|
| Home | Forum | Search |
| eNotAlone > Religion and Spirituality > Christianity > Christianity: Bible |
The Genesis of Justice: Ten Stories of Biblical Injustice that Led to the Ten Commandments and Modern Morality and Law Book Description
Who among us has not questioned the “justice” found in the Book of Genesis? Now Alan M. Dershowitz, one of our most brilliant legal minds and author of the #1 New York Times bestseller Chutzpah, casts new light on these ancient tales. What he finds is… THE GENESIS OF JUSTICE Violence, lust, deception, murder, incest, and vengeance: These are the subjects of the biggest--and perhaps the juiciest--bestseller of all time, the Book of Genesis. Its oft-told tales have inspired, cautioned, and challenged humankind for generations. But perhaps never before has anyone examined these stories from a modern legal perspective. | ||||||||
Based on Alan Dershowitz's class at Harvard Law School, The Genesis of Justice shows how The Good Book is also a law book. According to Dershowitz, these seminal stories describe a people--and a God--struggling in a world before the invention of systematic rules, a primal place that predates our notions of fairness, honesty, and “rights.” Yet here in Genesis we can see these concepts--and the need for them and for their embodiment in a formal legal system--evolving in front of our eyes. Using ten of the most intriguing biblical narratives and drawing on not only his own arguments but those of biblical commentators throughout the ages, Dershowitz evaluates the actions of biblical heroes, even God himself. And together with concluding discussions on “The Injustice of Genesis,” he shows us how the flawed behavior of its flawed protagonists led to the Ten Commandments and a deeper, richer sense of justice than any mere code could ever provide. From the time he was a kid--and was nearly tossed out of Hebrew school for asking one pesky question after another--Dershowitz has wanted to turn these stories inside out. As a result, The Genesis of Justice is filled with humor and passion as well as erudition… which helps make these ancient and often seemingly impenetrable writings more understandable, relevant, and wonderfully alive. PART I Why Genesis? Would you give a young person a book whose heroes cheat, lie, steal, murder-and get away with it? Chances are you have. The book, of course, is Genesis. And you are right to encourage your child to read it-with some guidance. It is the best interactive moral teaching tool ever devised: Genesis forces readers of all ages to struggle with eternal issues of right and wrong. There is a fundamental difference between the Five Books of Moses, especially the first book, Genesis, and the New Testament and Koran. The New Testament and the Koran teach justice largely through examples of the perfection of God, Jesus, and Mohammed. Christian or Muslim parents can hand their children the New Testament or the Koran and feel confident they will learn by example how to live a just and noble life. The parables and teachings may require some explanation, but on the whole, the lessons to be derived from the lives of Jesus and Mohammed are fairly obvious. Who can quarrel with the Sermon on the Mount, or with Jesus' reply to those who would stone the adulteress on the Mount of Olives, or with the parable of the good Samaritan? The same is true with Mohammed. The Koran describes his life as exemplary and Mohammed himself as of a great moral character. If you pattern your behavior after Jesus or Mohammed, you will be a just person. In sharp contrast, the characters in the Jewish Bible-even its heroes-are all flawed human beings. They are good people who sometimes do very bad things. As Ecclesiastes says: “There is not a righteous person in the whole earth who does only good and never sins.” This tradition of human imperfection begins at the beginning, in Genesis. Even the God of Genesis can be seen as an imperfect God, neither omniscient, omnipotent, nor even always good. He “repents” the creation of man, promises not to flood the world again, and even allows Abraham to lecture Him about injustice. The Jewish Bible teaches about justice largely through examples of injustice and imperfection. Genesis challenges the reader to react, to think for him- or herself, even to disagree. That is why it is an interactive teaching tool, raising profound questions and inviting dialogue with the ages and with the divine. What lessons in justice are we to learn from the patriarch Abraham's attempted murder of both his sons? Or from God's genocide against Noah's contemporaries and Lot's townsfolk? Generations of commentators have addressed these questions, and rightfully so. They need addressing. These stories do not stand on their own. Reading the Old Testament, and especially the Book of Genesis, must be an active experience. Indeed, the critical reader is compelled to struggle with the text, as Jacob struggled with God's messenger. A midrash describes how man “toils much in the study of the Torah.” Maimonides believed that Torah study is so demanding that husbands engaged in this exhausting work should be obliged to have sex with their wives only “once a week, because the study of Torah weakens their strength.” For comparative purposes, rich men who don't work must have sex with their wives “every night,” and ordinary laborers “twice a week.” Whether or not we agree that biblical scholarship should interfere with our sex lives, it is certainly true that we are invited by the ambiguities of the text to question, to become angry, to disagree. Perhaps that is why Jews are so contentious, so argumentative, so “stiff-necked,” to use a biblical term. I love reading the Torah precisely because it requires constant reinterpretation and struggle. I first thought about justice when, as a child, I studied the Book of Genesis. To this day, I remember the questions it raised better than the answers given by my rabbis. To read Genesis, even as a ten-year-old, is to question God's idea of justice. What child could avoid wondering how Adam and Eve could fairly be punished for disobeying God's commandment not to eat from the “Tree of the Knowing of Good and Evil,” if-before eating of that tree-they lacked all knowledge of good and evil? What inquisitive child could simply accept God's decision to destroy innocent babies, first during the flood and later in the fire and brimstone of Sodom and Gomorrah? How could Abraham be praised for his willingness to sacrifice his son? Why was Jacob rewarded for cheating his older twin out of his birthright and his father's blessing? I first encountered these questions as an elementary-school student in an Orthodox Jewish day school (yeshiva) during the 1940s and 1950s. My teachers, mostly Holocaust survivors from the great rabbinic seminaries of Europe, encouraged the sorts of mind-twisting questions posed by the rabbis over the centuries, without fear of apostasy. These were old questions, asked by generations of believers. Each question had an accepted answer-an answer that strengthened faith in the divine origin of the text and in the goodness of God and His prophets. Sometimes there were multiple answers, occasionally even conflicting ones, but they were all part of the canon. Some of them required a stretch-even a leap of faith. But none, at least none that were acceptable, encouraged doubt about God's existence or goodness. If a skeptical student asked a question outside of the canon, the teacher had a ready response: “If your question were a good one, the rabbis before you, who were so much smarter than you, would have asked it already. If they did not think of it, then it cannot be a good question.” The teachers even had an authoritative source for their pedagogical one-upmanship. The Talmud recounts the story of the great teacher Rabbi Eliezer, who was teaching the following principle:
I would occasionally ask impertinent questions that got me tossed out of class. I remember upsetting a teacher by asking where Cain's wife came from, since Adam and Eve had no daughters. A classmate was slapped for wondering how night and day existed before God created the sun and the moon. My teachers dubbed these questions klutz kashas-the questions of a “klutz,” or ignoramus. But I persisted in asking them, as did many of my classmates. I continue to ask them in this book. Following my bar mitzvah, I began to deliver divrei Torah-talks about the weekly Bible reading-at the Young Israel of Boro Park Synagogue, which my family attended. My mother found a copy of one of these talks among some old papers, and it was amazing to discover that even back then I was thinking about some of the issues addressed in this book, arguing that rules without reason are antithetical to liberty and that the first seeds of democracy are planted when lawmakers see the need to justify their commands. The talk my mother found was about the Bible portion called Chukkat, which deals with a category of laws for which the rabbis could find no basis in reason. They were divine orders to be followed blindly, simply because God issued them. These chukim were distinguished from mishpatim, which were laws based on reason and experience. The word “mishpat” comes from the same root as the words “justice” and “judge” and so mishpatim (the plural of mishpat) were based on principles of justice, whereas chukim needed no justification. As I will try to show in this book, the unique characteristic of the Bible-as contrasted with earlier legal codes-is that it is a law book explicitly rooted in the narrative of experience. The God of Genesis makes a covenant with humans, thereby obligating Himself to justify what He commands-at least most of the time. The Bible reflects the development of law from unreasoned chok to justified mishpat. Abraham's argument with God over the fate of Sodom and Gomorrah-the first instance in religious history of a human being challenging God to be just-marks an important watershed in the development of democracy. These and other stories of justice and injustice had a powerful effect on my young mind. They encouraged me to view the world in a skeptical and questioning manner. If Abraham could challenge God, surely I could challenge my teachers. When my high school principal refused me permission to take a statewide exam for a college scholarship on the ground that no one with my low grades stood a chance of winning, I challenged his action and won both the opportunity to take the test-and the scholarship itself. The Bible had empowered me to pursue justice. I imagine these Bible stories must have had similar effects on the minds of other inquiring students, Christian, Muslim, and Jew alike! I read Genesis as an invitation to question everything, even faith. It taught me that faith is a process rather than a static mind-set. The Book of Genesis shows that faith must be earned, even by God. Jacob expressly conditions his faith on God complying with His side of the bargain-of the covenant. As a child, I trivialized this unique relationship between God and His people by inventing conditions of my own: I would be faithful if God would bring a World Series championship to Brooklyn. I spent many a faithless day until 1955, when the Dodgers finally beat the Yankees-and promptly moved to Los Angeles. God works in mysterious ways. As I grew older I continued to ponder the wonderful stories of Genesis. They leap into my mind whenever I think about contemporary issues of justice and injustice, as if they are hard-wired into my consciousness. As a law professor, I have always used biblical narratives in classes as sources of analogy and reference, since most students have some familiarity with Adam, Eve, Cain, Abel, Abraham, Sarah, Jacob, Moses, David, Job, Jesus, and Mohammed. In the fall of 1997 I decided to offer a Harvard Law School seminar on the biblical sources of justice. I was flabbergasted at the amount of interest. Approximately 150 students applied for the 20 places in the seminar. The classes themselves were exhilarating, as Jews, Christians, Muslims, atheists, and agnostics explored the sacred texts in search of insights about justice and law. In the spring of 1998 I spent several months in Israel, reading biblical commentaries and discussing them with a wide assortment of scholars from differing perspectives. In the fall of 1998 I taught the seminar again, focusing on the narratives of Genesis and Exodus. And in the summers of 1998 and 1999 I led a Bible study group on Martha's Vineyard in which we explored the ethical implications of several biblical stories. My students have included religious fundamentalists who take every word of Scripture literally. “God said it. I believe it. Case closed,” read a bumper sticker I saw in the law school parking lot. At the other extreme I have taught atheists, agnostics, and some who have never even opened a Bible in their lives. As one woman told me: “Until now, I've thought of the Bible as a book I see in a hotel room drawer while I'm looking for stationery.” Some of my students view the Bible as great literature, akin to Shakespeare, Homer, and Dostoyevsky. I regard it differently, as a holy book in which many people believe and for which some have been willing to die-and kill. Whether or not one believes the Bible was written or inspired by God and redacted by humans, it cannot, in any view, be read as just another collection of folktales, short stories, or historical accounts. It is a sacred text, and Scripture must be read differently from secular literature if it is to be fully appreciated. We read Shakespeare to glory in his mastery of language and to share his remarkable understanding of the human condition. Yet we do not look to Hamlet or Othello as templates for moral behavior. We identify with the struggles Shakespeare's characters undergo, while recognizing that Shylock and Lear are the creations of a brilliant human mind. The Bible, on the other hand, purports to be the word of God and the moral guide to all behavior. We are supposed to act on it, not merely ponder its insights. No one was ever burned at the stake for misinterpreting Macbeth. In preparing for my classes on the Bible, and in writing this book, I have tried to reread the biblical texts afresh. For purposes of the Harvard classes, I am neither Jew nor Christian nor Muslim. I take no position on divine versus human or singular versus multiple authorship. Each student is encouraged to bring his or her tradition to the reading of the texts. Nor do I take a position on the “truth” of the various commentators, who are deemed “authoritative” by different religions. We study many commentators, judging them by their contribution to the discussion and the insights they provide, without regard to their doctrinal presuppositions. I found particular inspiration in a statement made by the great medieval commentator Ibn Ezra, a Spanish Jew of the twelfth century who was familiar with Greek, Christian, and Islamic philosophy and wrote one of the most brilliant and enduring commentaries on the Bible. Ibn Ezra once said that “anyone with a little bit of intelligence and certainly one who has knowledge of the Torah can create his own midrashism.” Midrashim, or the singular midrash, are interpretations of the biblical text by the use of illustrative stories, explanations, commentaries, and other forms of exegesis. There is a traditional saying in Judaism, “There are seventy faces to the Torah,” which means there is no one correct interpretation of a biblical narrative. A contemporary scholar has suggested that many of these faces “were latent; and as generation after generation found expression for some or other of these aspects, they revealed again and anew the Torah which Moses received on Sinai.” It is in this spirit that I join this dialogue among generations. Every generation has the right, indeed the duty, to interpret the Bible anew in the context of contemporary knowledge and information. Eight centuries ago the most revered of Jewish commentators, Maimonides, insisted on studying ancient and current writers, both within and outside of his own religion, because he believed that “one should accept the truth from whatever source it proceeds.” Maimonides read widely among Greek and Arab writers and was particularly influenced by Aristotle, while fundamentally disagreeing with his concept of God. Norman Lamm, the president of Yeshiva University, has reiterated this eclectic perspective: “No religious position is loyally served by refusing to consider annoying theories which may well turn out to be facts… . Judaism will then have to confront them as it has confronted what men have considered the truth throughout generations… . [I]f they are found to be substantially correct, we may not overlook them. We must then use newly discovered truths the better to understand our Torah-the 'Torah of truth.'”
Copyright © 2000 by Alan M. Dershowitz About the Author Alan M. Dershowitz is a professor at Harvard Law School and a noted appellate lawyer and columnist. He has represented such clients as Claus von Bülow, O. J. Simpson, Anatoly Shcharansky, Michael Milken, Mia Farrow, and Mike Tyson. He lectures widely on legal and religious issues, appears frequently on television and radio, and is the author of the number one bestseller Chutzpah, as well as Supreme Injustice, Reversal of Fortune, The Abuse Excuse, Just Revenge, The Genesis of Justice, The Advocate's Devil, and Reasonable Doubts: The Criminal Justice System and the O. J. Simpson Case. More by Alan M. Dershowitz |
| |||||||
|
© Copyright 2000-2006 eNotalone.com Inc. All rights reserved | ||||||||