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Approaching Biblical Parallels in the Ancient Near East
The gods of Gudea, king of Lagash, commanded him to build a temple according to a particular pattern. His account dates more than seven hundred years before God commanded Moses to build a sanctuary with a plan to follow. The contrast between the polytheism of the one account and the monotheism of the other does not obscure the parallelism between them.
This parallel is one of many that we will explore in the following chapters. In almost two hundred years of patient archaeological research, many such parallels between the Old Testament and the ancient Near East have come to light. Archaeology has in fact altered the whole climate of Old Testament studies. No study of biblical material can now be complete without some understanding of its ancient background.1 Comparative studies have become virtually mandatory for a proper understanding of the Old Testament. But a foundational question to comparative study is this: What is the proper comparative method that will assure true results?
Truth
Most scholarly endeavor assumes that truth exists, and the present work is no exception. It is, I hope, founded on truth, and more precisely, on biblical truth, because God’s revelation of himself in the Bible is the standard of truth par excellence. We ought to affirm at the outset, however, that truth also exists in myth, only figuratively. Yet no mythology can ultimately satisfy our desire for truth. Only God can do that. As Augustine once remarked, “You [God] have made us for yourself, and our heart is unquiet until it rests in you.” For the same reason, what we have said about myth also applies to science. Any scientific Weltanschauung is actually poetic because it is a human fabrication, a poema (a thing made).2 Because only God can satisfy ultimately, natural science as a human creation cannot. As Frazer shrewdly observed,
In the last analysis magic, religion, and science are nothing but theories of thought; and as science has supplanted its predecessors, so it may hereafter be itself superseded by some more perfect hypothesis, perhaps by some totally different way of looking at the phenomena—of registering the shadows on the screen—of which we in this generation can form no idea.3
Only God’s way of “looking at the phenomena” is objectively true and perfect. But science does aim to understand truth, insofar as it seeks to understand God’s created order.
Science has ways of establishing truth. One is the experimental method, which is generally taught in schools. Another is the comparative method, which descends from Aristotle. By this approach, the unknown is compared with the known. If parallels are found, the unknown can be understood and classified accordingly. Sir James George Frazer employed this method of comparison and classification in his major work The Golden Bough.4 The method has become a component of modern anthropology and also of biblical studies today.
Two uses of the comparative method are possible in biblical studies: one may use it to classify biblical material into categories of myth and legend, or one may use it to understand pagan myths and legends according to biblical truth. The first approach cannot be correct, according to the attitude of the New Testament to the Old Testament. The New Testament actors and writers affirm the historicity of such “legendary” figures as Adam and Eve, Abraham, and Moses; Jesus affirms that Jonah spent three days in the belly of a great fish, and so on. A use of the comparative method that places biblical narratives among the mythological or legendary donations of the world is flawed, because it assumes that biblical data are capable of such classification. It ignores (or rejects) the Bible’s claims about its own historicity. Once we accept those claims, however, the same comparative method can be turned around and produce valuable results. We can then understand legends and myths by comparison with what God and people actually did according to the biblical accounts.
Those who choose the first approach mentioned above (that is, those who use a comparative method to classify biblical material as myth and legend) fall largely into two categories. Some take a universal approach. They posit some universal aspect of human nature to account for parallel mythologies the world over. Frazer, Freud, and Jung fall into this category. Others compare pagan and biblical data, and conclude that the latter are derived from the former via cultural influence. Gunkel, Delitzsch, and others fall into this category.
We wish to understand pagan data from a biblical perspective, because we believe that such a perspective offers a true hermeneutic. Before we do so, however, it is important to consider the approaches just mentioned.
The Universal Approach
Sir James George Frazer
I have spoken of a scientific, comparative method, and Mr. Casaubon, George Eliot’s fictional character, employed just such a method. He sought a hermeneutic by which he could understand and categorize all mythology, a task that “had been attempted before, but not with that thoroughness, justice of comparison, and effectiveness of arrangement at which Mr. Casaubon aimed.”5 By 1910, Sir James George Frazer appeared to have accomplished Casaubon’s ambition: to discover such a key and to compare and categorize myths accordingly. George Eliot’s character had hoped to condense his “voluminous still-accumulating results … and bring them … to fit a little shelf.”6 Now Frazer’s thirteen-volume study, The Golden Bough, appeared to do just that. It was global in scope, a monumental work that has influenced generations of anthropologists and remains a classic in its field.
Frazer modestly concluded: “My contribution to the history of the human mind consists of little more than a rough and purely provisional classification of facts gathered almost entirely from printed sources.”7 Today most students of the ancient world would agree with that evaluation. Still, Frazer believed he had made some contribution to the “history of the human mind” (by which he meant the “gradual evolution of human thought from savagery to civilization”).8 Frazer detected a pattern in the evolution of human thought: from belief in magic through belief in religion to belief in science. He thought the pattern was universal.
If then we consider, on the one hand, the essential similarity of man’s chief wants everywhere and at all times, and on the other hand, the wide difference between the means he has adopted to satisfy them in different ages, we shall perhaps be disposed to conclude that the movement of the higher thought, so far as we can trace it, has on the whole been from magic through religion to science.9
According to Frazer, man’s foremost concern has always been to satisfy his wants, and that has preoccupied his “higher thought.” Magic, religion, and science are the means man has evolved to satisfy those wants: first magic, which seemed to give him control over nature; then religion, which projected gods in man’s image who might be appeased and enlisted to control or affect nature or events on man’s behalf; and finally science, which appeared “to revert in a measure to the older standpoint of magic by postulating explicitly what in magic had only been implicitly assumed, to wit, an inflexible regularity in the order of natural events, which if carefully observed, enables us to foresee their course with certainty and to act accordingly.”10
The evolution of human worldviews from magic through religion to science was a universal process. And because it was rooted in human nature and human needs, it was also an inevitable process. For Frazer, the ideas that characterize the early stages of this evolution are parallel. They are so, not because of any mutual influence of cultures, but because of a universality in the human constitution.
If there is one general conclusion which seems to emerge from the mass of particulars, I venture to think that it is the essential similarity in the working of the less developed human mind among all races, which corresponds to the essential similarity in their bodily frame revealed by comparative anatomy.11
That is to say, the magical and mythological thought of different cultures may be expected to develop along parallel structural lines simply because of a universal “similarity in the working of the less developed human mind” worldwide. As Frankfort notes, Frazer applied this similarity “not only to the processes of mythopoeic thought but to its concrete manifestations in beliefs and institutions.”12 In other words, such institutions as “divine kingship,” the “scapegoat,” and the “dying god”—all key figures in the Frazerian analysis—could be found in all cultures because they arose from universal mythopoeic processes of the primitive mind.13 Those processes, again, sought to deal with the problem presented to primitive human beings by their wants.
Frazer, Freud, and Jung
It is important to recall at this point that Frazer’s work arose out of a climate of evolutionary thought that had not begun with Darwin but had received a major impetus from his work. Frazer proposed in effect a phylogenesis of culture, which found a ready acceptance because it suited the contemporary spirit.14
Moreover, as Frankfort notes, Frazer’s thought also bore a “family resemblance” to that of Freud.
Freud was born two years after Frazer. And if I stress the contemporaneity of these two men who have influenced Western thought so profoundly, it is because their discoveries show a certain family likeness. Frazer saw the whole host conjured up in The Golden Bough as sprung from a universal preoccupation with food and fertility; Freud found an equally universal one in the libido, the sexual appetite…. Both Freud and Frazer reduced the complexities of civilization to something essentially natural, simple—and, we may add, trivial.15
Frazer and Freud each found a supposed basis for “the complexities of civilization” in some universal aspect of human nature.
Carl Jung, an early advocate of Freud, did likewise.16 Jung, however, posited a universal “collective unconscious” for humanity, out of which parallel mythologies arose.
The collective unconscious seems to be the storehouse of latent memory traces inherited from man’s ancestral past, a past that includes not only the racial history of man as a separate species but his prehuman or animal ancestry as well. The collective unconscious is the psychic residue of man’s evolutionary development, a residue that accumulates as a consequence of repeated experiences over many generations. It is almost detached from anything personal in the life of an individual and it is seemingly universal. All human beings have more or less the same collective unconscious. Jung attributes the universality of the collective unconscious to the similarity of the structure of the brain in all races of men, and this similarity in turn is due to a common evolution.17
Frazer speculated that parallels of religious thought were rooted in evolution, specifically in “the essential similarity in the working of the less developed human mind among all races, which corresponds to the essential similarity in their bodily frame revealed by comparative anatomy.” Jung postulated a source of mythopoeic thought (a collective unconscious) rooted in “the similarity of the structure of the brain in all races of men … due to a common evolution.” A “fam...