Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Professor Finkelstein still minimising Israel’s great kings David and Solomon

 


 

“Finkelstein believes that the original city of Jerusalem must have constituted

a large tel mound located within the area today known as the Temple Mount.

It’s an interesting theory. But how much of it is “facts and data”?”

Brad Macdonald and Christopher Eames

 

Was David and Solomon’s Jerusalem a ‘Godforsaken’ Place?

What does archaeology tell us?

By Brad Macdonald and Christopher Eames

  

From the March-April 2024 Let the Stones Speak Magazine Issue

 

In a 2021 interview series hosted by the W. F. Albright Institute of Archaeological Research, one of Israel’s most prominent archaeologists made some bold remarks about the Bible and its role in archaeology in Israel.

 

He explained that David and Solomon were simple, hill-country chieftains, and not the towering monarchs recorded in the Bible. He theorized that the story of David and Goliath was invented during the time of King Josiah (late seventh century b.c.e.) and was crafted to reflect his upcoming clash with Egypt’s Pharaoh Necho (Josiah was King David, Egypt was Goliath).

 

He also said King Solomon’s glorious reign was probably modeled by late biblical writers after an Assyrian king, maybe Sennacherib.

 

He also shared some bold and controversial views about biblical Jerusalem. He claimed that Judah and Jerusalem only turned from a “godforsaken” place to an important kingdom in the late eighth century b.c.e., when they were incorporated into the Assyrian economy. And he claimed that Judah only became a truly literate state—allowing for the composition of the Bible—when educated Israelites from the north fled into Judah from their own Assyrian destruction during the same century.

 

Many Jews, Christians, even Muslims would disagree with the views of Prof. Israel Finkelstein. And some might even get upset by these claims. But the more important question is, what does the evidence say?

 

In the first interview of the series, Professor Finkelstein emphasized how important it is to “speak facts and data” when talking about ancient Israel and Jerusalem.

 

And he is absolutely right. But here’s the context of that statement: “First and foremost, … the Bible does not mean to speak history. The Bible is all about theology, about ideology … and we scholars, researchers, need to speak facts and data” (emphasis added throughout).

 

Finkelstein clearly rejects the Bible as a historical source. But on what grounds? Where are the facts and data, the hard evidence—the science—proving that the Bible does not “speak history”?

 

Let’s examine Finkelstein’s claims specifically about biblical Jerusalem (Episode 15 of the series). Was Jerusalem a “godforsaken” place until the late eighth century b.c.e.? Is understanding Jerusalem of the united monarchy “a lost case,” as his interviewer concluded following Finkelstein’s comments? Is it correct for his interviewer to assert that “[e]xtensive archaeology has revealed nothing” about it?

 

Where Was Original Jerusalem?

 

The interview began with a discussion about the original location of Jerusalem. The majority opinion of scholars, archaeologists and historians is that early Jerusalem was situated in the area known today as the City of David, the ridge located south of the Temple Mount. According to the biblical text, David conquered this original city site ruled by the Canaanite Jebusites and made it his capital—and Solomon later expanded the city northward to include the temple construction.

 

According to Finkelstein, this understanding is flawed and there is “no way to clarify” where the ancient City of David really was. “We don’t really know what [these names] mean. We don’t really know what the Bible means when the Bible speaks about the City of David. There’s no place we can really pinpoint on the ridge to the south of the Temple Mount.”

 

Finkelstein believes the original city of Jerusalem was situated at the top of the Temple Mount hill, and that the city expanded southward down the ridge.

 

He gave several reasons for his theory. First, he said, the City of David does not look like a typical “tel” mound. Second, he pointed out the lack of Bronze Age remains in the area, particularly the southern part of the City of David. And third, he explained that city mounds are usually situated at the top of the highest ground. “The City of David ridge,” he explained, “is completely dominated on three sides by higher grounds,” and this would have given enemies a tactical advantage.

 

Because of these reasons, Finkelstein believes that the original city of Jerusalem must have constituted a large tel mound located within the area today known as the Temple Mount. It’s an interesting theory. But how much of it is “facts and data”?

 

Consider the claim that we cannot know what the Bible means when it speaks about the City of David. The Bible is actually quite specific in describing the location of the original Canaanite city, Jebus. First, it says explicitly that the original Jebusite fortress in Jerusalem, captured by David, was renamed the City of David. 2 Samuel 5:7 tells us “the same is the city of David.” Furthermore, this passage states that this fortress (metzudah in Hebrew) was located in a lower ridge location—“down” from the highest geographical features (verse 17).

 

The Bible also indicates that the site was atypically small and extremely well defensed geographically. In verses 6-8, the Canaanites boast that the city’s defense is so strong, even “the blind and the lame” could defend it. Finally, the Bible also reveals that the upper site of the future temple was part of an agricultural area outside and higher in elevation than the original city (1 Chronicles 21:18-19; 22:1).

 

Professor Finkelstein suggested that a settlement on the lower ridge would have been a strategic liability, but this view is not borne out historically. Jerusalem has been conquered numerous times. While the northern Temple Mount area is technically the highest point, this area is also a more-gradually sloped, broader area. Historically, this is the point where the city has typically been breached.

When the Romans invaded in 70 c.e., they attacked the city from north of the Temple Mount. The Babylonians attacked the same point when they conquered Jerusalem in 586 b.c.e. This was the point where Assyria’s King Sennacherib threatened Judah with his armies in the late eighth century b.c.e. (although an attack did not take place). This was also the location where part of the city wall was torn down by the attacking kingdom of Israel (2 Kings 14:13).

 

The ridge and small summit on which the City of David sits is actually an extremely difficult area to penetrate. The bedrock on the east and west sides of the ridge falls away sharply, creating narrow valleys that become a kill-zone for large forces.

 

Additionally, recent excavations of the Givati Parking Lot have revealed a massive man-made trench in the bedrock between the City of David and the Ophel mound. This moat undoubtedly served as a defensive feature protecting the city from invasion from the north. (For more information, read “The Moat of Ancient Jerusalem.”)

 

The fact that the City of David doesn’t fit the mold of a large “tel” mound, and that it has a comparatively lower elevation, may not accord with Finkelstein’s conceptualization of early Jerusalem—but it does fit with the historical accounts.

Now what about the purported lack of Bronze Age remains?

 

Where Is Bronze Age Jerusalem?

 

Archaeology in Israel and the ancient Near East is divided into several periods. The Bronze Age spans the third and second millenniums b.c.e. (put simply, Early Bronze, circa 3000–2000; Middle Bronze, 2000–1500; Late Bronze, 1500–1200 b.c.e.). Where are the remains of Jerusalem from the middle of the second millennium b.c.e.?

It is clear from Egyptian inscriptions, as Finkelstein highlighted, that Jerusalem was occupied in the Bronze Age—both the Middle and Late.

 

Where, then, are these remains on the City of David ridge? After all, as Finkelstein noted, in areas of the southern ridge there is bedrock under Iron Age remains, and we have “only a [Bronze Age] sherd here or a sherd there … we don’t have at all evidence, or almost none, for architecture, houses, any construction activity.” Due to the lack of Bronze Age remains in the City of David, Finkelstein concludes that Bronze Age Jerusalem “must have been located on the Temple Mount” (although, as he admits, this theory cannot be put to the test by excavation due to the religious and political situation).

 

Before getting into what has been found, consider what has not been found.

 

While the City of David isn’t as politically or religiously sensitive as the Temple Mount, it is still incredibly sensitive. Much of the area is situated in the densely populated Arab neighborhood of Silwan. This makes it difficult to conduct large-scale excavations that would expose large swathes of territory. Instead, archaeologists have to excavate smaller areas, building their picture slowly over time, in fits and spurts.

 

Next, recall that Jerusalem has been destroyed and rebuilt several times over the centuries. According to Eric Cline’s book Jerusalem Besieged, the city has been “besieged 23 times, attacked an additional 52 times, and captured and recaptured 44 times.” This, too, explains the lack of Bronze Age evidence: Much of it was destroyed in these attacks.

 

Finally, despite the relatively small area that has been excavated, and all of the destructions that have occurred, there is archaeological evidence for Bronze Age occupation in the City of David.

 

Archaeological excavations around the Gihon Spring—situated in the lower, northeastern corner of the City of David—have revealed part of a truly massive fortification, one that dates to the Middle Bronze Age (circa 2000–1500 b.c.e.).

This fortification wrapped around and protected the vital Gihon Spring. Its walls are massive, up to 7 meters wide at their foundations—the widest walls of any Bronze Age site in all Israel.

 

The Gihon Spring, Jerusalem’s only water source, is located on the lower ridge of the City of David, partway down into the eastern Kidron Valley. The location of this spring, and the tunnels that link it to the City of David (not the Temple Mount), are some of the greatest proofs of the location of the original site of Jerusalem—built deliberately around and protecting the vital spring.

 

Professor Finkelstein recognizes this massive Middle Bronze Age fortification in the lower City of David.

 

However, he suggests that this giant structure was simply a standalone building, an outlying tower from the Temple Mount city-hub, built to protect the distant spring. (He also postulates that the underground network of ancient tunnels beneath the City of David leading to the Gihon Spring simply gave late writers the idea to craft a story about David conquering Jerusalem using them.)

 

Consider the facts: What is the most rational explanation? Why do these Bronze Age tunnels connected to the Gihon Spring lead into the City of David and not north, into the Temple Mount? This suggests the City of David was the central habitation at this time, not the Temple Mount.

 

Consider too: Is it difficult to believe that Middle Bronze Age structures such as these continued to be used in the Late Bronze Age? And what about other Canaanite-era walls discovered on the lower eastern slopes of the City of David, better sheltered from exposure and destruction?

 

The man who interviewed Professor Finkelstein questioned his theory of a Bronze Age Jerusalem centered on the Temple Mount. The interviewer identified certain difficulties with the theory, such as the exposed bedrock at the center of the Temple Mount site. In response, Finkelstein noted that erosion down to bedrock at an elevated point of the site is not unusual (again, structures are usually better-preserved in lower, more sheltered areas of a site). He also pointed out that we shouldn’t expect to find much on the Temple Mount anyway, given Herod’s clearing and rebuilding of the site for his temple.

 

How ironic. These are the same explanations for a lack of Bronze Age remains in much of the City of David—the exposed, eroded bedrock along the upper, southern part of the ridge, as well as repeat events of destruction and rebuilding. Here’s the key difference though: The only remnants we have of Bronze Age Jerusalem are in the City of David, not on the Temple Mount. Because something can be said to the question of Bronze Age remains on the Temple Mount: Sifting and various analyses have been done on the many tons of earth illegally bulldozed out of the Temple Mount foundations by the Islamic Waqf, along with other underground surveys of the Temple Mount. As affirmed by Dr. Hillel Geva and Dr. Alon De Groot, there is no evidence of tel stratification, and only 1 percent of the material remains discovered date prior to the Iron Age—rather damning evidence against this site as the location of a strong Bronze Age city tel.

….

Thursday, March 19, 2026

David’s prophet Nathan may be the same as Gad

 

 


by

 Damien F. Mackey

 

 

 

The different names could be explained by, for instance, Nathan being the prophet’s actual name, and Gad being his geographical home – perhaps Ramoth-gilead where Levites dwelt, Gad and Gilead being interchanged.

 

 

Given the similarities between the seer Nathan, the seer Gad, the Scriptures may possibly be describing here just the one person in the same way as, so I believe, David’s shrewd-wise counsellor, Jonadab, continues as the shrewd-wise counsellor Achitophel, thereby completing an absorbing tale of intrigue that had appeared to end too abruptly. Regarding this, see e.g. my article:

 

Absalom and Achitophel

 

(8) Absalom and Achitophel

 

Some similarities between Nathan and Gad are long contemporaneity with the reign of King David; serving the king as a truly wise counsellor; a fearless prophet or seer; a recorder of Davidic history.

 

It would be unlikely - so it seems to me - to have two such similar seers operating over that long a period of Davidic history.

 

The different names could be explained by, for instance, Nathan being the prophet’s actual name, and Gad being his geographical home – perhaps Ramoth-gilead where Levites dwelt, Gad and Gilead being interchanged. This would make him Nathan the Gadite, and it might even connect him to the later great prophet, Elijah, from Gilead.

 

A possible explanation of I Chronicles 29:29-30, then, wherein Samuel, Nathan and Gad appear as if being three distinct prophets:

 

The prophets Samuel, Nathan and Gad wrote history books about all the things that King David did. They wrote down everything that he did as king, from the beginning to the end. The books tell us how he ruled with great power. They tell us about the things that happened to him. They also tell us about the things that happened in Israel and in the other kingdoms in that region ...

 

would be that a waw consecutive is in play here, to be read as: “The prophets Samuel, Nathan, that is the Gadite, wrote history books about all that David did”.

 

According to the Topical Encyclopedia:

Topical Bible: Gad and Nathan

 

Gad was a prophet and seer during the reign of King David, playing a significant role in the spiritual and political life of Israel. He is first mentioned in 1 Samuel 22:5, where he advises David, who was then fleeing from King Saul, to leave the stronghold and go into the land of Judah. This counsel reflects Gad's role as a divine messenger, providing guidance to David during a tumultuous period.

 

Gad's most notable involvement is recorded in 2 Samuel 24 and 1 Chronicles 21, where he delivers God's message to David after the king's sinful census of Israel. The Lord, displeased with David's action, sends Gad to offer David a choice of three punishments: three years of famine, three months of fleeing from enemies, or three days of plague. David chooses to fall into the hands of the Lord, resulting in a devastating plague. Gad later instructs David to build an altar on the threshing floor of Araunah the Jebusite, where the plague is halted. This site becomes the location for Solomon's Temple, underscoring Gad's influence on Israel's religious heritage.

 

Gad is also mentioned in 1 Chronicles 29:29, where he is noted as one of the authors of the records of King David's reign, alongside Samuel the seer and Nathan the prophet. This highlights Gad's role not only as a spiritual advisor but also as a chronicler of Israel's history.

Nathan

 

Nathan was a prominent prophet during the reigns of King David and King Solomon, known for his courage and faithfulness in delivering God's messages. He first appears in 2 Samuel 7, where he initially encourages David to build a house for the Lord. However, after receiving a divine revelation, Nathan returns to David with a message from God, promising that David's offspring will build the temple and that his kingdom will be established forever. This prophecy is foundational to the Davidic Covenant, which has significant theological implications for the messianic lineage.

 

Nathan's most famous encounter with David occurs in 2 Samuel 12, following David's adultery with Bathsheba and the arranged death of her husband, Uriah. Nathan confronts David with a parable about a rich man who unjustly takes a poor man's lamb, leading David to pronounce judgment on himself.

Nathan then reveals David's sin, prompting the king's repentance. This episode underscores Nathan's role as a fearless prophet who holds even the king accountable to God's standards.

 

Nathan also plays a crucial role in the succession of Solomon to the throne. In 1 Kings 1, as David's life nears its end, Nathan, along with Bathsheba, ensures that Solomon is anointed king, thwarting Adonijah's attempt to seize the throne. Nathan's actions demonstrate his commitment to God's will and the stability of the Davidic line.

 

Nathan is mentioned in 1 Chronicles 29:29 as one of the authors of the records of King David's reign, alongside Samuel the seer and Gad the seer. This indicates his involvement in documenting the history and spiritual legacy of Israel during a pivotal era.

 

 

 

 

Sunday, March 15, 2026

Humanity will not have peace until it turns to Divine Mercy

 


 

 

“God wants us to know that all the graces of His mercy

can only be received by our trust.

The more we open the door of our hearts and lives to Him with trust,

the more we can receive”.

 

 

The Divine Mercy Message and Devotion

 

The message of The Divine Mercy is simple. It is that God loves us – all of us. And, He wants us to recognize that His mercy is greater than our sins, so that we will call upon Him with trust, receive His mercy, and let it flow through us to others. Thus, all will come to share His joy. 


The Divine Mercy message is one we can call to mind simply by remembering ABC: 


A - Ask for His Mercy. God wants us to approach Him in prayer constantly, repenting of our sins and asking Him to pour His mercy out upon us and upon the whole world. 

 

B - Be merciful. God wants us to receive His mercy and let it flow through us to others. He wants us to extend love and forgiveness to others just as He does to us. 


C - Completely trust in Jesus. God wants us to know that all the graces of His mercy can only be received by our trust. The more we open the door of our hearts and lives to Him with trust, the more we can receive.

 

This message and devotion to Jesus as The Divine Mercy is based on the writings of Saint Faustina Kowalska, an uneducated Polish nun who, in obedience to her spiritual director, wrote a diary of about 600 pages recording the revelations she received about God's mercy. Even before her death in 1938, the devotion to The Divine Mercy had begun to spread. 

 

The message and devotional practices proposed in the Diary of Saint Faustina and set forth in this web site and other publications of the Marians of the Immaculate Conception are completely in accordance with the teachings of the Church and are firmly rooted in the Gospel message of our Merciful Savior. Properly understood and implemented, they will help us grow as genuine followers of Christ.

 

….

Jesus told St. Faustina, “Mankind will not have peace until it turns with trust to My mercy” (Diary of Saint Maria Faustina Kowalska, 300; see also 699).

 

The five elements of the devotion (represented by the acronym F.I.N.C.H., for FeastImageNovenaChapletHour) have attached to them some of the most powerful and extraordinary promises of any devotion.

 

Spend time to learn more about the mercy of God, learn to trust in Jesus, and live your life as merciful to others, as Christ is merciful to you. 

 

For a full understanding of Divine Mercy, we recommend Divine Mercy Message and Devotion, by Fr. Seraphim Michalenko, MIC.

 

The Divine Mercy Message | The Divine Mercy

 

 

 

Distinctive philosophy of Jesus Christ

 

 


 

… considers the significance of Jesus for some prominent contemporary philosophical topics, including epistemology and the meaning of life.

 

 

What, if anything, does Jesus of Nazareth have to do with philosophy? This question motivates this collection of essays from leading theologians, philosophers, and biblical scholars.

 

Part I portrays Jesus in his first-century intellectual and historical context, attending to intellectual influences and contributions and contemporaneous similar patterns of thought.

 

Part II examines how Jesus influenced two of the most prominent medieval philosophers. It considers the seeming conceptual shift from Hebraic categories of thought to distinctively Greco-Roman ones in later Christian philosophers.

 

Part III considers the significance of Jesus for some prominent contemporary philosophical topics, including epistemology and the meaning of life. The focus is not so much on how ‘Christianity’ figures in such topics as on how Jesus makes distinctive contributions to them.

Buy Jesus and Philosophy Online | Kogan.com

 

Jesus and Philosophy

Paul K. Moser

Faith and Philosophy 22 (3):261-283 (2005)

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Taking Aramaïc into account, Qur’an reads as Christian text

 



https://youtu.be/oUXxxvcem0g

 

German Scholars reveal Aramaic-Christian hymns embedded in Qur’an

 

Top of Form

Bottom of Form

In the 1970s a German Protestant theologian scholar named Dr Gunther Luling (a Dr. in Arabistics and Islamics and a pioneer in the study of early Islamic origins) wrote his Doctoral thesis on the origins of the Qur’an, where he reconstructed a comprehensive pre-Islamic Christian Hymnal hidden within the Qur’an, taken from 5th-6th century Syriac Christian hymns.

 

His 1970 PhD thesis received the ‘Opus Eximium’ (high distinction) grade, the highest available in Germany, which should have promoted him to professorship anywhere, but in 1972 he was kicked out of his University, for no reason. One German scholar said ‘He was a crack-pot’, possibly because his research was just too new and too explosively controversial.

 

In the 1990s his thesis was translated into English, which gave it a much wider audience, and he was rehabilitated, so that by the time he died in 2014, he had been exonerated.

 

Following Dr Luling’s example another German Arabist and Syriac scholar, Dr Christoph Luxenberg broke new ground on the Qur’an, discovering that much of it came from previous Christian Lectionaries, Homilies, and Hymns, written in Syro-Aramaic, and then interposed into Arabic later on.

 

Like Luling, he was ostracized by the German academic community. As a result, he changed his name and never publicly showed his face, in order not to be identified.

He was curious concerning the 25% of the Qur’an which even the scholars don’t understand, known as the “Dark Passages”, and so decided to apply Luling’s methodology, using his own 7-step process of peeling back the layers of the Arabic to find what the text originally said.

 

Here is his 7-step process:

 

1) He checked al-Tabari’s 10th century Tafsir (commentary) for an Arabic meaning for the words in question.

2) He then checked the 13th century Lisān al-ʿArab (Tongue of Arabs = Arabic Dictionary) which was compiled by Ibn Manzur (in 1290) for dictionary meanings of those words.

3) He looked to see if there were homonymous (synonymous) roots in the Aramaic, even perhaps with a different meaning.

4) He then tried different diacritics (the 5 dots above and below each of the letters in Arabic) to see if he could fine other alternatives.

5) He finally went to the Aramaic language to find an Aramaic root using different Aramaic diacritics (dots similar to those in Arabic).

6) Upon trying the different diacritics, he then re-translated the Arabic words back into the Aramaic using the semantics of the Syro-Aramaic word.

7) And finally he tried to find the lost meanings of Arab words using 10th century Syro-Aramaic lexicons.

 

After employing these 7-step he was able to reproduce the 25% “Dark Passages” and noticed that they were simply Aramaic Christian Lectionaries, Homilies, and Hymns written by Christian priests in the 4th – 6th centuries in worship to JESUS!

 

So, his exercise had nothing to do with ‘what he found’, but ‘who he found’!

 

What can we conclude?

 

•The Qur’an is a mixture of Arabic and Aramaic words, originally written in Aramaic script, later transcribed into the Arabic script.

•When taking Aramaic into account, the Qur’an can be fully understood as a Christian text.

•During the 9th & 10th centuries (according to the Germans), diacritics/vowels were added and the reading was therefore fixed (scriptio plena).

•The present Qur’an is an interpretative act by Muslim Arabs (no longer Christians) who decided where the dots and vowels would go.

•Thus, the Qur’an was changed, and claims that an oral tradition ensures the correct reading are patently false.

 

Here then is a possible time line, including 5 periods of Textual evolution:

 

·7th century = Aramaic texts were transposed into Arabic, though few of the compilers knew Aramaic well.

·8th – 9th centuries = Arabic manuscripts began to appear, but without diacritics or vowels, making it difficult to read.

·8th – 10th centuries = Qira’at & Ahruf copies were compiled (736 – 905 AD) by over 700 different men put their dots/vowels wherever they chose, and then gave their name to their Qur’anic text.

·10th – 15th centuries = 7 Qira’ats (chosen by Ibn Mujahid in 936 AD), then 14 (chosen by al Shatabi in 1194 AD), then 9 ‘Readings’ (chosen by al Jaziri in 1429 AD) were designated the 30 official Qira’at Qur’ans, with over 93,000 differences between them.

 

As different geographical groups memorized their Qur’an, they followed the Qira’at of their choice, which created problems.

 

·20th century = So, in 1924 the final and singular ‘Hafs’ Qur’an was chosen, first for Cairo, then in 1936 for Egypt, and then for the whole world in 1985.

 

So, Muslims began with 1 Qur’an, which became 7, then 21, then 30, and finally back to 1 again. Yet, they still claim that there has always been only 1 Qur’an, without one letter or one word different.

 

 

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

What if Haman, the Hitler of the Book of Esther, was not of Amalek, but was a Jew?


 


by

 Damien F. Mackey

 

 

“It is of interest to note that from this point in Israel’s history as the scriptures record it, Amalek is on the scene more consistently than any other nation in attack against Israel for the next 300 years, first assisting Eglon, then in association with Midian (Judges 6:3), and then in the days of

King Saul and David (1 Samuel 15 and 1 Samuel 30)”.

 

Dr. John Osgood

 

 Introduction

 

That there is real uncertainty regarding the ethnicity of the conspiratorial Haman in the Book of Esther is apparent from the fact that he is designated amongst the various versions of the story, now as an Agagite, now as an Amalekite, now as a Macedonian, and, finally, as a Bougaean.

 

It is not inappropriate that the LXX should describe him as “a Bougaean” (Βουγαîος) because that word, Boogey-an, with one consonantal addition, becomes Boogeyman.

And, not only is Haman like a Boogeyman for the Jews, but apparently they relish Boo-ing him during the Feast of Purim.

 

Moreover, the Amalekite (Agagite) race from which most think that Haman could trace his descent, was thought to hover, like a dark Boogeyman, over the history of Israel.

 

And, indeed, some of this is true.

 

Amalek was Israel’s first enemy after they had escaped from Egypt.

This formidable foe had looked to deprive Israel of access to drinking water.

For this, the race was condemned by God to annihilation (Exodus 127:8-16):

 

The Amalekites came and attacked the Israelites at Rephidim. Moses said to Joshua, ‘Choose some of our men and go out to fight the Amalekites. Tomorrow I will stand on top of the hill with the staff of God in my hands’.

So Joshua fought the Amalekites as Moses had ordered, and Moses, Aaron and Hur went to the top of the hill. As long as Moses held up his hands, the Israelites were winning, but whenever he lowered his hands, the Amalekites were winning. When Moses’ hands grew tired, they took a stone and put it under him and he sat on it. Aaron and Hur held his hands up—one on one side, one on the other—so that his hands remained steady till sunset. So Joshua overcame the Amalekite army with the sword.

Then the Lord said to Moses, ‘Write this on a scroll as something to be remembered and make sure that Joshua hears it, because I will completely blot out the name of Amalek from under heaven’.

Moses built an altar and called it The Lord is my Banner. He said, ‘Because hands were lifted up against the throne of the Lord, the Lord will be at war against the Amalekites from generation to generation’.

 

And Amalek will continue to be Israel’s most persistent enemy for centuries, as noted by Dr. John Osgood writing of the Judges period (emphasis added):

http://creation.com/the-time-of-the-judges-the-archaeology-b-settlement-and-apostasy

 

It is of interest to note that from this point in Israel’s history as the scriptures record it, Amalek is on the scene more consistently than any other nation in attack against Israel for the next 300 years, first assisting Eglon, then in association with Midian (Judges 6:3), and then in the days of King Saul and David (1 Samuel 15 and 1 Samuel 30).

 

Amalek and Benjamin

 

Most famous is the war between Amalek and the Benjaminite king, Saul, meant to be that war of total annihilation (I Samuel 15:2-3), the dreadful haram (חֲרַמְ):

 

The Lord All-Powerful says: ‘When the Israelites came out of Egypt, the Amalekites tried to stop them from going to Canaan. I saw what the Amalekites did. Now go fight against the Amalekites. You must completely destroy the Amalekites and everything that belongs to them. Don’t let anything live; you must kill all the men and women and all of their children and little babies. You must kill all of their cattle and sheep and all of their camels and donkeys’.  

 

Consequently, King Saul destroyed the Amalekites, but not entirely, famously sparing their king, Agag, as well as seizing everything else worth keeping (vv. 7-9).

 

The completion of the unfinished work, so the story goes, would be left to the Jewish hero of the Book of Esther, Mordecai – a Benjaminite descendant of Saul’s father, Kish, (Esther 2:5).

 

Thus we read:

Mordechai, Esther, and her Father’s House

….

The contemporary scholar Yitzhak Berger sees in Mordechai’s words not an emotional flourish but a political argument. Haman, we are told was an Agagite, and Mordechai and Esther were from the tribe of Benjamin.

 

Six centuries earlier the Benjaminite King Saul spared Agag, king of Amalek, against the express direction of God and the prophet Samuel, and was stripped of his kingdom for this misplaced mercy.

 

So Mordechai wasn’t just making an odd rhetorical flourish, he was, Berger writes, “redeeming the Benjaminite line from its association with the inadequacies of Saul—particularly in fighting Amalek.” Moreover, Esther and Mordechai’s ancestor Saul had been replaced by the more worthy David; now Esther, who herself had replaced the unworthy Vashti, could flip the script of her father’s Benjaminite house. Mordechai was reminding her that this was an opportunity not only to save herself and her people but to salvage their ancestor’s political legacy. ….

[End of quote]

 

There is a nice symmetry in a view such as this, and it makes for a terrific story.

 

Mordecai and Haman are described in Mordecai’s dream as like two great dragons (Esther 10:4-9, RSV Catholic Edition):

 

And Mor′decai said, ‘These things have come from God. For I remember the dream that I had concerning these matters, and none of them has failed to be fulfilled. The tiny spring which became a river, and there was light and the sun and abundant water—the river is Esther, whom the king married and made queen. The two dragons are Haman and myself. The nations are those that gathered to destroy the name of the Jews. And my nation, this is Israel, who cried out to God and were saved. The Lord has saved his people; the Lord has delivered us from all these evils; God has done great signs and wonders, which have not occurred among the nations’.

 

The trouble is, the hopeful parallel is not really there – and Haman, once again, is the problem, the obstructive Boogeyman.

 

Why?

 

Because, as even Jewish legends tell, Haman was a Jew, known to Mordecai. “Ginzberg furnishes substantial evidence that Mordecai and Haman were both Jews who knew each other well …”: Eugene Kaellis:

Welcome to the Jewish Independent

 

And I firmly believe this to have been the case, and I hope to have proven it in articles such as:

Haman un-masked

 

(1) Haman un-masked

 

On this shattering piece of traditional information the whole wonderful tale of Haman and Mordecai perpetuating the feud between Amalek and Benjamin falls flat on its face.

 

The fact is that David, after King Saul’s abysmal failure, went on campaign against the Amalekites (I Samuel 30:1-20).

They cease to be a factor in the Bible after that.

 

A new Benjamin (Netanyahu), however, ‘tilting at windmills’, is trying to perpetuate the ancient feud with Amalek:

 

Netanyahu likes to recall Amalek

 

(2) Netanyahu likes to recall Amalek

 

But is Iran really “the same ancestral land of Haman”?

 

(2) But is Iran really "the same ancestral land of Haman"?