the other, not
            only was it modified by the later Scribes, but it never expelled tendencies of
            an antilegalist nature. Outside Jerusalem synagogues were springing up; and,
            as apart from the more national religious organization with Jerusalem as its
            seat, a deeper personal religion was manifesting itself, of which the Psalms
            afford so many impressive examples.
             In point of
            fact, the Pentateuch as a whole contained in narrative and in law, in precept
            and in example, a treasure upon which the worshipper of Yahweh, as an
            individual or as a member of the religious community, could draw inexhaustibly.
            The grand conceptions of the discipline of history which give unity to the
            Pentateuch have compelled admiration for their sweep and reverence for their
            profundity. And, as frequently elsewhere in the Old Testament, questions arise
            as to the historical circumstances that lie behind the great ideas. So, the
            deliverance from Egyptian bondage, the tedious journey into the Promised Land,
            the rivalries, the promises and covenants, the discipline of both people and
            leaders—these not only gain an entirely new interest when read in the light of
            the disintegration and constructive efforts of the sixth and fifth centuries BC,
            but as has been seen, they are contained in very composite sources which were
            only then assuming their present form.
                 Further, the
            Pentateuch breathes a fine universalism when it opens, as it does, not with
            Yahweh and Israel, but with Elohim and Mankind; but the God who destroys a
            sinful world and undertakes never to repeat the catastrophe is, in the sequel,
            Yahweh, who is uniquely the god of Israel. And when mankind, a universal
            brotherhood, essays a fresh start, and, arrogantly striving to transcend human
            limitations, builds a tower to reach unto heaven, the races of mankind are
            scattered, and this new divine judgment prepares the way for the subsequent
            appearance of Abraham and the first beginnings of the history of a chosen
            people. Here, whether Israel—and who represented the true Israel was quite
            another question—was to be a prophet-people with a mission, or a priest-people
            with saving-rites, there are in either case sweeping conceptions of God, the
            Universe and Israel; and .these come fittingly, not as part of the catastrophes
            of the early exilic age (at or shortly after 597 and 586 BC), but more probably
            after a new and unsuccessful attempt at reconstruction and a fresh calamity, at
            a rather later age, the age of (or after) Zerubbabel, and prior to the
            supremacy of the exclusive and legalizing priestly phase (p. 183 above). There
            are, at all events, facts to be explained, and the explanation, in the nature
            of the case, becomes increasingly hypothetical as one seeks to fill in the gaps;
            but it can safely be said that the complete Pentateuch in its present form,
            with P as its framework, belongs to the Persian age, and after the age of
            Nehemiah, and that its literary growth and the great events of the sixth and
            fifth centuries BC are linked together. This is the starting-point for
            reconstructing the history of Israel on the basis of the criticism of the Old
            Testament.
                 The
            Samaritans did not refuse the Pentateuch. Deuteronomy probably arose in the
            north, and the Samaritans were eager to assist in rebuilding the Temple. But it
            is significant that, whereas on internal literary grounds we may speak of the
            ‘Hexateuch’—the Pentateuch and Joshua—as a single unit, the line has been so
            drawn that the first part of the Jewish Canon ends, not with the solemn
            covenant of all Israel at the ancient Samaritan sanctuary of Shechem, but more
            neutrally, after the death of Moses beyond the Jordan. Although the actual
            history of the kingdoms of Israel and Judah had been full enough of events to
            stimulate religious teaching and literary activity, the story of the monarchies
            leaves relatively little impression upon later generations; and the most
            impressive memories are of a neutral and much more remote age before the
            division of a united people. The religious history upon which psalms and
            prayers love to dwell is common ground to an All-Israel, and, so far as can be
            seen, both the biblical account of that past itself and the most pregnant ideas
            enshrined in it were of relatively recent inception.
                 The
            Pentateuch was the book of both Judaism and Samaritanism, rival sects which
            grew further apart until this book alone united them. And if Jewish
            exclusiveness—and Jerusalem—must be held responsible for this, the fact remains
            that the Samaritans who rejected the other writings which the Jews added to
            their Canon, played no part in history, and that Judaism was preserved by its
            exclusiveness, self-consciousness and intensive development. It was the
            nationalistic Jews who fought with indomitable courage and unquenchable enthusiasm
            to preserve the heritage of their fathers; and the stalwart fight of the
            Maccabees against tendencies which would have destroyed all, that was best in
            Judaism forms the next chapter in the vicissitudes of an Israel jealous of its
            name, its past, and its destiny.
                 Thus does the
            history of a petty people hidden away in the vast Persian Empire raise the
            profoundest problems of national genius, its contribution to the world’s
            history, and the price it has to pay. The genius of Israel showed itself in her
            prophets, story-tellers and psalmists, and in her ideas of religion and
            history.
             Genius has
            its conspicuous defects: that of the Semites, and especially Israel, not least
            of all. Yet through her genius Israel’s history was what it was; and she was
            able both to interpret and to shape her history in a way no other people has
            done or could do. No other people found and made their national history so
            supremely significant, so worthy of interpretation and of preservation. She
            alone of all peoples earned the right to set forth for mankind that which she
            had learnt at the cost of heavy sacrifices. Poignant experiences and their
            re-expression in a theistic exposition of history constitute Israel’s unique
            contribution, and this gift becomes doubly precious as fuller knowledge of the
            facts of ancient history is bringing a re-interpretation of the past which is
            placing the Old Testament and the function of Israel in a new and larger
            framework.
                 
             APPENDIX
             THE
            ELEPHANTINE PAPYRI (p. 172)
             
             Of the appeal
            of the Jews of Elephantine to their brethren in Judah and Samaria two drafts
            were found (Cowley, Aramaic Papyri of the Vth Cent. B.C., nos. 30, 31).
            They are from the same papyrus roll and contain slight variants, some of which
            are indicated in the following translation, where references are made to
            various interesting terms which recur in the Old Testament. Like the other
            papyri, they are in an Aramaic dialect philologically earlier than the Aramaic
            of the book of Ezra (including the permits and documents quoted therein), and
            still more so than the Aramaic of the book of Daniel (dated on internal grounds
            to the second century BC).
             
             “To our lord Bagohi, the governor (pehah)
            of Judah, thy servants Yedoniah and his colleagues
            (Ezra IV, 23), the priests who are in Yeb, the
            fortress (Neh. II, 8 ‘castle’). The peace of our lord may the God of Heaven
            grant greatly at all times, and give thee favour before Darius the king and the
            members of the house—a thousandfold more than now, and long life may he grant
            thee, and be thou happy and prosperous at all times. Now thy servant Yedoniah and his colleagues thus say: In the month of
            Tammuz, the fourteenth year of Darius the king, when Arsames went forth and departed to the king, the Kemarim of the god Knub in the fortress of Yeb gave money and
            property to (Waidrang who was governor here (saying),
            ‘let them take away thence the temple of Yahu the god
            which is in the fortress of Yeb.’ Then this accursed
            (?) Waidrang sent a letter to Nephayan hisson who was commander in the fortress of Syene, saying ‘let them destroy the temple of the god Yahu which is in the fortress of Yeb.’
            Then Nephayan led the Egyptians together with other
            forces; they came to the fortress of Yeb with their
            weapons, they went up into this temple, they destroyed it to the ground, and
            the stone pillars there they broke. Also it came to pass that the five great
            gates of stone built of hewn blocks that were in this temple they destroyed and
            their doors they (?), and the hinges of these doors were of bronze and the
            roof of cedar wood, the whole, with the rest of the detail, and the other
            things which were there they burnt with fire, and the bowls of gold and silver
            and whatsoever was in this temple they entirely took and made it their own. And
            from the days of the king of Egypt our fathers had built this temple in the
            fortress of Yeb, and when Cambyses came to Egypt 'he
            found this temple already built, and the temples of the gods of Egypt they
            wholly destroyed and no one did aught of harm in this temple. And when they had
            done this, we together with our wives and sons were putting on sackcloth and
            fasting and praying to Yahu the Lord of Heaven who
            showed us our desire this hound (?) Waidrang. They (?
            the hounds) removed the chain from his feet (i.e. they degraded him), and all
            the wealth which he had acquired they destroyed, and all the men who had sought
            evil against this temple were all of them killed; and we saw our desire on
            them. Also before this, at the time when this evil was done to us, we sent a
            letter to our lord and to Yehohanan the high priest,
            and his colleagues the priests that were in Jerusalem, and to Ostanes the brother of Anani, and
            the nobles of Judaea—no letter did they send unto us. Also, from the month of
            Tammuz, the fourteenth year of king Darius even unto this day we have been
            wearing sackcloth and fasting, our wives are made as widows, with oil we do not
            anoint ourselves, and wine we do not drink. Also from that time even to this
            day of the seventeenth year of Darius the king, meal-offering, and incense and
            burnt offering are not offered up in this temple. Now, thy servants, Yedoniah and his colleagues, all citizens (baals) of Yeb, say thus: If it seems well to our lord, take thought concerning
            this temple to build it, inasmuch as they do not allow us to build it. See thy
            well-wishers and friends that are here in Egypt, let a letter be sent from thee
            unto them concerning the temple of the God Yahu to
            build it in the fortress of Yeb according as it was
            built aforetime; and meal-offerings and incense
            offerings and burnt offerings shall they offer upon the altar of the God Yahu in thy name, and we will pray on thy behalf at all
            times, we, and our wives and our sons, and the Jews all that are here. If thou
            wilt so do that this temple shall be built, there shall be merit to thee before Yahu the God of Heaven more than a man who should
            offer him burnt offering and sacrifices worth as much as a thousand talents of
            silver. And concerning the gold, in reference to this we have sent and made known1.
            Also all the words in a letter in our name did we send unto Delaiah and Shelemaiah the sons of Sanaballat the governor of Samaria. Moreover, concerning this that was done to us Arsames knew nothing at all. On the 20th of Marheshwan, the seventeenth year of Darius the king”.
             The answer
            was a favourable one, and the messenger’s formal document, corresponding to the
            tablet of earlier days, ran as follows:
             “Memorandum
            (record, Ezra VI, 2) of Bagohi and Delaiah. They said to me, Memorandum, It shall be for thee
            in Egypt to say to Arsames concerning the altar-house
            of the God of Heaven which had been built in Yeb the
            fortress from of old before Cambyses, which that accursed (?) Waidrang destroyed in the fourteenth year of Darius the
            king, to build it in its place as it was aforetime,
            and meal-offerings and incense-offerings may they offer upon that altar
            according as it formerly used to be done”.
             
 
  | 
    
![]()  | 
        ![]()  | 
      
![]()  | 
          ![]()  | 
          ![]()  |