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Our
understanding of the Old Testament is in crisis. The tide of Biblical Criticism
and archaeology has eroded our sense of divine action, or of divinity acting in
history. Traditionalists are frozen in biblical literalism, and heading over a
cliff oblivious to their situation, while arrogant Darwinian reductionism only
compounds the confusion by offering no insight into religion beyond the Social
Darwinist vulgarity of the cadres of scientism.
One
of the most remarkable aspects of the study of the eonic effect is the
perspective given on the riddle of the Old Testament. Suddenly the pieces of a
puzzle fall into place and we see the context, moment, and significance of that
mysterious document that tradition takes for granted, but whose historical basis
is increasingly challenged by the rise of Biblical archaeology. In fact in our
account those challenges actually come into their own as the interaction of
historical fact and mythology begin to clarify themselves. And then we see something
remarkable, from a secular perspective, an incident in the 'eonic evolution of
religion'. And
yet the account recorded in the Bible resists the standard secularist treatment.
The resolution to the enigma lies in seeing the chronicle given in light of the
eonic effect. Our approach is neither theistic, atheistic or agnostic. We simply
stand back and perform periodization analysis, based on the eonic model (itself
a periodization framework), on the incidents that constitute the core history.
The result is an elegant wonder of systems analysis, and clarifies at once the
puzzle left to us by its redactors. There
is something odd about this approach. Systems analysis applied to Biblical
history? It seems rather there is nothing like a good old narrative tale to
induce conviction, and the Bible was a smashing success with this set of
tactics, but the clock is ticking on epic sagas, and in the end, a series of abstractions from systems analysis might
release us from the mesmerizing quality of such a narrative. Neither a
mechanical nor a design argument will succeed with this stubborn data of an 'age
of revelation' stubbornly recorded by observers and agents of that period. A new
kind of model can help us to see the data as if for the first time. A
discrete-continuous model applied to one of history's most famous chronicles
thus seems at first a strange approach to the question of religion. But in fact
the model seems almost tailor-made for the data, and the result is a kind of
'time and motion' analysis of one of the enigmas of world history. We can
adopt a secular stance, we have no other option, and the study of the eonic effect does, subject to a
clarification of what we mean by the term 'secular', demand that, but it must be
admitted that after all of the mythology has been stripped away, what is left is
still enough to leave our secularist with something that 'doesn't compute' in
the agenda of scientism. It doesn't quite add up, and the redactors of the 'holy
book' were on to something, the strangeness of the history they could but
look back upon in wonder. Their account, streamlined in a dynamical abstraction,
faithfully reflects the findings of the eonic model, the more so since they had
no conception of the eonic effect. The result, if we compensate with a judicious
pruning using the rapidly emerging data of archaeology, is almost more
remarkable than the epic tales of the miraculous that have entered just as
surely as they entered the Greek epic's (purported) tales of the Trojan
war. Basically
the redactors of the Old Testament were saying that a 'funny something in the
sky' induced a social transformation in a particular region in Canaan. We
wouldn't quite put it that way, but they were right to see that something had
derandomized historical stream history. Those redactors further knew the dangers of
theistic reference and attempted, with zero success, to stem the tide of
theistic gibberish with abstract tokens in a glyph of austere reference, at the
threshold of spoken terms, IHVH. We should take due note of that honorable
hope, and consider that systems analysis might do the job better at one stroke.
So be it. The age of gibberish 'god talk' ought to come to an end. A
nice feature of the eonic model is that it leaves the data alone, so to speak,
and one way to unlock the riddle it models is to see the isomorphism with the Greek Axial
transition, and then a similar analysis of the Indian Axial, which is
unfortunately less well documented. But that still leaves the considerable
effort involved in arriving at that data! We can't map the data suggested in the
Old Testament onto the model, unless we can verify its historicity. We can cite
a work such as The Bible Unearthed, by Silberman and Finkelstein, as one
recent summary of the emerging picture of the histories of Israel/Judah. The
point is that the Old Testament gives the game away for us in the rough overall
architecture of periodization implied in its account, and we can see that this
does approximate the known facts. The
basic point is the context of the Axial Age and the appearance of a new branch
of cultural tradition in that context. Thus the mystery of the Old Testament and
the people it describes is transferred to that of the Axial phenomenon, thence
of the eonic effect itself. The core issue is the sudden transformation that
occurs in the indicated time interval of the Axial Age, as against the lead up
period prior to that, and the follow up period in its wake. Once we
analyze those separate pieces, the riddle begins to resolve itself, although not
completely. It
thus becomes possible, although the obstacle course of traditionalist protest
might prove considerable, to reconsider the Old Testament in its new
interpretation, as a chapter in a greater universal history of the emergence of
civilization and the 'evolution' of religion.
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