History of Oral Culture in Modern Religion

by Guest Author/Contributor, Devorah Yocheved

Part I

The Convergent Tides of Oral Cultures and the Rise of Literate Cultures Produced Two Major Religions in a Backlash to Retain the “Old” While Embracing the “New” World Order

Israel went into the Babylonian exile on the cusp of a major paradigm shift in history: the rise of the written text and literacy.  Scholars in this area of study attribute the addition of vowels to the Greek alphabet for hastening the “literate world.”  As was typical of the emerging nations of the new Western worldview, the people of exiled Israel, now the Jews in the nations struggled to retain their ancient identity as the chosen people of the Torah of Moses while embracing the new literate world founded in the Greco-Roman cultures.

The shift from purely oral cultures, without writing, to text driven literate cultures allowed people to remember their thoughts without the use of memory aids and to work out more complex solutions.  This gave birth to the analytical and systematic thinking which produced science, history, philosophy and liberal education.  Professor Walter J. Ong wrote extensively about this “evolution of consciousness” in his 1982 book “Orality and Literacy.”  This evolution is manifested in the classical Greek years as seen in the science of Euclid and Meton, the philosophical works of Plato and Aristotle, and the more objective historians such as Herodotus, Thucydides, Xenophon, and Ctesias.

This new world was no longer solely dependent on the elite scribal class of literates who controlled not only the limited written texts; they controlled the oral narratives from 3000 BCE through the 1st millennia CE.  The West developed along these lines as a more secular, pragmatic and individualized society through the text based education of “higher learning.”  The purely oral cultures that did not let go of their “orality,” as humanity moved towards “literate” text based cultures, were relegated to the “primitive” end on the continuum to “modernity.”  The growing literate cultures remained segregated into classes of the uneducated poor and the educated rich, farmers and city dwellers, the people of oral folk traditions and the townsfolk of letters.

In the midst of this major shift in human history two new religions emerged that not only embraced the new literate mind set but used ancient scribal traditions to preserve their “primitive” oral traditions in their literature and liturgical traditions alongside new theologies that have endured the test of time: Rabbinic Judaism and Christianity.  The rabbis of the Talmud claimed that they were handing down “the oral tradition that was given to Israel through Moses at Sinai.”  The Christian founding fathers claimed equal infallibility in their new theology and text, the New Testament.

Is there verifiable authority for these claims?  Looking first at the earlier rabbinic tradition, we ask these questions: 

What if the Jewish people have bet our collective soul on the wrong oral tradition that is based in lies and false narratives that aids and abets the exile mentality far from our original Covenant?  And if we have, how do we know that and, for the sake of a true return to our Maker, how do we do that?

The Mishna Talmud created a new utopian world for the Jewish people to learn of, embrace, and use to manage the changing social environs in their ever extended exile far from their original covenant and homeland of Israel.  This new oral tradition retained a memory of their original texts, the Torah and the Prophets, placing them alongside new texts from the exile that were added to the Hebrew canon.  The rabbis completed their work of codifying the Talmud which included ancient scribal devices of repetition and mnemonic memorization along with formulaic expressions such as proverbs and pithy maxims required in a purely oral tradition absent the use of a written text.

This method cleverly allowed the rabbis to invent new and every changing interpretations of the original and foundational text memorialized in the Torah and the Prophets Masoretic text.  In the earliest meeting places of the exile and during the second temple period in Israel the people gathered to hear the public readings from the Torah, but in a new and different language [Aramaic] and with new and different interpretations and translations [targumim].

What followed was a vast and never ending collection of commentaries from generation after generation of “Torah scholars” known collectively as the rabbis and sages of the past two thousand years.  The retention of this “oral tradition” has worked well to help the Jewish people feel “connected” to their original covenant made at Sinai.  

It is implemented through ritualistic formulas of blessings, prayers, mitzvot, and celebrations that replaced the Covenantal temple, priesthood and appointed times in Israel.  The orality of the rabbinic tradition is reinforced with the hermeneutical learning method of the Mishna Talmud which interprets Torah through formulaic and mnemonic expressions and repetition.

I forsook the false narrative of my birth religion Christianity that teased out its oral traditions and theologies based on the reinterpretation of the Torah and the Prophets in the New Testament.  I chose the Jewish faith and tradition in my adult years seeking an authentic connection to the Covenant Maker of Israel as given in the Torah and the Prophets.  I chose to move to Israel as an heir of Abraham through Jacob. 

It has been heartbreaking to learn that the Jewish people in the exile inherited the false narrative based on the new Writings and expounded in the Talmud as their interpretive text of the Torah and the Prophets.  The written Hebrew text of the Torah and Prophets has been sublimated to the replacement theology of rabbinic Judaism.  The Jewish people have inherited this false religion crafted for the exile with no way back to our Covenant of the Ten Words, the Land of Israel, and the proper authority under the Levitical priesthood in the House of YHVH on Mt. Zion.

In fact, we learn that the Torah and the Prophets are not historically significant but allegorical, that Ezra rewrote and restored Torah, that the rabbis replaced the Levites as the presumptive authority to handle and reinterpret the Torah through a contrived chain of transmission, and that when the “mashiach” comes the rabbinic tradition will continue as the legal and religious authority over the Jewish people. Many believe that there is no need for the temple to be restored and that the Jewish people are not required to live in their Covenant Homeland of Israel … none of which is supported by the Torah, the Covenant or the Prophets.

The deep seated angst that continues to reside in the soul of the Jewish people is palpable and is reinforced by the nations continuing hatred of Israel, her people and her land.  We are at war again with our neighbors and their allies in the world for our very survival in this Land of Israel.  No one can be trusted or believed to have the answer.  There are no good answers politically or religiously that will take us back to our Covenant Maker.

Many of us are asking: how do we return to our Covenant Maker as He wills for us?

We must return to our original Torah as given to Moses and as seen through our Prophets, through the end of the first kingdom and into the Babylonian exile, before we have a chance to understand the Will of our Covenant Maker.  Even though there is evidence of scribal tampering and false narratives that made it into our canon, it is possible to see through these lies as enabling the post-biblical replacement theology of exile.

We must admit that we have exchanged our Covenant and our very essence for a manmade construct that enables our exile mentality.  We must seek the ancient and everlasting path back to our Covenant Maker.

As suggested by students of ancient history, we must be willing to put ourselves in the sandals of those ancients.  We must wipe our minds clean of our preconceived assumptions and work to understand their worldviews in their lifetimes.  We must forsake manmade interpretations of Torah and relearn what YHVH said then and what He is saying now from His Written Word that was given to His Servant Moses in that day.

Starting with the understanding that Moses and the people who stood at Sinai in 1552 BCE lived in a world that did not have writing for the many.  There were no books that could be accessed, no libraries or education for the common people. From Genesis to the first kingdom of Israel was a time of purely oral cultures, bereft of literacy and written literature.  The people were wholly dependent on the narratives of the elite scribal classes regarding the heavens and life itself.  

Most of humanity has been dependent on and enslaved by the dominance and persuasiveness of the few who controlled the flow of information whether orally or textually received.  The people of the world are in the same predicament today.  No matter how much we have “advanced,” we are being held hostage by the few self-proclaimed elites who control the flow of information, politically, socially and religiously.

With this basic understanding and in that mindset, we will approach our written text and behold what the Creator of the universe, the Holy One of Israel, actually did for all of humanity through the Covenant He made with Israel.  We have forgotten and even forfeited the redemption from bondage that was granted to us 3500 years ago at Sinai.  We have forgotten who we are as Covenant Israel.  We must remember.

And, keeping in mind that He never changes and that His Word is everlasting, we can at least begin to understand that what He willed for Israel then and what He wills for us today has not changed.  We have changed and that is why we must seek His ancient and everlasting paths back to Him and His Covenants.

נִדְמוּ עַמִּי מִבְּלִי הַדָּעַת כִּי־אַתָּה הַדַּעַת מָאַסְתָּ וְאֶמְאָסְאךָ מִכַּהֵן לִי וַתִּשְׁכַּח תּוֹרַת אֱלֹהֶיךָ אֶשְׁכַּח בָּנֶיךָ גַּם־אָנִי׃

Hosea 4:6: “My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge.  Because you have rejected knowledge, I also will reject you from ministering before Me.  Since you have forgotten the Torah rule of law of your God, I also will forget your children.”

שִׁמְעוּ אֵלַי רֹדְפֵי צֶדֶק מְבַקְשֵׁי יְהוָה הַבִּיטוּ אֶל־צוּר חֻצַּבְתֶּם וְאֶל־מַקֶּבֶת בּוֹר נֻקַּרְתֶּֽם׃ הַבִּיטוּ אֶל־אַבְרָהָם אֲבִיכֶם וְאֶל־שָׂרָה תְּחוֹלֶלְכֶם כִּי־אֶחָד קְרָאתִיו וַאֲבָרְכֵהוּ וְאַרְבֵּֽהוּ

Isaiah 51:1-2: “Listen to me, you who pursue righteousness, who seek YHVH: look to the rock from which you were hewn and to the quarry from which you were dug.  Look to Abraham your father and to Sarah who gave birth to you in pain; when he was but one I called him, then I blessed him and multiplied him.”

2024-02-22 devorah yocheved

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But it is Just a Thing…

What is idolatry anyway?

I always thought that bowing to an image or cultic idol in a pagan temple was idolatry. Well, yes! But what is the essence of Idolatry and can it be something that is even more pervasive, less obvious and more accepted by society than a pilgrimage to the shrine of a pagan god? I know that for Catholics, the explanation given them is that it is not the stone they are worshiping but that they are actually being reminded of whom they are praying to by a visible image. For some reason the Catholic Bible has deleted a commandment from the 10 words of YHVH on Sinai: “you shall not make to yourselves a carved image…you shall not bow yourself to them nor serve them.” Exodus 20:4 But before we get really tough with the Catholics, maybe we should look at what is the real essence of the problem of idolatry.

Here is another Torah text:

Deut. 12:30-31 Beware that you do not go astray after them, after YHVH your Elohim destroys them from before you, and do not ask about their gods and say, ‘How were the nations serving these their gods, that I may also do like them?’ But you shall not do so to YHVH your Elohim, because everything that YHVH despises and hates they have done for their gods…”

So, what other things did the nations do for their gods? And what is the intrinsic thought behind idolatry? Basically this—that a material object can transfer good or bad to a person and can become an item of our focus rather than the ONE and only Elohim who is uncontainable, uncontrollable, unfathomable, indescribable and on and on ad infinitum. There is more truth to be told in what YHVH is not than what He is. If we could define Him we would be equal to him. God forbid!

So lets look at a few things…that have been seen as having powers from a blessing that they may have been associated with.

A Biblical Example:

Gideon, a judge of Israel– righteous as well as chosen of YHVH to be a great warrior, deliverer.and judge of Israel for many years, 40 of which Israel had peace in the land, made an ephod before he died and hung it in his city. It later became a snare to his people. (Judges 8:27) Why? Because the people saw it as the object that brought blessing and because Gideon made it, it became revered as if having his blessing.

Memorabilia:

Many people save memorabilia to remember their loved ones who have passed on. There is no problem in that. However, if that object is seen as something that contains the essence of the dead relative and brings that essence, or any quality of good or bad into the home or house of worship, then it is counted an object of worship—an idol. How so? If we look to anything other than the Creator as having power to bless or curse, then we are directing to it, undue “worship” even if in the slightest degree.

Amulets:

So how about amulets? That should be easy enough. If an item is seen as having power to protect us then it is replacing the great Protector YHVH who is always with us. We have no need of amulets, not even to remind us of the protection of YHVH nor any blessing. Why? Because that is what the pagans did for their gods, which by the way can be as small as an amulet. But do you worship or serve it? Well, just ask yourself what happens if you lose it…

The Mezzuzah:

Now this may be something very touchy, but consider the case of the mezzuzah on the doorposts. Yes, we must have them. It is a commandment. But how are we viewing them? Is that little scroll inside with a material ink an paper copy of the NAME on it, what keeps us safe? Think about it! So, I have been told over and over to have a sofer check the mezzuzahs on our doors. When I fell and twisted my ankle, many were worried that something was wrong with the mezzuzah. If, God forbid someone in the house gets Covid, the same question comes around. But why do we need this object to be in rabbinic perfection to receive the protection of the Most High YHVH? Where does it say that in the Torah? It doesn’t! So, what was the purpose of the mezzuzah anyway? And by the way, the word mezzuzah means doorpost. So what is the object called? Here is Deut 6:9 “and you shall inscribe them on your doorposts and upon your gates.” And in Hebrew:

וּכְתַבְתָּ֛ם עַל־מְזֻז֥וֹת בֵּיתֶ֖ךָ וּבִשְׁעָרֶֽיךָ׃

The verse does not refer to an object at all. It says to write the words of YHVH on the doorposts. So how has the mezzuzah in it’s present form come about as a tradition?

Years ago in California, I paid over $100 for a Kosher parchment scroll that had been written by a sofer and imported to the United States. I then put it inside the little box (mezzuzah) made for it and had the congregation come and install it, hold a kiddish service and bless my office. I believed I had to do this. I suppose there was nothing wrong with that, but it was not necessary. Later someone pointed out: “Why don’t you just write your own Shema on a piece of paper and stuff it with that. It would be more meaningful, and actually fulfill the commandment more closely.”

But, however you put the words of the Almighty on the doorpost, the custom is fine, but what matters is what power you give to the object or writing that you do. The object has no power at all. The command was to remember that YHVH is ONE and that there is no other. (If you think about it, when you give the mezzuzah power to protect you, you are actually denying who it is that does so.) There IS NO OTHER thing or person or material item that has any power to bless or curse. That, my friend, is idolatry!

Hamsa:

And we should mention the Hamsa. After something so simple as the wrong focus in belief in the case of the mezzuzah, it is surely obvious that the Hamsa has no power to protect and the Evil Eye has no power to curse. Let’s get things straight.

There is important history of the Hamsa. Where did it come from? What did is symbolize? Was it ever used in other religions? Here is what Wikipedia says:

“The hamsa (Arabic: خمسة‎, romanized: khamsah, Hebrew: חַמְסָה‎, romanized: ḥamsā) is a palm-shaped amulet popular throughout the Maghreb and in the Middle East and commonly used in jewelry and wall hangings. Depicting the open right hand, an image recognized and used as a sign of protection in many times throughout history, the hamsa is believed by Middle Easterners, to provide defense against the evil eye. The hamsa holds recognition as a bearer of good fortune among Christians in the Middle East as well. “Khamsah is an Arabic word that means “five”, but also “the five fingers of the hand”. The Hamsa is also variously known as the Hand of Fatima after the daughter of Muhammad, the Hand of Mary, the Hand of Miriam, and the Hand of the Goddess.”1 Wikipedia

So yes, it is used by other religions and is an item of luck which can also be called worship when it is believed in.

What do Rabbinic Jews say about it?

From My Jewish Learning: “What Is A Hamsa? Although it may derive from Islamic or pagan culture, the hamsa today has become a Jewish and Israeli symbol…It is difficult to pinpoint the exact time when hamsas emerged in Jewish culture, though it is clearly a symbol of Sephardic nature. Jews might have used the hamsa to invoke the hand of God, or to counteract the Evil Eye with the eye embedded in the palm of the hand. Some hamsas contain images of fish, in accordance with Rabbi Yose son of Hanina’s statement in the Talmud that the descendants of Joseph, who received Jacob’s blessing of multiplying like fish in Genesis 48:16, are protected from the Evil Eye like fish. He explains: “the water covers the fish of the sea so the eye has no power over them (Berakhot 55b)…other icons besides eyes and fish have also found their way into the hamsa, including the Star of David, prayers for the traveler, the Shema, the blessing over the house, and the colors of red and blue, both of which are said to thwart the Evil Eye…“The symbol of the hand, and often of priestly hands, appears in kabbalistic manuscripts and amulets, doubling as the letter shin, the first letter of the divine name Shaddai. This mapping of the human hand over the divine name and hand might have had the effect of creating a bridge between the worshipper and God.”2

From a historical site:

“Hamsa is a universal protective sign and we encounter it in faiths. It is believed the symbol brings its owner happiness, luck, health, and good fortune. Hamsa offers protection from harm caused by the evil eye. As previously mentioned in Ancient Pages, there is an ancient, superstitious, and almost universal belief that certain people possess the supernatural power to cause disaster, illness, calamity and even death. They have the ability to do it with a gaze or stare that gives an unpleasant emotion. The evil eye is widely feared in many parts of the world. This is why the Hamsa symbol can be found today throughout the Middle East.3 Ancient Pages/hamsa

Soon we must look at the practice of going to graves to worship, but for now, remember: it is the same thing; no person nor stone nor grave nor dead person, has any power to bless or curse. Speaking to ask the dead to mediate with YHVH is invoking the dead. Necromancy! And why would we need a dead mediator when the King of Kings hears our prayers? This too comes under the judgment of the verse we started with:

Deut. 12:30-31 Beware that you do not go astray after them, after YHVH your Elohim destroys them from before you, and do not ask about their gods and say, ‘How were the nations serving these their gods, that I may also do like them?’ But you shall not do so to YHVH your Elohim, because everything that YHVH despises and hates they have done for their gods…”

Psa 135:15-19 “The idols of the nations are silver and gold, the work of men’s hands. They have mouths, but cannot speak; they have eyes, but cannot see; they have ears, but cannot hear,
nor is there breath in their mouths. Those who fashion them, all who trust in them, shall become like them. O house of Israel, bless YHVH.”

1https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamsa

2https://www.myjewishlearning.com/article/hamsa/

3https://www.ancientpages.com/2020/05/20/ancient-symbol-hamsa-meaning-history-explained/