Identity Theft (3)

Then God said, “Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness, and let them rule over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the sky . . .”  Genesis 1:26 NASB

Image – Culture determines the meaning of the word.  That’s the message in the bottle.  We learned that even theological dictionaries import alien categories of meaning into the text if they do not answer the question, “What would this mean to the audience that first heard it?”  In this crucial text, we need to know what “image” would mean to the ancient near-Eastern, ex-slave, Hebrew audience at Sinai.  These people came out of Egypt, out of an Egyptian worldview that influenced their Hebraic teaching (an obvious conclusion from the fact that they could not accommodate to God’s cultural mandates in 40 years), so we must turn to Egypt to grasp what “image” means.  Whatever it means, the meaning must come from the socio-politico-culture environment of the people who heard it.

John Walton’s book[1] provides insight into the meaning of the word in this culture.  First we must shift from universalized language to tribal consciousness.  Mythology of the ancient near-East supplies the community with its identity.  This tribal storehouse of shared memories gives members of the community common ancestry and common patterns of behavior.  These memories tell me who I am and what I must do.  In other words, they define what it means to be in the tribe.  They define responsibility, community and conscience through connection with the ancestors of the tribe, and ultimately with the deity or deities who formed the tribe.  Most importantly, ancient near-Eastern tribal stories focus attention on the purpose of the formation of tribal men and on the roles that tribal men play in the world.  Walton points out that most ancient near-Eastern creation accounts include some physical element of deity in the formation of human beings (e.g. blood, tears, semen).  But not the Hebrew account.  Dust of the ground shares no properties with God.  Furthermore, it has no moldable form in itself.  In Hebrew thought, Man does not originate from any substance that has prior purposeful connections.  It is God’s effort and God’s intention that originates the purpose of Man.  It is His purpose that governs the design of Man.

The word tselem would be recognized by the community at Sinai as a word describing an idol, a representation of a god.  Coming out of Egypt, the community had ample experience with Egyptian idols.  The crucial point is that the idol is not the god; it is merely an icon of the god.  Nevertheless, it retains all the power of the god so that in pagan thought it is appropriate to worship the idol as if it were the god.  Of course, the God of Israel demonstrated in word and deed that all other gods represented by idols were in fact not gods at all.  But the concept of representation still adheres to the word tselem.  This means that when the audience heard the story of God’s formation of Man, there was an immediate connection between the power of God and the representation of that power in the image of God in Man.  Man is the “idol” representation of God.  We must understand the “image of God” as a description of the role and action of God (His power), not as a summary of enduring attributes, as the Greek view would suggest.  In tribal language, a Man is a man when he acts as the representative of God’s power.  To be in God’s image is to act like God acts.

There are significant implications for this understanding of tselem.  First, to be formed as human beings does not mean to be biological entities called homo sapiens.  Just as an adult male can still be a “boy” if he remains unmarried, the definition of tselem describes what it means to be human within the culture.  In the Hebrew culture, what it means to be human is to act as the representative of the power of God.  This means that even if there are other creatures who appear human in biological form, they are not “human” in the tribal sense if they do not represent the power of God in their actions.  Since God’s power is displayed in bringing order to chaos, creating, perfecting, discriminating, organizing and nourishing life, behaviors that do not model these godly actions would be considered signs of non-human beings.

If you were standing at the foot of the mountain, if you had come from the polytheism of Egypt, if your God had just demonstrated His absolute sovereignty over all other supposed deities, how would you understand a story that describes the purpose of your existence?  Wouldn’t you recognize that your purpose is directly tied to God’s purpose, that you are not free to do whatever you wish and remain “in His image”?  Perhaps our tendency to read the Genesis account as a universal description of the creation of all biological “human” life is really the result of a paradigm; a paradigm that comes to us from the Greek idea of a common essence of humanity.  Perhaps Genesis is a story about the origins and purposes of the tribe of Abraham, and only the tribe of Abraham – and we are invited to join that tribe and share in its story.

What do you think?

Topical Index: tselem, image, tribe, Genesis 1:26, Man



[1] John Walton, Ancient Near Eastern Thought and the Old Testament, especially Chapter 9.

Subscribe
Notify of
13 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
carl roberts

Shema, O Israel.. -picture this..

Hallelujah! – it is written: ~ The Word became flesh and made His dwelling among us. We have seen His glory, the glory of the One and Only, who came from the Father, full of grace and truth ~ (John 1.14)
Real flesh? Real blood and bone? Really? A real cross- made of real wood? Real nails? a real spear?- Really died? and really resurrected? Christ died for sinners? Really? We report..- you decide.

~ And we are witnesses of these things; and so is the Ruach HaKodesh, whom G-d has given to those who obey Him ~ (Acts 5.32)

~ He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all things? ~ (Romans 8.32)

~ That in the ages to come He might show the exceeding riches of His grace in His kindness toward us through Yeshua HaMashiach ~ (Ephesians 2.7)

Benny de Brugal

Blessings to all of you…..
I have feast myself with all this and found it very profound and enlightening and think that this should not end here ’cause I know there should be more to it, and eventhough what you said in Spiritual Epistemology that in somethings that only make sense to us we have to keep quiet I would like to share this because I feel fits exactly in what we have been taught in these 3 days. I feel that we are those purposes that Bible talks about without defining them and that I don’t have to ask for my purpose because it is already given and I just have to act accordingly and the same thing happens with the prayer I am that prayer when with my behavior I model and act like G-d.

Michael

“Perhaps Genesis is a story about the origins and purposes of the tribe of Abraham, and only the tribe of Abraham – and we are invited to join that tribe and share in its story.”

Hi Skip,

I think that might be a valid interpretation, but for me not a particularly inspiring one

It seems to me that the beginning starts out with a big bang, the so called priestly account

Which frames the so called anthropomorphic account, the older of the two versions of creation

For me, the two versions of creation have deep meaning, and the meaning seems universal

The story of Abraham has never resonated much with me; but for me Gene sis is not just for Jews

It seems to me that the Jewish God and the Jewish Bible has something for everybody 🙂

robert lafoy

Perhaps Genesis is a story about the origins and purposes of the tribe of Abraham, and only the tribe of Abraham – and we are invited to join that tribe and share in its story.

What do you think?

Interesting observation. I don’t recollect ever thinking of this account in these terms, but I have seen this;

Gen. 2:4 says, “these are the generations of the heavens and the earth…” A generation is a springing forth of something that already exists (hence the previous account in Gen. 1). That would seem to make all that happens in 2 and onward a result of the previous formation, keeping in mind the purpose (The driving force of God himself) of that creation.

I see the same thing in Matthew 1, “the book of the GENERATIONS of Yeshua..” The account speaks not of the “ancestors” of the child/man Yeshua, but rather of His offspring, up to the one born as Yeshua the man. In other words, He (Yeshua) was the “initiator and the driving force behind the lineage leading to the physical revelation of Himself on this earth.

Whether or not Adam was the first “man” in the physical sense seems almost indifferent to the heart and intention of the message. Interesting to note however that the “exacting details” of the creation of this earth are not given, only that it was there, covered in darkness and water, and out of that, God himself began to divide and set in order that which already existed. That He created it, is told to us, the process is left in obscurity.

(BTW) I don’t think it was “evolution” as understood in the modern context. (just trying to disarm any assumptions 😉 )

Michael

BTW) I don’t think it was “evolution” as understood in the modern context. (just trying to disarm any assumptions )

Hi Robert,

Just for fun, I would argue that it is perfectly clear that Adam is the “first man” in the original story

Freud once noted that the pun was the lowest form of Humor

And I would thereby argue Adam was a dam fool

robert lafoy

Just for fun back.

Perhaps in reference to Adams capacity per Romans 5:12, he could be called a fool dam, which is futher proof that he was the first man, because if anyone else had been there they would have assuredly put their finger in the hole!! 🙂

robert lafoy

and btw,you didn’t copy the winky face guy!! 🙁

Michael

“in reference to Adams capacity per Romans 5:12”

Hi Robert,

You must know Paul pretty well:

“Romans 5:12 Therefore, just as through one man sin entered into the world, and death through sin, and so death spread to all men, because all sinned….”

Too bad the legendary little Dutch boy of Hans Brinker wasn’t there with his famous finger

Instead of the fool dam Adam 🙂

robert lafoy

Sheniy

Michael

BTW robert,

In one of my very, very, few on-stage performances

I starred in a one act play as the little Dutch boy when I was 8 – 10 years old

Dressed in wooden shoes, a cap, baggy blue pants and a blousy white shirt

I spoke the following lines:

– I’m a little Dutch boy

– As you can plainly see

– And I am very, very, happy

– That you are friends with me 🙂

Gabe

I’ve heard before that “repentance” is akin to “a return to existence”, which fits with whats being said here.

Sheila

OOPS! My message about a typo had a typo! Sigh…

Butterfly poster:
http://www.butterflyalphabet.com/main/index.php

The “nature” alphabet is cool too.

Some of them are a “stretch” (portions of the designs), but the “contained” letters are amazing!