The Hebrew Bible is a fount of political ideas, many of which were centuries and millennia ahead of their time. But the notion that man’s relation to his surrounding political and social structures should—indeed, must—stem from his metaphysical relation to God is one that is not immediately apparent to a modern reader―even a religious one.
Why do we think of religion in the Bible, but not politics in the Bible? How did we get here?This is because the development of political thought in early modern Europe was largely a conscious effort to leave behind the theologically laden political systems dominated by the Church in the Middle Ages in the period following the general disintegration engendered by the barbarian invasions.The Church saw the purpose of the republic as a vehicle toward salvation of the individual and imposed theocracy in its rule over empires, monarchies and city-states. It was hostility toward theocratic rule that ultimately allowed the first secular culture in Europe to arise in Italy, in the writings of figures such as Dante, who were the first to challenge the political power of the papacy.
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Joshua Berman is an associate professor of Bible at Bar-Ilan University in Israel and a research fellow at the Herzl Institute and the Center for Hebraic Thought. His books include Inconsistency in the Torah: Ancient Literary Convention and the Limits of Source Criticism (Oxford University Press); Created Equal: How the Bible Broke with Ancient Political Thought (Oxford University Press); The Temple: Its Symbolism and Meaning Then and Now (Wipf & Stock); and Narrative Analogy in the Hebrew Bible: Battle Stories and Their Equivalent Non-Battle Narratives (Brill).
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