Wednesday, June 5, 2019

Transactional Failure: The Negative Ethic of (Stipulation Against) Idolatry


Transactional Failure: The Negative Ethic of (Stipulation Against) Idolatry
Rev. Douglas Olds
May 2019
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     It is sometimes implied (Moe-Lobeda [2013; 2017]; Jenkins [2013, 8; 2014], Jenkins, et al. [2018]) that there is no direct Biblical message or historical analogy to apply to the issue of Global Warming and Climate Change so that secular ethical foundations must be developed.  A canonical approach to the theological condemnation of idolatry in Deutero-Isaiah may offer a productive pastoral and proclamatory approach.  Isaiah 44.9-20 is centrally occupied with the use of combustible resources--the unbounded and unsustainable scale of exploitation of which is at the root of the Greenhouse Effect. In my research, I have yet to find this passage linked with Global Climate Change. Yet, in the parodic account of Deutero-Isaiah (Watts 2005, Holter 1995, Baltzer 2001), the idol maker is charged with diverting combustible resources away from their stated, intended function--instrumental sufficiency for personal warming and cooking--toward the creation of idols. 
Isaiah 44.9 All who make idols are nothing, and the things they delight in do not profit; their witnesses neither see nor know. And so they will be put to shame. 10 Who would fashion a god or cast an image that can do no good? 11 Look, all its devotees shall be put to shame; the artisans too are merely human. Let them all assemble, let them stand up; they shall be terrified, they shall all be put to shame.
12 The ironsmith fashions it and works it over the coals, shaping it with hammers, and forging it with his strong arm; he becomes hungry and his strength fails, he drinks no water and is faint. 13 The carpenter stretches a line, marks it out with a stylus, fashions it with planes, and marks it with a compass; he makes it in human form, with human beauty, to be set up in a shrine. 14 He cuts down cedars or chooses a holm tree or an oak and lets it grow strong among the trees of the forest. He plants a cedar and the rain nourishes it. 15 Then it can be used as fuel. Part of it he takes and warms himself; he kindles a fire and bakes bread. Then he makes a god and worships it, makes it a carved image and bows down before it. 16 Half of it he burns in the fire; over this half he roasts meat, eats it and is satisfied. He also warms himself and says, “Ah, I am warm, I can feel the fire!” 17 The rest of it he makes into a god, his idol, bows down to it and worships it; he prays to it and says, “Save me, for you are my god!”
18 They do not know, nor do they comprehend; for their eyes are shut, so that they cannot see, and their minds as well, so that they cannot understand. 19 No one considers, nor is there knowledge or discernment to say, “Half of it I burned in the fire; I also baked bread on its coals, I roasted meat and have eaten. Now shall I make the rest of it an abomination? Shall I fall down before a block of wood?” 20 He feeds on ashes; a deluded mind has led him astray, and he cannot save himself or say, “Is not this thing in my right hand a fraud?”

A. Centrality of Message: Form and Rhetorical Criticism of Is. 44. 9-20
Is. 44.9-20 is the conclusion to dramatic center of the Deutero-Isaianic corpus of Is. 40-55 (Sweeney 2016, 19-20) concerned with YHWH’s redemption of Israel. Specifically, Is. 42.14-44.23 concludes the third of five successive arguments for God’s agency in determining Israel’s prospects (Sweeney 2016, 20).  Is. 44. 9-20 is thus marked as a climax to this central motif.
Moreover, Is. 44. 9-20 is noted by Matheus (1987, 324) as the thematic center of a chiasm, or ring-structure, concerning the incomparability of God against the abomination of idol fabrication:
A Is. 40.18ff. Introduction: with whom can one compare God? 
Β 41. 6-7 the intent for creating idols
C 42.17 who trusts in idols will be confounded 
D 44. 9-20 process of idol fabrication
C' 45.16-17 who trusts in idols will be ashamed
B' 45.20 the ineffectuality of created idols
A' 46. 5-8 concluding query: with whom can one compare God?
The centrality of Is. 44. 9-20 in this chiastic structure rhetorically marks and emphasizes the human failure to recognize God for who God is: The Creator and redeemer of the people of Israel.
Not only is Is. 44. 9-22 recognized literarily as the rhetorical center in Matheus’ (1987) and Sweeney’s (2016) formal structuring of the Deutero-Isaianic account, Holter (1995) and Spykerboer (1976) note that Is. 44. 9-20 makes up the third and far most important of the polemical presentations against idolatry in Deutero-Isaiah.
Both Matheus (1987) and Spykerboer (1976) note the marked literary form of Is. 44. 9-22: it is poetic in meter and structure, but “it is more descriptive than most other parts of [Deutero-Isaiah]” (Spykerboer 1976, 117).  The meter and descriptive poetry of Is. 44. 9-22 markedly changes that of the meter and rhetoric of the poetry of the rest of Is. 40-48 in which it is embedded.  The language and flow of this passage is so marked that many scholars have taken the passage to be an interpolation (Watt 2005, Baltzer 2001).  However, Goldingay and Payne (2006, I, 303) discern that both thematically and linguistically the passage forms part of a “spiral” within the more characteristic versification and poesy beginning in 42.14. Matheus (1987) agrees that poetic form characterizes this passage, and Spykerboer (1976, 117) sees no argument for this passage’s lack of originality or genuineness despite its “markedly prose form.”
The sum of these illustrations of poetic, rhetorical markedness and thematic centrality serve to demonstrate the importance of Is 44. 9-22 as a Biblical message.  The passage demonstrates the process of idol fabrication forward and backward (Goldingay and Payne 2006, I, 356) which compares with Wisdom13.10–13.[1] Verse 19 recapitulates verse 17, doubly emphasizing its condemnation of the diversion of carbon combustible resources from subsistence heating and cooking to that upon which the idol fabricator makes his abomination. I conclude that this repetition of the framing of the diversion of combustible resources as idolatry to be the most highly marked passage of this demonstrably thematic and literarily central hinge sequence.  The diversion of carbon combustible resources from subsistence needs into an idol-making process is thus germane to the ethical and Biblical evaluation of the carbon combustion-intensive political economy.
Because God’s primary commandment (Exod. 20.3) and protological curse (Deut. 27.15) concern idolatry, and because Deutero-Isaiah 45 involves a creation account set inside a critique of empire, a theological foundation of concern for nature affected by the misuse of carbon combustible resources may be derived from the Trinitarian ethic of trusteeship as promoted earlier.  If the charge of idolatry holds, a society heedless of the misuse of combustible fuels might be recognized as engaging in a foundational, covenantal sin against the Creator, one that assaults God’s atmospheric mover (Gen. 1.2), the Holy ruach.
Trusteeship of nature by humanity requires something to motivate the execution of its covenantal duties.  To that end, we turn to God’s final judgment flowing from the negative principle of idolatry. It may be noted how modern Judaism employs Isaiah 44 (including 44.9-20) in its regular sequence of parashah and haftarah readings. That sequence implies the covenantal structure suggested above: idolatry in contravention of the covenant of trusteeship is followed by God’s Final Judgment. In the year 2020, the Va-yikra service of 5 Nisan 5780 (March 28) has as its haftarah reading Is. 44.6-23, with the liturgical description, “God’s greatness contrasted with the sin of idolatry.”  The following week (Tzav) has a haftarah reading of Malachi 3.4-24, described as “Approach of the Day of Judgment” (Assembly of Reform Rabbis 2017). This sequence of haftarot that follows the betrayal of God through idolatry by the Approach of the Day of Judgment is repeated in the year 2021, on 7 and 14 Nisan 5781.  This sequence is instructive as to Judaism’s seriousness with which it makes of idolatry described by Is. 44. 9-20: It is to be followed by God’s Judgment.

      B.  Canonical Arc of Condemnation of Idolatry from the Prophets to Revelation 18
Coote (2004) locates the impetus for Deutero-Isaiah’s condemnation of idolatry during the Persian period; it was applied, in part, to calling for the return to Jerusalem of the offspring of exiled Judahites who were continuing to find employment and residence in Babylon. Many of these were craftsmen employed in the Babylon religious establishment.  Yet the context of (Deutero-) Isaiah 40-55 may be more general than particular in its condemnation of Babylonian society.  Read intertextually with Rev. 17-19, the entire Babylonian economy may have been seen by early Christian readers as by “Persian Isaiah” (Coote 2004): as idolatrous, and the prophet’s charge of idol fabrication might be applied to all exiled Judahites participating in the Babylonian economy, whatever their occupation or sector. 
        Other prophets condemn Israel’s idolatry, which they characterize as “adultery,” the fundamental disloyalty of Israel to its partner YHWH. Hosea (4.12-13), Jeremiah (9.2), and Ezekiel (16.36) join Isaiah (57.7-8) in naming idolatry as adultery. This characterization is significant because the charge of adultery is applied to encompass Babylon’s society in Rev. 18.  That charge of adultery is linked to and envisions a political economy idolatrous in the production of luxuries, a diversion of resources from subsistence needs to the vanities of the rich.
Rev. 18.1 After this I saw another angel coming down from heaven, having great authority; and the earth was made bright with his splendor. 2 He called out with a mighty voice,
    “Fallen, fallen is Babylon the great!
    It has become a dwelling place of demons,
    a haunt of every foul spirit,
    a haunt of every foul bird,
    a haunt of every foul and hateful beast.
    3For all the nations have drunk
    of the wine of the wrath of her fornication,
    and the kings of the earth have committed fornication with her,
    and the merchants of the earth have grown rich from the power of her luxury.”
9 And the kings of the earth, who committed fornication and lived in luxury with her, will weep and wail over her when they see the smoke of her burning; 10 they will stand far off, in fear of her torment, and say,
    “Alas, alas, the great city,
    Babylon, the mighty city!
    For in one hour your judgment has come.”
11 And the merchants of the earth weep and mourn for her, since no one buys their cargo anymore, 12 cargo of gold, silver, jewels and pearls, fine linen, purple, silk and scarlet, all kinds of scented wood, all articles of ivory, all articles of costly wood, bronze, iron, and marble, 13 cinnamon, spice, incense, myrrh, frankincense, wine, olive oil, choice flour and wheat, cattle and sheep, horses and chariots, slaves—and human lives.
    14“The fruit for which your soul longed
    has gone from you,
    and all your dainties and your splendor
    are lost to you,
    never to be found again!”
15 The merchants of these wares, who gained wealth from her, will stand far off, in fear of her torment, weeping and mourning aloud,
    16“Alas, alas, the great city,
    clothed in fine linen,
    in purple and scarlet,
    adorned with gold,
    with jewels, and with pearls!
    17For in one hour all this wealth has been laid waste!”
And all shipmasters and seafarers, sailors and all whose trade is on the sea, stood far off 18 and cried out as they saw the smoke of her burning,
    “What city was like the great city?”
    19And they threw dust on their heads, as they wept and mourned, crying out,
    “Alas, alas, the great city,
    where all who had ships at sea
    grew rich by her wealth!
    For in one hour she has been laid waste.
    20Rejoice over her, O heaven,
    you saints and apostles and prophets!
    For God has given judgment for you against her.”
Adultery is linked in this passage with the luxury production by idol fabricators. This vision, which is meant to be applied to Rome of New Testament times, picks up on the Old Testament’s condemnation of Babylon’s society during the exile of Judah there during the time of Deutero-Isaiah.  This condemnation of the resource-diverting—especially combustible resource-diverting—economic society has ready application to this day and age when a carbon-intensive economy degrades the atmosphere and does not provide sufficient subsistence opportunities to the poor, future generations, and other species.

II.          Covenant Performance of Atmospheric Trusteeship
 Alienation may be humankind’s greatest existential problem--alienation from God, from nature, from society, of the human soul from the human body.  Because of alienation, humankind struggles with feelings of insecurity and insufficiency.  In their idolatrous desire to become like gods, Adam and Eve as the mythological representatives of fallen human nature misapply their freedom in what they misconstrue as capricious and chaotic nature—nature perceived at times graciously fecund or punitively hostile.  This psychological dualism leads humanity through history to fantasize looming, recurrent scarcities and consequently to build stores of hoarded goods and commodities to serve as material security. Alienation stimulates Adam and Eve’s modern human heirs to pursue a destructive environmental ethic of hoarding and extractive exploitation of resources relatively unbounded by concerns of future generations, marginalized groups, indigenous peoples with historical land tenure, and other species.
To describe and repair this alienation, the Bible structures the environmental surroundings of humanity on a Trinitarian basis.  Ontogenetically primary is nature as a “garden,” the realm of humanity’s creation by God the Father and therefore an average child’s first experience of his or her surroundings.  It stands to reason that God’s directive to Adam to serve and preserve the garden in Gen. 2.15 is directed at this fecund household inside a parenting and sustaining nature.  The environmental ethic that results is “usufruct,” the non-exploitative culling of nature’s yearly harvest without depletion of its productive capacity. This trustee’s task derives from the Creator’s blessing. Leithart (2018) illustrates this blessing by inverting the curse of Cain:
The Lord curses Cain in Genesis 4:12: ‘When you serve [abad] the ground (adamah), it will not give (natan) its strength (koach) to you.’
Invert that, and we have a fair summary of God’s blessing, and a mini theology of the natural environment. Humanity’s stance toward the earth: Service, not exploitation, pillage, or rape.
When the adamah is well served, she gives.
The relation of humanity to creation is not master-servant. Humanity doesn’t dominate but serves; and the exchange that results is an exchange of gifts.
The adamah gives strength, which means that the adamah has power to give. It also implies that the adamah shares power.
Humanity’s task inside the Creator’s garden is to respect, tend, and serve.  Humanity is to recognize its fellowship with other created natural entities.
The second conceptualization of humanity’s ambient surroundings is the Bible’s consideration of אֶרֶץ ʾerets the land as a political, historical, and cultural construct. This is the realm of the Logos—God the Son.  It is in adulthood that the denizen of the garden of creation goes forth to encounter the world in its historical and cultural complexity and risk.  It is within this latter, blended milieu of terrestrial substrate and human sociological forces that an individual created being learns how to function and what existential choices to make.  It is within adulthood in the land that a person learns whether to pursue violence and Machiavellian stratagems to survive, or whether to take up the challenge of the moral lifestyle of God the Son to extend the garden for others, not only to embody and exploit it solipsistically.  In such a case, the directive toward trusteeship of nature’s garden continues.  If, however, the alternative is pursued for a reckless individualism and selfish self-centeredness, an exploitative ethic of economic intensification and depletion results.
The third Trinitarian state of nature is dichotomous: the landing of the Holy Spirit or its absence.  It is the bifurcate exit either to grave—dead earth—or renewal: Paradise/new earth.
To illustrate, Robb (2010) contrasts the “Kingdom of Oil” with the Kingdom of God. After establishing a moral foundation in liberation and the insurrectionist Jesus, she demonstrates the necessity to collectively deliberate over the vision of the good society, which in Church circles involves the Gospel kerygma (proclamation) of the Kingdom. I (not Robb) argue that if a person’s values in this life are the extensions of life to others in the form of trusteeship of nature and the Kingdom ethics of God the Son, then those values will be realized anew in the Creator’s Final Judgment that brings the individual’s final destiny inside an ambient and productive paradise that instantiate those values.  If self-centeredness and exploitation were the core of an individual’s lifetime in both garden and land, then the prospect from God’s judgment is a destiny in a cold grave and the self-created, non-productive values that represents. 
The Holy Spirit’s absence or presence in the environmental surroundings of land and garden leads to the “double exit” of life and death within the Creator.  In death, there is no ruach’s breath of air, only its cessation.  By this prospect, we again return to the necessity in this life to promote the sustaining fellowship with the atmosphere as a value that demonstrates to the Creator our seriousness with which we take life in the garden and life in the land. We demonstrate our respect for life by fellowshipping with and acting as a trustee of the atmosphere while living the Kingdom ethics of God the Son.  We receive fellowship in return by pneumatic companionship with God’s breath, the ruach of Creation, and the love poured out into our hearts by the Son. The Gospel of our receiving redemption by grace may be existentially primary, but the Gospel announced by the Son of the Kingdom of God surely includes our awakening to the covenantal requirements that focus on the life-sustaining surroundings of our neighbors no less than ourselves.




[1]   Wis 13. 10 But miserable, with their hopes set on dead things, are those
    who give the name “gods” to the works of human hands,
    gold and silver fashioned with skill,
    and likenesses of animals,
    or a useless stone, the work of an ancient hand.
    11A skilled woodcutter may saw down a tree easy to handle
    and skillfully strip off all its bark,
    and then with pleasing workmanship
    make a useful vessel that serves life’s needs,
    12and burn the cast-off pieces of his work
    to prepare his food, and eat his fill.
    13But a cast-off piece from among them, useful for nothing,
    a stick crooked and full of knots,
    he takes and carves with care in his leisure,
    and shapes it with skill gained in idleness;
    he forms it in the likeness of a human being,

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