By V. Philips Long
Professor of Old Testament
Regent College, Vancouver
March 2005
Readers of Bible and Interpretation will be aware that a debate around
the issue of biblical "minimalism" (for want of a better term) [1]
has been taking place in its ether. A year and a half ago Niels Peter Lemche
contributed a piece entitled "Conservative Scholarship—Critical Scholarship: Or
How Did We Get Caught by This Bogus Discussion." He begins with a quote from
James Barr's 1977 book Fundamentalism to the effect that "a conservative
evangelical student" will tend to want to avoid reading Wellhausen (and, by
implication, other critics of his ilk) and will prefer to read books about why
Wellhausen is wrong, encouraged in this avoidance strategy by his or her
"pastoral advisors." Lemche then comes immediately to his main concern:
"Conservative scholarship is on the move, often disguising itself as mainstream
scholarship" (p. 1). [2] As perfect examples of the kind of scholars
and scholarship he is worried about, Lemche mentions Iain Provan and me. I offer
the following response in the hope that it may contribute to better mutual
understanding, even if understanding does not lead to agreement.
Conservatives Barred?
Provan is cited as a "perfect example" of a conservative who disguises
himself as a mainstream scholar by "being reconciliatory—maybe with a touch of
condenscendence [sic]—…claiming the highest level of scholarship even
though other interests may be at hand at the same time" (p. 1). We shall return
to the issue of "other interests" presently, but for now it may suffice simply
to ask whether scholarship and scholars are ever free of "other interests." That
Provan should be chosen to represent the kind of "conservative" scholarship
against which James Barr warned strikes me as both mystifying and misguided. I
have known Provan for almost twenty-five years, have observed his scholarly
habits, have read much of his work, have recently co-authored a book with him,
[3] and for the past five years have served with him in the same
faculty. To attempt to paint Provan with Barr’s fundamentalism brush simply
doesn’t work. To mention but one piece of evidence: Provan currently teaches a
course entitled "Biblical Hermeneutics and Criticism" in which he introduces
various critical approaches and assigns weekly readings drawn almost exclusively
from the progenitors or practitioners of the various criticisms. [4]
Does he encourage his students to read critically and to evaluate carefully the
strengths and weaknesses of the various critical approaches? I certainly hope
so, but isn’t that part of what critical scholarship is about?
Misprision, Misunderstanding, or…?
I am cited as "another perfect example of this tactical new orientation" (p.
2). Specifically, Lemche charges me with a "misprision" of his work—a misprision
being (according to his note 6) "a deliberate misunderstanding of the view of
one’s opponents"—thereby creating a "bogus victim" that I have no trouble
discrediting. The statement by Lemche that I am charged with deliberately
misunderstanding is this: "In the eyes of many ‘scholars’ of the past who have
never looked out the window to perceive the world outside it, this biblical
Israel was believed to have existed once." These words come in the last
paragraph of Lemche’s "Prolegomena" to his Israelites in History and
Tradition. [5] In quoting them in my own introductory chapter to
Windows into Old Testament History, [6] I understood Lemche to
be charging those who do not share his skepticism about "biblical Israel" with
having paid insufficient attention to the kind of external, outside-world
evidence that, say, ancient Near Eastern studies could offer. Lemche insists,
however, that his "remark has nothing to do with the ancient Near East" but
stands, rather, "at the end of a discussion of European biblical scholarship in
the 19th century" and is meant to criticize "ivory tower" scholarship and its "Schreibtischtheorien."
[7]
While to my recollection the terms "ivory tower," "Shreibtischtheorien," and
the like do not appear in Lemche’s "Prolegomena," it is certainly true that he
discusses European biblical scholarship of the 19th century. Having now reread
Lemche’s "Prolegomena," I think I can see his point—and one must in any case
grant him the right to declare what he meant to say—and so I apologize for
taking his words in a way he apparently did not intend. A deliberate
misunderstanding ("misprision"), however, I cannot in good conscience confess.
As I have reflected on what may have prompted me to read Lemche’s words in the
way I did, a number of factors have come to mind, but I shall relegate them to
an endnote [8] so that we may move on to the more general substance
of Lemche’s essay. At the heart of his essay, it seems to me, is a concern that
he and other minimalist scholars are being treated unfairly. [9]
Lemche’s Concerns
My understanding of Lemche’s key points is as follows:
1. Conservatives seldom if ever engage in serious reading of and dialogue
with their opponents (pp. 1, 4, 8–9) but seek to bury their hated opponents by
name-calling (p. 6). [10]
2. Some critical scholars have recently (unwittingly?) adopted this
reprehensible tactic (p. 6) and should stop it: "Critical scholars should be
critical enough to realize the tactics of conservative scholars: never engage in
a serious discussion with the minimalists" (p. 9).
3. Whether by conservatives or by critics adopting conservative tactics,
minimalist scholars have been labeled and dismissed, even while knowledge of
their thirty years of output has remained remarkably limited (p. 10 and
passim).
4. Finally, the notion that minimalists have pursued a hidden, ideological
agenda is absurd, and one should ask who the real ideologues are (pp. 10–11).
Each of these points requires a response, so we shall take them up in turn.
Point #1: The Problem with Conservatives
Barr’s (and Lemche’s) indictment of conservatives and fundamentalists as
obscurantist may well be true of some conservatives, but it is hardly
true of the vast majority of established evangelical scholars. In fact, if
citation rate in publications be any guide, evangelical writers read more widely
outside their particular camp than do many (though not all) non-evangelicals. To
Barr’s charge that evangelicals tend to read secondary literature as a short-cut
to gain perspective in lieu of the much more demanding task of reading primary
literature in order to develop perspective, I would ask what scholar does not do
this on some occasions? (Would it be unfair to suggest that Barr’s
Fundamentalism, cited by Lemche, is itself just this kind of secondary
literature intended to give perspective on a particular brand of scholarship?) I
would also contend that inspecting course syllabi (such as Provan’s, mentioned
in endnote 4) or published works (such as the recently released Biblical
History of Israel by Provan, Long, and Longman [11]) shows how
wide of the mark the obscurantist charge is nowadays. In the latter, a wide
variety of scholarship is discussed, ranging from Davies to Donner to Dever to
Deist, and including numerous works by Lemche, Thompson, and many others of
various persuasions.
To the more serious charge that conservatives, or critics behaving like them,
seek to bury their hated opponents by name-calling, I offer two observations.
First, Lemche is of course correct that name-calling is inappropriate and
unhelpful in any context—including the academy, where dialogue and understanding
are desired. I entirely agree with Lemche that characterizing other scholars as,
e.g., anti-Semitic is to set a very dangerous precedent, and it is hard to see
how this can help anything. This cannot mean that substantive criticism, even
such as might kill the sales of a book, is disallowed in the interest of
civility. But it does mean that criticism should be substantive, not ad
hoc or ad hominem.
Secondly, however, I find it puzzling (and disturbing—or perhaps comforting)
that in his section entitled "Name-calling and the conservative position" (pp.
3–6) Lemche cites almost no evangelicals. Rather, he cites (1) a review in the
Jerusalem Post, (2) a University of Tel Aviv professor who accused
Lemche’s daughter-in-law (herself a Jew) of being a Nazi by virtue of her
relationship to "the Nazi Lemche," and (3) a critical scholar who on his website
ascribes to the minimalists an "anti-Zionism approaching anti-Semitism." The
only example of a conservative evangelical scholar cited by Lemche is the
notably outspoken K. A. Kitchen, and all he is quoted as saying (borrowing
Barr’s summary) is that "any attempt to apply to ancient near eastern literature
the sort of [documentary] analysis customary within the Bible would ‘result in
manifest absurdities.’" [12] No name-calling here, just a statement
of opinion about a particular critical approach. Indeed, judging from Lemche’s
further quotation of Barr and from the fuller discussion in Fundamentalism,
Barr does not seem to be accusing Kitchen of name-calling at all but only of
making a "pretence of impartiality." [13] Regarding the latter,
Barr’s criticisms may have some force (though not just with respect to Kitchen).
While notions of impartial, or objective, scholarship may have been common
enough in 1966 when Kitchen wrote Ancient Orient and Old Testament, today
few hermeneutically aware scholars would deny that the practice of scholarship
is bound up with (though not necessarily determined by) "other issues."
[14]
So, what of the charge that conservative scholars are obscurantist,
preferring name-calling to dialogue? I am not about to claim that no
conservative fundamentalists are obscurantist or that none have ever stooped to
name-calling. After all, ignorance is bliss, and to err is human. But it does
appear from the literature that evangelical scholars are as diligent in
their research and as widely read as their critical colleagues. And as for
name-calling, to engage in it would not just be a breach of scholarly protocol
but would run counter to the most basic tenets of biblical ethics. [15]
Point #2: The Problem with Critics behaving like Conservatives
Given the evidence that Lemche cites, it hardly seems justified to lay the
charge of abusive name-calling at the feet of conservative evangelicals, but
this is what Lemche does when he suggests that the name-callers are "using a
language that has been colored by remarks such as those found in evangelical
literature" (p. 6). If such language ("slander" [p. 6]) can be shown to be
widespread in current evangelical literature, we need to be made aware of it.
Failing such a presentation of evidence, the suggestion that critical scholars
have wittingly or unwittingly taken a page from the conservatives’ book of dirty
tricks remains baseless. Might it not simply be the case that some critical
scholars qua critical scholars find the minimalist case lacking cogency
on enough points to begin to wonder whether it is worth their while to try to
keep up with the prodigious publication rate of some its leading proponents? In
other words, could it not be that some critical scholars believe that they have
gotten the minimalist drift sufficiently to feel justified in moving on to more
fertile pastures? Engaging in name-calling while turning to these other pastures
is uncalled for, but it hardly seems fair to blame conservatives either for the
decision of critics to move on or for their behavior when doing so.
Point #3: Feeling Labeled and Dismissed
At the heart of Lemche’s complaint seems to be a sense that the minimalists
have simply been labeled and dismissed. If the refusal of scholars of various
stripes to endorse minimalist conclusions leaves some feeling labeled and
dismissed, then this is regrettable. I believe, however, that many scholars of
various persuasions have in fact engaged seriously with minimalist writings,
even if there may have been little initial or, indeed, final inclination to
agree with them. My own situation is this: while I have not read all the
prodigious output from Copenhagen, Sheffield, and other centers of minimalism, I
have thoroughly read books by Davies, Thompson, Lemche, Garbini, Van Seters
(though he occupies somewhat different scholarly space) and others; I have read
collected volumes such as Can a ‘History of Israel’ Be Written? [16]
and a wide array of articles. Further, I included essays or excerpts from
Davies, Thompson, and Lemche in a volume I edited on the topic of ancient
Israelite historiography. [17] Thus, in our current environment of
over-publication, I feel that I have engaged seriously if not exhaustively with
minimalist writings, even if I have not found them generally convincing.
[18] I also wonder—and I mean this as an honest question, not an accusing
one—how much contemporary evangelical scholarship the minimalists have seriously
read and engaged with. Judging from the wistful tone of Lemche’s recollection of
a time when "the historical-critical scholar would never have accepted the
conservative as his equal and never have allowed him into his company" (p. 7)
and when "No conservative, i.e., evangelical scholar would ever be allowed to
contribute" (p. 8), I cannot imagine that the engagement has been large.
The irony in all this is that Lemche seems to be advocating with respect to
conservatives (and critics who join them in their disenchantment with
minimalism) precisely the kind of labeling and dismissing that he feels he and
other minimalists are suffering. The problem as Lemche sees it is that "Entering
a dialogue with an opponent who has different goals from the ones of the
critical scholar means the same as diluting one’s own position" (p. 8). This
refusal of dialogue might appear obscurantist, but that is not Lemche’s point.
Rather, he maintains that "in the universe of the critical scholar, there can be
no other goal than the pursuit of scholarship—irrespective of where his
investigations may lead him or her" (p. 8). While the notion that scholarship
should seek to follow the evidence wherever it leads is axiomatic, Lemche’s bald
statement strikes me as perhaps too positivistic. Later in his essay, Lemche
himself observes that since the 20th century "we possess an immensely improved
understanding of the cognitive process and its ideological basis in the milieu
of the individual scholar. Of course, there is no such thing as objective
knowledge. This goes without saying" (p. 10). If Lemche is serious about "the
self as a social construct" (p. 10), how can he speak of simply pursuing
scholarship wherever it may lead, as if "other interests" are not somehow
involved? As I have argued elsewhere, "every scholar comes to the table not just
as a scholar but as a human being," [19] replete with those "other
interests" of which Provan was earlier charged. If a kind of relative scholarly
objectivity is to be achieved, it will be by recognizing and thus controlling,
not denying, the influence of these "other interests."
Point #4: Conspiracy or Consistency?
Lacking evidence to the contrary, I quite agree with Lemche that revisionist
scholars are not engaged in some kind of conspiracy. They are, it seems to me,
simply drawn together in common cause in the same way that other scholars who
tend to see things in similar or compatible ways are drawn together. To find
another’s views sympathetic and convincing does not mean that one has joined the
other in a conspiracy. I also acknowledge the force of Lemche’s claim that
today’s so-called minimalists did not arrive at their minimalism by taking a
path different from the path traveled by their critical predecessors but,
rather, by following the path consistently and relentlessly to its radical
endpoint (pp. 10–11). On this point, Lemche may find himself in surprising
agreement with Provan and his co-authors in A Biblical History of
Israel. [20]
So, Can We Talk?
At the end of the day, I believe that just as there are no "bad questions,"
provided that they are sincerely and respectfully posed, there are no "bogus
conversations," provided they are sincerely and respectfully joined. Lemche is
quite correct to decry situations in which scholars of other viewpoints are
simply labeled and dismissed. This should not be done to today’s minimalist
scholars, nor indeed to today’s more conservative scholars. Respect should not
and cannot require that one read everything another scholar has written,
but it does require that a representative sampling be read, and read well,
before judgments are made. Further—and this is important—if our conversations
are to be not only genial but also profitable, we must begin to explore more
openly the deeper levels at which some of our disagreements exist. In other
words, we must become more open to discussing the "other issues" that we all
bring to the table. Only then will we be in a position to work upward from the
fundamental differences to the resulting disagreements at the surface level of
particular judgments on specific points. In The Nature of Historical
Knowledge, in a chapter entitled "The Historian’s Mind and Historical
Reconstruction," Michael Stanford remarks:
In all these approaches, historians employ their intentions, their hopes
and fears, their beliefs, their methodological, even metaphysical,
principles, their grasp and use of language and of languages, their
hermeneutic capacities, and so on. All these are relevant to the major task
of seeing and understanding the past, and hence making a reasonably accurate
and functioning mental model of it. [21]
In short, there are indeed "other issues" involved in all our scholarly
practice, and the sooner we recognize them ourselves and disclose them to
others, the sooner we may get to the heart of some of our academic
disagreements. But here a word of caution: to attempt to divine the "intentions,
…hopes and fears, …beliefs, …methodological, even metaphysical, principles" of
other scholars is a dangerous business and one that can all too easily
lead to a kind of labeling—even name-calling—that, as Philip Davies fears, could
"bring scholarship as a whole into disrepute." [22] But burying real
points of disagreement is not the solution either. As I have suggested
elsewhere,
Perhaps if scholars were more forthcoming about their own core
commitments, there would be less temptation to characterize (or caricature)
one another in terms that might indeed bring scholarship into disrepute.
[23]
Near the end of one of his recent books, Dever poses a very direct question:
Are we not entitled to know what professional biblical scholars, whether
they are clerics or not (most no longer are), after a lifetime of study and
reflection have come to believe about the Bible, that is, about its
ultimate claims? [24]
To borrow words from Hans Barstad, we are "all in fact practising some
sort of philosophy, and it would certainly not hurt [our] work if [we] realized
this." [25]