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Golden calf - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Golden calf

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Adoration of the Golden Calf by Nicolas Poussin: imagery influenced by the Greco-Roman bacchanal
Adoration of the Golden Calf by Nicolas Poussin: imagery influenced by the Greco-Roman bacchanal

In the Hebrew Bible, the golden calf (עגל הזהב) was an idol (a cult image) made by Aaron for the Israelites during Moses' unexpectedly long absence. In Hebrew, the incident is known as "Chet ha'Egel" (חטא העגל) or "The Sin of the Calf". It is first mentioned in Exodus 32:4.

In Egypt, whence the Hebrews had recently come, the Apis Bull was the comparable object of worship, which the Hebrews were reviving in the wilderness. Among the Egyptians' and Hebrews' neighbors in the Ancient Near East and in the Aegean, the Aurochs, the wild bull, was widely worshipped, often as the Lunar Bull and as the creature of El. Its Minoan manifestation survived as the Cretan Bull of Greek myth.

Contents

[edit] Summary of the Biblical narrative

When Moses went up onto Mount Sinai to receive the Ten Commandments (Exodus 19:20), he left the Israelites for forty days and forty nights (Exodus 24:18). The Israelites feared that he would not return, and asked Aaron to make gods for them (Exodus 32:1). The Bible does not note Aaron's opinion of this request, merely that he complied, and gathered up the Israelites' golden earrings. He melted them and constructed the golden calf.

Aaron also built an altar before the calf, and the next day, the Israelites made offerings and celebrated.

The Lord told Moses that his people had corrupted themselves, and that he planned to eliminate them, but Moses argued and pleaded that they should be spared (Exodus 32:11); the Lord relented. Moses went down from the mountain, but upon seeing the calf, he too became angry. He threw down the tablets upon which God's law had been written, and broke them. Moses then burnt the golden calf in the fire, ground it to powder, scattered it on water, and forced the Israelites to drink it. He questioned Aaron about the event, who admitted to collecting the gold, throwing it into the fire, and out came a calf. Then Moses gathered the sons of Levi and set them to slaying a large number of adult males (3000). A plague then struck the Israelites. Nevertheless, the Lord stated that he would one day visit the Israelites' sin upon them.

Since Moses had broken the tablets, the Lord instructed him to return to Mount Sinai yet again (Exodus 34:2) to receive a replacement.

[edit] Interpretation

[edit] The Sin of Idolatry

Within the context of the narrative, God has just finished delivering the Ten Commandments to the Israelites which included the Second Commandment regarding the prohibition against idolatry, that is, the making of images (similitudes) to be used in the worship of Yahweh. Further interpretation also suggests that the prohibition of the Second Commandment also included any adoption of the rites and traditions of the pagan nations, not merely the making of images.

Many Christian scholars have suggested that the Israelites were worshipping the Egyptian god Apis, falling back into what they had known for centuries while in captivity. It is suggested that the "idolatry" (a voiding of the Second Commandment) on display here was the worship of another god. However, forging an image of Apis would not have violated the Second Commandment before it had literally violated the First, "worship no other gods".

As such, what may have actually transpired within the event is that the Israelites had not so much voided the First Commandment so much as they had violated the Second which prohibited the making of an image of Yahweh. In Exodus 32 it states: "When Aaron saw this, he built an altar in front of the calf and announced, 'Tomorrow there will be a festival to the LORD (Yahweh).'" Within the context of the Exodus story, it would be highly unlikely that the Israelites, after witnessing the miracles of the Exodus first hand, would have fallen into the worship of another god immediately after Yahweh had just spoken the Decalogue in their midst.

[edit] General Questions

The worship of the golden calf.  From the Nuremberg Chronicle (1493).
The worship of the golden calf. From the Nuremberg Chronicle (1493).

The story has long raised a number of interesting questions[1], how gold can be burnt? how burnt gold can be ground to powder? and why Aaron, who went on to be the head priest, was not punished for his action? Aaron leads a somewhat charmed life, missing out on the consequences of his actions, similar to the Snow-white Miriam issue.

In the documentary hypothesis, the story is not present in the Priestly source. It would certainly not fit in with their view of Aaron. The story occurs in the Elohist component. This author is rather anti-Aaron, and pro Moses.

The grinding to powder action is also repeated in King Josiah's reign when "He burned the high place and ground it to powder", which echos the "then he ground it to powder, scattered it on the water and made the Israelites drink it" phrase.

[edit] Aaron's Statement

When Aaron has made the golden calf, he says the rather confusing statement "These are your gods, O Israel, who brought you up out of Egypt." It is confusing because there is a single calf, so why refer to it as gods (plural). It is also not clear why it might be involved with bringing the people up from Egypt.

According to Exodus 32:4 the golden calf is made and Aaron says "This is your god (singular) O Israel, who brought you up from the land of Egypt.

However later on in 1 Kings 12:28, Jeroboam tries to stop the Northern Israelites from visiting Jerusalem. He has two high places erected at Dan and Bethel as new offering places. At each of these he has constructed a golden calf and says "It is too much for you to go up to Jerusalem. Here are your gods, O Israel, who brought you up out of Egypt." A similar phrase.

The creation of the golden calves may have been an attempt to identify the Lord with Baal. Among the Phoenicians, Baal was sometimes called the "calf" whereas the supreme god El (God) was called the "bull". Bovine whole-burnt offerings were an important part of Baal worship. The golden calf may have been a zoomorphic ark for Baal, just as winged lions (cherubim) were for the Lord. By making a calf pedestal, instead of a lion, would have been an attempt to identify the Lord with the Canaanite son of Dagon, Baal.

The construction of the two golden calves would have been seen as a gross blasphemy by the Kings author, on a par with the original Golden Calf episode. The Levite priests in the North would have found those golden calves an irritation as they were looked after by non-Levite priests, and were probably seen as idolatrous. A reference to the original golden calf episode may have been seen fitting. There may even have been some cross over of the language.

This however may be just a literal translation of the honorific plural form found in Hebrew as in the word Elohim.

[edit] Trivia

[edit] See also

Torah parshiot or portions dealing with the Golden Calf: Ki Tissa and Eikev

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ The history of exegesis on this episode is summarized by j. Hahn, Das 'Golene Kalb': Die Jahwe-Verehrung bei Stierbildung in der Geschichte Israels (Frankfurt 1981) pp 195-208.


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