11/01/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/01/2024 14:55
When Timothy Hogue started working on a book about the Ten Commandments, the ACLU had recently sued to prevent their display at two courthouses in Kentucky. This summer the commandments made news again, as Oklahoma and Louisiana sought to pass laws requiring all public schools to post them.
In his new book "The Ten Commandments: Monuments of Memory, Belief, and Interpretation," Hogue argues that instances like these are just the latest in a history of the Ten Commandments as a monument, rather than just text, with the goal-then and now-of defining a community.
He makes his case by comparing their words, presentation, and how people interact with them in the Biblical narrative to other monuments of that time. "What are they written on?" he asks. "Where are they placed? What are the ritual or political practices of engaging with them? And how did all those aspects change over time?"
Hogue is an assistant professor of Middle Eastern languages and cultures in the School of Arts & Sciences, whose specialty is the Hebrew Bible and ancient Israel. His field of study is the Levant, the area now occupied by Syria, Israel, Palestine, Lebanon, and Jordan. Roughly 3,500 years ago, he reports, a new type of monument appeared there, designed to embody a king or other elite and create a community around that person. By the Iron Age, when scholars believe the Bible started to be written, it was the region's most popular monument form. Their text began with the words "I am," then identified a person, their deeds, and the behavior incumbent on followers because of those deeds.
"It was kings, or in some instances, queens, presenting themselves to a group of people and laying out their expectations about what they were to believe and how they should act," Hogue says. "And that formed the community." He points out that although it's often left out of public versions of the Ten Commandments, in the Bible they begin with "I am Yahweh, your God, who brought you out of Egypt, out of slavery." The commandments themselves, then, were the behaviors intended to define how followers should act.
Through his research, Hogue discovered that such monuments evolved in text, style, and placement, depending on the social or political concerns of the times. He points to the fact that the Ten Commandments appear in the Bible twice-one of the few repeated texts. "In Exodus, the commandments are set up with an altar and stelae on a mountain, and the entire community is gathering around it," Hogue says. "Then in Deuteronomy, suddenly it's on tablets that get hidden in a box, and there's much more social stratification, with the people getting at it via the priests and the Levites. That matches other historical changes happening in the region."
Read more at Omnia.