Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Where Babylon Gave Israel A New Song

Found this little excerpt of Alan Jacob's review of a book written by Richard John Neuhaus called "American Babylon" posted on culture-making.com . Some great thoughts on how the Jews time in captivity helped shape them in positive ways (although there was tremendous pain in exile):

"[T]he Babylonian captivity of the Israelites produced social and, yes, technological developments that permanently altered Judaism—that, one might say, made Judaism as a way of life separate from the cult of the Temple in Jerusalem. For it was in that captivity that the synagogue developed—the place for reading and interpreting Torah—and along with it the scribal system by which the debates of the rabbis were recorded, organized, displayed, and passed down to future generations in what we now call the Talmud. And when the Israelites were given the opportunity to return from exile and rebuild the walls of Jerusalem and the Temple, many—among them some leading rabbis and their devoutest students—chose to stay in Babylon. They had come to prefer the new social structures they had made, and the new technologies formed to sustain those structures.

For those of us residing in the American Babylon, this sounds suspiciously like a parable; but it’s important to see that those who chose to stay behind were often neither frivolous nor culpably assimilated into Babylonian life. Moreover, wise historians doubt whether Judaism could have survived its ultimate diaspora were it not for the cultural forms originally built in that captivity."

4 comments:

  1. Along these same lines, Michael Frost recently came out with an amazing book titled "Exiles" in which he makes the parallel between the Babylonian captivity and today's church in a post-modern/post christian world. While I don't agree with everything in the book, it is an amazing read that really made me think about some things. I would highly recommend it to you as a theologian, and a worship leader.

    p.s. I also made a comment on your previous post about "embedded vs deliberative theology" great post!

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  2. nice... i've wanted to read "exiles" for a while, but haven't gotten around to it. heard more about "forgotten ways" so i read that and really enjoyed it. obviously "the shaping of things to come" was the initial installment.

    i actually posted a response on your comment earlier, thanks for reading!!

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  3. are those books also by Michael Frost/Hirsch?

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  4. yeppers. "forgotten ways" is just by hirsch. "shaping of things to come" by both. they also just wrote a new one as well called "re-jesus". not sure how it is though.

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