Samuel E. Balentine (ed.) 2020 Ritual
Balentine 2020 Ritual
The Oxford Handbook of Ritual and Worship in the Hebrew Bible,
Oxford: Oxford University Press
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ToC of Balentine 2020 Ritual
Table of Contents |
1. Introduction (Samuel E. Balentine) I Historical Contexts 2. Mesopotamian Religion (Tzvi Abusch) 3. Ritual and Worship in Ancient Egypt (Emily Teeter) 4. The Hittites Serve Their Gods (Gary Beckman) 5. Syria-Palestine: Worship and Ritual (Adrian Curtis) 6. The Greeks and Their Rituals (Barbara Kowalzig) II Interpretive Approaches 7. History of Religion (Lester L. Grabbe) 8. Rituals and Ritual Theory: A Methodological Essay (Ithamar Gruenwald) 9. Social and Cultural Anthropology (William K. Gilders) III Ritual Elements: Participants, Places, Times, Objects, Practices 10. God, Gods, and Humankind (Worldview) (Friedhelm Hartenstein) 11. Sacred Space and Common Space (Michael B. Hundley) 12. Ritual Experts and Participants in the Ancient Near East and the Hebrew Bible (Thomas Hieke) 13. Sacred and Ritual Times (Andrew R. Davis) 14. Ritual Objects and Artifacts (Ryan P. Bonfiglio) 15. Ritual and Religious Practices (Roy E. Gane) 16. Ritualizing Iconic Jewish Texts (James W. Watts) 17. Ritualizing Christian Iconic Texts (Dorina Miller Parmenter) 18. Ritualizing Muslim Iconic Texts (Jonas Svensson) IV Cultural and Theological Perspectives 19. Sin and Expiation (David Janzen) 20. Clean/Unclean, Pure/Impure, Holy/Profane (Jonathan D. Lawrence) 21. Sickness and Healing (Deborah Rooke) 22. Death and Afterlife (Brian B. Schmidt) 23. Divine Presence and Absence (Angelika Berlejung) V History of Interpretation 24. Ritual and Worship at Qumran (Eileen M. Schuller) 25. Influence on Early Christian Worship (Paul F. Bradshaw) 26. Ritual and Worship in Early Judaism (Judith H. Newman) 27. Rabbinic Judaism (Stefan C. Reif) VI Social-Cultural Functions 28. The Politics of Worship (William S. Morrow) 29. The Ethics of Worship (Eryl Davies) 30. Socio-Religious Functions of Worship (Stephen L. Cook) 31. The Economics of Worship in Ancient Israel and Judah (Joachim Schaper) VII Theology and Theological Heritage 32. Ritual Theology in/and Biblical Theology (Gerald Klingbeil) 33. Welcoming the Sabbath on the Kibbutzim: Secular Religiosity (Dalia Marx) 34. One God, Multiple Rituals and Theologies: Christianity (Rodney A. Werline) 35. Islamic Ritual (Richard Gauvain) |
General topic(s) of the book |
A very useful handbook to gain insightful information about rituals and cultic activities in the Ancient Near East and Israel (as specifically attested in the Old Testament). |
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Excerpts from Balentine 2020 Ritual
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Atonement in Syria
Atonement in Syria | p. 65 | An Atonement Ritual?. Noteworthy is what Wyatt entitles A Liturgy for a Rite of Atonement for the People of Ugarit. Several copies of this ritual have survived, the most complete being KTU 1.40. Del Olmo Lete speaks of "Rites of Purification and Atonement," but Pardee entitles it a "Ritual for National Unity." The crucial word npy has been variously understood. Pardee gives "well-being," and Wyatt picks up on his explanation of the underlying meaning as "being made whole," suggesting that the obvious technical equivalent in English is "atonement." If this understanding of the text is correct, it provides a possible parallel to the idea of an annual Day of Atonement in the Hebrew Bible (see Leviticus 16) (Curtis). |
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Comparative Approach
Comparative Approach | p. 145 | This chapter summarizes basic characteristics of the encounter with the divine in the cultures of the ancient Near East (ANE), ancient Greece, and Israel. It focuses on essential elements of the relations between humans and their gods in order to understand especially the Biblical God YHWH as a participant in ritual and cultic practices. To achieve this, the essay thoroughly considers an emic (cultural or contextual) as well as an etic (modernscholarly) point of view [on this topic, see also Buccellati 2006 - mDP]. For that it is necessary, on the one hand, to put the material evidence from archaeology into perspective. On the other hand, the most important sources for a differentiated overview on the matter are textual traditions from the ancient world. The chapter starts by posing a question whose answer normally seems self-evident: "What is a god?" The comparison between different ancient cultures leads to a working definition of gods/God and serves as a foil to outline basic characteristics of YHWH. A further survey is dedicated to central topics of the communication between gods and humans by focusing on the complex of offerings/sacrifice (Hartenstein). |
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Cultic Statues
Cultic Statues | p. 208 | The central ritual object in most ancient Near Eastern religion was a freestanding cult statue. Referred to as an "idol" or "graven image" (pesel) in the HB, a cult statue was typically anthropomorphic in form and fashioned from wood or stone, overlaid with precious metal, and housed in a temple. Rather than being seen only as an image of a god, the cult statue was understood to serve as a conduit for divine disclosure insofar as the real presence of the deity was thought to dwell in the material form of the object. However, the connection between the deity and the image was not automatic or inherent. Rather, it was conferred through special consecration ceremonies, known as the washing of the mouth (mīs pī) or opening of the mouth (pīt pī). Through these rituals, the statue's senses were activated, transforming it into an epiphany of the deity. This understanding explains why cult statues were routinely fed, clothed, washed, anointed, perfumed, and processed as part of the regular operation of ANE temples. Almost without exception, the HB condemns the making and use of cult statues (Bonfiglio). |
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G/god(s)
G/god(s) | pp. 145-148 | God/gods in the Ancient Near East:
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Methodology of Analysis
Methodology of Analysis | p. 110 | .The study of rituals can be done in two complementary ways: by observing live rituals or by studying texts that contain ritual prescriptions and guidelines. In both cases, not all the needed details of what is done and how become clear (Gruenwald). |
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Myths and Rituals
Myths and Rituals | p. 110 | In many cases, rituals are sustained by a link to a story in a mythic context. In other words, myth is a story that links and sustains a ritual. In the mythic context, rituals make a culture-related point. They are shared by a concerned and involved community, creating complex notions of social identity and cohesion (Gruenwald). |
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Palace Rituals in Syria
Palace Rituals in Syria | p. 66 | Palace Rituals: Funerary and Non-funerary. Wyatt refers to text KTU 1.161 as "A Royal Funeral Liturgy" and, noting that it involves the summoning up of rpum (corresponding to the rĕpā’îm of the Hebrew Bible), suggests that it "provides a remarkable backdrop to Isa. 14.9-21" (Curtis). |
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Priests
Priests | p. 103 | Cultic Personnel and Religious Specialists. Almost all religions appear to have cult personnel of some sort. They might be priests with a formal office and formal duties or they might be senior figures of the religious community who lead in worship on a part-time basis. The ancient Roman religion did not have priests as such, but the head of the family normally undertook cultic duties. Ancient Israel may not originally have had a hereditary priesthood, since we have accounts of a variety of figures who took on cultic duties (Jonathan [Judges 17-18]; Samuel [1 Samuel 1-3]; David's sons [1 Sam 8:18]). But at some point a hereditary priesthood was appointed, with various ranks that exercised a variety of specialized duties. These included the Aaronites and the Levites, but also a number of other classes of temple servant with other (sometimes more menial) duties (Ezra 2:41-58; Neh 7:44-60). Priests were not the highest rank of cult specialist, however. A number of passages make it clear that the king was in charge of the temple and all personnel who served there (1 Kgs 4:2-5; 6-8; 1 Chron 22:1–23:6), even if attempts were made to edit the text in such a way that the king was subject to the priests (Deut 17:14–20; 2 Chron 26:16–21). The temple was the king's chapel, and at various times he led the religious ceremonies (1 Kgs 3:4–15). It is hardly surprising since, as in many neighboring nations, the king was considered the son of God and had a special religious place in the national order (cf. Psalm 2) (Grabbe). |
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Analysis of Rituals
Analysis of Rituals | pp. 109-110 | It follows, then, that the discussion of rituals and ritual theory is best undertaken in the context of behavioral factors. That is, rituals are best discussed in terms of what is done, how it is done, and what existential and anthropological functions the actions are expected to accomplish. In our view, the ideological and theological concerns that accompany rituals do not account for the performance aspects of rituals. In disciplinary terms, anthropology with an eye on socio-psychological issues (mainly group and identity formation) is the adequate platform for the study and scholarly assessment of rituals (Gruenwald). |
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Anthropology of Rituals
Anthropology of Rituals | p. 128 | The predominant anthropological understanding of ritual as symbolic communication – which has been referred to as "canonical" and "almost a social compact in anthropology" – can be termed "representational"; that is, ritual actions stand representatively for various phenomena (most quite abstract): social relations, beliefs, values, concepts, or worldview. [...] this understanding of ritual as symbolic activity goes back to the first definitions of ritual that were formulated as anthropology emerged as a distinctive scholarly discipline. It is expressed by key figures in the development of the discipline, [...] referring to ritual actions ("rites") as "the regulated symbolic expressions of certain sentiments". While the identification of ritual as symbolic activity has a long history in anthropology, it took on a new life with the emergence of what came to be termed "symbolic anthropology" (especially in American contexts) (Gilders). |
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Behavioral View
Behavioral View | p. 110 | Viewed from a behavioral angle, rituals are extensions of the human mind. They reflect a specific inclination on the part of the group or the individual to express themselves in structured and purposive forms of behavior, rather than, or instead of, ideas. Evidently, religious rituals engage unique spectra and complex layers of such behavior (Gruenwald). |
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Definition of Ritual
Definition of Ritual | p. 109 | In the eyes of many, rituals constitute a riddle. Many people do not understand what makes rituals work and how the doing of rituals is essential to reaching specific goals. In other words, what are rituals and what do they do? Social ethnography, anthropology, and the comparative study of religions consider rituals as the dynamic core of social and religious systems. From tribal groups to fully developed religious systems, rituals play a major role in making the respective systems work. However, rituals are also vital for the orderly functioning of bureaucratic organizations and structures. Whether these rituals are agreed upon or prescribed by an accepted authority, they are a major factor in bringing people together in a working coherence. In other words, rituals create and maintain social systems. |
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Ritual Experts
Ritual Experts | pp. 179-186 | The ancient Near East offers a wide variety of ritual personnel due to regionally differing systems of polytheism. As a rule, the priest or the priestess is the main ritual expert: He or she acts as mediator between the Divine (gods and goddesses) and human society or the individual, performs the rituals in the cult, and cares for the gods and goddesses. Other officiants, priests and non-priests, take over various tasks within the cult or in support of the activities at the temples. Often the king does not officiate in the cult, but he has the main responsibility to keep up the sanctuaries, their personnel, and the cult. As the priests and other ritual experts perform functions and tasks for the community, they get their alimentation by the state (the king). In many cases they are separated from the common to preserve their ritual purity and the dignity of their office (Hieke, p. 179).
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Function of Rituals (1)
Function of Rituals (1) | p. 109 | A starting point in assessing rituals and figuring out a relevant ritual theory is the notion that rituals constitute a major component in human behavior, in general. In other words, many forms of human activity unfold as structured forms of behavior that come into purposive effect by doing an orderly sequence of purposefully detailed acts. The bureaucracy of ritual protocols constitutes structured segments that obey an inner logic of functional organization. Together these segments compose the processual dynamic that unfolds as a ritually configured whole. |
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Function of Rituals (2)
Function of Rituals (2) | p. 111 | Religious rituals, though, are by definition shared by a community. More than any other ritual, religious rituals create group cohesion. In their special context, religious rituals are reinforced with theological stances. Apart from their function in establishing social identity, rituals create notions of (bureaucratic) hierarchy and social stratification. At the same time, rituals are functional in maintaining social diversity and ideological differences, even factors of alienation, which enhance the existence of classes, groups, and denominations (Gruenwald). |
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Function of Rituals (3)
Function of Rituals (3) | pp. 490-494 | Function of rituals: The focus in what follows will be on three important characteristics of ritual, including (1) ritual as an integral part of human existence and its role in the biblical text; (2) ritual as a vehicle for complex concepts; and (3) ritual and its relationship to worship against the backdrop of the relational concept of the "I and Thou" connecting humanity with the divine (Klingbeil, p. 490).
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Relationships between Israel and Canaanite Rituals
Relationships between Israel and Canaanite Rituals | p. 54 | Perceived Importance for Biblical Study. Perhaps the most important reason the discoveries from Ugarit were seized upon as of relevance for the study of the Bible was the early surmise that this was a Canaanite city. Previously the principal source of knowledge of the Canaanites was the Hebrew Bible, where they were hardly presented in a good light. Perhaps here was a direct witness to Canaanite culture and, in the texts, beliefs. But reasons for the initial interest went beyond the suggestion that Ugarit was a Canaanite city, and that its texts would provide a direct witness to Canaanite religion and culture. That there had been an Israelite conquest of, and settlement in, Canaan was also widely believed, and much of the debate revolved around whether the Exodus took place in the 15th or 13th century BCE rather than whether it happened at all. So here was potential evidence of the Canaanites from a time close to when Israelites may have been encountering Canaanites (Curtis). |
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Meaning of Rituals
Meaning of Rituals | p. 1 | The construction of rites and rituals enables humans to conceive and apprehend this transcendent order, to symbolize it and interact with it, to postulate its truths in the face of contradicting realities and to repair them when they have been breached or diminished (Balentine). |
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Nature of Rituals
Nature of Rituals | p. 109 | Rituals consist of stylized ceremonial events. They evolve in strict and repetitive protocols. Among them one finds rich displays of colors (e.g., garments [uniforms], insignia, flags), instrumental and vocal music, and a variety of physical gestures (e.g., parades, stylized exercises). One may view these protocols as the bureaucracy of rituals, each of them consisting of a purposive "cosmos". |
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Ritual Objects
Ritual Objects | p. 207 | The Hebrew Bible refers to a wide range of material artifacts in connection to worship and ritual activities. These include the ark, altars, wash basins, censers, tables, lampstands, and various other items. During the fall of Jerusalem, these objects were destroyed and some were brought back to Babylon as spoils of war (2 Kgs 25:13-17; Jer 52:17-23). Certain cultic objects deemed to be illicit, such as idols, pillars, sacred poles, and the bronze serpent, are critiqued by the prophets and are the target of the cult reforms of Hezekiah (2 Kgs 18:1-6) and Josiah (2 Kgs 23:1-20). For much of the history of biblical scholarship, especially in Protestant circles, the importance of ritual objects has often been downplayed if not altogether dismissed. Some have suggested that any connection between Yahweh and the natural or material world was the result of Canaanite influence. As a form of syncretism, this aspect of early Israelite religion was eventually overcome through a theological emphasis on Yahweh's transcendence beyond image, object, and locality. Other interpreters have concluded that a concern for ritual and ritual objects only emerged in the latter stages of the Hebrew Bible's literary growth and thus reflected a priestly corruption of earlier forms of religion (Bonfiglio). |
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Ritual Practices
Ritual Practices | pp. 224-251 | Ritual practices and gestures:
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Segmentation of Rituals
Segmentation of Rituals | p. 114 | In principle, rituals engage four experiential platforms: the reality that requires change or was damaged and needs to be fixed (the starting point); what makes the change happen (the ritual act); what is expected to happen (the effect that rituals have on shaping requested realities) or what comes into functional existence; and, finally, the likely results or consequences of the ritual act (what the new reality facilitates or brings about). Every ritual embodies a "cosmos" of its own, with its own rules and forms of functioning. Furthermore, every "cosmos" embeds or is likely to create its modes of sharing with other rituals, thus building a totality, a "ritual cosmology," which is the overarching ritual system of any religious system or social structure. As indicated, each ritual consists of a set of entities, sections, or segments (Gruenwald). |
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Synthesis on Rituals
Synthesis on Rituals | p. 111 | To sum up this part, the ritual aspects of human behavior come into effect in segmented units that link together to make a workable whole, a ritual Gestalt. Furthermore, the enactment of rituals assumes that repeating the same things in the right order guaranteesthe same results. The repetitive factor is a dominant feature. The same things are done in the same manner to achieve or fulfil the same aims or results. In other words, rituals presuppose a strictly observed protocol. [...] any change in the processual protocol is likely to disrupt the ritual process and end in failure. Culturally oriented rituals engage a wide spectrum of factors. They bring about what may be considered substantial changes in life-preserving or life-enhancing processes. They empower processes that prevent the disruption or annihilation of existence in the broad sense of that term. In other words, rituals bring into effect dynamic processes vital for creating and sustaining processes that sustain the existence of a "cosmos." Or, else, they prevent the termination, disintegration, or annihilation of that "cosmos" (Gruenwald). |
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Sacred and Rituals Times
Sacred and Rituals Times | p. 195 | In the religion of ancient Israel and its neighbors the connection between time and divine worship is rooted in humankind's need for temporal guidelines to maintain a proper schedule of offerings. According to ancient Near Eastern literature, including the Hebrew Bible, these guidelines were provided with the creation of celestial bodies that ensured the accurate division of time. The Babylonian myth Enuma Elish, for example, intertwines Marduk's fashioning of the stars and moon with his creation of the year, months, and days (Tablet 5, lines 1-22), and according to the Priestly creation story of the Hebrew Bible the lights in the sky mark the seasons, days, and years (Gen 1:14). The division of time indicated by these celestial bodies made possible a festival calendar that provided consistency and regularity to the worship of gods, and some rituals continue to reflect the originating connection between sacred time and creation. For example, the Enuma Elish was recited at the annual Babylonian Akitu (New Year's) Festival, an eleven-day event, originally coinciding with the equinoxes, that celebrated the renewal of creation, and in ancient Israel God's rest on the seventh day (Heb. šabbāt) was an organizing principle for parts of its cultic life. These examples represent a widespread assumption in the ancient Near East that time was sacred because it was created by god(s) and that humans participate in this sacred time through worship. This worship follows a calendar whose units of time were established at creation and correspond to other parts of the created order (Davis). |
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Sacrifice
Sacrifice | p. 154 | Sacrifice:
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“Scapegoat” Ritual (Hittites)
"Scapegoat" Ritual (Hittites) | p. 46 | Substitute or "Scapegoat" Rituals. These procedures do not belong in the category of offerings, because their purpose was not the bestowal of a gift on a deity, but rather the disposal of impurity, sin, blood-guilt, or other unwanted quality. Nonetheless, they must be mentioned here because in many cases they were performed not for an individual, but on behalf of a societal collectivity, such as the Hittite army. Their goal was accomplished through the transferal of the moral or literal pollution (papratar) from the patient onto a living carrier, who was then either driven off into the wilderness or killed. In the latter instance the victim, along with the associated evil, was indeed definitively removed from the human realm, but this practice is really a magical one. The few attestations of "human sacrifice" in Hittite texts are to be interpreted in this manner (Beckman). |
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Temple
Temple | p. 163 | In a dangerous world, where disease, childbirth, or lack of rainfall could prove fatal, people in the ANE turned to the gods to gain some measure of control over their lives. They believed that the gods governed the necessary, dangerous, and humanly uncontrollable elements of the world. In turn, they sought to secure divine favor to ensure some measure of security. How could they influence the gods without consistent access? Temples were their primary solution, concretizing the divine presence and enabling access to it. Rather than being the gathering place for a worshipping congregation, temples were considered divine homes to which common people had little access. In fact, the various ANE languages use the same language for a domestic dwelling and a temple (Ugaritic and Aramaic bt, Hebrew and Aramaic byt, Akkadian bītu, Sumerian é, Hittite per- and parn-, and Egyptian ḥwt and pr). As such, they bear a greater resemblance to a modern home than a modern church. The temple's goal was not primarily to meet worshippers' needs, but divine ones, so that the resident deity would remain resident and continually extend its blessing and protection. The people presumed that as long as the deity in its temple was satisfied, the world around it would prosper (Hundley). |
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Temple Service
Temple Service | p. 152-153 | Temple service:
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Worship Rituals
Worship Ritual | p. 104 | Worship Ritual (Sacrificial System). The cult is often slighted or even ignored when Israel's religion is discussed, because it revolves around animal sacrifice. Any description of Israelite religion has to take stock of its complexities, but one cannot get away from the fact that the sacrificial cult, especially blood sacrifice, lay at the heart of worship in Israel. The various aspects of the temple cult are too lengthy to describe in detail here, so only two aspects will be commented on in this section. The Israelite cult, like all religious ritual – and all religions have their ritual – was extremely meaningful to the participants even if we do not always understand it from our time and culture millennia later. A number of recent studies have focused on the symbolism of the cult and attempted to decipher the priestly world view that lay behind it. For example, F. H. Gorman argues that a complex creation theology is presupposed and represented by the cult. The priestly view had a cosmological and sociological dimension, as well as a cultic. In order to express this, it made distinctions between holy and profane, clean and unclean, life and death, order and chaos [as it was in Egypt; cf. the opposition "Maat" vs. "Isefet" - mDP]. The lengthy ritual described in Leviticus 8–9 has many characteristics of what is often referred to as a "rite of passage". This is an anthropological term for rites that take place as a person passes from stage to another, such as from boyhood to manhood or girlhood to womanhood. There is first a rite of separation, next a transitional rite during which the person is in a "liminal" state (on the doorstep between one phase and another). There may be dangers while in this liminal state, and various rituals have to be carefully performed to protect the one undergoing the transition. In the case of Aaron and sons, they were undergoing the passage from "common" to "sacred." Thus, the ceremony of consecration in Leviticus 8–9 is very much parallel with rites of passage known both from preliterate modern societies and from many examples in modern Western culture (Grabbe). |