Difference between revisions of "The Prophet from Beit El/2"
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<p>The prophet from Beit El was looking after his personal interests, and doing what he thought would be best for his prophetic business.</p> | <p>The prophet from Beit El was looking after his personal interests, and doing what he thought would be best for his prophetic business.</p> | ||
<mekorot>Josephus, modern scholars</mekorot> | <mekorot>Josephus, modern scholars</mekorot> | ||
− | <point><b>Yerovam's Invitation</b> – Yerovam's invitation and offer of a present was an attempt to commission the Man of God from Yehuda to work for the king and thereby give a southern seal of approval to his idolatrous practices.<fn>See the opinion of | + | <point><b>Yerovam's Invitation</b> – Yerovam's invitation and offer of a present was an attempt to commission the Man of God from Yehuda to work for the king and thereby give a southern seal of approval to his idolatrous practices.<fn>See the opinion of N. Samet above.</fn></point> |
<point><b>"אִם תִּתֶּן לִי אֶת חֲצִי בֵיתֶךָ לֹא אָבֹא עִמָּךְ"</b><ul> | <point><b>"אִם תִּתֶּן לִי אֶת חֲצִי בֵיתֶךָ לֹא אָבֹא עִמָּךְ"</b><ul> | ||
<li>Josephus reads the Man of God's words simply as a true refusal of the king's offer due to the Divine command.</li> | <li>Josephus reads the Man of God's words simply as a true refusal of the king's offer due to the Divine command.</li> | ||
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<point><b>In the aftermath of the death</b> – These sources disagree in how they read the older prophet's actions after the Man of God's death:<br/> | <point><b>In the aftermath of the death</b> – These sources disagree in how they read the older prophet's actions after the Man of God's death:<br/> | ||
<ul> | <ul> | ||
− | <li>Josephus presents the older prophet as continuing to act in his own best interests, and being joyful in the Man of God's downfall.  He is motivated to bury the אִישׁ הָאֱלֹהִים only so that he can save his own bones later.  Moreover, Josephus suggests that th </li> | + | <li>Josephus presents the older prophet as continuing to act in his own best interests, and being joyful in the Man of God's downfall.  He is motivated to bury the אִישׁ הָאֱלֹהִים only so that he can save his own bones later.  Moreover, Josephus suggests that th</li> |
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
</category> | </category> | ||
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<opinion>Co-opt the man of God | <opinion>Co-opt the man of God | ||
<mekorot>Josephus, modern scholars</mekorot> | <mekorot>Josephus, modern scholars</mekorot> | ||
− | <point><b>Yerovam's Invitation</b> – Yerovam's invitation and offer of a present was an attempt to commission the Man of God from Yehuda to work for the king and thereby give a southern seal of approval to his idolatrous practices.<fn> | + | <point><b>Yerovam's Invitation</b> – Yerovam's invitation and offer of a present was an attempt to commission the Man of God from Yehuda to work for the king and thereby give a southern seal of approval to his idolatrous practices.<fn>See the opinion of N. Samet above.</fn></point> |
− | <point><b>"אִם תִּתֶּן לִי אֶת חֲצִי בֵיתֶךָ לֹא אָבֹא עִמָּךְ"</b> – | + | <point><b>"אִם תִּתֶּן לִי אֶת חֲצִי בֵיתֶךָ לֹא אָבֹא עִמָּךְ"</b> – Reis suggests that the Man of God's apparent refusal of the king's offer is actually not a refusal at all, but a setting of the price for which he would be willing to defect to Beit El and defy God. Though his opening offer (half the kingdom) is couched in the negative (לֹא אָבֹא עִמָּךְ), such feigned reluctance is simply the standard manner in which business deals were negotiated in Biblical times.<fn>Reis points to the negotiations between Efron and Avraham as another example of similar "no means yes" bargaining. Efron begins by offering the plot a as gift, though both sides are fully aware that eventually money will pass hands. Other examples of feigned reluctance include the interaction between Aravna and David in Shemuel II 24, and Bilaam's responses to Balak in Bemidbar 22. Reis suggests that the latter is very similar to our story as Bilaam states, "אִם יִתֶּן לִי בָלָק מְלֹא בֵיתוֹ כֶּסֶף וְזָהָב לֹא אוּכַל לַעֲבֹר אֶת פִּי י"י" even though he, apparently, had every intention of doing so.</fn></point> |
<point><b>נביא שסרח</b></point> | <point><b>נביא שסרח</b></point> | ||
− | <point><b>הנביא מבית אל –  True or false prophet?</b> The Prophet from Beit El was a false prophet | + | <point><b>הנביא מבית אל –  True or false prophet?</b> The Prophet from Beit El was a false prophet who had a "prophetic business" in the city.</point> |
− | <point><b>The invitation from the prophet from Beit El</b> – | + | <point><b>The invitation from the prophet from Beit El</b> – The false prophet thought that having the the Man of God as a business partner would be great for business.  His public demonstration of his powers had been quite impressive and was likely to attract customers.  Thus, when he learned that the Man of God was willing to be "bought",<fn>Reis assumes that the false prophet correctly read between the lines of the interaction between the king and Man of God, recognizing his refusal to "eat and drink" as really being a counter-offer and willingness to defect.</fn> he hoped to invite him home to cajole him into joining his prophetic business in Beit El.</point> |
− | <point><b>How was the Man of God duped?</b> | + | <point><b>How was the Man of God duped?</b> According to Reis the Man of God had been tempted to stay in Beit El and turn his back on God all along.<fn>Given the high taxes and uncertain political situation in Jerusalem, moving to Beit El might have seemed like a promising alternative.</fn> Thus, when the older prophet told him "אֲנִי נָבִיא כָּמוֹךָ" hinting that they are two of the same breed, prophets with their eyes on material advantage rather than on God's will, he did not need much convincing.  According to this reading, however, it is not clear why the false prophet felt the need to pretend that he had received a Divine prophecy overturning the previous one; after all, his working assumption was that both prophets were willing to dismiss God's word regardless.</point> |
− | + | <point><b>Harsh Punishment</b> – According to Reis, the Man of God's punishment is not overly harsh as he had not accidentally transgressed his own word, but knowingly defied God.  Moreover, he had being willing to join Beit El in its apostasy.<fn>She points out that Hashem only explicitly refers to his "eating and drinking in Beit El" because man is always punished more for his actions than his thoughts. Though he might have been motivated by avarice, and might have thought to promote idolatry, he had not yet actively done so</fn></point> | |
− | + | <point><b>In the aftermath of the death</b></point> | |
− | |||
− | <point><b>Harsh Punishment</b> – According to Reis, the Man of God's punishment is not overly harsh as he had not accidentally transgressed his own word, but knowingly defied God.  Moreover, he had being willing to join Beit El in its apostasy.<fn> | ||
− | <point><b>In the aftermath of the death</b | ||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
</category> | </category> |
Version as of 02:15, 13 December 2017
The Prophet from Beit El
Exegetical Approaches
Political Agenda
The Prophet from Beit El hoped that by having the Man of God disobey his own words and prophetic sign, he could undo the prophecy against Beit El and restore legitimacy to the worship taking place there.
- Reaffirm status of Beit El – According to R. Samet, after the אִישׁ הָאֱלֹהִים cast doubt on the legitimacy of the new worship during the dedication ceremony, the Prophet from Beit El realized he needed to reaffirm his prophetic position and thereby restore Beit El's religious status. By getting the אִישׁ הָאֱלֹהִים to accept his word, he could assert himself as the more senior prophet, and prove that his stance towards the new worship was the correct one.
- Reverse the prophetic sign and its content – Prof. Simon, in contrast, assumes that the fate of the new religious system was less troubling to the old prophet than the prophecy regarding the burial plots, and it was mainly this which he wanted to prevent coming to fruition. He suggests that the act of undoing a prophetic sign11 was believed to actively affect the word of God that lay behind the sign.12 Thus, the prophet believed that if he could reverse the decrees against eating he could also undo the prophecy which they symbolized.
- Corrective– It was imperative for the Prophet from Beit El to get the prophecy so that after the אִישׁ הָאֱלֹהִים died, he could confirm to the city that this happened by the word of Hashem for his transgression.17 In so doing, he was able to reverse some of the damage done by his deception of the אִישׁ הָאֱלֹהִים.
- Test – R. Samet adds that the prophecy was also a test to the false prophet. Would he change in the aftermath of hearing the word of God, recognize the truth of the original prophecy, and help spread it, or would he remain mired in his old ways?
Religious Motives
The Prophet from Beit El did not know if the Man of God was a legitimate prophet or an emissary sent by Rechovam to attack Beit El for political reasons. His invitation was intended to discover whether or not he truly spoke the word of Hashem.
Act of Altruism
The prophet's motives were misguided, but altruistic. He simply wanted to prevent the Man of God from going home hungry.
Selfishness
The prophet from Beit El was looking after his personal interests, and doing what he thought would be best for his prophetic business.
- Josephus reads the Man of God's words simply as a true refusal of the king's offer due to the Divine command.
- P. Reis, however, suggests that the Man of God's apparent refusal of the king's offer is actually not a refusal at all, but a setting of the price for which he would be willing to defect to Beit El and defy God. Though his opening offer (half the kingdom) is couched in the negative (לֹא אָבֹא עִמָּךְ), such feigned reluctance is simply the standard manner in which business deals were negotiated in Biblical times. Reis points to the negotiations between Efron and Avraham as another example of similar "no means yes" bargaining. Efron begins by offering the plot a as gift, though both sides are fully aware that eventually money will pass hands.32
- Delegitimize the Man of God– According to Josephus, after hearing of the miracles performed by the Man of God and how he both paralyzed and cured the king's hand, he feared for his job, concerned lest the new prophet gain a better standing with the king than himself. As such, he hoped to trick the אִישׁ הָאֱלֹהִים into sinning and transgressing his own words to prove to the king that he was not trustworthy.
- Co-opt the Man of God – Reis, instead, suggests that the false prophet recognized that the Man of God was willing to be "bought" and hoped to cajole him into joining his prophetic business in Beit El.
- Gullible – Josephus presents the Man of God as being gullible, but having had no intention of transgressing his prophecy. In his trusting innocence, he truly believed that the Prophet from Beit El had received an alternative prophecy which overturned the original one and therefore joined him.
- Greedy – According to Reis, in contrast, the Man of God had been tempted to stay in Beit El and turn his back on God all along.33 Thus, when the older prophet told him "אֲנִי נָבִיא כָּמוֹךָ" hinting that they are two of the same breed, prophets with their eyes on material advantage rather than on God's will, he did not need much convincing. According to this reading, however, it is not clear why the false prophet felt the need to pretend that he had received a Divine prophecy overturning the previous one; after all, his working assumption was that both prophets were willing to dismiss God's word regardless.
- Josephus presents the older prophet as continuing to act in his own best interests, and being joyful in the Man of God's downfall. He is motivated to bury the אִישׁ הָאֱלֹהִים only so that he can save his own bones later. Moreover, Josephus suggests that th
Personal Gain
The prophet from Beit El was looking after his personal interests, and doing what he thought would be best for his prophetic business.