History
- The Occupation of Canaan
When the Hebrews arrive at
Canaan, the land promised to them millenia earlier when God told Abraham
at Shechem that the land would belong to his descendants, they they
begin the long, painful, and disappointing process of setting the land.
There were, after all, people already living there. These people, the
Canaanites, were a Semitic people speaking a language remarkably close
to Hebrew. They were farmers, some were nomads, but they were also
civilized. They used the great Mesopotamian cities as their model and
had built modest imitations of them. They had also learned military
technology and tactics from the Mesopotamians, as well as law. So the
Hebrews, uncivilized, tribal, and nomadic, found themselves facing a
formidable enemy. Even the accounts of this period in the Hebrew bible,
the books of Joshua and Judges paint a pretty dreary picture of the
occupation.
After a few spectacular victories and some impressive territorial gains
along the coastal plains, the Hebrews are eventually driven out of these
areas and settle in the central hill country and a few places in the
Jordan River valley. While they held their own against the Canaanites, a
new player had arrived on the scene. These people, the Philistines, had
rushed down from the north and overwhelmed everyone in their path. They
had chariots and iron weapons and few could stand against these new
technologies.
So the Hebrews found themselves living in the worst areas of Canaan,
spread thinly across the entire region. The balance of power constantly
shifted as local kingdoms would grab and then lose territory, and the
Hebrews would find themselves first under one and then another master.
The Judges and the Deliverers
All during this period, the Hebrews rarely if ever organized into a
single group. They were divided, rather, into separate tribes which
administered themselves using tribal logic. There was no center of
Yahweh worship (as there would be in later years), and no central
government. There are, however, two types of figures that regularly
dominate the landscape: the judges and the deliverers.
The judges are a curious sort and we're not sure what the office
involved. What we do know is that they exercised some authority over all
the tribes of Israel and were generally recognized by all the tribes.
While the translation of the term, "judges," seems to imply judicial
activities, that is, deciding disputes between tribes, the word in
Hebrew, "shopetim" (-im is the plural), implies legislative duties as
well. So its possible that these "judges" exercised some kind of
legislative and judicial control over matters involving all the tribes
of Israel. Unlike the patriarchal age in which the "father" was the
ruler, "judges" weren't gender specific. The most important "judge" of
this period is, in fact, a woman: Deborah.
The deliverers (in Hebrew, "moshia") were specifically military
commanders. They organized intertribal armies and led them into battle
against foreigners: Philistines, Canaanites, Moabites, Ammonites, etc.
They arose in times of the greatest oppression of the Hebrews and, in
the Hebrew account of them, specifically elected by Yahweh to free the
Hebrews from oppression. Most of the names are familiar: Gideon, Samson,
etc.
The Hebrews themselves, however, do not seem to have settled comfortably
into the Yahweh religion. According to Hebrew history, the Hebrews
regularly abandon the Yahweh religion for local cults, particularly
Canaanite cults. The Canaanite religion focussed on the god Baal, and
the Hebrews frequently disassemble their Yahweh altars and build Baal
altars. Those Hebrews that settle in the Canaanite cities literally
disappear into the Canaanite religion; the Yahweh religion seems to have
been largely maintained among the nomadic groups in the hill country.
Uncertain of their future, wracked by constant warfare and even civil
war, and barely holding on to their Yahweh religion, the Hebrews would
eventually long for the identity and stability of a unified nation and a
monarchy. This act of disobedience towards Yahweh (according to the
Hebrew account) would turn this scattered group of tribes into a briefly
glorious kingdom and empire.
From:
http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~dee/HEBREWS/HEBREWS.HTM
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