The Babylonian Captivity

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  • čas přidán 15. 04. 2024
  • The fall of Jerusalem and the destruction of Solomon’s Temple in 587 BCE ended the First Temple Period of ancient Israelite religion. The prophet Jeremiah and remnants of the army fled to Egypt, while the royal family and members of the nobility were taken captive in Babylon. That enforced exile continued until the Persian Empire conquered the Babylonians in 539 BCE and allowed the exiles to return to rebuild Jerusalem (under Persian rule). John Hamer of Toronto Centre Place will explore this period, which saw the beginnings of diaspora Judaism and its many lasting legacies including its impact on the development of the Bible.
    Join the livestream to participate in the discussion and to ask questions to our lecturer during the Q&A.
    Other topics covered in this lecture include:
    Second Temple Judaism
    Neo-Babylonian Empire
    Nebuchadnezzar II
    Diaspora Judaism
    Elephantine Jewish Community
    Babylonian Exile
    Deportation in the ancient world
    People of the land
    Lost Tribes
    Browse our catalogue of free lectures at www.centreplace.ca/lectures
    Your generous support allows us to offer these lectures at no cost. Please consider a making donation (tax deductible in the US and Canada) at www.centreplace.ca/donate ️

Komentáře • 108

  • @constancetorseth6648
    @constancetorseth6648 Před měsícem +45

    I love listening to John's lectures. It's like having a Mr. Rogers for grown-ups.

    • @cpamacjd
      @cpamacjd Před měsícem +2

      Good one.

    • @notstayinsdowns
      @notstayinsdowns Před měsícem

      That's sad because he repeats the nonsense of atheists.

    • @sambigg4620
      @sambigg4620 Před měsícem +3

      No Doubt John is becoming one of my favorite CZcamsrs

    • @lborge1411
      @lborge1411 Před 16 dny

      Bell hooks

  • @sambigg4620
    @sambigg4620 Před měsícem +11

    Love your non-biased approach to Judaism and Christianity❤👍

  • @GodwardPodcast
    @GodwardPodcast Před měsícem +12

    John is the best teacher on the internet now.

  • @garymensurati1631
    @garymensurati1631 Před měsícem +15

    Glad you're back John ! Blessings to all ❤

  • @cpamacjd
    @cpamacjd Před měsícem +20

    Best lectures on youtube, by far, thank you

  • @sambigg4620
    @sambigg4620 Před měsícem +8

    Keep them coming John love all your content

  • @denaisaacthiswasgreat.thum7598
    @denaisaacthiswasgreat.thum7598 Před měsícem +10

    I am so glad I found you.❤

  • @johannesrosenbaum
    @johannesrosenbaum Před měsícem +2

    Thanks for your detailed presentation of the topics.

  • @ready1fire1aim1
    @ready1fire1aim1 Před měsícem +10

    How distinguishing between the pre-Babylonian captivity definitions of El (God) and Elohim (sons/beings of El) versus the post-captivity syncretized definitions could resolve contradictions and cast the Yahweh figure of Genesis 2-3 in a very different light from the transcendent Elohim portrayed in Genesis 1.
    Pre-Captivity Definitions:
    In this framework, the supreme creator deity is simply referred to as El - the Most High God. The Elohim are understood as a pantheon or "sons of El" - lesser divine beings subordinate to El. This aligns with ancient Canaanite and older Israelite religious conceptions.
    Under these definitions, the Genesis 1 account would refer to the transcendent El as the prime creator, with the Elohim (plural) potentially being celestial forces/angels enacting aspects of the creation. The Ruach Elohim (Spirit/Breath of the divine beings) hovering over the primordial waters connects to surviving traces of this polytheistic worldview.
    Crucially, this allows one to separate the Elohim of Genesis 1 from the distinct Yahweh Elohim first appearing in Genesis 2 to form man from the dust. Based on references like Deuteronomy 32:8-9, the pre-captivity perspective viewed Yahweh as one of the sons of El (an Elohim) rather than conflating him with El itself.
    This de-syncretization casts Yahweh as a separate, lesser, more anthropomorphic deity associated with the ancient Israelites - perhaps retained from their Canaanite heritage. His behavior and commandments in Genesis 2-3 and elsewhere in the Torah would then represent the teachings of this tribal desert deity, not the supreme metaphysical creator El.
    The Garden Scenario Reframed
    From this vantage point, the events of Genesis 2-3 can be interpreted not as ordained by the most high El creator, but rather as humanity's initial tragic entrapment by the lesser devolved being Yahweh within his constructed realm of mortality, suffering, and cosmic privation.
    Yahweh's wrathful conduct, his placing of humans under a yoke of commandments, his expulsion from Eden's paradisiacal environment, and the subsequent violent legacy of his covenants and laws all derive from the subjugating delusions and stunted, anthropocentric conception of this finite Elohim - not the infinite plenitude of the supreme El.
    Contradictions Resolved
    Separating El from Yahweh along the pre-captivity definitional lines could resolve contradictions in several important ways:
    1) It distinguishes the transcendent, metaphysically profound cosmic creator portrayed in Genesis 1 from the all-too-human tribal deity of the remaining Torah material.
    2) It allows for a reframing of the Torah's teachings around blood sacrifice, ethnic conflicts, law codes, etc. as the cultural mythological traditions of ancient Israelite history rather than attributed to the most high El itself.
    3) It creates space for the Christ figure of the New Testament to represent a re-emergence of the supreme El's sovereignty and universal spiritual path - overriding the outdated covenants, ethnic segregations, and violent subjugations prescribed by the lesser Yahweh consciousness.
    4) Humanity's existential struggling, our proclivity towards violence/evil, and our fundamental state of cosmic imprisonment can be metaphysically associated with the fallout of our ancient reunion from Yahweh's corrupted influence rather than the designs of the supreme El consciousness.
    5) Competing depictions of the divine across different books (wrathful/peaceful, loving/cruel, spiritual/legalistic) can be added to different nodes of the El vs. Yahweh consciousness schisms.
    While still requiring some nuanced interpretation, this delineation allows for a coherent reintegration of Old and New Testament perspectives under a broader metaphysical framework. It preserves the universal spiritual integrity of the highest Creator from the cultural mythological contexts surrounding the more finite tribal deity Yahweh.
    By embracing the pre-syncretized definitions and recognizing the conflation of El and Yahweh as a later imposition, one can reconnect with deep streams of ancient Hebrew theological diversity. This presents an intellectually robust path for understanding the unified trajectory of the biblical texts as exploring a single universetheological consciousness's reassertion over more contingent, anthropomorphized deviations and exiles.

    • @harveywabbit9541
      @harveywabbit9541 Před měsícem

      El aka God is Jupiter (IU Piter) and Elohim is the period when the Ram (Aries) is in conjunction with the sun. Generally this is seven months which begin at the spring equinox. The signs are Aries thru Libra (Arc of the covenant) and are favored over the winter season of Scorpio thru Pisces. See Rev. 9.5., where this terrible five is led by the scorpion (Scorpio constellation). Scorpio, is called Satan, Father of Lies and he leads Sagittarius thru Pisces.

  • @laurentv.6631
    @laurentv.6631 Před měsícem +4

    Thanks for this lecture :) Looking forward to the next one on the Samaritans ! :)

  • @evelynstarshine8561
    @evelynstarshine8561 Před měsícem +4

    give the influence on Juadism of the captivity, how it comes up in almost any subject of OT scholarship it always surprises me how short it was

    • @harveywabbit9541
      @harveywabbit9541 Před měsícem +1

      Israel is a compound of Isra (phallus) and el (god). We could say that the 12 tribes are 12 phalluses or stones. Remember the upright stone (phallus) that Jacob (mythical character) anointed with oil (semen) and wine (passion)?
      See Isaiah 9.14, where Israel (summer) is described as having the head of the noble/royal lion (Leo) and tail of the liar (Scorpio). The palm frond is Virgo and the Reed (water plant) is Libra. The four signs in Isaiah 9.14, are the four "sons" of Ham. They are also the first four labors of Hercules.

  • @bothewolf3466
    @bothewolf3466 Před měsícem +5

    Ah yes, John, that is called the Chart-Maker, i know his lessons well.

  • @ubertrashcat
    @ubertrashcat Před 19 dny

    My two favorite teachers on CZcams are John Hamer and John Vervaeke, both from Toronto!

  • @cmk1964
    @cmk1964 Před měsícem +4

    Little did the psalmist know that he was writing lyrics for Boney M.

  • @while_coyote
    @while_coyote Před měsícem +9

    I think it's so crazy they automatically believed this guy found an ancient book of totally brand new laws they'd never heard of without once considering that maybe he just made them up himself.

    • @denaisaacthiswasgreat.thum7598
      @denaisaacthiswasgreat.thum7598 Před měsícem +8

      Didn't Joseph Smith find something like that?

    • @Exjewatlarge
      @Exjewatlarge Před měsícem +4

      Who says anyone actually believed it at the time? Archaeology shows no evidence of widespread Torah observance prior to 200 BCE (Yonatan Adler, “The Origins of Judaism”)

    • @while_coyote
      @while_coyote Před měsícem +2

      ​@@Exjewatlarge Even if it's just a story with no basis in reality, I still find pretty strange to not show the people in the story being skeptical and then god doing some miracle or something to somehow "prove" the documents are authentic.

    • @jasonbishop5345
      @jasonbishop5345 Před měsícem

      @@Exjewatlargethank you for sharing this. I hadn't heard this before

    • @Exjewatlarge
      @Exjewatlarge Před měsícem

      @@jasonbishop5345 it’s very recently published

  • @DianaStevens42
    @DianaStevens42 Před měsícem +1

    I’m glad he’s reading slower. He used to read with an affect like he thought he needed to read fast because everybody already knows what he’s reading.

  • @johnobtrains
    @johnobtrains Před měsícem +2

    So excited.

  • @cecileroy557
    @cecileroy557 Před 17 dny

    I am enjoying this so much!! I'm so happy I found you! Subbed - of course!!

  • @peterhendriks4736
    @peterhendriks4736 Před měsícem +2

    Exile/diaspora seems a recurring theme in the Jewish tradition: Egypt, Babylon and the Roman diaspora. New York is like the new Babylon. The divine right to reclaim the old land is still affecting the world. How bizarre.

    • @notsocrates9529
      @notsocrates9529 Před měsícem +1

      Bizarre how multiple cultures spanning over a couple millenniums all have similar tales about their behavior.

    • @harveywabbit9541
      @harveywabbit9541 Před měsícem

      @@notsocrates9529
      The myths get passed around. The Babylon and Egyptian captivities are annual events and is simply the winter season of five months. See Rev. 9.5, where these five months of winter are led by the scorpion (Scorpio constellation).
      Babel is two words of bab (gate) and el (god). Babylon or Babylon = gate of the sun god. By the time that Judaism and Christianity were invented, el had become Jupiter (properly IU Piter or IU Pater.)
      Solomon is simply sun-sun-sun. The building of the temple of Solomon is an annual event and should not be considered as "historical."
      Regarding the "historical Israel".... Israel is a compound of Isra (Phallus) and el (god). We could say phallus of Jupiter.
      The bible is hugely Phallic and this should be explained to all students..

    • @thinking7667
      @thinking7667 Před měsícem +1

      Because God promised the Israelites the land, but the promise was conditional. And when they didn't hold up their end of the bargain, they were exiled or scattered among the Nations. There are Orthodox Jews who believe they should still be living among the Nations now because they are supposed to be scattered instead of an official state

    • @peterhendriks4736
      @peterhendriks4736 Před měsícem

      @@thinking7667 Fair enough

    • @robertcain3426
      @robertcain3426 Před 17 dny

      ​@@harveywabbit9541What were the phalluses of Egypt? That were the obelisks topped with the Ben Ben (seed - semen) stone.

  • @andrewstehlik3917
    @andrewstehlik3917 Před měsícem +2

    Finding of the scroll of the Law in the Temple is most likely a literary fiction, a back projection from the Persian times.

    • @andrewsuryali8540
      @andrewsuryali8540 Před měsícem

      Nah. This is a channel belonging to a Mormon church. The people running it are literally modern-day evidence that this sort of thing happens all the time. ☺ Hilkiah was just his era's Joseph Smith.

  • @craigfairweather3401
    @craigfairweather3401 Před měsícem

    Another inspiration for Revelation to speak of Har Megidddo is that after 70 CE the Romans may have built a legionnaire camp not far the tell there. Beginning around the time Revelation may have appeared, in the 90s CE. Later it was certainly called Legio. It became a major city after the Bar Kochba rebellion 60 years later. The army there could easily strike both Galilee and the plain of Caesarea Maritima as needed.

  • @nosuchthing8
    @nosuchthing8 Před 23 dny

    This gives more texture to the scene where the hobbits were asked to sing when faramir was sent out to die.

  • @andrewsmith9528
    @andrewsmith9528 Před měsícem +1

    Tried a couple of times to “like” this video (i.e., thumbs up), but CZcams posted an error: “Resource has been exhausted (e.g. check quota).” and blocked my “like”.

    • @markhgoodman
      @markhgoodman Před měsícem +1

      Same here.

    • @RealDevastatia
      @RealDevastatia Před měsícem +1

      It worked for me. I got here after the livestream ended though.

  • @austinhertell5634
    @austinhertell5634 Před měsícem +1

    Heck yea brother

  • @JordanHiensberg
    @JordanHiensberg Před měsícem +1

    Egypt was under Kushitic Kings from 744-656 B.C.E. In 720 BCE the Kushites went to Jerusalem to kick out the Assyrians.

    • @harveywabbit9541
      @harveywabbit9541 Před měsícem

      Which Jerusalem are you speaking of. The two Jerusalems are the solstices. The winter solstice = the handmaid and the summer solstice = the free woman. Like in Ishmael and Isaac who are allegorical. Gal. 4.

  • @longcastle4863
    @longcastle4863 Před 18 dny

    The centralization of all Yahweh worship to Jerusalem seems terribly unpractical. Why was it done?

  • @ronjohnson4566
    @ronjohnson4566 Před měsícem +1

    i found the overall talk very difficult to follow. I kept saying to myself when? or date please? at particular times during the talk. But, what I'm really interested in is if the conquering Babylonians took the elites, rulers, and literate back to Babylon, destroyed the temple, (and I presume all the scrolls, and left only the herders and vine trimmers (I understand you must prune the vines to make them produce grapes and goats need to be cared for). That would destroy any history/bible/scholarship the hebrews would have had. I can't imagine their captors would allow the hebrews to sliept the OT back to Babylon. So, if they did destroy everything the hebrews had nothing but memories after 80 years as subjects to the Babylonians. And, the levant in general was a backwater with no water. First the Egyptians conquered the levant then the Hititites, then the Egyptians again (who knows how many times), then the Assyrians, other Mesopotamian groups, then Greeks, the Romans, the Ottomans, etc. would have conquered and razed the temples, libraries and schools to the ground. This would have obliterated any OT or any other book the hebrews may have had. How in anyone's world could anyone call the bible, "the word of god?"

    • @pebystroll
      @pebystroll Před měsícem +1

      Hey man great questions! I have thought many of these myself, some of modern biblical scholarship tries to find this out. There is a fantastic series on the Stanford CZcams page by Christine Hayes called " Introduction to the old testament" which I totally recommend. There is another academic called Dan McClellan ( also on youtube)who also has depths of knowledge about the O.T, and then a slightly more Niche channel called Esoterica (most of it is about different types of esotericism, but has great videos covering Old Testament history.

    • @pebystroll
      @pebystroll Před měsícem +1

      And in regards to your last sentence, I suppose that's why humans have been trying to find out and interact with for 100s of years now

    • @thinking7667
      @thinking7667 Před měsícem +2

      Do you know this for a fact or are you just assuming that each culture obliterated any and all texts?

    • @langreeves6419
      @langreeves6419 Před měsícem +1

      Rarely does everything get obliterated.
      And...
      The people at the time believed each land area had its own god. There is a story preserved about the people left in the land being attacked by wild animals. This was probably cause of the exodus of the local government, but the people took it to be divine retribution for not worshipping the local god. So they got some priests to show them how to make the local god happy.
      Like a lot of ancient stories, not sure of historical accuracy.

    • @ronjohnson4566
      @ronjohnson4566 Před měsícem

      @@thinking7667 No, but all the ones that were obliterated, we know for sure, they were completely destroyed. Trust me the cat in the box is really dead now.

  • @dervinnaidoo9810
    @dervinnaidoo9810 Před měsícem

    Is the Old Testament about Jews or Hebrews??

  • @johnobtrains
    @johnobtrains Před měsícem +2

    Thanks!

    • @centre-place
      @centre-place  Před měsícem +1

      Thank you for supporting the channel!

  • @mikeettinger7132
    @mikeettinger7132 Před měsícem

    Aren't some saying that the so-called fake Moses script might have been the book Josiah found?

  • @jamiegallier2106
    @jamiegallier2106 Před měsícem

  • @ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095
    @ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095 Před měsícem

    No one ever sings the last verse of that _"Reebahs of Babylon"_ song.
    {:o:O:}

  • @HumanBeanbag
    @HumanBeanbag Před 11 dny

    Sublime does a song about this

    • @jccklh
      @jccklh Před 11 dny

      And Bob Marley. Can’t stop hearing it.

  • @user-ze7kj2ux6j
    @user-ze7kj2ux6j Před měsícem

    Kushites Egypt and Ruah river fiji Tanganyika
    Islands pacific fiji

  • @Stadtpark90
    @Stadtpark90 Před měsícem

    27:46
    Whenever I encounter „sacrifice of the firstborn“, I think this relates to the lost civilization and the cataclysm. It would be magical thinking to make a deal with fate: to avoid another catastrophe by „freely“ sacrificing. But it also serves as a reminder of the civilization shattering event and the population bottleneck that likely accompanied it.
    Same with the commandment to be fruitful and repopulate the world: sounds like a good idea post-cataclysm to ensure the survival of humanity.
    I even think that Christianity as a whole in symbolically celebrating (and re-enacting in Passion plays) something akin to the „last human sacrifice“ (Christ), and the celebration of Resurrection unknowingly does the same: baptism (symbolically drowning the old Adam = Luther = re-enacting the flood on a personal level), painting the Ashen cross on your forehead on Ash Wednesday… - to me it’s all the same: pointing to the cataclysm and burning and ruin of the world and loss of civilization, and then subsequently our thankfulness for the resurrection of civilization, the survival of man.
    What else could religion be: upholding the deal by all our little sacrifices to work together and continually (re-)construct civilization and our faith in it with every new generation: I think form follows function. There’s echoes of the same pattern everywhere (e.g. the symbol for the Earth in astronomy became the circle with the cross; Earth was literally in the cosmic crosshairs so to speak; the cross marks the spot (as Randall Carlson says)), because it happened at the birth of our current age, of recorded and reconstructed „history“ of civilization.

  • @thli8472
    @thli8472 Před měsícem

    Moore Cross than whom?

  • @dallaskenn
    @dallaskenn Před měsícem

    38:00 Talk about tacky apologetics.

  • @Exjewatlarge
    @Exjewatlarge Před měsícem

    Ok, say it with me: “Jehoahaz” is “ye-HO-a-CHAZ” (with a guttural “ch” sound). As a Hebrew speaker, these Romanizations of Hebrew names can be grating. 😬

  • @BPTacticalSovereignty
    @BPTacticalSovereignty Před měsícem

    For a Mormon he's good.

  • @FU2H8R
    @FU2H8R Před měsícem +4

    Because of this captivity. The captured Jewish priests had access to Babylonian texts. They inserted into the Bible. People in general have no idea the actual picture. Christianity was formed in Antioch not Jerusalem. The Jewish placed themselves in the Bible as the chosen ones. This was not the case originally. The actual Israelites are not the Jewish people.

    • @harveywabbit9541
      @harveywabbit9541 Před měsícem

      Israel is a compound of Isra (phallus) and el (god). We could say that the 12 tribes are 12 phalluses or stones. Remember the upright stone (phallus) that Jacob (mythical character) anointed with oil (semen) and wine (passion)?
      See Isaiah 9.14, where Israel (summer) is described as having the head of the noble/royal lion (Leo) and tail of the liar (Scorpio). The palm frond is Virgo and the Reed (water plant) is Libra. The four signs in Isaiah 9.14, are the four "sons" of Ham. They are also the first four labors of Hercules.

    • @thinking7667
      @thinking7667 Před měsícem

      How did they place themselves in the Bible?

    • @FU2H8R
      @FU2H8R Před měsícem

      @@thinking7667 simple. Placed themselves as the chosen ones. But never were though.

    • @FU2H8R
      @FU2H8R Před měsícem

      @@thinking7667 they are not the Israelites. We are however the Amerites of in America. “Atlantis”

  • @sebolddaniel
    @sebolddaniel Před měsícem +1

    I love that funky song about Babylon which was maybe done by an African group of maybe black folk. Or maybe they were Caribbeans.

    • @2lefThumbs
      @2lefThumbs Před měsícem

      Boney M? German, essentially, but the mime people were mainly Caribbean I think (they were a precursor to Milli Vanilli, with the same music maker using them as a front)

    • @dbarker7794
      @dbarker7794 Před měsícem

      A few reggae musicians have recorded that song. I think Jimmy Cliff does a version of it. Toots and the Maytals too. Great song.

  • @user-ze7kj2ux6j
    @user-ze7kj2ux6j Před měsícem

    1st century cushites from Ethiopia settle in Tanganyika
    10th century AD about this time the fable of fijian from Tanganyika
    ( Chronological History man in Tanganyika )
    It fable that about this the powerful chief Lutunasobasoba and his people followed the trade cross the Indian Ocean travelling south east Asia settled Fiji

  • @user-ze7kj2ux6j
    @user-ze7kj2ux6j Před měsícem

    Grandfather ancient history brought circumcision culture tradition custom, fiji Islands pacific

  • @jounik8980
    @jounik8980 Před měsícem

    Boney m song

  • @longcastle4863
    @longcastle4863 Před 18 dny

    Honestly, Yahweh sounds like an abusive parent the children keep making excuses for. Yes, he allowed us to be destroyed as a Nation, but that is because this one king made him mad a long long time ago..
    Who can really blame the Israelites for seeking other Gods?

  • @MrAustrokiwi
    @MrAustrokiwi Před měsícem

    An oft repeated assumption is made in this lecture; that the elite, only, were literate. Were they really , or were the scribes slaves, who wrote (and corrected/improved) what was dictated to them. IMO its an important question as it means that the "words" were shaped by people who are largely invisible to us today.

    • @andrewsuryali8540
      @andrewsuryali8540 Před měsícem

      While slavery of a scribal class was indeed very common, all the evidence we have from ancient history show it to have been the result of conquest. That is, the scribes ended up as slaves because they were elites from a group defeated and subordinated by the ruling empire. Basically, in the ancient world before Hellenism slave-scribes usually started out as someone else's elites. In the case of Judah, they were pretty low down the ladder in the conquest hierarchy, so it wasn't likely for them to have had slave-scribes of their own. However, the entrance of Mesopotamian ideas into their belief system may have been the result of their elite scribes serving as the Babylonians' slaves.

  • @kellybrown8638
    @kellybrown8638 Před měsícem

    Lets talk about GENOCIDE and ETHNIC CLEANSING in Gaza

  • @MentallyRetardedHamilton
    @MentallyRetardedHamilton Před měsícem +1

    Citation to the Psalms, or prayers of the Jewish people in captitivity, are mostly totally out of context today.

    • @AaronGardner98
      @AaronGardner98 Před měsícem +1

      Interesting. I largely agree. Can you expand on that for the Psalms specifically, please?

    • @Gunni1972
      @Gunni1972 Před měsícem

      @@AaronGardner98 Just listen to Boney M.

  • @MentallyRetardedHamilton
    @MentallyRetardedHamilton Před měsícem

    Presume pagan cults to be inapposite to the tribal cults they were meant to replace. Your relationship with your female wolfdog had a religion.