DEUTERONOMY 32:8–9 AND THE OLD TESTAMENT WORLDVIEW
Blog Post Date: 2-3-2020
Deuteronomy 32:8 describes Yahweh’s dispersal of
the nations at Babel and His disinheriting of those nations, giving them over
to other, lesser gods (elohim). Deuteronomy 32:9, by contrast, states that the
nation of Israel belongs to Yahweh alone:
When the Most High apportioned the nations as an inheritance, when he
divided up humankind, he established the borders of the peoples according to
the number of the sons of God. But the LORD’s portion is his people, i.e. Jacob his allotted heritage.
English translations based on the traditional
Hebrew text of the Old Testament read “sons of Israel” instead of “sons of
God.” The phrase “sons of God” comes from manuscripts of Deuteronomy found
among the Dead Sea Scrolls—scrolls much older than the traditional “received”
text.
The reference to Babel in Deuteronomy highlights an
important point regarding this manuscript disagreement. The division of the
nations at the Tower of Babel (Gen 11:1–9) is connected to the Table of Nations
of Genesis 10, which directly precedes it. The Table of Nations catalogs 70
nations but does not include Israel. Why? Because Israel did not exist at the
time of the Babel event. This makes the reference to “sons of Israel” in Deuteronomy
32:8 illogical and unsustainable: “sons of God” was most likely changed to
“sons of Israel” sometime after the Jewish community—in response to the new
Christian church and its use of the Septuagint—“standardized” the Hebrew text
in the second century AD.
The Israelite View of the Nations and Their Gods within
Deuteronomy 32:8–9 is fundamental for understanding the worldview of Old
Testament Israel. These two verses explain both the existence of the foreign
pantheons and their inferiority to Yahweh. A parallel passage to Deut 32:8–9,
Deut 4:19–20, will provide some needed context.
And
beware lest you raise your eyes to heaven, and when you see the sun and the
moon and the stars, all the host of heaven, you be drawn away and bow down to
them and serve them whom the LORD, your God, has allotted to all the nations under the whole heaven. But
the LORD has taken
you and brought you out of the iron furnace, out of Egypt, to be a people of
his own inheritance, as you are this day.
Deuteronomy 4:19–20 and 32:8–9 represent two sides
of the same coin. In Deuteronomy 32:8–9, God apportions the nations to the sons
of God; here, however, God allots the gods to the nations. Israelites, in other
words, believed that Yahweh, their own supreme, unique God, sentenced the
nations and their gods to each other. At Babel, God, like a father dismissing
and disinheriting his children, judges all the nations for their disobedience
(Gen 11:1–9). Then, in the very next chapter, He calls Abraham (Gen 12:1–3),
effectively starting over in creating an earthly human family for Himself.
These other gods, which Deut 32:8 refers to as “the
sons of God,” were members of Yahweh’s heavenly host. Scripture elsewhere
condemns both the members of the nations and their gods for disloyalty and
corruption (Psalm 82). Linking the pagan
Gentile nations and their gods in this way gave the biblical worldview its
particular focus on making the Israelites distinct from other nations and their
gods. These spiritual boundaries between Israel and every other nation
indicated that loyalty to other nations could not be separated from loyalty to
their gods. The distinctions even extended to physical geography, which for the
Israelites was cosmic geography.
Consider two examples of these spiritual
implications: circumcision and the law. Circumcision reminded Israel that they
were Yahweh’s portion. Other nations practiced circumcision, but it did not
carry the same significance for them that it did for Israel. For Israel,
circumcision was sexual and procreative in nature and thus symbolized the
nation’s birth via Yahweh’s miraculous intervention. In choosing Abraham and
Sarah, Yahweh had disinherited all other human nations.
Likewise, Israelite laws share many features with
other ancient Near Eastern cultures, but the rationale for the laws is unique
to Israel. In Israelite religion the laws are inseparably tied to an
everlasting covenant relationship between Yahweh and the people. This
perspective, derived from Israel’s unique status as Yahweh’s inheritance, does
not appear in other law codes. The
concept of cosmic geography is illuminated by other examples. Israel, as
Yahweh’s inheritance, was holy ground.
Similarly, the territory of other nations,
according to Yahweh’s decree, belonged to other gods. But in the course of Old
Testament history, Israel had become enslaved to the Egyptians and required
supernatural deliverance from Egypt and its gods. To subsequently inherit the
Promised Land - now occupied by nations who worshiped other gods - Israel would
have to reclaim its land inheritance by holy war. Thus, once in the land,
Israelites still believed that their land belonged exclusively to Yahweh and
was His sacred domain: other nations, even if they were in Israel, were under
the dominion of evil, lesser gods.
First Samuel 26 reflects this belief. David, whom
Saul is pursuing, feels distress at not being on holy ground: Saul recognized David’s voice and said, “Is
this your voice, my son David?” And David said, “It is my voice, my lord, O
king.” And he said, “Why does my lord pursue after his servant? For what have I
done? What evil is on my hands? Now therefore let my lord the king hear the words
of his servant. If it is the LORD who has stirred you up against me, may he accept an offering, but if it
is men, may they be cursed before the LORD, for they have driven me out this day that I should have no share in
the heritage of the LORD,
saying, ‘Go, serve other gods.’”
David links being in Israel with the ability to
worship Yahweh. Why? Is David ignorant of the fact that God can be anywhere? No - David knows that Israel is Yahweh’s
portion and that Yahweh has disinherited all other territory and handed it over
to the other gods. David cannot worship without being on holy ground. David
wants nothing to do with ground outside of Israel, where other nations worship
their gods. Rather, he desires to be in the sacred space of Yahweh.
Another curious incident reflects this same aspect
of Israel’s worldview. After Elisha the prophet heals him, Naaman, commander of
the army of Syria (a domain outside Israel) makes a strange request of the
prophet: Then Naaman said, “If not,
please let there be given to your servant two mules’ load of earth, for from
now on your servant will not offer burnt offering or sacrifice to any god but
the LORD. In this matter may the LORD pardon your servant: when my master goes into the
house of Rimmon to worship there, leaning on my arm, and I bow myself in the
house of Rimmon, when I bow myself in the house of Rimmon, the LORD pardon your servant in this matter.” He said to
him, “Go in peace.
”Naaman’s seemingly odd plea for dirt clearly
reflects the Deut 32 worldview. He wants to ensure he worships the God of
Israel from now on. And since the only way he can be sure he is worshiping the
true God is to worship him on holy ground, he decides to take some of it with
him.
The Israelite Worldview in the New Testament
The idea that corrupt gods (sons of God) both
populate and control certain geographical regions was still prevalent in the New
Testament era. Paul used geographical
terminology to describe the heavenly host: principalities, rulers, thrones,
authorities, powers, dominions (Eph 6:12). The most dramatic example, however,
may be the Pentecost event in Acts 2, where God begins to reclaim all the
nations for Himself. God, in other words, has not forever abandoned the
nations. Even in the Old Testament, Israel was to be a kingdom of priests,
mediators between the disinherited nations and the true God. Israel’s laws,
prophets, and Scriptures all convey knowledge of the true God to the nations.
In this sense, Christ became the ultimate mediator—reconciling every nation to
God.
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