Abraham of Ur: A Critical Analysis of the Life and Times of the Patriarch
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Did Abraham bring Genesis-like stories to Canaan that Moses uses in the Torah?
Did Abraham Avenge the killing of Lots father Haren?
Genesis tells us Terah became the father of Abram, in Ur of the Chaldeans; while history shows Abraham was born in 2000 BC into the worlds most advanced civilization, the 3rd Dynasty of Ur.
When God tells Abraham go forth to a land that I will show you he was probably going to go there anyway as part of a mass migration of Semites into the Levant that will take them one day to Egypt as part of the Hyksos invasion.
It is probable that Abraham brought many ancient stories of Sumer and Akkad that influenced stories in Genesis. And, if we are to believe Josephus, Abraham was an astronomer and a warrior, hardly the nomadic sheepherder we see pictured in religious art.
David Snyder is a new author taking a new approach to the study of Abraham. By researching the time and place that Abraham lived he found an incredible amount of extant documents available to give a realistic view of the geopolitical world that motivated Abrahams family and influenced the growth of monotheism. Along the way, he discovered and enhanced his own understanding of Christianity.
David A. Snyder
David Snyder is a retired Insurance executive who now lives in San Juan Capistrano, California. During his insurance career he published several insurance journal articles and taught Insurance Law to claims executive for seven years through the Insurance Education Association. He has lectured before the UCLA Law School, on the subject of Structured Settlements and has been a guest speaker on this subject at the Southern California and Texas bar associations. Mr. Snyder attended Pasadena City College where he received an AA degree in History and a subsequent AA degree in Industrial Supervision. He attended California State University in Los Angeles majoring History and Business. Mr. Snyder has a Master Catechist Certificate from the Diocese of Orange California. His thesis paper, a book entitled Abraham of Ur has been the most read thesis for two consecutive months on academia.edu where masters and doctoral works are submitted. Mr. Snyder has also completed a comprehensive seven year Bible Study under the direction of Dr. Bill Creasy of Logos Catholic Bible Study in Southern California. Mr. Snyder spends most of his time researching and writing religious articles of interest while he enjoying life with his wife Dorothy, five children and eleven grandchildren.
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Abraham of Ur - David A. Snyder
Copyright © 2015 David A. Snyder.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the author except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
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ISBN: 978-1-4917-7725-1 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-4917-7726-8 (e)
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iUniverse rev. date: 10/27/2015
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface
Introduction A Critical Examination of Scripture
Chapter One Abraham the Son of Terah
Chapter Two Ancient Sumer
Chapter Three Empire — Akkad and Ur III
Chapter Four The Gods of Mesopotamia
Chapter Five Genesis-Like Stories in Ancient Mesopotamia
Chapter Six Life After Death
Chapter Seven Terah Leaves Ur For Haran
Chapter Eight Abraham Enters Canaan
Chapter Nine The Gods of Canaan
Chapter Ten Abraham in Canaan
Chapter Eleven After Abraham
Chapter Twelve Connecting the Dots
Acknowledgements
Bibliography
To Whom it was that asked me to write this book.
The Lord said to Abram: Go forth from the land of your relatives and from your father’s house to a land that I will show you.
(Gen 12: 1)¹
PREFACE
Therefore the Lord himself will give you this sign; the virgin shall be with child, and bear a son, and you shall name him Immanuel.²
T wo thousand years ago, the greatest event in the history of mankind occurred. The God that created the universe became a human being. The Incarnation was so important to mankind that the world’s current calendar is hinged on time before the birth of Jesus the Christ (B.C) ³ and the time thereafter (A.D.) This event did not happen in a vacuum. God, in His plan for man to know Him, prepared us for this divine appearance. Because of the immensity of the Incarnation, God gave mankind thousands of years to develop an understanding of deity to the point where we could conceive of, and understand, a single transcendent omnipotent God who created all there is – the concept of monotheism that led to the Christianity that we practice today. This work will study that development.
The essence of this book is to give the reader a fuller understanding of the world in which Abraham of Ur lived when he received the word of God four thousand years ago. For this reason we will review the ancient history of where Abraham lived before during and after he left his homeland for the land of Canaan. We will also discover how secular history influenced and helped form our understanding of monotheism practiced in Judaism, Christianity and Islam today. The desire of man to know God has been a long journey. This study will show that at first man created his gods in man’s own image. Only later, with the help of the Holy Spirit, will the authors of the Hebrew Scriptures teach us that God created man in His image. We will study the history of the time that the Hebrew patriarchs first received the word from God that they were to be His chosen people. Most importantly, we will discover that Evolution and Revelation are not mutually exclusive -- they can and did develop side by side.
Most books that consider these subjects look primarily to the development of a theology and do not consider in detail how the civilization and culture of the time affected these doctrinal developments. We will discover and digest some of the theological practices of ancient Mesopotamia and Canaan. Not being ordained or trained in theology, I will not try to justify or admonish these practices; but, one does not need to be trained in theology to compare history and science to Holy Scripture to help us better understand our religion.
Abraham’s role in God’s Plan
In His chosen time, God will direct a Semitic man named Abram from the ancient city of Ur in southern Mesopotamia to lead his clan to the land of Canaan. From there God will slowly reveal to Abram and his descendants that He is their God and that there is no other. This will be a strange revelation to this man Abram, as all of humanity at this time in history worshiped a pantheon of gods. We will follow the life of this Abram whom God will later name Abraham. We will discover that he may have been as great a secular figure as he was a Biblical one. At the same time, we may be disappointed to discover that while Abraham is called the father of monotheism, the monotheism that he practiced was probably far from the one we claim today.
As we study the Hebrew Scriptures, we will see that the secular world was reluctant to release its theology of polytheism. God’s prophets, called by the Holy Spirit time and again over fifteen hundred years, will wage a long war with the world around them until finally Abraham’s people will be ready to accept the anointed one of God -- the Messiah -- the Christ that the prophets constantly foretold would come. Only after Abraham’s clan, later known as the Jews, were able to accept the God of Abraham as the only God was man ready to accept God in the form of his humanity.
At first I was not sure that Abraham even existed. After I investigated the secular history of the day and considered the Ugaritic literature, the Hyksos and the Tell el-Amarna tablets that we will detail later, I came to realize that the geopolitical climate at the time Abraham entered Canaan was perfectly conducive to support the stories of his travels into the Promised Land. I will attempt to show the reader that as a slave-owning citizen of the Third Dynasty of Ur in 2000 BC, Abraham’s family was well-educated, literate and wealthy. And if we are to believe Josephus, Abraham was possibly an astronomer and military leader. This is contradictory to the image most people have of Abraham as a nomadic shepherd leading a flock of sheep; however, I believe that only a well-educated and worldly man such as Abraham would be able to achieve the goal that God gave to him – to establish the Hebrew nation.
A Challenge to Our Faith
The primary focus of this work is history, not theology. If, like me, the reader becomes more aware of the highly advanced and exciting time in human history that Abraham lived, then I will have accomplished the purpose of the book. This being said, the reader may be surprised and at first even threatened by some of the similarities of stories that we will study of ancient Sumer and Akkad with those found in the first five books of the Bible. Our first thought may be that perhaps the Hebrew Scriptures are not the word of God but plagiarized from men in a pagan society. But, as we develop the story of man’s search for God, we will find that the ancient concept of deity was man’s first attempt at trying to understand the mystical world around him and was but a stepping stone to the final concept of God that all monotheistic religions now share. By exploring these similarities, we do not want to tarnish the lessons the Holy Spirit has revealed in the Hebrew Scriptures, but rather to augment their historicity and give greater credence to some of the stories.
Most references in this study will be referred to as the Hebrew Scriptures rather than the Old Testament. This description is in respect to my Orthodox Jewish friends and to the fact that during the development of monotheism we are not primarily looking at these stories from a Christian perspective, but from the perspective of our elder brethren, the Jews, who gave this theology to us. As we will be going back and forth in time when studying the life of Abraham, we will use the name Abraham over Abram in most cases.
INTRODUCTION
A CRITICAL EXAMINATION OF SCRIPTURE
In order to discover the sacred authors’ intentions, the reader must take into account the conditions of their times and culture, the literary genres in use at the time, and the modes of feeling, speaking, and narrating then current.⁴
T he purpose of this book is to apply the admonition above to the study of the patriarch Abraham, the son of Terah, as found in the book of Genesis in the Hebrew Scriptures. As we will see, there have been an abundance of discoveries by Biblical scholars in recent years that will help us in this endeavor. Most of the discoveries of secular history of the Middle East that concern the study of the Hebrew Scriptures occurred over the last two hundred and fifty years. These discoveries led Bible scholars and theologians to examine Scripture in an entirely new light. There has been ample evidence that the Hebrew Scriptures may well have been influenced by ancient stories in pagan societies. This brought about a new form of scripture study which came to be known as the Historical-Critical Method ⁵. This meant that secular history was now to be considered in interpreting the scriptures and not faith alone. Notwithstanding the quick spread of this form of study, the Historical-Critical method of Bible study had its share of serious criticism as many non-religious secular scholars have tried to use this approach to disprove the influence of God in the Scriptures. The proper use of this method is to let our secular discoveries augment our faith in the Hebrew Scriptures rather than taint our beliefs that the works are inspired by the Holy Spirit. This is difficult for those who profess a literal translation of Scripture. Many Protestant theologians, as a result of the Reformation, had forsaken the Roman Catholic Church’s theology of truth through Scripture and Tradition for that of Sola Scriptura (scripture alone). As a result Scripture, their primary base of faith, was being threatened. Still, most of the leading scholars who used this method were Protestant Bible scholars from England and Germany, and it was later used in the United States. Many of these theologians led the academic world in the translation of these new discoveries in a quest to understand more fully the genesis of Genesis.
The Catholic Church and Historical Criticism
Up until the time of the Second Vatican Council in 1962, the Catholic Church had not paid much attention to this new method of study. After all, the Church still had its Tradition⁶. A challenge to the historical correctness of Scripture did not threaten its core beliefs; however, some of this study was so persuasive that the Church, although some would say late coming to this study, recognized that it must inform the faithful of its position on these new revelations. Pope Pius XII in his Encyclical on promoting Biblical Studies, Divino Afflante Spiritu⁷ when commenting on historical criticism said:
13. We also, by this Encyclical Letter, desire to insure that the work may not only proceed without interruption, but may also daily become more perfect and fruitful; and to that end We are specially intent on pointing out to all what yet remains to be done, with what spirit the Catholic exegete should undertake, at the present day, so great and noble a work, and to give new incentive and fresh courage to the laborers who toil so strenuously in the vineyard of the Lord.
One of the sixteen documents of Vatican II, DEI VERBUM⁸, was written on the subject of sacred scripture, and some of it deals with this new exegesis. It first advises that what Scripture tells us is what God wishes us to know. The document states in part:
"Since, therefore, all that the inspired authors, or sacred writers, affirm should be regarded as affirmed by the Holy Spirit, we must acknowledge that the books of Scripture, firmly, faithfully and without error, teach that truth which God, for the sake of our salvation, wished to see confided to the sacred scriptures."⁹
Notwithstanding the secular history we will discover in this study, I firmly agree with this statement. The canon of Sacred Scriptures that we recognize as the Bible today was inspired by the Holy Spirit, regardless of where the authors obtained the information transferred therein. DEI VERBUM and the Catechism of the Catholic Church under The senses of Scripture¹⁰ teaches that the faithful should distinguish between two senses of Scripture, the literal and the spiritual – the latter being subdivided into the allegorical, moral, and anagogical senses¹¹. Considering the sense of scripture in another way, the Church is saying that the faithful is not required to accept the entire Hebrew Scriptures as factual history.
In this book we will frequently refer to scientific discoveries that concern the history of the Hebrews and particularly stories in the book of Genesis, which brings up the issue of science and scripture. I am well aware that some of the theories of this work will be controversial and threatening to some of the faithful. To address this concern, I have again found the answer in the Catechism of the Catholic Church. It tells us that whatever we discover in nature, we must always relate our knowledge to the glory of God:
"The question about the origins of the world and of man has been the object of many scientific studies which have splendidly enriched our knowledge of the age and dimensions of the cosmos, the development of life-forms and the appearance of man. These discoveries invite us to even greater admiration for the greatness of the Creator … The great interest accorded to these studies is strongly stimulated by a question of another order, which goes beyond the proper domain of the natural sciences. It is not only a question of knowing when and how the universe arose physically, or when man appeared, but rather of discovering the meaning of such an origin: is the universe governed by chance, blind fate, anonymous necessity, or by a transcendent, intelligent and good Being called God"?¹²
Finally, we are fortunate that Pope Emeritus Benedict the XVI has recently given us his opinion on the Historical-Critical Method in his book Light of the World¹³. This section begins with a question from Peter Seewald, who articulates many of the concerns of this method which is still held within some parts of the Vatican.
SEEWALD: The historical-critical method had its merits, but it also led fatefully to an erroneous development. Its attempt to demythologize the Bible produced a terrible superficiality and blindness toward the deeper layers and profound message of Scripture. What is more, looking back, we realize that the alleged facts cited for the last two hundred years by the skeptic’s intent on relativizing pretty much every statement of the Bible were in many cases nothing more than mere hypotheses. Shouldn’t we be much clearer than we have been that the exegetes have to some extent been practicing a pseudo-science whose operative principle is not Christian, but an anti-Christian animus, and that it has led millions of people astray?
POPE EMERITUS BENEDICT: I wouldn’t subscribe to so harsh a judgment. The application of the historical method to the Bible as a historical text was a path that had to be taken. If we believe that Christ is real history, and not myth, then the testimony concerning him has to be historically accessible as well. In this sense, the historical method has also given us many gifts. It has brought us back closer to the text and its originality; it has shown us more precisely how it grew, and much more besides. The historical-critical method will always remain one dimension of interpretation. Vatican II made this clear. On the one hand, it presents the essential elements of the historical method as a necessary part of access to the Bible. At the same time, though, it adds that the Bible has to be read in the same Spirit in which it was written. It has to be read in its wholeness, in its unity. And that can be done only when we approach it as a book of the People of God progressively advancing toward Christ. What is needed is not simply a break with the historical method, but a self-critique of the historical method; a self-critique of historical reason that takes cognizance of its limits and recognizes the compatibility of a type of knowledge that derives from faith; in short, we need a synthesis between an exegesis that operates with historical reason and an exegesis that is guided by faith. We have to bring the two things into a proper relationship to