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t'nim. esp. cantos L. lines 1-34; 3. lines 385399 (A. Penusi fed.j. Poemi Giorgio di PiJidia I: Pmugirici epici (Studia RltristiC3 et Bp.antina 7: Etu.l: Buc:h-Kunsrverlag. 19591. pp. 84-85. 133). On George's evolving I'C'presentarion of Her:tdius, see Mary 'Whitby. "'George of Pisidia's Pf'<'scm.ltion of the Emperor Her.Kiius and His CAmpaigns: Variety and Devdopment,.. in G.J. Reinink 3nd B.H. Stolte (eds.), Tht- &igu ofHrmcliru (610-641): Crisis aud Conftomnrioll (L.cuven: Peeters. 2002). pp. I57-74. an J. Trilling. .. f\·i)'th and Met:tphor :u fhe Br.L.lminc Court: A Literary Approoch w the David J>iates." 8;-zmu;ol/ 48 ( 1978), pp. 249-63 (259-60). SO)
234
1
RA ANAN S . 60USTAN
profound literary and cultural continuities, the d ramatically violent register that Jewish "Kaiserkritik" assumed in the early Byzantine period suggestS that the Mediterranean world that Jews and Christians shared had indeed changed in palpable ways.
Conclusion
De.s pite the shared genealogie.s of Jewish and Christian discourses of retributive' justk c, we have. scC'n that the progressive Christianizatio n of Roman political institutions and power gradually led these traditions along di verging trajcc.torics. This divergence. rcprcsent.s o ne small f:,cct of the much wider process thro ugh which Jews and C hristians in the post-Constantinian era gradually articulated their differences within often uncomfortably proximate social and cultural domains. I have argued that Byzantine Jewish sources !Tom the late fifth to early seventh centuries attc..st just such a shift in-or, perhaps better. intensificatio n of-negative Jewish attitudes toward the institutio ns of the Roman empire, precisely at a time whc.n Jews were being increasingly cast in Roman~Christian sources as a troublesome and vio lent minority. Rc.sistancc. to the new Christian o rder also entailed the integratio n and internalization of that o rder.
More interesting still, this image of the Jew seems to have exerted an equal, if paradoxical, infl uence on the e.volutio n of Jewish self-repre· scntatio n, as we have seen most d early in He;khnlot Rnbbati. This unset· d ing convergence in the Jewish and the Christian lite.rary cultures of the Byzantine period demonstrates the degree to which Jews and Chris· tians. though increasingly occupying distinctive. social positions. still share.d a common discursive landscape. I would even argue thac C hris·
tian fantasies of the violent Jew and Jewish fa ntasies of violent retribution could serve the mutual interests ofboth groups, namely, the process of communal differentiation. In imagining thcmsehres as a dissident counter--culture, Jews e mbraced a role that the Byz.antine .. Christians
authorities were more than happy to g rant them. The violent fan tasy of making the Roman empero r s life here o n earth a living hell, I would suggest, is o ne index of {he climate in which {he Jews were formedand formed themsclves- inco a minority culture.
Martyrdom, Jesus' Passion and Barbarism Jan Willeru van Henten Uuitvniuis wtn Amsurddm
Introduction The c.ross--culrural phenomenon of martyrdom is more than two millennia o ld, but. as rcccnc events cominuc to demonstrate, it is still a prominent featu re of contemporary cult ure .• Wh cth<'r one admires o r abhors martyrs, martyrdom appeals co the imagination of many, because it is a spectade, albeit with deadly consequences. Martyrdom is also a complex power game , which is already apparent from the agonistic vocabulary in several martyrdoms. Statements about martyrs in t hese writings suggest that t he martyrs' vio lent deaths imply t hat their opponent is defeated by them. f or examp le, 4 Mace. 17:1 1- 16 expresses the martyrs' triu mph over Antioch us IV with the imagery and vocabu lary of the arena. Whether such a triumph should be interpreted in a moral, spiritual, salvation-h istorical or political perspective-or all o f these-
its impact is more than a temporary reversal of the power relations at hand .' Moreover, t he hero ic death of t he martyrs remai ns powerful as long as it is commemorated by certain media, writings, a rtifacts, monumcncs, imcrnct, film ct cetera o r even rc~c:nactcd du ring community meetings and rit ual.> Another passage from 4 t'vlaccabces highlights t h is I) I warmly thank Jan G. van der \'(T,m {Pretoria), laur.l Copie-r an d Emma England
(Amsterdam) for their hdpful suggestions (and the latter also for improving my Eng-
lish). ~ See Mark Ju erge-nsmC')~r$ cha r;tcterization of the acr of terrorism as a temporary tl:'versal of the power reb tions between the "'terrorists" and their w.rgets, M. Juergensme)'et. Terror iu rbr .'\1iud ofGod: 1h~ Global Risr ofRrligious Violmu (BC'rkdcy: University of California Press, 3rd cdn , 2003), pp. 148-89. }) See E. Castelli, Martyrdom aud Mrmory: Early Chrisrinn Culturt Mnki!Jg(New York: Columbia Uni\·C'rsity Press, 2004).
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JAN WlLLEM VAN HENTEN
point, and expresses at rhc same rime that rhc martyrs' act exemplifies the collective identity of their group. The fictitious epitaph in 4 Mace. I 7:9· I 0 reads: It would in flct be appropri~te to engrave o n that place near their tomb, as a memorial to those nu•mbers of o ur n~ltion, tht" following words: " Here lie buried
an aged priest, a respecc-.lble woman and her SC'\'CO .sons, through the \'ioiC'nce of a tyrant bent on destroying the war of litC {l«lAneia) of the Hehrtws. They \'indiatted their people, st;'lying F.tithful to God and enduring torments I!Vctl unto
de:n-h."
This epitaph keeps the memory of thc.se martyrs alive and also recalls the perceived victory ovc.r their o pponen t. Subsequently, the commcm.. oration of the martyrs brings the cmpowcrmcm of t he community wit h it. The martyrs nor only highlight the rd igious and political goals that arc important fo r rhc communities that support chcir cause, but also inspire these groups because they function as modds. They also lcgiti· marc the authority of the insider community, and disqualifY t he SO\'
MART'\' Rl>OM, Jt!SUS' PASSION AND BARBARlSM
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exhaustive discussion of the connections b
The Concept of Barbarism The F..mous poem by the G reek poet Constantine [~ Cavafy (18641933), entitled "Waiting for the Barbarians" in English, ends with a paradoxical non~evcnt: the barbarians, whose arrival in an unidC"ntified city is awaited with great anxiety, never actually arrive.~ Some people who have returned from the border oven daim that there arc no longer any barbarians at all. Thus, the anxiously an ticipated interactio n of the civilized and the barbarians never takes place. But how docs th is •• j .\X( ·..-~ul HentC"n, "Jewish Martyrs -and the Lubn Passion Narrative Re>.·isitc-d," in R. Biering«. C. v.ln Bdle and J. Verhe}tden (C"ds.), Luk~ and his &n.das: Frsuchrifi A. Dmaux (BETL 132: Lcu\'cn: Pe
<m
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JAN WlLLEM VAN HENT EN
non-arrival affect the ''u.s" in th e: poem, the non ..barbarians? The bar· barians t urn out to be a projection of the non ..barbarians. There is no meeting, no commu nication whatsoever between barbarians and non .. barbarians.6 And this commu nicat ion--or rath er non·communica .. tion-is exactly what barbarism is about. in mod ern times as wdl as in antiq uity. Ba rbarism is o riginally a G reek concept that highlights fo reignness by focusing u pon the language of the fo reigners. "Barbarians" do not speak G reek, o r t hey speak broken Greek. but arc not understood because of their language. A passage in Herodotus about th e o rigin of the O raclc.s of Dodo na in Greece a nd Ammon in Libya demonstrates th is core meani ng {Herod otus 2.54-57). As usual, H erodotus relates several tradit ions when he discusses the o rigin o f th ese o racles. In con· ncction with Dodona, he mentio ns that it was founded by a n Egyptian woman fro m Thebes, who was carried away by t he Phoenicians. But he also refers to the story about a dove conveying a divine instr uction to found t he o racle. H erodotus prefers th e first explan at ion and he explains the trad itio n about the dove as follows: Thl-" story which the people of Dodona tdl 'Olbom the doves came, 1 should say, fro m the fact dut the women were fore-igners (pcXpl}ccpol ~oav), whose language sounded to th em like the twiuerin.g o f birds; later o n the dove spoke with a human voice, bec:tuse by that rime the woman had stopped twittering ('ttu..; &f: iPapl}&pt~t:} and l~rned to t:~lk imdligibly (Herodotu5 2.57).7
This passage comb ines the ph rases ~6:p~cxpo:; ("not speaki ng G reek," "non-G rcck," "barbarian") and ~cxp~cxpii;O> ("speak non-G reek," "speak like a barbarian").• Passages in C lassical G reek writ ings show a sem antic d evelopment of the meaning of~O:p~apo:; fro m "not speaking G reek"
It is tempting to write "ci\·ilizcd." :u many scholars do. but Ca\':l(y never uses this word in h is poem. which triggerJ several questions: who arc the "'barbarians"' and the "-us" in the poem? If there arc no barbari:ms, what arc the implications for the non barbarians? Arc they identical with rhc barbarians~ 1) Herodotus. 7h~ Histon'e; {trans. A. de Silincourt~ rev. ed. A.R. Burn; Harmondsworrh: Penguin, 1972), p. 152. 19 LSJ306. Cf. the phrase l3o.pjk(p6~:wo.; ..speakjng a foreign language" in Homer. II. !>)
4
8.267, ond Sib. Or. 3.516: 3.)28.
MART'\'Rl>OM, Jt!SUS' PASSION AND BARBARlSM
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into ''no n-G reek." The phrase ~ap~cxp~ ITcqucntly has a pejorative connotation, and "barbarism" often highlights the un-G rcckncss of fore igners wi[h a negative conno[ation. 9
Interestingly, several Hellenistic-Jewish authors usc phrases belong· ing to the semantic fid d of ~apj3ap~ and related words." A few of them also demonstrate that the concept of barbarism was broadened and re-interpreted, by re-defining the categories of the civilized and the barbarians.'' A note about a prayer by Judah the Maccabcc and his companio ns in 2 Maccabees I 0:4 offers a Aashback to the severe conflict between Jews and G reeks narrated in chapters 4-9. The prayer con nects this with an appeal to God. It refers to barbarians. clearly non-Jews, in irs final words: When they had done this, rhey fd.l prostrate and implored the Lord th:tt they might never ~gain f.11l imo such misfonunes. hut that, if they.should C'\'er sin. ther might be disc.iplined hr him with forbearance and not be h::andcd O\'er ro blasphemous and barbarous nations (JXxp~&.pol~ f:9vE:Gw).
At first glance, readers may conclude that this passage implies that Jews Uudah and his companio ns, and/or the cpitomist of 2 Maccabees) applied barbarism to no n-Jews" and, ironically, e\•cn to Greeks, but this is incorrect.'' The note implies a partial reversal of roles: Jews, Judah the Maccabcc and his supporters, arc constructed as the civil ized and the others, whether Greeks o r non-Greeks, arc at least potentially barE. l.C\•y. "'Nai.ss.1nce du conce-pt de b.ubare,.. Kt~ma9 {1984). pp. 5- 14. ~ S<pruagim: Ps. 113( 114): I: Ez
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JAN WlLLEM VAN HENTEN
barians. The main point is that Jews as wdl as non-Jews can behave like a barbarian according to 2 Maccabees. Deeds, not language, arc dcc.j..
sive fo r the qualification "barbarian," as a passage about the wicked high pries t !vfcndaus dc:mo nstrarcs: "Afte r receiving the: king's o rders he returned, possessing no qualification fo r the high priesthood, bur having the hot ttmper of a crud tyrant and the rage of a barbarous beast (~llPOS ~cxpj3apou opy/ts ixrov, 2 Mace. 4:25)." 2 Maccabm shows, therefore, a third stratum of the semantic development of ~ap~cxpos and rdattd phrases: they indica« that barbarism is not o nly rdattd to language and identity but also to barbarous behavior." In short, in antiquity, barbarism seems to have bee n a mulri~appJi ..
cable construct highlighting the srrangene.s of the (barbarian) other (non.. Grcck, non#Jew etcetera), often in a negative context. Because of its o riginal focus o n language, barbarism fo regrounds the process of communication between G reeks (or other "civilized people) and barbarians. In the next section I will return co the nexus of communica ..
tion and barbarism, but before that I will brieRy survey more recent approaches to barbarism . In the recent period, the notion of barbarism has become well-known because two modern authors of fiction, Con.sraminc Cava~' and J.M.
Coetzee, have elaborated aspects of barbarism in a poem (1904) and a novd ( 1980), which are both called "Waiting fo r the Barbarians."" 1 have discussed Cavafy's poem above in some detail. Coeru:c's novd builds o n the poem not o nly by having the same tide, bur also by sharing important motifs with it. The novelS main character is a magistrate in one of the towns of an unspecified Empire. He is confronted by the scc.rct service because the barbarians arc o n the vc.rgc o f rebellion. An
expedition of the secret service, led by a Colonel Joll, leads to the arrest and pu nishment of some of the barbarians. The magistrate tries to stay away from the brutal me thods of the secret service. but he. is arreste d and tortured because of treason. The magistrate rc.scues a barbarian girl
and hdps her to recover, but he also sleeps with her. Another expeditio n into the land of the barbarians /ails; the barbarians remain and 1 ''
C( .-.Jso 2 t\hcc. 5:22: l 5:2:AriJt. 122; Sib.Or. 5.96: 5.132. Sec n. 5 .-.nd J.M. Cot't'.t«, Wniring for tiN' Barbarians (London: SC'ckct & Warburg. 1980). 1 ~1
MART'\' Rl>OM, Jt!SUS' PASSION AND BARBARlSM
241
may even strike back. Cocrtc:e's novel c:vokcs even more d isturbing q uestions than docs Cavaf).'s poem: the ro les of victims and perpetrators seem to overlap. It is difficult to say who the real barbarians arc. The power dynamics between "civilized" and "barbarians" show multiple corruptio ns b ut also reversals of power, and justice is not prcsent.u' Scholars, especially anth ropologists and philosophers of culture, have fu rther elaborated the concept of barbarism. while others have commented on the interactions between literary and scholarly u nderstand ings of the rc:-rm .17 ( usc three poin ts from these discussions in my subsequent intcrpr<:tation of martyrdom through the lens o f barbar ism. which arc drawn primarily from the work of Brett Neilson and Maria Boletsi. 13
1. Problematic Communicrttion Barbarism implies a lack of understanding between the civilized and the barbarians. The language of the other is perceived as meaningless sounds, an iterative disturbance that interrupts the usual lincar passage oflanguage. This can go hand in hand with an unwillingness to u nderstand the other's language and to make the encou nter with the other into a communicative occasion. 19
2. Change ofPowa Relatiom The failing communication destabilizes the positions of both sides and can lead to a change of the power relation between the civilized and the
D. :\tv.-ell, J.Af. C«tut: SoutiJ Africa nnd u)t" Politics o{\f!riti11g (Bc.-rkdey: Univcrsit)' of Glifornia Press, 1993); T James, "'loc:uing the Sacred: J .M. Coctzcc.-'s Waitiug for tiJt· Bm·b:triam." in J .S. Scou (cc:L), And rht Birds >m to Sing: Rt!igion a11d Liraaum• in Post-ro!Minl Gt!r.urt'f {Amstc.-rdam: Rodopi. 1996), pp. 141-49; S. VanZanten Gallaghc.-r, "-·ro rturc and the Novd: J.M. Coetzce•s \'C'aitingfor tl.~< Bnrbnriam." Gmr.:mpom~y u"mturr29 ( 1988). pp. 277-85. m Amhropologisu: Edward Bumeu Tylor and Marianna lOrgovnick; philosophc.-rs of culture: Walter Benjamin, '1l1c.-odor Adorno, Eric Hobshawm, Jc.-an -Fr.m~ois l yow.rd, Gilles Ddeuz.< and Fdix Gu:ntari; for rdcrencc.-.s, sec footnote 18. 1•) B. Neilson, "Barbarism/Modernity. Notes on Barbarism,.. Trxr.ual Pnutia 13 (1999), pp. 75-91: Bolc.-tsi, ..Barbaric Encounters" (s«> n. 5). I'J) Neilson, "Ba.rbarism/Modcmity." p. 83~ Bolc.-tsi, ..Barbaric Encounters," p. 68. l 6)
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JAN WlLLEM VAN HENTEN
barbarians. This aspect of barbarism is articulated in various ways. According to Lyo tard's concept of the differmd, fo r example, barbarism would imply a situation in which the rc.gulation of a c.onAict between two parties fails hccausc of a mismatch of language: the regulation is fo rmulated in the idiom of one of the parties while the wrong suffered by the other cannot be expressed in that idiom. 10 This invalidates the other because he or she can never speak back and question his or her idcncity as constructed by the orhcr. 1 1
3. AmbiguQ/ts Roks and Identities The binary oppositio n between the civilized and the barbarians is disrupted by the f. iling communication because of barbarism. The confrontatio n with the barbarians affects the sdf-imagc and the roles of the civilized C"vcn if the barbarians do not communicate with the civilizcd:u The barbaric q ualities projected o n the (barbaric) other arc rcAccted in the id<."ntity construction of the civilized of rhcmsdves.:!J
Barbarism in 2 Maccabees 7 2 Maccabees 7 presumes a context that obliges Jews to participate in Gentile religious activities. Like the ninety year old scribe Eleazar, the anonymous mother and her seven sons arc forced to cat pork (2 Mace. 6: 18, 2 1; 7: I) d uring some sort of ritual meal (<mAayxvtcrllo;, 6:21; 7:42), which is part of the persecutio n by the. G reek king, Antioc.hus
1111
J.-F. Lyot:trd. lr dijftrmd (Paris: les Editions de Minuit, 1983}. pp. 9-55; Neilson,
"B:trbarism/lvlodernity,.. p. 84. m BoiC'tsi, "Barbaric Encounters,.. p. 68. See also G. Dd euze and F. Guattari, Amio~dipus: Cnpitr~lism and Schizophrmin (trans. R. Hurley. M. Seem and H.R.. lane; New York: The Viking PI'C'ss, 1982), pp. 192-21 7. They characterize barbarism :u a srsrc-m o f I'C'pre5entation that entails a rC'Org.lni.zation o f sociai i'C'ality because it organizes signif)·ing pracricC'5 into hierarchic structures of domination and subordination. Further discussion in Neilson "'Barbarism/Modernit)'•" pp. 86-87. ~ Boletsi, "Barbaric Encounters," p. 71. l.\l This is also the disturbing crux of Coettee's novel (see n. 15): The ""security officers" or the "col o ni :~l ists" of the empire' appear to be the "new b;uh:uians" (78, 8). 129); Boletsi, "'Barb:u-ic Encounters," pp. 7 1. n-80.
MART'\'Rl>OM, Jt!SUS' PASSION AND BARBARlSM
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IV. The story offers litdc info rmation about the martyrs' arrest or the juridical proced ure. It focuses upon the antithesis of the martyrs and the king with his representatives in a repetitive way, with the dash bcrwcc:n the king and the youngest son as a dimax. 24 The ki ng tries to force the seven brothers to cat pork by using torture, but the martyrs refuse to comply and arc tortured to death. The first brother immediately sct.s rhc tone when the torture begins and says o n behalf of his brothers: "What do you intend to ask and learn from u.s? Since we arc ready to die and won·t transgress the ancestral laws" (7:2)." Two o bservations can be made in connection with this beginning of the martyrdom of the anonymous mother and her seven sons. fi rst. King Amiochus applies torture in an unusual way. He docs nor usc it as punishment or a means to find out the truth, but as a tool to demonstrate his power and to put pressure o n the martyrs to give in to him." Second, the king's attempt to make the boys obey by the usc of force fails ar the outset, as the first son's statement indicates. His fail~ urc to domesticate the boys enrages the king and urges him to order o utrageous tortures against rhe first martyr (7:3 .. )). The vcrsc.s about the first martyr already demonstrate that there is a power struggle going o n between king and martyrs. 27 This first failed commu.nic.arion also ~) See for a recent commentary D.R.. Schwartz, 77Jr Smnul BotJk ofMacrahm: lmrodu,·rion, Tmmlnrion and Commmrary(Jerll.S:llem: Yad Yicshaq Ben-Zvi, 2004) I Hebrew;
English translation Berlin: de Gruyter. 2008). For a discussion of the martyrdoms stt J.W. v.:tn Hemcn. 11Jr Maccahrun Manyrs at Savioun oftiN J~wi!h P~opk: A Srud)' of2 mul 4 Afaunbrn (lciden: Brill, 1997). .m Translation from J.W. \'om Henten a nd F. A'·emarie, Martyrdom nnd Noblr Dn11!J.· St'lmcd Tr.m.from Gnm:o-Roma11,jrwiJJ, and CiJrisrinn Antiqttit)' (london: Routledge.
2002), pp. 66-70. ~
C i. Hannah A~ndt•s instrumental .-.ppro:tch to \'iolence: Violence wiiJ ocrur when power is in danger, but violence cannot take place without a certain b.-.sis of power, even something like the St'Crtt police. H. Arendt, 011 Violmct (New York: Harcourt, Brace & World. 1970). Tonurc was.-. common mc-.:tns of finding om the uuth d uring Greek a nd Roman trials, b ut, in princ iple, only sla\·es werc:- subjected to torrurc to ~ nd out the truth or to testifY: E. Peters, Tonm~ (Oxford: Bbck.,..,cJJ, 1985). pp. 11-36. In Coenee•s \flairi11gfor rh~ /Jarhm·inns, Capt-:.in Joll cxemplifle.s the connection bemttn the e>:enion of b rute tOrce and lr.ubarism, when he identi6es the screams o f torture victims as ''lxtrbarian language" ( 119). l 7> 4 Maccabcxs d abor:nes the power struggle between martyrs and the king with ath· letic vOClbular}' .-.n d meuphors. See V.C. Pfitzner, Prwl m:d ti.J.r AgM tl>forif Trudi·
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JAN WlLLEM VAN HENTEN
highlights the two mutually exclusive views of king and martyrs. This pattern is repeated in the other comacts between the martyrs and the
king, or his representatives. The section about the second brother (7:7· 10) isshorter, but it high· lights three fu rther aspects of the interactions between martyr and oppo· ncnts. First, like the entire group at the beginning of the martyrdo m (7: 1), the second young man is already tortured befo re being asked whether he is willing to cat pork: "After the firs t one had q uitted life in this manner, they brought the second one to the place of mocking and tore the ski n off his head, along with his hair, while asking: '\Xi ill you cat, or rather have your body being punished limb by limb?'" (7:7; cf. 7:10, 13, 15). This detail matches my earlier observation about the pre· liminary torturing of the martyrs as a demonstration of the king's pow .. c.r.28 The king's represe-ntatives tonurc the second boy in an incredibly savage way- starting by taki ng his scalp-to display their power over this young jew who dared to challenge the king's command. In fact, all the tortures ordered by the king arc characterized by the text as outra· geous (7:3· 5, 7, 10, 39). But the excessiveness of his tortures actually highl ights rhc king's defeat, because all seven martyrs end ure rhc tor· turcs in an impressive way. This explains the king's great anger (7:3, 39). Second, the inte raction between marty rs and their o ppo nents turns into a sicuation of miscommunication when the second brother ans ..
wcrs the king's rc.p rc.scntativcs in his own ancestral language-: "Heanswered in his ancestral language and said to them: 'No"' (7:8). This answer basic
tio11ai AriJ/nic lmagny inthr Pauline LitmtriiJ't' {NovTSup 16; Lcidcn: Brill. 1967}. pp. 38 78; van He-nte-n, MawtbMn Mart)'rt. pp. 119w22. !IIJ for details concerning the tortures, S« \'an Hcnten, :11/aanbeau J \fhmyr;. pp. 1054
16.
MART'\'Rl>OM, Jt!SUS' PASSION AND BARBARlSM
245
cabccs and the king is associated with G reek language and cultural pmcticcs ..t9 The ancestral language of the martyrs is not made explicit, but certain details in 2 Maccabees re nder it plausible that it concerns
Hebrew."' Significantly, the barbarism involved in this passage again links communicatio n to power. The implication of the switch to the anC<."stral language is that the martyr refuses to communicate in G reek,
the language of the king, and in this way undermines the ki ng's authority and power. Ultimately, this behavior implies a reversal of the rolc.s. by which the king, as the supposed civil ized person, becomes the barbarian and the martyrs the civilized. The brief answer "no" in Hebrew (or Aramaic) implies a rejection of the king's authority by the second martyr. It ends the interaction with the king's representative.s and immc...
diatdy leads to the final tortures of this martyr." The motif of the refusal to communicate is elaborated in the finale of the narrative, when six martyrs have died and only the youngest remains (7:24-40). The king realizes that he has almost lost his battle against this Jewish F.tmily. He docs his utmost to persuade at least the youngest brother to give in to him. The narrator e mphasizes that the
speech of rhc mother had unnerved the ki ng precisely because she delivered it in her ancestral language (7:21-23; cf. 7:27). The king feels that he. has been treated with contempt and suspects rhat the mother is humiliating him (7:24). His frustration is logical: he simply could not understand what the martyrs were saying, and, apparently, thi.s was e xac-tly how the martyrs wanted it to be. The references to the language
of the martyrs help to articulate the power struggle that is going on between ki ng and martyr. They suggest that the power relations at the beginning of the martyrdom, with a trial and executio n scene that
immediately continues with tortures, should be radically re-interpreted . The ki ng is fully in control at the beginning, but the behavior and the statements of the martyrs imply that they do not acknowledge the king's
m
2 Mace. 4:9· 15: 6:1-11 . Se< Himmdfarb, "Judaism and HdJenism ... ))) j .\Y/. van Hemcn, "The Ancestral Language of the Jews in 2 M:tccab«s," in \'(~ Horbury (cd.), Htbmv Srudy ftom W
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powa and auchority; rhc martyrs undermine the king's authority and principally abort communication with him. Their final stateme nts even
go o ne step further and call for a reversal of power, which leads to my th ird point. 2 t'vlaccabees 7:7-10 describes the last moments of the second martyr: "With his last gasp of breath he said: 'You wretch, you take life away from us now, but the Ki ng of the world will raise us, who d ie fo r his laws, up from the dead for an everlasting renewal of life"' (7:9). This statement puts the king in his place and indicates that G od will reward the martyrs posthumously for their absolute faithfulness to the Jewish laws.-" Other statements of the martyrs elaborate the king's fUtu re punishment (2 Mace.. 7: 11 -12, 14, 16-17, 18-19, 30-38). The martyrs' final statements add another dimension to the power game highlighted by the story. They suggest that the ki ng is subjected to divine authority and point out the rewards and punishment for the winners and the
loser of the power struggle of the martyrdom. The tensio n between the earthly authoritic:-s and the d ivine authority is a prominent motif in many marty r swrics. s tarting with Daniel 3 and 6. The vind ication of
the martyrs by God and the announcement of the divine punishment fo r the king, which comes true in chapter 9, is the finishing touch of the. discmpowerment of rhe ki ng."
Barbarism and the Pass-ion Narrath•es
The New 'l f:stamcnt Passion Narratives have been compared with ancient martyrdoms many times." Scholars have also applied Jewish martyrdoms as a modd for the reconstruction of the origin of the passion nar.. ~)
Concerning the vindic:u-ion of the martyrs. SC<' \ ...ln Hcnten, J\tlnaalxan ,\fnnyrs, pp. 162·86. l"ll The cohe-sion of the martyrdoms and rhe divine punishment of the king in Chapter 9 is strengthened hy the repetitions of the vocabulary that describes the punishment of the martyrs and the suffi.rings of the king: The divine illness nrikes Anriochus in his bowds (2 M.-.cc. 9:5), an afRiction rtminisccm of the ritual meal order<"7:21. 42). 2 Mace. 9:6 states that Anriochus' sufferings were just "for he had tonured the bowels of others with many and strange inAictions... See also 2 Mocc. 9:28-29. ~~1 Reccndy: \'incs ...The 'li·ial Scene• Chronorype... For funher refcrencxs, scc n. 4.
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rativcs. It is1 of coursc1 impossible to offCr a full discussion of the Passion Narratives in tho context of this artido. 1 can o nly deal with a few aspects that may bo illuminat
'" Mark 14:53, 55-65: 15:1 -15: Mat<. 26:57. 59-68: 27: 1-2, 11-26: Luke 22:54, 63-71 ; 23:1-25: cf. John I8: 13-14. 19-24, 28-40: 19: 1- 16a. "' 2 Mace. 6:2 1-28: 7: 4 Mae<. 5: 6: 12-23: 8:1-9:9. Cf. D.1n. 3:13-18. .~ In connection w ith the Maccabean m:.nrrdoms, I suggested .-.J~ady th:u the pr<"liminary use o f torrure can be SCC'n :.s :.n aspect of barbarism. In the Passion Narrati'lcs, we flnd a similar use o ( ph)rsical punishment during the u i.al scenes, which goes hand in h:and wirh the mocking of Jerus (Mark 14:65; M:1tr. 26:67; Luke 22:63-65; 13: II;
John 18:22). See also Mark 15:1 6-20: Matt. 27:27-31: John 19:1-5 ond the other mockery scene when Jesus is hanging on (he cross (Mark 15:29-32: l\·fatt. 27:39··4:~> Luke 23:35-39). The idiom used in 2 f\·bcC3bees fo r making a fool of somebody by physical punishment or ton ure (cf. f.~RCUY!!6.; ""mocl.cry"' in 2 M:acc. 7:7 01nd iJ.tnc.tl~oo "'mock, make asport or in 2 i\·lacc. 7: LO) is sh"~d by the Synoptic passion narratives (i~n«(~oo. Mork 15:20, 31; Matt. 27:29, 3 1.41; luke 22:63: 23:11, 36) .
.u; Van H en ten, Marmlmm :\>fnrt)'J'S. pp. 125-269. )i) K. Berger, Fonng<St·!Ji
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The high priest o r the Sanhed ri n and Pilate reveal through their q uestio ns the s ignificance of the person Jesus. 40
The perspective of barbarism helps to illuminate the peculiarities of Jesus· responses to the questio ns o f his opponents. There is, of course, a power dynamic. involved in the imcraction between Jesus and his o pponents and it is particularly noticeable that Jesus avoids engaging them in discussion. In Mark 14:61 -62, Jesus confirms the high priest's question concerning whether he is "the Messiah, the Son of the Blessed O ne?" (Mark 14:61) with "I am" (eyol ei~u)." but this very brief respo nse is immediately followed byJc.sus' puzzling statement "'you will sec the Son of Man seated at the right hand of the Power', and 'coming with the. d ouds of heaven."' (Mark I 4:62). This statement can be read as a threat, though, if it is intended as such, the high priest has, ironically, missed its thrust. Jesus· confession with the two words" l am" is all rhat matlcrcd to him and Jesus is q uickly condemned to death (Mark
14:63-65). It is significant that Jesus' brief affirmative answer to the high priest has been adapted by Mallhew and Luke, where Jesus responds in more evasive ways. In Man 26:63, the high priest first invokes the authority of God and then asks Jesus the crucial q uestion: " I put you under oath before the living God, tell us if you arc the Messiah, the Son of God?" (Matt 26:63). Jesus' response ignores the pressure put o n him: " You have said so (cri> einaq. But I tellyou (nA.qv Uyro i>,.lv), From now o n you will sec the Son of Man seated at the right hand ofPowe.r and coming on the clouds of heaven" (Matt 26:64: my emphasis). This brief dialogue d early builds on Mark 14:61-62, but there arc also small but significant differences between Matthew and Mark. From the perspcc4111
~questions conccrn Jesus bcing the' r-.·fcssiah, the Son of Cod (~t.uk 14:6 1;. M:ttt.
26:63: luke 12:67, 70), the IGng of rhe Jews (Marl< 15:2: MaN. 27: II : luke 23:3: John 18:33: cf. Mark 15:12, 18, 26. 32, 39 ond parallels; luke 23:37-38; john 19:3, 7-15, 19-22). Herod Anti pas' question in luke." 23:8-9 i.s not gi\·en. Dct::~ilcd discussion in R.E. Brown, 71J~ Dr.uh ofth~ .A1~ssinh. From Grt11J.t'111tlllt' ro rhr Gnu:t': A Commmrary 011 rhr Pmsion Namllillt'$ in tlu· Four Gos~ls (2 \'Ois.; London: Ch... pman, L994). pp. 461-968. m G.N. St:lnton, 7/Jt" G01prls ami Jrms (Oxford: Oxford University Press. 1989). p. 223 suggests that the more:- ev:t.sive re.1ding "You h;m~· said rhJt I 'lm,. of codex Koriderhi :.nd SC\'tr:tl minuscuiC' manuscripts rna}' I'(Acct Jesus• 'lcmal response.
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tive ofbarbarism it b<eomts u nderstandable why Jesus' response to the high p riest is evasive. Jesus rejects t he inferior power posit ion into which he has been put during h is interrogatio n. He avoids a d iscussio n on the terms of the high p riest and replies instead with a statement t hat expresses h is own a uthority (introduced by Aiyro Uf,l\v)." This implies a reversal of the power positions of the h igh priest and Jesus. This d isrupt ive commu nication process is even more explicit in the interaction between Jesus and th e Sanhedrin in Luke 22:67-70, which starts with the ques-tion of t he Sanhedrin: " If)'OU arc the Messiah, tdl us." He replied: "If I cdl you, you will not bc-lie\'e; and if I question )'OU, )'OU will not answer. But from now on the Son of Man will be seated at the right hand of the powc:r of Cod." All of them asked, ..:\re you, then, the: Son o f Cod?., He said, "You say ' hat I am."
Appa rently, Jesus considers the d ialogue with the Sanhedrin hopeless from a murual perspective, as the reversal of roles in Luke 22:68 indicates: "and if I question you, you will not answer (£0..v 0£ ipoo·n)O(J) 1 oU )Ill cmoKpt9~te)." He therefore refuses to answer t he Sanhedrin. but doc:.s express an alternative powerful .statement a bout h imsdf as Son of Ma n, wh ich is also found in Mark 14:62 a nd Matt 26:64. The interact ion between Jc.sus and Pilate in Luke 23:3 e nds in a similar way. Pilate asks him: "Arc you the King of the Jews?" (cf. Mark 15:2 ; Matt 27: I I ; John 18:33. below) and jesus answers: "You say so." Herod Antipas. whose quc:.s tion i.s not given in Luke 23:8 ..9, docs not get any response from Jc.sus (23:9) ." As a matter of fact, Jesus' reactions to the questions of his opponents do not contradict what the questions imply." The point is that Jesus' responses in Matthew a nd Luke suggest that Jesus tries to avoid an elabo ra te communi<.-ation with h is opponem.s, or even blu ntly refuses to
'!)
Ekrger, Formgtscl!ir!Ju. p. 259.
' -'> C f. Luke 22:63-64 d uring the mockery lxforc- Jesus' imcnog;uion: no response to the question. Cf. also John 19:9- 10. 't) K.S. O'Brien, " Innocence and G uilt: Apologetic. Martyr Stories, and :\Jiusion in rhe rvlark:ln TriaJ Narratives," in G. \·an Oyen and T Shepherd (cds.), 71N Trill! mul IA1lfil ofJma: Essays 011 tlu Rmio11 Namuiw in Marlr ( Leu\·en: Pec:tC'rs, 2006), pp. 20)-28.
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communicate with them, like rhe Maccalx:an martyrs do according to 2 Maccabees 7. The youngest .son, fo r example, fi rst rc:main.s silent in a self-assured way (2 Mace. 7:25)," but ultimately he speaks (7:30-38), just before h is death, expressing his superiority over the king and announcing God's judgment over him: "And through the verdict of God you will receive the right punishment for your arrogan ce ... I call upon God that .. . you will con fess lx:cause of trials and tortures that He alone is God" {7:36· 37).46 ln a d iffere nt way. the Passion Narrat ives also combine the motif of an interactio n that turns out to be a non.-d i.. alogue of two d iametrically opposed views and a reversal of the power relat io ns. Jesus ridicules h is interrogators in his rc.sponsc to the Sanhc· drin in Luke 22:68-70, a nd then identifies h imself as Son of Man, announcing with sovereign authority that th is Son ofMan will be se~tcd at the right hand of t he power of God "from now o n:'"'7 Here we see the second aspect of ba rbarism, the overlap or even change of roles of the civilized and the barbarians, and the consequent reversal of the power relat io ns. The morif of a reversal of power is especially prominent in John's Pas· sion Narrative, whcre the dialogues between Jesus and Pilate dominate the trial scenes.'" John elaborates u pon the motif of Jesus' being king, which is triggered by Pilate's questio n "Arc you the King of the Jews?" already transmitted in Mark 15:2 discussed earlier." jesus' response to Pilate in John 18:36 suggests t hat Jesus' kingdom is of a d ifFerent and superior nature t han the secular powers that dominate the human C( 4 Mace. 6:5, 9 -11 -and Babylonia n TaJmud BcrJkhot 61 b about the martyrdom of Rabbi Aqi\'3. $11! G.N. Stanton. Jesus ofNazamh ;, New Tmame111 Prr,uhi11g {Cambridge: Cambridge University Pr~. 1974), p. 34. rejects the analogy bccwec:n Jesus' rc-spon~s -and the reaction of the Jewish martyrs to their oppont'ftts. 471 M.L Soards, The Pmsion according to Lu/.:e: 7hr Spt
w.rk, 1996). "' john 18:33-37, 39; 19:3, 12, 15. 19·22; c( 1:49: 3:3. 5.
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world."' The dialogues between Jesus and h is o ppo nen ts in Joh n not o nly express failed commu n ication t ime and again but also presuppose a principled antithesis lx:twccn t he eart hly powers and Jesus' au thority. They p resent Jesus as the au thoritat ive person d uring t he inte ract ions he has with h is o pponents. Jesus acts on th e basis of a superio r a ut hority, but he docs not exchange roles with his o pponents (John 18 : 19-23; 18:33-8; 19:9-1 1) ." In the first dialogue ( 18: 19-23) . Jesus a nswers t he high priest at length, b ut he docs not simp ly respond to the q uestion a bo ut his d isciples a nd h is teaching (18: 19-2 1).>' His answer includes a brief rhetorical question: "Wh y do you ask me? (tl 11e tp(l)t'}:<;; 18:21)," which is reminiscent of the response o f the 1v1accabcan martyrs to Anti# ochus JV's order to cat pork in 2 Mace. 7:2, which starts with "What do you intend to ask . .. (tl f.leAAet<; tprot&v;)?"" W hen Jesus is hit by
C.K. Barrt'tt, 11!~ GosfXInmmling to StJohn: An burrxlurthm with CoumtnltllYJ auJ Nott•s 011 tht Grnk Ti:xt ( London: S PCK, 2nd edn, 1978), p. 536; R.J. Cassidy, jolmf Go1ptl in Nerv Persprctiw: Cl!ris:ology•auJ thr Rrt~litit"; ofRtmum l'owt'r(Maryknoll, NY: Orb~, 1992), pp. 48-49 . .,,> C f. P.O. Duke, Iron)' in :hr Fqurth Glnf"/ (Atlanta, GA: John Knox, 1985). \o))
pp. 126-37, who argues that John IS:28-19:l6, 19-22 points to a doubft' downward movement that concerns Pilatt' and the Jews :ts wdl as co ..the ironic dev.ltion of Jesus to the office of King, Judge, and Son of God" ( 127). Also D.A. U rson, 1br Gosprl According UJ jolm: All lmrodu
AB 29; Nnv York; Doubleda)l 1966-1970), vol. 2, p. 826; Cor.;on, 71x Gotf
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o ne o f t he attendants because of his lack of rc.spcct for the h igh priest, he reacts by saying: "lfl have spoke n wrongly, test ify to t he wrong. Bu t if I have spoken rightly, why d o you strike me?" Thus, the attendant is sh ut up a nd d egraded , not Jesus. The b rief d ialogues with Pilate evolve around Jesus' kingd om, which is "not fro m this world" ( 18:34-37}, and, by way o f contrast, arou nd Pilate's power (£E,ouo la, 19: 10- I 1)." There is a fOIIow~up o f qucscions and a nswers in thc.s.c passages. b ut Jesus docs not really respond to Pilate's questions. The first dialogue between Jesus a nd Pilate, fo r exam ple, starts with Pilate's questio n "Arc you the king of the Jews?" (18:33), a nd Jesus answers: " Do you ask this on your own, o r d id o thers td l you about me?" (18:34), to which Pilate a nswers: " I am not a Jew, am I?" which is not a direct answer either.'"} In the sec.. o nd dialogue (19:9- I 1), Jesus d ocs not respond to Pilate's first q uestio n "Where arc you fro m?" But t he second q uestion trigge rs an elabo rate answer, which h ighlights the contrast between Pilate's power and that o f Jesus: .. Do you refuse to speak to me? Do you not know that I have power to rdcase you, and powt'r to cruci~· you?" Jesus answered him, "You would h:wc no power O\'C'r me unless it lud becn givC'n to you from above; t herefore the one who handed me over to you i.s guilty of a grelter sin... Qohn 19: 10-ll)
The point fo r me in t h is co mp licated passage is that Pilate is pu t in h is place by Jesus' state men t and intend s to release h im (John 19: 12). The d ialogue contrasts Pilate's secular authority with Jesus' au thority, which derives !Tom God , and the implicat io n is that all hum an aut hority,
"'' The conn ection bC"twcen the rwo thcmes is stressed br BarrC'tt, Gosf"lnccording to StJolm, pp. 542-43. Compare nlso t he amithC'Sis of secular ruk and God$ powC'r that underlies t he court tales of Danid 3 and 6, the Maccabe.m martyrdoms as wdl :tS Josephus' story about the' demolition of H erod•s eagle Qosephus, lKitr 1.648-655: 2.5-7;
Am. 17. 148-164). on which sec \ ':tn HentC'n, MnrcabMJI Martyrs. pp. 10- 14: Idem . "Ruler or Cod? The OC'molition ofH«od's Engle'," in J. Fotopoulos (cd.), Nrw Tt-ltnmmr nn.d &rly Christiall Lirrratun: i11 Gr«o-Roma!l Gmuxr: Studies i11 Honor ofDavid E. Am.- (NovTSup 122; Lciden: Brill, 20061, pp. 257-86. ~"1 C f. similar "miscommunications,. in John I 8:35-36 (PibtC': "\'(that ha\'e you done?,.
Jesus: ..My kingdom is not from t his world ... j; 18:37-38: 19:9-10.
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including Pilate's, ultimately derives from God." At least for the moment, Pilate goes along with th is rad ical redefinition of t he power relations involved.
Paradise Now ) will finish my d iscussion with.• perhaps, a rathe-r extreme come.mpo# rary document, the movie Pflmdise Ntnv (2006). l'dmdise Norv, by the Palestinian· Dutch d irector Hany Abu-Assad, is a movie about the final days of two young Palestinian males, Said (Kais Nash if) and Khaled (Ali Suliman ), who have been dose friends since their childhood." They have agreed to perform a suicide mission in Israel. The m ovie focus~s o n the martyrs' action, including the final preparations." Khaled decides at the very last moment to step out of the operation. Said, however. proceeds with h is mission and u ltimately b lows himself up on a b us in Tel Aviv, although the realization of this act and its deadly consequences arc not actually shown. The. movie is qu ite obviously cont roversial likely intentionally so. But it is ncvenh cle.ss an int riguing text. because1 astonishi ngly, it succeeds in creating some u nderstanding of th ese sui# c.ide bombers and their motives. At rhe same time, t he movie offers a rad ical criticism of this kind of self-sacrifice. It downplays t he ro le of religion -as motivation in several scenes, including a rid iculing of the martyrs' testam ent recorded on vidco."9 Their deed turns t hem into
~ BaJTC'tt. Gospel aft·ording to
5I jolm, pp. 542-43.
~ Augusrus Fil m. HaariC'mJWarnt'r l ndt'pendent Pictures, Burbank: 2006.
""'i { use the term "matt")'f,. here' bec.:msc the movie constructs Said and Khalcd as ma rt}'TS, but it is obvious that for many they ai"C' terro rists, not man yrs. This distinction depends upon tht' diffcTence herween "insidt't and "outsidC'r,. perspC'Cti.\·es and their respo::ti\'C' viC'ws concC'rning rht' nexus o f martyrdom and violcncC'. SC'C' my '"Inter· net Martyrs and. ViolencC': Victims and/or Perpetl".nors?,. in J.J. BC'kkenkamp and Y. ShC'rwood (cds.), SannifoJ Aggmsion: L~g,ui~s of Bihlical aud Post-Bibliml Vm-.1bu/arin of Violma (Tht' Biblt' in the Twenty First Ct'nnuy 3; London: Continuum,
1004). pp. 193-2 12. ""~ Two dialogues with dtt'ir ~cruiter also highlight tht' artificiality o f Islamic rdigion as the motiv.tting factor fo r th C' martyrs. In onC', thC' recruiter asks whcthC'r the mar· t)'TS are re.tdy fo r tht'"ir act; onC' martyr responds: "Yes, with God's hdp... The cam t'ra zooms in on the f.tcC' of tht'" r«ruiter, and h ighlights tht' man•s disbelief. Anotht'r d i:l·
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barbarians fo r most, but still they are depicted as very human, with their fears, love and clumsiness. I will focus o n the beginning and the end of the movie, which together form a diptych because of the repetitions and analogies that can be illum inated with the help of the concept of barbarism."' The telling firs t scene of the movie takes lc.ss than ninety seconds. It shows how a fragile young Palestinian woman, Suha (Lubna Azabal), crossc.s a chcckpoinr before entering the Palestinian territoric.s. Later
on we learn that she is the daughter of a famous martyr. Suha approaches the checkpoint on foot and the camera dosdy follows her steps. When Suha approaches the officer who checks her identity card and luggage, the soldier watches her closely, keeping eye contact with her as much a.s possible. The next moments arc visualized alternating between medium dose-ups and dose-ups of Suha and the soldier, with doseups that focus on the ID and the luggage in between them.•• There is no music, nothing is said and the audience o nly hears the no ises made
by the wind or the pieces of Suhas luggage when they arc taken out. The series of alternating (medium) close-ups of both persons focusing on their minimal body language suggests that the soldier can make or break Suha. The soldier is fully in control: he has his weapon close at hand, while one of his comrades keeps Suha within firing-range throughout the entire interactio n.
Iogue concerns the question of what happens with the m:lrt)'I'S after their act, and the rcxruitcr says that two .,_ngds will come to fetch them and bring them to he.wcn. Said expresses his doubt.s ~bout this. ThC' most st"rious deconstruction o f the entire martrrdom ~\Ct comes fro m Said's girlfriend Suha. whose f.ltht'r Abu Azz:.1m i.s a f.lmous Pal· esrinian martyr, but who c.!e:trly states that there i.s no God and convincingly argues in a dialogue wirh Said that the suicide bombin~ are counter-productive to the Palestinian c-.ase. 6111 O n the beginnings and endings of movit"s, S{'(' E. Neupert, 7h~ Em/: Nnrmtion nnd Clomr~ in tlh" Cin~mn (Dt'troir: Wayne State University Press, 1995); D. Bordwell, 1ht \li'ny Hollywood Tr/ls It: Story and SfJ·I~ iu Modt'm Movi~s (Berkeley: University of Californ ia Press, 2006}. 411 :\ medium dose-up fr!lmes the human body from the cht"st up, a d~ up o f a hum:ln person focuses on the h(':ld or one o f the other mt'mlx-rs: D. Bordwell & K. Thompson, Film An: An bltrodiu·tiou (New YorJ.: fvfcGraw-Hill, 5th edn, 1997), p. 238.
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The c m ire c rossing is shown from Suha's pe rspective and the sold ier is ••the barbarian o thcr."6 :: The power dynamics involved in this border
crossing arc highlighted by the. f.tct that there is no dialogue between Suha and the soldier, who is constructed as the o ppressor. The crossing takes place in silence. This verbal non ..communication confirms noc o nly the binary o pposition lx:twccn Suha as a Palestinian woman and the sold ier as an Lsrad i, buc also their o pposite power positions as abs~
lutdy dominant and utterly dependent. Their roles, however, become slippery through the behavior of the soldier. The non-verbal communication is dear enough. It implies, in combination with the soldier's arrogant attitude, that it is problematic to sec the soldier as the repre...
scntativc of the civilized in this silent th•-lt-the. For the soldier, Suha must be the barbarian, be ing a Palestinian woman, but his behavior suggests othe rwise. "'fV.-o details are im portant in this connection. W hen
the soldier returns Suha's I D. the camera turns 90 degrees to the space between them so that the audience gets a close up of what happens with the ID. Suha tries to g rab her ID, but the soldier q uickly lifts his hand so that she misses it before he eventually lets her have it. This is humiliating fo r Suha and d early confirms the dominant position of the sold ier. Next, the two stare at each ocher again and we sec a close ..up of
the soldier's face. He docs not say anything, but suddenly nods his head in the direction of the territo ries. Now the audience scc.s the pcnctrat..
ing gaze of Suha, fixing her eyes on the soldier. and she seems to nod slightly in acknowledgement before she walks to her taxi. Suha undergoes the procedure of the crossing witho ut any comment.
She remains silent until she meets her fellow Palestinians. The taxi d river who asks whether she is traveling to Nablus is the first human voice we hear in the movie . There is no power reversal between the civilized and
the barbarian duringSuha's crossing, but one could argue that she gai ns a mo ral victory in this scene because of her dignified behavio r. However, from the soldier's perspective this would be ridiculous."
~
Suha is che so-CJJied "'foc.alizor" of chc: entire beginning of the movie:. For foc.ali:t..1tion. SCC' rvt Bal. Na"atology: burodstrrioJJ/(1/ht' Thtory ofNamlth't (lOromo: University ofToromo Press, 1985). pp. 100-15. '-» The sharp anti.thc:sis bc:twcen PJJcstinians and lsr:1dis in the movie implies th::at humani-x.ing the one automatically means dehumanizing chc other.
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The movie's end suggests a reversal of its beginning through several analogies. It shows the final moments of Said, who becomes a martyr fo r his insider community by his sclf~sacrifice. Most people will con· sider hi m a brutal suicide bomber-and not a martyr at all. The per· sonal mocivcs that bring Said to his act of terror include compensatio n
fo r the disgrace of his fitthcr who collaborated with the Israelis and was executed. These reasons do add another clement to the barbarism dis· cussion,
but I want to focus o n the final scene. I inte rpret this sce-ne of
less than a minute again through the lens of barbarism, focusing upon the communication between Said and his victims and the power dynam~ ics involved.
The movie depicts Said sitting in a public bus, d riving through one ofTcl Aviv's streets. He sits o n the back of the bus in his black suit and white shirt, with a haircut and his beard shaven off. The clothing of Said and that of the other passengers contrast with each other. The other passengers arc clearly Israelis and wear colored clothes, which empha· sizes the opposition between Said and them. Said's clothes arc ambig· uous. They could be associated with the clothing of an ultra-orthodox o r o rthodox national ist Jcw.M At the sam e time, Said•s outfit can also
be interpreted as the suit of a wedding guest, which may itself carry a double meaning. O n the one hand, for the other passengers on the bus, Said could plausibly be a guest going to a wedding. hence explaining why they do not suspect any danger. For viewers who arc famil iar with the tro pes o f Is lamic martyrdom, the suit triggers associatio ns with the martyrs' immediate transfer to hc.avcn and the company of the houris, the heavenly maidcn 1 there.6 .,
Said is sitting o n the left side of the bus, surrounded by soldiers and o ne or two civilians. The communication process ind udcs verbal exc.hangc.s as wdl as body language and cons tructs another concrasc "'' This as.sociario n is supported by an earlier scene in the movie rh:n ind udes the remark "you look like a settler."' €.$1 E. Kohlberg. Mrdirun/ J\;fmlim Vii'WJ on A1nrtpJom (Amsterd':lm: Koninklijke Ncxlerland5e Akademie \...ln \'(fetensch:.ppen, 1997), pp. 14- 16. Th< martyrs• ple.uure with the hourit is mentioned twdve time.s in the short Spiritu:.J Manual of the 911 1 attackers; see H.G. Kippenberg <1ndT. Seidensricker (eds.). Tlu• 9111 Handbook: AIIIIO· taud Trnuslntion and lmrrpri'lluifJII ofrlu Atfd(kal Spirhual i\>lamuli (London: Equinox, 2006), pp. 15-16, 21, 31, 55, 74-77.
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lx:twe
(.6}
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JAN WlLLEM VAN HENTEN
scngcrs arc chatting am ong t hemselves, but we cannot hea r what th ey arc saying, a nd t hey do not talk to Said. Said remains silent and looks straight ahead of him. Both "sides," the refore, comp letely ignore each othe r; the martyr in spr n:mains passive a nd silent fOr t he moment, bu t the audkncc knows what is coming. Said remains staring during h is last seconds, which we, t he audience, share with him, b uc we do not hea r or sec what he thinks or feels wh ile his Israeli targets arc chatting around h im. Although t he very last moment, the explosion, is not shown, the fi nal scene suggests, ncvc.nhdcss, t hat Said succC"cds wit h his mission. The ga p of the blank a t the end of t he scene implies, from Said S perspective, that the roles of victims a nd pe rpetrators arc reversed by Said's act. Through h is self-sacrifice, Said fi nally t riumphs over h is Israeli enemies. It cannot be coincidence that almost all of th em a re sold iers!' The soldiers d ie together with h im an d become t he victims o f h is martyrdom. But this victory is dcconstructcd at the same time by the: movie: it is neither shown, nor i.s it cdebratcd . ln.stc.ad, there is just a blank, which can be interpreted in several ways. The ligh t of the b lank screen may allude to the martyr's transfe r to heaven, bu t t he audience knows because of previous scenes that Said himsdfdoubrs whether heaven exists.
C onclusion This article applies t he concept of barbarism to analyze th e power dynamics involved in the interactio ns between c-he martyrs and their o pponents in various con texts. I have attemp ted ro show rhat barba· ri.sm is a useful lens for illu minat ing t he commun ication- o r rather rniscommunication-bc rwce-n marty r an d oppon<:nt. Barbarism nor o nly h ighl ights the strangeness of rhe opponent, t he barbarian other, b ur also foc uses on rhc p rocess of comm u n icat ion between the sup~ posed civil ized and t he barbarians, and th ereby fo regrounds the powe r dynamics between the two grou ps.
The bus .sce-ne repeats an e3rlier scene when Said decid es to Ic-c :t bus pass bec-.1use there are children on board.
681
MART'\'Rl>OM, Jt!SUS' PASSION AND BARBARlSM
259
All three examples discussed in this contribution, the martyrdom of the Maccabcan mother and her seven sons, Jesus' passion, and the selfsacrifice of Said in Pnrddisr NOw, confirm that the nexus of commun ication and power dynamics is an important aspect of martyrdom, across
different cultural contexts and periods. Barbarism illuminates the particularities of the communicatio n process lx:-tween martyrs and their opponents, and points, in various ways, to a reversal of powe r between the two. The outcome of the interactio n process. with the reversal of the power relations, leads to the empowc.rment of the martyr, whether in the present, posthumously, or in the case of Jesus in the context of
an eschatological time-frame. The martyrs bri ng about a defeat of their o pponents. immediately o r in the anticipated future. Barbarism also
makes us aware of the fact that the roles and idcntitic.s of the martyrs and their opponents can become ambiguous during rhc martyrdoms: at the start, the martyrs arc constructed as the barbarian others from
the perspective of their opponents, but as victims of the barbarian oppressor /Tom the perspective of the martyrs' in-group. D uring the process of marty rdom, the multi~layercd contrast between ('the ch•i#
liu:d" and "the barbarians'' can become blurred, especially if the martyr resorts to violence. The vic.tims may ultimately become perpetrators
whose hands arc stai ned with blood like those of the. perceived oppressor, as Pnmdisr Noru shows. Pnmdisr Noru differs !Tom 2 Maccabees and the [>assion Narratives by presenting conflicting imerpretations of the
act of martyrdom . The blank scr<en at the end invites the audience to make up its mind about SaidS act. Barbarism invitc.s us to rethink mar# tyrdom.
Select Bibliography Ando, CliftOrd. !mprrial !dndogyo11d ProvillcinlLoJnley i11 tiN' Roman Empi~. Berkdey: Univctsity of California Press, 2000. Arendt, Hannah. On Violence. New York Harvesr, 1970 . Avalos, Hc:cfor. Fighting \VOn{.r. 1hr Origim oj'&ligious Violm«. Amherst: Prometheus, 2005. Barr, David l., cd. 7h~ R~n/iry• ofApomb'Psr: Rlmoric nnd !'t!litia iu tiN B(J()k ofRrwlntion. SBLSympS 39. Adanu: Society of Bibliatl Lircrarure, 2006. Bauer, \'<'.alter. " Das Gcbot dcr Feindesliebe und d ie alrcn C hristen." Pages 2.43--44 in Aufiiiru mrd klt'iur SrJ,rifrm. Edited b}' Georg Stre-cker. TUbingcn: f\·{ohr SiC'bcck, 1967. Rrpr. from Zl'itrrhriftfiir 71xologir mrd Kirch.t 27 (19L7). Baum an. Richard A. Crimt' and Prmislmum ;, Audrm Romr. London: Routledge, 1996. BC."k.kC'nkamp, Jonncke ~nd Yvonne ShC'rwood, eds. Smmificd Aggrmiou: Ugadrs of Bibliml a11d Pott Bi!Jii~td Vornbrtlarirs of Violma. JSOTSup 400. Bible in the Twenry-First Century 3. London: T. & T: Clark, 2003. Bd Jinger, Charles K. 9
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- - - . Apornlypridsm in tiJr Dt>ad Sra Sn·olls. london: Routledge, 1997. - - -.. "The Zeal of Phinehas. the Bible, and the legitimation of Violence." Jounw/ of Bibli
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Gagc.-r, John. Ki11gJom nnd Gmummit)'. Englewood Cliffs.. NJ: Prentice Hall, 1975. GaugC'r, J.-D . .,Ocr 'lOd des VC"riolgC'rs•: Obt"rlegungC'n zur Historizitit cines Topos,'" joumalfor tht> Sf11dy ofjudaimt 33 {2002): 42-64. Gibson, E. Leigh. and Shdly Matthews, C'ds. Violmc~ intht' Nrw 7i:stammr.. Edinburgh: T. & T Clark. 2005. Gillxn. Cary. .. Ronun Propaganda and Christian Idcmity." Pages 23.3-56 in Ctmuxtunlizing Aru: Lukau Nnmuiw and Grt'arRomau Disamru. EditC'd by l Odd 1\-nnC'r and Caroline V. Stichde. SBLSympS 20. Adanta: SociC'ty oi Biblical Liter:tturt', 2003. Gilmour. ?v1ichad J. "'Delighting in the Suffo-ing of O thers: E:trly Christi:m Schadm/mtdt'and the Fu nction of the Apom&pu ojPt'lt:r."' Bul/niu for Bib/iml R('Jcttrrb 16: I (2006}: 129-39. G underson, Erik "'The Ideology of the Arena." Classicnl Amiquisy 15 ( 1996): 113-5 1. H~un mt'rton- Kdly. Roben G., ed. lfiokm Origim: \V'alt..r Brtr!un) Rmr Girard, and jonatlum Z Smith 411 Ritual Killi11g and Culmml Fomuuio11. Stanford: St:.lnford University Press; 1987. Hanis. \'(filliam V. Restmini11g Ragr: 71" !tkolog)'O/AugrrComrol in Clas;ical Amiquity. Cambridge: Harvard Uni\'crs.ity Press, 2004. Himmdtarb, Manha. 70un ofHr/1: An Apocalyptir Form i11 jtutisl!nud Christian Litrm· un·~. Philaddphia: Univt"rsity of Pconns)'lvania Press, 1983. Homer-Dixon, Thom:u F. Environmmt, Smrdty, (llld Violmcr. Princeton: Princeton University Prt:ss, 1999. HorowirJ., Elliot. Rtcklns Rite~: Purim ami tlu Lrgary ofJnvis/, Violmrr. Princeton: Princeton Uni\·ersity Press, 2006. Ja.ssen, Alex P. .'\1tdiating rhr Divinr: Prophecy a11d Rewlation in six Dt:.ul Sea Scrolls nnd ~rOfld Ti:mplc judaism. STDJ 68. leiden: Brill, 2007. Ju('rgcnsmcycr, i\·fark Trrror in t/,e Mind of God: 71Jr Global Risr o/Rrligious Violmu. 3rd cd. B«kdcy: Uni\·crsit)' of Calitornia Press, 2003. Lccmans, John, Wendy i\·fa)'tr. J>auline AJicn. and Boudewijn Dchandschuttcr, cds. ...Lrt us Die rluu \\V "'")' Liw': Gr«k Homilirt OJI Chriuiau ,t-frmyrs from Asia Minor. Pidatinr and Syrin c. AD 350-AD .f50. london: Roudedgt", 2003. Levinson, Joshua. "Tht" Athlete of Piety: F.n.aJ Fictions in Rabbinic Literaru ~." Tnrhiz 68 (1999): 6 1-86 (liebo<w).
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1999. Schwarn, Regina. 11Jr Curu ofCain: 1hr Violmt Lrgmy of,\lollothrism. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1997. Schwartz, Seth. lmpaia/ism (IJidJrwi;h Sorirsy, 200 He£ I.IJ 640 u_ Princeton: Princeton Uni\•er.sity Press, 2001. Scott, James C. Domination and rhr Aru ofRNisuma: Hit!dm 71-imscripts. New Ha\'en: Yale Univcrsity Press, 1990. Shaw, Brem...Judicial Nightmares and Christi:lll Memory." JoumalofEnrly Christian Studirs I I (2003): 53:\-63. Solhuna, R:ljj .l. "'War and Violence in rhe Ideology of the Qumr.1n Community." P.1ges 34 1-.52 in Vrrbum rs Cnlnmus: Srmitir :md &lnudStut!i~s i11 Honour ofd,rSixtirth Birtlulay ofProjNsor 1i1pnni Hnrvi.dilrm. Edited by Hannu Juusola. Juha Laulainen and Heikki Paiva. Helsinki: Finnish Oriental Society, 2004. Stcndahl. KristC'r. " Hate, Non-retaliation, and love: IQS x, 17-20 and Rom. 12: L9-
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Index of Ancient Sources
Hebrew Bible.
7:5
7:9
GC"nes-is
6 Exodus 15:3 15: 17-18 20:2 20:5 20:22 23:7 32:8 36: I 36:3 39:32
45
3 32 186, 187 199 187 154, 156
199 37n87 37n87 37n87
leviticus
4 IS 18:3 19:4 I9: I 5 I9: I6 19: 18 23:36 25:2-3 25:55 26: I
126 156-57 149, 150, 156-58, 159 187 I 54-56 167 159 60 199 187 187
Numbers
4:33 4:35 4:39 4:43
37n87 37n87 37n87 37n87
8:11 8:24 I2:8 15:22-3 1 18:4 I8:13 I8:2 I 18:33 19:9 19:35 25:2-3
37n87 37n87 37n87 37 202 126 37n87 168 37n87 37n87 37n87 60 199
OC'utcronomy
4:19 6:4 6:4f. 6:5 I I:27f. 12:2 12:30 13:10 13:16ff. 17:3 18:10-1 I 19 I9:15 20:15-18 23:2-3 27:15 3 1:10-13 Joshua 22:27
200 198 187 199n50 187 187 187 187 187 200 157 I55 153, 155, 156
4 35 187 61
37n87
266
JNOt!.X OF ANCIENT SOURC ES
31
87
Pro\·crbs 9:2 II : 13
2 S3mud 7: II
33
lamentations
I S:lmud
I Kings 8:33 8:35
188 188
185 167
I :5
226
Estht-r
208
D.mid ls.1.iah 22:37 24: 17 28:9- 11 33: 14 53 53:7 53: 12
127 28 195, 197 58 130 130 127, 128, 136
Ezcokid 40:3 40:5
163 163n31
Zechariah 2:5 14: I
25 30
162 62
MaJachi I: I0 Psalms 2: 1-2 41 69:9 88: 12 135: 15f. 11 5:3 11 5:4 116:1 5
6
208 236. 246 247 n36 236. 246
7:9
64
7-12 9 12:2 12:2-3
208 246 226 208-9
Ezra 7:25
6 1n53
Nehemiah
Habakkuk 1:5 2: 17
1-6 3 3:13-18
29
33 198 I I0 226 187 198, 199n50 187 185
8:1-8 10:30
61 37n87
I Chronicles 28:13 28:20 23:24 23:25 23:28 23:32 25:6
37n87 37n87 37n87 37n87 37n87 37n87 37n87
2 Chronicles 21:33 24:12 24:17-25 24:21 24:23-25 35:16 35:20
37n87 37n87 130
l:lO 131 37n87 37n87
267
JNOE.X 0 1: ANCI ENT SOURCES
Scptu-agi•tt (LXX)
7
Psalms 113( 11 4):1
239nl0
Isaiah 53: 12
127
Ezckid 21:31(36)
239nl0
Habakkuk
I:5
25n45
Hd>""' Bible Apocrypha & P.scudcpigtapha
I Enoch 27 27:3-4 37-71 48:9 56:8 90:28-29 9 1: 13
67 67 66 66,67 66 34n75 34n75
I Maccabcxs 1:24-27
208 16
2 Baruch 32:3-4
34n75
2 Macc3btts 2:2 1 4-9 4:9- 15 4:25 5:22 6-7 6: 1- 11 6:7 6: 18 6:2 1 6:2 1-28
211)...11 239nl0 239 245 239nl0, 240 239nl0,240nl4 236 245 246n33 242 242 247n36
7:1 7:2 7:3 7:'1-5 7:6 7:7 7:7-10 7:8 7:9 7:10 7:11-12 7:13 7:14 7:14-16 7:15 7:16-17 7:18-19 7:19 7:21 7:21-23 7:24 7:24-40 7:25 7:27 7:31)...38 7:31-36 7:36-37 7:39 7:42 9:1-28 9:5 9:6 9:28-29 I0:4 13:9 15:2 15:3
3 Maccabee.s 3:24
237. 242-46, 247n36, 250 242,244 243, 244. 151 244 243,244 130 244,247n37 244,246 244 246 244,247n37 246 244 130,246 209 244 246 246 130, 209 246n33 245 245 245 250 245 246,250 130,209 250 244 242, 246n33 209.217 246n33 246n33 246n33 239nl0 239nl0 239nl0 239nl0 239nl0
268 4 Maccabees
5 6:5 6: 10 6:9- 11 6: 12-23 8: 1-9:9 9:9 9:24 9:32 I0: II 10: 16 10:2 1 II :3 11 :23 12: 12 14: 12 14: IS 17:9- 10 17: 11-16 18:5 18:22
JNOt!.X OF ANCIENT SOURC ES
2 10- 11 247n36 250n45 197 250n45 247n36 247n36 130.209 209nl5 130,209n l5 130, 209n 15 209nl5 209nl5 130, 209n l5 130, 209n l5 130, 209n 15 209nl5 130. 209n l5 236 235 130, 209n 15 130
Apocalypse of Baruch (Erhiopic) 72-73 2 12-13n24 Apocalypse (Vision) of Ez.ra 2 11
4
2 14-15
2:45 2:4~7
2:154-173 2:174-175 2:252-310 2:286-296 2:312 2:444 35 3:36-74 3:516 3:528 5:28-34 5:96 5:132 Testamem of Moses
9:1-7
Tobit 14:5 Wisdom of Solomon I: 16-3:9 2 2:19 2:19-20
3 3.10-19
AscC'nsion of1sliah 4:2- 14
2 16n38
CD 34n75
L..ltin Apocalypse of Elijah
212n24
~ttcr of Arisrea.s
122
Sibylline Oracles 1-2 2
240nl4
53n30 53-57,59
209nl4
34n75
127 128, 130 127-28 129 128 130
Dead Sea Scrolls
Jubile<s 1:26-29
53n30 53n30 53n30 53n30 53n30 52 53n30 53n30 6n39 216n38 238n8 238nS 2 16n38 240nl4 240nl4
1:4-5 I :7 1:12-13 2:4-5 2:6-7 2:7-8 4:14-18 4:14-19 5:6 6:11-14
28-29, 30, 37, 39-40 40 40 40 40 40 40 28
33 28n58 29
269
JNOE.X 0 1: ANCI ENT SOURCES
IQS
CD Com.
6: 13-16 11: 18-2 1
28n58 29n61
15: 15-17 20:22-23
36 28n58
IQ32
32n68
IQM 1: 1-2
14n3,34. 36-3S 35 14n3 26 34 35n77 26n49 36 37
1:2
1:6-7 2:6 3: 11 4: 1-2 7:2-3 7:3-7 7:4 7:9- 15 7: 10- 11 7: 12 I I:7-8 12:7-8 16: II 16:15 17: I 17:9 IQpHob 2: 1-3 2:3-4 2:5-6 2:5- 10 2: 13 2:6-9 7: 1-5 7:5- 14 8:8- 13 I I:4-8 11:17-12:6 12:3-4 12:7- 10
35nn
37 37 37 25 37 34 34 34
34 23.25,29-30 25n46 25n47 25 2.1 25n47 25 23 41 29n58 27n52 30 30 29
I: 17-18 2:15 3:13-4:26 3:13-15 3:17-19 3:18 4:13-14 4:14 4:16-17 4:18-19 4:2D-22 5:7-13 5:11-12 8:4 8:4-10 9:6 I0:19 11 :8-9
22-23. 24. 4 1-42 34 24n42 24 41 41 40 24 26n49 41 41 42 22 24 34 31 31 43 31
IQS. I: 12-13 2:5-8
36-37
2Q24
32
4QI6 1
26 26
36 36
S-10 iii 1-13
4QI69
3-4;) 1-13
29n58
4QI7 1 1-10 ii 19
4QI74 I + 3 ii I 1-2-+21 1-2 + 21 1-2 + 21 1-2+21 1-2-+21
i2 i2 i4 i6 i 6-7
1-2+21 ; 18-19
34 3 1-36 33 32 32 35 32-33 32 33
270
JNOt!.X OF ANCIENT SOURC ES
4Ql77 5-63
34
4Q255-264
22
Classical Authors A~schylus
4Ql66-273
28
Agnmmnum
IIQI9 29:7-10
441~42
4Q266 8 i 6-9 4Ql71 5 i 12- 15 4QMMT B 1-2 c 10 c 10-11 c 11-16 c 17-18 C26-28 C30 4Q491 4Q5 11 35 35 2-5
36
AuIus Cdlius Attic NigiJts 1.26
32n6S
86
110
29n61 20-24,27-28, 30.39 21 2 1,39 24 23 24 39 39 37n88
Cicero lh iuvmtiotu rlmorica I 80--81
2.40.116 2.40.116~ 1. 1 21 2.43. 115~4. 1 28 2.47. 138~8. 1 43
181 nl 7 181 nl 9 181 n20 181 n21
2.52 185 Tmculmuu ditplltntitmes 2.41 46n3 HC"rodoms
2.57
238
HomC"r
36n80 31
4Q554 3 iii
35
4Q554-555
32n68
5QII
22
5QI2
28
5QI5
32
6QI5
28
IIQI8
32n68
!lind 8.267 JosC'phus Comm Apio11nn 1.58 1.116
238
239nl0 239nl0
Amiquitfltnjudaicae fJrwisiJ Antiquitin) 1.1 07 239nl0 4.12 239n 10 9.169 130n28 239nl2 15.30 15.136 239nl0 15.268 49n13 15.274-75 49n13 17.148-164 252n54 29n6 1 18. 18-19
271
JNOE.X 0 1: ANCI ENT SOURCES
Brllum judaimm (f~wis/, \YoUr)
1.648-6)) 2.5-7 2.;67 7. 132-157
252n54 252n54 l3nl 63n61
Livy
1.3-8 22.57 29. 10-11 29. 14
231n79 54n32 54n32 54n32
Minucius Fdix Onnvim
10.5
72
60
Scnce1 De clmmlfid
1.21.1 2.3.1
141 141
01: im
1.6.1 1.6.1-2
46n3 74n99
27
59
Tacirus Agricola
239nl0
Dr opijidq mundi
128
; 1.18
Sucronius Gnius
Philo Dt! mutrlliour nomimmr
36
Sailusc &llum raMiinar
30
86
Ammle-s
239nl0
1).44
74
Quod omuis prolms libtr sit
78
13nl
Plato Corgias
473c 477a
74n99 74n99
Laws
735d-736a
74n99
Pliny Namml Histqry
9.62
63n59
Plutarch M:m:~llm
3
54n32
Quintilian /mr.itutiq omtqrin
2. 15.7 7.6
91 180nl6
Nc.w Testament r-.·fanhcw
5:3 ) :10 ) :12 ) :28 5:34 5:38-42 5:38-48 10 I0:17 I0:21 10:32 10:34-37 10:39 13:41-42 13:49-50 18:23-35 18:41 22:13 22:37
198 187. 198 47 72 200 47 133 ISS 187 3. 188 188, 191 3 189 47 47 47 47 47 198, 199n)O
272
JNOt!.X OF ANCIENT SOURCES
.'\1arrhrtv Com.
24 26:39 26:53 26:57 26:59-68 26:6 1 26:6 1-62 26:63 26:64 26:67 27: 1-2 27: l l 27: l l-26 27:27-3 1 27:29 27:3 1 27:39-43 27:4 1
175, ISS 137 47 247n35 247n35 34n75 248 248 248,249 247n37 247n35 248n40, 249 247n35 247n37 247n37 247n37 247n37 247n37
M:uk
10: 18 13: l 14:32-42 14:53 14:55-65 14:58 14:6 1 14:6 1-62 14:62 14:6'!-65 14:65 15: 1-5 l 5:2 15: 12 15: 16-20 l 5: 18 15:20 15:26 15:29-32 l 5:3 1 15:32 15:39
200 10 l 94n42 247n35 247n35 34n75 248 248 248,249 248 247n37 247n35 248n40, 249, 250 248n40 247n37 248n40 247n37 248n40 247n37 247n37 248n40 248n40
luke 1:48 2:52 5:20 6:29-36 6:35-36 7:55 9:2'1-25 ll ll :47-48 ll :49-50 12: 10-12 12:51-53 12:52 22:18
22:25-30 22:54 22:63 22:63-65 22:63-71 22:67 22:67-70 22:68 22:68-70 22:69 22:70 23:1-25 23:3 23:8-9 23:9 23: ll 23:13 23:33 23:34 23:35-39 23:36 23:37-38 23:41-43 23:46 23:63-64
197 250n47 133 47 123 47 131 131-32 131 123, l24nll 3 250n47 250n47 250n47 247n35 247n37 247n37 247n35 248n40 249 249 250 I 21
248n40 247n35 24Sn40 248n40, 249 249 247n37 124 124 120-25, 127. 128, 135. 137. 138. 139 247n37 247n37 248n40 142 121 249n43
273
JNOE.X 0 1: ANCI ENT SOURCES
j ohn I:49 2: II 2: 13-22 2: 14- 15 2: 16- 17 2: 19
2:2 1-22 2:23 2:24 3:2 3:3 3:5 4:54 11:47-48 11:50 18: 13-14 18: 19-2 1 18: 19-23 18: 19-24 18:2 1 18:2 1a 18:22 18:28-40 18:28-19:16 18:33 18:33-37 18:33-38 18:34 18:34-37 18:3)-36 18:37 18:37-38 18:39 19: I 19: 1-5 19: 1- 16o 19:3 19:7- 15 19:9-10 19:9-11 19: 10-11
250n49 104 99 107 llln27 34n75, 113 llln27 Ill, 11 4n33 III III 250n49 250n49 II I 113 113 247n35 251 251 247n35 251 251n51 247n37 247n35 247n35.25 1n51 248n40, 249, 252 250n49 251 252 252 252n55 252 252n55 250n49 109 247n37 247n35 248n40,250n49 248n40 249n43,252n55 251,252 252
19:12 19:15 19:19-22
250n49 250n49 248n40, 250n49, 251n51
Act5
3:12 3:14-17 13:27 5:1-20 5:41 6-8 7:51-52 7:56 7:58-8: I 7:59 7:60 17:30-3 1 18:6 22: 19
198n48 122 122 47 198 13 1 13 1
121 132 121 11 7, 121. 138 123 250n47 132
Romans I:25 5:3-5 8:35 8:37 12 12:17-2 1 12:18-2 1 12:20 13:4
200 196. 197 78 78 134 135n35 85 85, 135 78
I Corinthians 2:2 2:16 3 3: I 5:1-5 8:4-13 13 13:8-13 13:12 15:26
97 198 195 195.197 85 65 85 202 202 85
274 1 Corinthiam Com. 15:32 15:54 15:54-55 15:55 15:57
16:22 2 Corinthians 1: 1-2:1 3 1-4
JNOt!.X OF ANCIENT SOURC ES
78 78 85 78 78 85
95, 97,98 197
2: I
97
2:4 2:5-10 2:6-10 2: 13 2: 14 2:24 3: 1- 18 3:6 4:7 4: 17 5 5:5 7:5 7:5-16 7:8 7: 12 I0: I 10: 1-6
78.95
10: 1- 13:10 10:2 10:2-6 10:3 10:4 10:4-5 10:6 10:8 10:9 10: I0 10: I I
97 97 85 78 78 88 176n6. 180n l6
92 197 84 84 78.85 95, 97,98 79,90 97 87,90 8, 78, 79. 80-81. 85,9 1,92 78, 84,85 88 79.89 80.88 88 88 88 90,97 79 78, so, 87,9194.97 90
:3 :4
:23 :6 :6-7 :12-2 1a :13-15 :21 :21h :21h-12: 10 :21h-12:13 :23 :23-29 :25 :26-29 :26-35 :29 :30 2:5 2:7 2:7-8 2:8-10 2:9 2:10 2:11-13:10 2:15 2:16-17 2: 17 2:19 2:21 3:1-2 13:2 13:3 13:4 13:9 13:10 14:8
97 97 97 78 78 91 97 93 91 80,91,97 93
n
94 87.92
92 93 93 93.94 93 78 94 94 93 93.95 95.97,98
96 95 95 95, 96.97 97
97 96 93 93 93 95. 96.98 78
Galati.ans
I :8 I :9 6:10 6:17
85 85 84 92-93
275
JNOE.X 0 1: ANCI ENT SOURC ES
I Th<ssaloni:tns
5:8
175 78
19:11-16 19:20 20:11-12
63 65 64
I Timothy
I:7 2:2 3:6 4:7 4:8 6:3 6:5 6:6
137 198n48 198n48 198n48 198n48 19Sn4S 198n48 198n48 19Sn48
Titus
I: I
198n48
Hebmv.s
5: 12
195, 197
I PetC'r
2:9
Apoc3l)'p« of P:tul
34-36
9:2 9:4 13 Rainer frJgmem
212n24 215 214 68-69 211 2I I
74 215-16
Othe-r Ancient & Medieval Christian Authors/W'orks Apoc3lypse of Gorgorios ( Erhiopic) 86 2 12n24 Augustine ConftJJiom
198n48 198n48 198n48
7.8
73
Comra rpittulam l~trmmiani
1.8.14 1.10.16
74 73
Dr civitmr Dri
Revelation
2: 14 2:20 2:23 6:8 8:9 9:7- 10 9: 15 13:11- 18 14: I0 14:14 16:1- 17 17:7- 14
74
198
2 PetC'r
1:3 1:6 3: II
Pseud
Apoc-.ll)'pse of Pc:tc-r 8
2 Timothy
3:5
Nc-.w Test:uuent Apocrypha &
65 65 70, 72 62 62 62 4 216n38 70 62 65 216n38
20.19
216n30
Dr diwrtis quMstionibm adSimpliriam""
53.2
74
Episrln
95.3 153.17
74 74
Commodian lmtmrr.ioJU!
41
216n30
276
JNOt!.X OF ANCI ENT SOURCES
C)•prian Dr bono patimtin~
16 Didascalin 6 25
134 136 125nl5, 136
Hippolyrus Dmumsrrntio a.dvmus }t~thtun 3.20.4 124n 14 Hisroria pmsionis Domi11i f. 55' 136n37 lrt'nac-us
Ephr<-m Ommlt'llltuy on Tiuia11i Diatrmmm 10. 15 121 2 1.3 12 1 2 1.1 8 12 1 Epiphanius Pnnariou 78. 14.6
Adl~rms haernrs
3.12.13 138 3.16.9 121. 138 3.18.) 121. 138 3.185 133-34 139n40 4.36.1 Epi&ixis tou aponolikost kirygmaws 69 139n40
138 Jerome
Euscbius Agttinst Hrrctirs
4 4.28.4
139 139
HisUJrin «rlniastim
2.23. 16 5.2.5 6.2.6 6.28 6.28. 1
121 138 194 193 195
Eust.nhius of An tioch
Dr mgtts!Yilll)'tiJOs 1.3
200n54
George.' of Pisidia Dr t'>:~ditiout' Pt'rsim
1.1 -34 3.385-399
Epist!r 120.8.2
136
John Mahhs ClmmogmpiJi,t 15.15
220-21
Justin Martyr
Smmd Apology 5 lactantius DitJinr lmriturt'/ £H monibus ~rwrutorum
45n2 217n40 217
Origcn
233n84 233n84
Homiliar iu Lt:t,ifimm
2.5
128
£o.:homuio nd marryHaimo of Auxcrrc Gmmmmzry· ou lwial!
53. 12
rmm
128n24
2 4 5 6
196--97 196n46 198 19Sn47, 199n49 199n50, 200
277
JNOE.X 0 1: ANCI ENT SOURCES
b:JJOrtatifJ ad mnro·riron Com.
7 13 28 41 42 46 )I
200 202 199n)O 194n43 194n43 200,20 1 20 1n56
Pni PnsciM
43.33-36
12)nl)
1.13 2.1 2.1-2.-. 2.2-14 2.21>-1).6 2.10 2.13 3.1-8.8 7.1 7.1-2
75 PolyCJrp Philippians
12.3
139
Sl~p!Jerd ofHemms
I: I
7l
1Cnullian Agnimt iWnrcion
4. 16.4 4.42.4
135 135n36
Apologetirrmr
2 2.4 22. 1- 12 23.5-6 )0. 13
191n41 18Sn36 45n2 45n2 184
Dr s~ctnculis I
46
4-6 7 14-15 16 21 26 27.3 29 30 30.1-3
4), )2n28
45 46 46 46 46 71 46 66 46
&orpi11a (Srorpioll)
1.1- 13 1.5
186n33 184n31
7.7 9.1-11.3 9.3 9.8 9.9 0.4 0.9-12 I 1.1 1.4 1.4-5 1.4-8 1.5-7 2 2.1 2.1-14.3 3-14 ) .1 ).1-6 ) .2
5.4 ).7
S4n3 1, 191 8) 86n33 86n33 86n33 87 87 86n33 8) 8) 8) 8) 86n33 88 88 89 89 89 84 89 89 90n38 86n33 90 92 92.193 86n33 92 92 86n33 92 93 86n33
Theophanes the Confessor C!Jronqgrnphia 22 1-23 298-299 Roman Law
Cod,.· 7h.-odm;anus
16:18: IS
218
Nowl!.tr ComtiiiJtionr:;Jusrininni
146
219
278
JNOt!.X OF ANCIENT SOURC ES
Rabbinic. literature Mishnah, Tosdta
& Talmuds Mishnah Eruvin 5:4
4,9 (46b) 162 165
Ketubbot 5:3 9:5 9:7-8 Naz.tr 7:4 San!Jtdri11 3:7 7:3 Ta'tmir 3:8
151 164n36. 165n37 164, 165n37 152nl8
;,4 (29d) Srmhrdrin 1.4 (19c) 3,11 (2 1d) 4, II (22b) 7.3 (24b) T./nnit 3,10 (67a) 4,5 (69b) 4.12 (6b)
167n41 54-55, 148-49 166n40
49,52n28 151 164n36
Nazir
152nl8 154n22 150 2 12n27, 2 13 226n69 158n26 158n26
Yr-vamot
8:7
166n40
PalestinianTalmud Brmk!Jot 9, 1 ( 13b) Eruvin 5.3 (22d)
166n40 147n9 152nl 9
Bah)'lonian Talmud 17b 4h &vn Bmm 54a 168b &wn 1'-'lrtz.ia 83b
145 232n81 147nS 166n40 166n40 166
&tMQpmmn
Shnhbm 6 7
166n40 167n4 1 154n22 150
Jb,'Of!.tl, Zaml!
Tosefi:t
5: I Sanhedri11 8:3 9: II 13:4-5 13:5
151 nl3
}hmiiOI
17 ~18a
AIXIdah Znmh 2:2 Krtubbot 5: 1 9:3
166n40
Knuhbos
Giniu
4:3
Gittin
99b &mk!JOt 19a 32b 56a 61b En11'i" 21b 39b 57b 58 a 6 Sa
167n4 1 166n40 147n8 166n40 250n45 166n40 166n40
130n27 162n30 166n40
Ginin
2 12n27, 2 13
35a 54b 56b
162n30
56~57a
165n38 166n40 224n62-63, 226 226-27
279
JNOE.X 0 1: ANCI ENT SOURCES
14a
147n9
Knubh(lt
30a 54a 84b 87a
147n8, J60n28 J66n40 J66n40 163
M<"gdlah
15b
J66n40 J66n40 J66n40
I ~J
HagignJJ
147n9
23a 24o }~vamot
63b
J66n40
Minor Tractates, Midrash, Hclkhalot Literature & Hcb«W Apocal)•p.ses
A.t.'Ot de-.!Wbbi M1tha11 A
Ntdarim
20b
224n62 J66n40 A.t.Y)t de·Rnbbi Nathan B
Pnahim
87b
J66n40
224n62
7
QidJruhi11
JOb lOb-I Ia ?Ia
151nl3 J68n43 J66n40
R(lsiJ ha·SIJa!laiJ
17a
DmWIWIOJII)'
Rabb,J,
21
224n62
Ecclrsinsw RnbhaiJ
213n27
5:8
224n62,225-26
Snnlmlriu
9b J6b- 17a 22b 29a 31a 37b 42a
42b 52b 56a 65b 93b I l ib 17a Sl11zhbm 67a-b
15ln53 226n69 J66n40 J67n41 167 147n8, 154n22, 155n23. J60n28, 161 147n9 147 161 147n8 J66n40 147n9 147n9 J66n40
Gmrsis RabbnJJ
158n26
}01hun bm Levi Fragmmt
10:7 22:9 26:2 54:21
HtikiHilor. Rahbati {Sch~ ter, Sy11opsc zur HeldJalot·Liwmmr)
§§107-121 §§108-110 §§ 11 2-1 13 §§ 11 7-119 § 11 8 §§12()-121
228-34 230n78 230 231-32 23 1 229
Isaiah Fragmtm
212n25
sJJ~vu'ot
34a
212n24 154n22
Sotah
Sb
Lrvitiau RahbaiJ
147n8, J60n28
Taimit
17a
224n62 75 213n27 147n9
J66n40
6:5 20:5 22:3
147n8 224n62, 225n65 224n62
280 Lantt'tlft~tions
JNOt!.X O F ANCI ENT SOURC ES
Rnbhnh
1: 16
Sifrr Dr'llfmmomy
130n27
Mrkbilta de-Rabbi Yislmultf Masckhto 1)3n2 1 de-Kaspa 20 Numbers Robbnh 18:22
224n62
&siqta de-Rahlti Efitur 48 224n62 Pesiqta &-Rav Knhmw 24:3 226n69 26 224n62 58 28:3 &drr '0/am Rahbah
2 12
S
S.ftr Zrmbbahrl
40 307 321 322 328
14)n2 232n8 1 147n9 166n40 224n62
Sifrt Numbrrs 117
150 l)l nl .l-14
Siftr Zt11n 6:12 11 :26
152nl 8 166n40
Song ofSougr Rahbah I
1)2nl 9
Srory oftlJt Ttw Marry•rs130-32 38/40 232n81 7imlnmut, Huqm I
224n62
7/mlmma BuiN:r, Huqnt I 224n62
23 1 Yalqur Sl!im imi
Sifm Ah.-uei Mot 9 Qcdoshim 2:4
§933 1)7n24 167
227n70
MediC"Val Jc·wish Authon l\·{aimonides Mi;/mdJ TtmtiJ LrtwsoJSanlmlrill 18:6
25 I n51
Index of Subjects
I E•uKh, 66-68 2 Corinthian•• 8. 77-98. 176n6. 180n 16, 197 2 Macab«s, 130.208-9 .217.236-3 7. 239-40, 242-46. 247~37. 2~0. 259 4 Maccabtts, 130, 140. 197. 209- 11 , 23>-36,24 3n27,247n36.250n45
9111, "'· 77 Abel, 74-76, I)I Acts of the Apo$dn (New TcstlJTicnt book). 9.47, 11 7-19, 121-26. 13 132. 138. 141 -42. 144. 192. 198, 250n47. Srt 11/Jo Luke. Gospel of .~eschylus, 86 Ag~inst M~t.l't'i.~t.
IJ5
allegory, 9-10. 79n8, 89. 174-203. !i« A1s8 hcflllCncucic(s) I 06 Qa
Antioch"' IV Epipluna. 209.215,2 17, 235.242-4 3.246nJJ,2 51 anti-Jud.tism, 9, 122-23,21 9-23. !i« also :lnti·Scmic i1m anti-Semitism, ix. 22 1. Sa also anci· Judaism
Apocnlyp" of/h.,/, 214-15 Ap«a/ypvofJ>n,., 68-69.74.2 11 ;apocaJypcic litcntu" mel thoughc. 3-4. 4>-76. 193, 199n50. 207-16, 228: Byzantine c-na
J~ish. 223~
cognith·c
d issonancr- and. 47n8~ csch:trologic:ll
I"C\'cnge/judgmcnr in. 47, 70, 207-16: F.anusy of power :and violence in, 48, 68. 205, 234: holy v.·u- in. 80n8; nu.r· tyrdom :and, 209; origins of ...iolcMc in Ikad S
rijic texts arena(s). 7-8.45-76 .235. Su AHD sl>di.uon;; Ro.nu.n Empire, cutru~ of spec· uck of; \'O)'C'Uritm ARndt, H:tnn:ah, 82-84 Aristotle, 180, 193 Armilos, 231 Astcrius o( Ama~.a. 137-38 Augustine, 46n,l, 73-74. 79n6. ISOn I S•
216n39 Augustus. 49-50. 86n26, 87 ;uonemcm. 27nSl. 125n17.12 6. 128~
138 ll,,laam, 226-27 barl>arism, 10- 11 , 125nl6. 235-59 ll.u Kocnba r
cdibacy, 69-70 Cittro. 46n3. 181).81
Cla
11 8-20. 140-44
282
I NDEX OF SUBJ ECrS
Clement, 68n78, 193 c<>«c;on, 8, 62-65. 81-84, 9 I,
96
Cohen, Leonard, 174n 1 combat-.tm, I06 Constanrjne. 216-17.227
crucifixion, 46, 86, 92., 97, 99, I I4, 122-24, 136, 139. 142-43, 247n37,
252 culr(s), 55n32, 185, 198: of C hristian mo.rtyrs, 202n5S;. Chriscian rcfus..U • • • • • n » to JXl-M1C1patc m CI\'1C or pagan, 177-78, 184; impC"rial, 51-52,
64n62, IS4; of Jerusalem Tt'mple, 13. 15, 27-29, 36-37.6 1. I 14. Sual.w m:trtyr(.s) a nd martyrdom; sacriflcc; space (sacred); temple Cyn;c ph;losophy, 79, 86, 140. 193
Dead Sea Scrolls, 13-44,66-67, L35n35: 4QFiorilegium 14Q I74), 3 1-36: 4QIVHqsat Ma'asc Ha-l orah (4QMMT ), 20-24 .17-28,30,39: Damascus Document (CD), 28-29. 30, 37,39-40: Pesher Habakkuk ( IQpHab). 23-24.25, 29-30; Rule of the Community ( IQS), 22-23, 24,4 1-42; War Scroll IJQM), 14n3, 34, 36-38. S« also Q umran;
sectarianism
Did.ucali.1, I25, 136-38 disciplinary modd, 8, 8 1-82. 90-9 1, 96-98. Su a!J.IJ emancipator)' modd Egypt and Egypt;ans, 139, 156-57. 184n3 1. 187,212, 238 d oct o f God, 15, 38-4'\, 66, 68, 85. 198
Eliadc, Mircca, 100 El;;ah, 146, 212n24
t"mancipatory modd. 8, 82-&4, 92, 95. 97. Sl:t" also disciplinary modd C'mperor. S« Ro man empcror(s) cnC'mies: clemency toward one's, 144: in early Christia n litcr:uu~. 9, 63, 85,
106, 118-20; of God, 85; of" lsrad.'' 5. 13 1, 2 1), 2 I8, 224. 226-27; love of o ne's, 106, 13:~-36, 144; of mar·
tyrdom, 19 1: praycr of forgi\·eness lo r o n<'s, I 18-20, 127-28, 133-40; of Qumr.m community 14 n3, 16, 26, 27, 3 1, 33,40, 43-44; ofRome or Christian-Rome, 60n)O, 233:
retributive suffering of onC''s, 68, 85, 204-5,224-32, 258
Epiphanius, 138 eschatoLOS)'• 8, I95-96, 207 n9, 208-9, 21)-16: as colonial mimicry, 7-8, 10,45-76, 223-34; ;n D<Jd Sea
Scrolls. 7, 13-4-4~ and Jesus. 112, 134. 250n47, 259; in Lltc Antiquit)'•
10,217. 22~34. S~t>a/soAnrichrist; apocalyptic litC'rature and though~ hdl
Esscnes.. 13n I. 29n61 cx
exegesis. 5. 20, 23, 25, 148. 159, 173, 180n l5, 182, 186, 188, 19 1. 195, 200. Su abo hermcncurjc(s) lamasy, 47-48,55-56,66-68,75-76, 204-). 22;), 234. Stt a!Jq undn·
apocalypric litC'raturc an d thought: violence forgi\·cntss. &~ demenc)', Roman d iscourse of Gaius Caligula, 59 Grhnma or Gthim10m. Stt hdl GC'orgc of Pisidia, 133 Gcrh.s<mane, 136, 142 G;bbon, Ed""rd, 174-75, 179 Gibson, Md, 136 glad;ator(s), 4!)-50, 58, 60,6 1 Gregory I'll, Pope, 177n9
I NDEX OF SUHJ EC I'S
H:~m :m,
283
218. Srr a!Jo Purim Hnrris, Sam, 176 Hriklmlot Rabbnti, 228-34
132n30, 150-51, 152n l9, 156-57, 163, 213.218,226,229. 23 1 loudnioi. 9, 124-25, 132, 143
hdl, 52.68-69. 2 10-16,226. 228. 234. Su nlto eschatology
Jerome, 87, 136. 138
Herad iu.s, 222, 233 heretics:.nd hC'rcsy, 73, 76, 185, 189 .
226 hermencuric(s}, 2, 7, 176nS, 180nl ),
182-85, 196-97. 203: allegor;. cal, 175, 176n6. 176n8, 178-85, 189-9 1, 193, 194, 200-3:of H«ralism, 9-10, 174-203; rabbinic. 9-10,
145-73: of pass;v;ry, 9-10, 147-48, 158, 159, 162, 169, 171-73: of sectarian exclusivity. 2 1-26. ~e also allegory; exegesis~ PcshC'r litC'r.lture
Herod Ant;pas, 247, 248n40, 249 Herod rhe Great, 49n 13, 214-15, 239nl2 H itchC'n s, Christo ph«, 176 Holoc;au.st, 83. 145 Homer, 85-86
Jesus of Nazareth : acring in the name of. 85; :.scC'n sion of. 143n46; body of, 8, 112, 113, 11 4; compared with the' em~ror, 142; dying forgivcn<'S:S prayer of, 9, 11 7-44; marks o f. 93. 97-98; as modd of bC'havior, 92; muncction of. 85. I04, 113, 12.3; SC"Cond coming o r. 46, 174-75, 1S4,
187, 194, 202,248: rcach;ng< of, 3. 46-47,72, 132-36, 188, 189-90. 199-200: tempi<' in cident of. 8,
99-116: u;al of, 247-53 Judah ben Barcrah, 150-51, 157-58, 168-69 Judah ben Tabbo;, 153->6. 159-6 1, 169. 172 Jerusalem, I31 . Srr nlso undrr temple Ku Klux Klan IKKK), 83
idC'ntity. formation of. 5. 6-7, 15, 30,
40, 42-43, 65, 67, 139n39, 140, 206.220,236.242 imillltio Christi, 95, 133 imperial cult. Su undl.'r ruh
l..acrantius, 2 16-17 l..aw, the Qewish). Srr Tor:th In: talionis, 70,2 10 lo\'e: broth<'rly, I59: COC'rcion o r violence
impctialism: comempor.u y. 81. 83;
and, 78, 85, 95-97; God of, 117.
Roman, x, 9- 10, 17,45-76,86, 11 9, 125, 142-43.149,166, 172,205-6, 2 14-16,228, 230-3 1,233. S.ulso Roman Empire": Roman emperor(s} int<'rprc(ation. St't' hcnnenC'ut:ic(s) intifo1da, I 00 "'im roversionist ideology, 16, 22, 28, 40. Su also "rC"\rolutionist" ideology lrcn:.eus, 121, 133, 138-39 lsrJd (modern stateot), 5, II, 100.
253-58 Israel and lsrJdites (anciC'm ), x, ,3 • .5. 14.
28,3 1-33,39-40. 43,6 1n53,62,
I36: martyrdom :.s expression of. I97-98, 199n50: o f one's enemies.
85, 106. 11 7-20, 133-36, 139n39. 144; o f one's n<'ighbors, 106: in PolUJ's l cttr~. 78,85,95-97 lukr, Gospel of. 9, 11 7-44, 197, 247, 248-)0. S« nlso Act.s o f rhe AposdC'S
manHness, 8, 87-89,9 1,93-94, 110, 140 Marcion and marcionitism, 117. 118,
119n4,123, 135-36, 138 martyr(s) and martyrdom. :-:-xi. 72-73.
284 75. 11 7-18. 1.19-32. 145. 174-203. 211,21 5,2211-34. 23>-59: Christian, x, 9- 10, SJnJO, 72-73.7 5,98, 11 7- 18.125, 129. 132. 174- 203, 2 1I. 21 5-16.13 3: conrrmpor.uy,
IG-11 , 235, 25>-58. 259: cry of. 117-18, 129-32: cxhorut ion(s) to, 10, 178,1R4 n28, 193n4J, 194. 196, 198: Jslaoni<, II. 253-58, 259:Jesus as, 63, 129. 237, 246-53, 259: Jewish, 10, 11 7-18, 145. 209.228 -34. 23>-36. 246-47; Maeobean, 118. 130,209 . 211. 23>-37. 242-46, 247,250 , 251 .259: O dgen o n, 182-84, 193- 203: P«
I0, 47, 205-6. 120. 233-34
Mishnah , 54. 148-49, 151, I52n 18, 162. 164-66 motwlicism, 69-70 Moses, 126, 186-87
Necbuchadntzur. 207. 21 3 Nero, 74. 208. 215-16, 230. S.. •/so Antichrist
nonviolence, 39. 46, 106-7, 144 Oct.wian. StV- Augusrus Origen, 9-IO, 125. 128,182 -84, 193-203 othemess, 4, S 1-52. 67, 72, 8 1, 100-2, I 15, 241-42. 244. 255.258 -59
,..,.Jig Al>u•(film). 253-58 p.wi>i!J·· 9. 57. 134. 143-44. 14>-74, 258
P.tuion, the, 97. 114, 120,12S nl7. 126n20, 127- 28, 136, 142, 237. 246-53 .259 ll>ul ofTarsus, 8, 65. 78-98, 11 9, 122, 124. 129.134-35. 192. 19>-97, 202 JWX hmmkt, 86. 144 Pcshcr litcratuu , 2.}, 25-26, 29-30. Su a4o tJJTd(-r ~:ad Sc<.a Scrolls Phlll'.lOh. 207. 2 12 Pharisees, 105, 113. 132n30, 174 Pluwch , 110 pomognphy. 83. 98 postoJcrucnuulism. 81-83 pruyet(s) .3 1n65.94, IO!n5,2 01, 239: dominic:tl, 120. 122-23, 128. 137. IJ9. 144; of forgh-mess for t'n· <mics. 9. 11 7-44, 110nl9 . 118-20, 127-28. 133-40, S.. a/s•d<mency, Roman discourse of Purim, 218. Sr~a/JD Haman Q{U
Rabbi. s.. ;J>Mf- '""'"' R•bbi Aho, 58, 60-61 Rnbbi ElaLtt ben l>tr.lta, 1 45~6 Rnhbi Eleazar b. R. Yo.w:. 225
fUbbi Hanina ben 'fu~dyon, 173.229.
Ul-32 R"bbi lshnud. 229-3 1 Rabbi Joshua b<-n 1-'bn;,mi.lh, 162-63 R, bbi Judah. 148-SO, 153-54. 156. 158-59, 161, 167n40, 168-<)9, 17 1 Rabbi Mar, 157-58 Rabbi N..h,., 49-SO Rabbi Shimon b.u Yoh.t.i, 75-76 R:1hbi l 'Urfon, 152 Rng;an, Ron,)d, In n9 Rcn.., 231. S.. 4b. Rcnus retribution, 8. 10, 47, 56. 67. 85, 204-34. Su nlso vc.ngeancc-
INO~ Ofl SUBJECTS
Rcvdacion, Book oh 3--4, 45-76 "rc\•olucioni$t" idt'OIOS)'• 16-17,23, 26. 40, 43-44. S,t t~istf "'intro-.·c:nioniu" Kleology .Moric, 2, 16-17.44, 7)-76.. 78-79. 95,97,119 -20.129. 136, 139n39. 146, 148, 166, 170. 178-84, 185-87, 191-92. 196. 202,25 1; :.mti·Roman/imptrbl, 2 16, 22S; nurtUI, 8, 79. SOnS, 82-85, 88-91: of p,..;,;'J·· 9. 149nl0, 150-54. 163n61, 167, 169, 171-73: of.;.,. lencc, 7. II. 19, 23, 38,42, 44 RobertsOn, l'o11, 177n9 Roman Empire: -:~nimosity tow.u d. I0 , 26, 43-44, 53n30. 62n5<\, 208. 216. 223-24, 227-28. 230-34: culture of sp«=k of. 8. 4)-76.. 224-25; sov· emmml of. H-56.. 64, 160-61.166.. 172,207.2 10.2 19.228.24 3n26, 247: m;litot)' of. I 0, 14, 43-44, 51. 63, 68,70-71 , 86, 103, 107, I I), 124. 139.220: religious cn"ironmcnl of, 54n32, 177. 184,198-200; soc:i,l structuK within. S~52, 55-.59-60. 86.. 110, 183:-;ttue{s) of, 46n), 119. 128, 140-44. $tv alstt impcri~lism: Roman cmpc:J•or{s): Rome, city of Roman cmpci'Of($), x, 10. 46, 50-) 1, 59.62-65,7 0-71.75. 119, 140-43, 200.202.2 05-6. 208,2 14-17, 223-34. 5« •&•spmfic namn Rome. city of. 6}, 74, 141, 215, 224-25, 2,l0. 231 Romulus, 231. Srr also Remus
s,nhedrin, 11 3-14. 160, 187.247-5 0 ucrifice(s), 29n61. 31 n65. 45. 49, 54n32.65. 95. 101, 183n25.22 9. 5« •Is. cuh(s): manyrs md nurt)'l'• dom: temple "scarce roouroo" 1hc:or)'. 7, 15. 17-19, 27n52. 42-43
285
Scorpion (Srorpiau), 9. 184. 186n33. 191n40. 194 Scon,Jornes C.. 47nl3, 56-57.204 -5 scrib.lum. 19. 53. 120-23. 137-38 •ecurianum, 7. 13-44. 6'>-66.. 71. J32n30. s('(' .Jbo "imro\'C':rl:i oni.~l.. ideology, "~'olutionist'" ideology lrcn.eus, 121. U3. 138-39
sdf.-s;acri6cc. 5« m:myrs and nu.rtyrdom Sc:rmon on chc Mount. liS. 132-40.
198 Sermon on the Plain. Sr, Sermon on the
Mount SihJ·IIim o,.r/n. S>-59. 62 sbvery. 51, GO. 72, 74, 79,86-$7. 92, 109-10, 140-41. 150, 187, 24Jnl6. 5« .Is. R.onun Empire. soci.tl struc. ru~ "i.thin >J"'« (sacred), 27-38,99- 103. S" temple: sp«t:Jdc:. Su :m:n:l(s}: gbdi:ttor{sh Ro· man Empire, culn1rt' of spett.ade of Sccphen. 9, 117-44, 210nl9. S.t•ls• dcme'ncy. Rom;an cf&ounc of ncrcotyping. xi. 9-10, 148, 169~ 206. 212-13.21 9 Stoicism, xi, 79, 86. 140, 193. 200n55 su!fcring, 60. 67-68, 74, 87: of
•u•
or
m.
Tocirus, 74. 86 Talmud, U.b)ionian. 9. 130n27. 145-73.21 2.226-27, 230,250n45. 251 n53
286
I NDEX OF SUBJECrS
13Jmud, P.1lestinian, 15 Jnl 7. 150, 1)4,
159, 162-<S3, 163n31. 167-68, 172. 173,213 13tian. 12 1.193 temple: an:na o1s, 46; of Capitoline Jupiter, 5.3: destruction ofJems::l·
lem, 34, 53n30-31. 61, 100, 106, 114, 122, 131. 143, 159, 210nl 6, 2 13. 224-28; eschatological, 31-38:
Jmwlem (first), 130, 213: Jerusalem (second), 8, 13. 27-30.43. 53n30-3 1, 6 1, 101-3. 114-15, 159-60.224-27: Moumfharam
a/-;horif, 99-100; spirinulized, 30,32-33, 36. 38. Sunbo culc sacrificc(s); space (sacred) lCnullian, 9-10: on enemy love,
135-36.138; on martyrdom. 183,
184-93. 194. 198, 199-200, 202-3; on Roman g;tmes, 45-48. 49. 52n28.
117-19, 122, 124, 129-32, 134-38, 141. 204-<S, 209, 224n63, 230. S
fanrosics of. 47-48, 55-56, 66-68, 75-76.204-5,223,234: judicial, 62. 64. 153, 171 ; origins of, 17-19; legalir)' of. x. 9, 73, 147, 166n40, 173: lt"gitimation of, I, 2, II, 16, 43. 55. 67,73-74,76, 106-7: re.>l vs. mcraphoriol, 14, 17, 19,31, 103, 115-16; mob, 59n49, 121. 125, 126: rhetoric of. 7. II . 19, 23, 38. 41.
44: sacred space and. 27-38: ·S:liV>'l· tion and, 38-42: vC'rbal \'S. ph)'Sical,
83-84, 147 vorC'urism, 48, 66-7 1. S« alstJ arcna(s); Roman Empire, culturt" of sp«tadc of
59,66,71-72 T itus (Roman emperor), 61, 63,
war, x, 3. 7-8, I3n I, ISn I9. 62, 6,3, 68,
75.78-9 1.92.96. 99. 106, 113-14, 119, 141, 147.215-16.220,245:
224-28,230 Torah, 9, 21. 39.49nl5, 58,60-6 1, 126, 145-73. 186-87, 19 1-92 1oscfra, 49, 52n28, 55n35, 150-52, 154, 158n26, 163, 164n36, 165, 166n40, 168, 21 2n27, 213, 226n69
we.1pons. ix, 17, 65n66. SOnS, 8 1, 88,
totalitarianism. Srf' tyranny and t)'f:tnts Tr:tjan, I 4 1 tyranny and tyranu, x, 83, 130, 140-4 1,
\'(lisdom of Solomon, 127-30 womt"n, 69, 72, 87n27, 140-4 1,
t"schatological, 10, 14. 16-17, 19, 23,25-26, 3 1-44; rhetoric of. 8. 79,
SOnS. 82-85, 88-9 1; ofTo.ah, 147 93.95. 140,206,254
207, 21o, 213. 215. 225. 227. 230. 236, 240. 5« alto imperialism: Ro-
151-52, 157. 161-<>3. 165-66, 169-72,211 ,236. 238. 254-55;
man cmpcror(s)
traits ascribed to, 88-89. 92-93, 96
universalism, 81
Yohanan ben Bag Bag, 150-51. 168-<S9
vengeance, 10. 16, 43,47-48,51. 53n30,64,65,67-69, 75-76.90,
Zechariah, 130-32, 162-<S3 ZC'no, 220-2 1