jradoff said:
It is quite possible to reconnect with one's ancestors without taking up their superstitions.
Read about their history, visit museums that display and discuss their artifacts, examine the literature and art that they created...
I am in basic agreement
I also note that on archelogical evidence or the lack thereof, the
"history" in the Old Testament appears to be mostly phoney,
concocted during the Babylonian captivity. It helped to forge a national identity and validate religious laws and practices by giving them an imagined source in history.
Daniel Lazare's article says it ("False Testament" from harper's March 2002 and now a book)----Moses was made up, there is no concrete evidence of any kings David or Solomon like those described in the O.T., there is no evidence of a Joseph or a period of bondage in Egypt. The stories they made up are wonderful however----Lot's daughters, etc. great human interest stories superior to any novel I can think of or the national enquirer or any soap on TV. They are just flat-out excellent stories! So hats off to the guys in Babylonian Captivity times who concocted them.
when was that? 500 BC?
anyway after the babylonian invasion of 586?
Here's a link to lazare:
http://www.worldagesarchive.com/Reference_Links/False_Testament_(Harpers).htm
of course the Noah bit was stolen from the Sumerians (Gilgamesh, itself a real great book)
So I would even say this: don't just read their history and look at the archeological record and the genuine artefacts------read their lies.
Read their lies too, their lies tell something about them.
Here's another link to Daniel Lazare's Harper's article:
http://articles.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1111/is_1822_304/ai_83553507
There is an odd contrast. the national book of norwegians is almost all factual----the material was so good that Snorri didnt need to embelish, and it was recent and the facts were widely known. so he couldn't have.
the national book of the israeli is almost all fabricated, written by people
who had been uprooted by invaders who took all the middle and upper class people, the literate, off to babylon (wishing to destroy the indigenous society) and so the uprooted SYNTHESIZED a nation, made up myths and tradtitions and laws and ritual observances. what a great creation!
with reasons why for everything, this is why we do this, because so and so did that and when Moses led us out of Egypt, so we eat this kind of bread
and have salt water on the parsely.
this was a class act. it sets a very high standard for cultural invention
there is no question in my mind but that the O.T. is better reading than
the Iliad and Odyssey and the Song of Songs is at least as good as Sappho
(which is all fragments anyway).
I would compare the O.T. with the Heimskringla (and the rest of the body of factual norse sagas) and say that O.T. has all the trump cards except truth.
people who insist on it having truth too are just being greedy