So
eventually we get an extremely abbreviated bit of Saul’s story (basically, just
how he died and David became king). Then an abbreviated story of David’s
kingship (more time seems to be spent listing his “mighty men” and their
accomplishments in the realm of killing people than on what David actually did
with his throne). Nothing new or interesting until we get all the way to
Chapter 21. Like much of what’s already passed this is basically retelling of a
story from an earlier book, but it’s at least an interesting retelling. Because it starts like this:
“1 Chron 21:1 Then Satan stood against Israel and incited David to
number Israel. 2 So David said to
Joab and the commanders of the army ‘Go, number Israel, from Beersheba to Dan,
and bring me a report, that I may know their number.’”
First
interesting thing about this: who the fuck is Satan?
Now,
obviously, I know who Satan is. He’s the great bogeyman of Christian mythology,
with the horns and the pitchfork and the fallen angelness and shit. But this is
the first time Satan is mentioned by name in the Bible. And there is no context whatsoever! Just a name, with
absolutely nothing to connect it to who or what it’s supposed to be. For all we
know, it could be a treacherous advisor of David’s, or the king of another
nation, or a spirit, or whatever the hell you might think of that could have
some reason to dislike Israel. And it’s not like it’s further explained later
in the story, either – that one passage right there is the only mention of
Satan and he completely disappears for the rest of the story.
The
other interesting thing about that passage is that it’s kicking off a retelling
of an event we already read about in Second Samuel. Allow me to refresh your
memory.
“2 Sam 24:1 Again the anger of Yahweh was kindled against Israel,
and he incited David to go against them, saying ‘Go, number Israel and Judah.’ 2 So the king said to Joab, the
commander of the army, who was with him, ‘Go, through all the tribes of Israel,
from Dan to Beersheba, and number the people that I may know the number of the
people.’”
Notice
the difference? It’s pretty fucking critical. We have one book saying God told
David to take the census, and the other saying this so-far-undefined Satan
character did it. That’s a pretty damn obvious contradiction in our reputedly
perfect little Bible, and a pretty damn critical one as well in that it speaks
directly to the character of the god being described. Given that God punishes
David for taking the census by killing 70,000 people, it makes a real
difference whether he’s the one who gave the order or Satan is. I mean, the
slaughter is a dick move no matter who gave the order, but it matters for
understanding how big a dick move it
is.
Well,
there’s no clarity to be found within the story. It just outright contradicts
the Second Samuel account and moves on without addressing the discrepancy at
all. Enter the Internet, because I just had to look up how apologists deal with
this. I read through a couple different pages on the topic, and both dealt with
it using essentially the same argument. And that argument goes something like
this:
The
ancient Hebrews who wrote the Old Testament regarded God as the ultimate cause
of all things, and everything that happens is ultimately part of his plan (this
is just flatly asserted without linking any linguistic research to back it up).
So when writing about events, they would attribute them to God as if he were
actively causing them, when what they really
mean is that he allowed the circumstances surrounding the event to evolve on
their own without actively causing them himself. However, when they describe
the actions of anybody else using the
exact same wording (the one article made a point of specifying that the
original Hebrew words used were the same), they really do mean that those
people or entities were directly taking the action. So when the Bible says
“Satan incited David…” it really means that Satan directly convinced David to take
the census. But when it says “God incited David…” it really means that God
simply didn’t prevent David from deciding to take the census at Satan’s urging.
And because the exact same words mean entirely different things when talking
about God than when talking about everyone else, there isn’t really a
contradiction. One of the articles made a point of extrapolating this to other
situations beside the question of the census, asserting that this also means
that God didn’t “harden Pharaoh’s heart,” in the Exodus story, but rather
simply arranged the situation and Pharaoh hardened his own heart (even though
the text, as we’ve already discussed, explicitly says the opposite).
Wow! I have
to admit that I’m impressed. This is a truly magnificent edifice of bullshit!
The argument defends the literal truth of the Bible by abandoning the idea that
statements about God’s actions can be taken literally. And just imagine the fun
that can be had with this apologetic!
-
When
the Bible says that God created living things, what it really means is that he
allowed evolution to occur without ever involving himself directly.
-
When
the Bible says that God wrote the law on stone tablets, what it really means is
that he allowed Moses to write the law without participating directly.
-
When
the Bible says God parted the Red Sea, what it really means is that he allowed
the Israelites to cross during a naturally occurring extreme low tide event
without ever lifting a finger.
Holy
shit! It turns out that the Bible is really
saying that God never did anything! It only appears
to claim he did stuff because words have no agreed literal meaning!
Of
course, I don’t really think the authors of this particular bit of pig feces
meant it to be broadly applied. I’d bet good money that what he really meant is
“Whenever the Bible attributes something freaking awful to God, or that I don’t
want to believe about him, or that makes it impossible to defend the myth of Biblical
non-contradiction, then what it really means is this weird interpretation where
God can be said to not have been directly involved in some way that allows him
to bear no responsibility even though the text directly credits him. But
whenever the Bible attributes to God anything I happen to approve of or think I
can defend rationally, well, then you
take the words literally.”
It's also worth noting, I think, that both examples the author of that bit of apologetics uses as illustration (David's census, and the hardening of Pharaoh's heart) include the Bible attributing direct quotes of God speaking the relevant action. In David's census, the text doesn't just say that God incited David, it includes the order he gave as a directly attributed quote. The story of the Exodus doesn't merely state that God hardened Pharaoh's heart, it includes quotes from conversations with Moses where God says he will do exactly that. So I don't think this argument holds any water whatsoever.
Yeah, I’m
tossing this argument aside. The Bible contradicts itself and offers no
explanation. Most likely, the author of Chronicles was uncomfortable with what
the Second Samuel account suggested about the character of God, so he threw
this Satan character in to absolve Yahweh of some responsibility.
The rest
of the story plays out pretty much as we’ve read before. Joab takes the census
(but reports incorrect numbers to David because he disagreed with the
decision), then David has a sudden fit of guilt. God punishes Israel for the
census by causing a massive plague that kills seventy thousand men (and since
only men were counted, who knows how many women and children died?). David ends
the plague by buying the threshing floor of Onan the Jebusite and building an
altar to God on which he made sacrifices. Chronicles differs from Samuel on the
number of Israelites counted in the census, and on the amount David paid for
the threshing floor, but these are kind of small quibbles. The whole thing is a
clusterfuck from beginning to end.
There’s
some more intensely dull stuff about who David gave what duties with respect to
the resting place of the ark, and him gathering materials for his son Solomon
to use in building the temple. But essentially, there’s not much new of
interest for the rest of the First Book of Chronicles. The book comes to a
close when David dies after having named Solomon his successor.
Next
time we’ll be diving into the Second Book of Redundancy… I mean… Chronicles,
which picks up with the reign of Solomon. Will this be an equally dull read? Or
equally shattering to myths of biblical perfection? I guess we’ll find out! Until
then, do be well.
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