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The Great Shift

Encountering God in Biblical Times

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The renowned author of How to Read the Biblereveals how a pivotal transformation in spiritual experience during the biblical era made us who we are today.

A great mystery lies at the heart of the Bible. Early on, people seem to live in a world entirely foreign to our own. God appears to Abraham and Sarah, Jacob and others; God buttonholes Moses and Isaiah and Jeremiah and tells them what to say. Then comes the Great Shift, and Israelites stop seeing God or hearing the divine voice. Instead, later Israelites are “in search of God,” reaching out to a distant, omniscient deity in prayers, as people have done ever since. What brought about this change? The answers come from ancient texts, archaeology and anthropology, and even modern neuroscience. They concern the origins of the modern sense of self and the birth of a worldview that has been ours ever since. James Kugel, whose strong religious faith shines through his scientific reckoning with the Bible and the ancient world, has written a masterwork that will be of interest to believers and nonbelievers alike, a profound meditation on encountering God, then and now.

“Fascinating.”—The New York Times Book Review

“Biblical exegesis at its best: a brilliant and sensitive reading of ancient texts, all with an eye to making them meaningful to our time by making sense of what they meant in their own.”—Kirkus Reviews(starred review)

“A magnificent job of bringing important ideas from the academy to a broad readership . . . Kugel gives readers a sense of history’s convoluted texture, its ironies, and thus its beauty.”—The Jewish Review of Books
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from July 10, 2017
      Bible expert Kugel (How to Read the Bible), a Harvard professor emeritus of Hebrew literature, puts his decades of interdisciplinary scholarship to effective use in this thought-provoking and ambitious attempt to answer a challenging question: “What was the actual, lived reality of God in biblical times, and why have most people lost it today?” Kugel takes the texts literally when they refer to people such as Abraham and Moses hearing the voice of God or having visions of the divine, arguing that they “must have felt that they were telling the truth, at least in some sense.” His fascinating quest for an answer touches on virtually all of the Hebrew Bible, examining its changing theologies, including its views of human free will, as well as theories of the evolution of the self and the development of the concept of a soul. Kugel concludes that “as God came to be conceived as increasingly distant and abstract, the human went from being a general form of self-reference... to being a special, separate entity inside the human body, an entity uniquely attached to God,” and eventually this led to our “modern sealed-off individualism.” Kugel demands a lot from his readers, but all students of Scripture, whether religious or not, will benefit from this impressive synthesis.

    • Kirkus

      July 15, 2017
      An inquiry into how the contemporaries of Solomon and Sheba viewed the presence of the deity and why the reality of that highly personal divine/mortal relationship changed over time.Talking to God is usually a silent affair these days, lest those around the conversant think him or her crazy. By Kugel's (Emeritus, Hebrew Literature/Harvard Univ.; In the Valley of the Shadow: On the Foundations of Religious Belief, 2011, etc.) lively, inviting account, the reason we read today of the likes of Adam and Moses talking before the living presence of the deity is that they really did talk to a living deity; in their reality, there was no question whether God existed or not, only how people came to him and he to them. Probing not just the texts, but also the secondary literature of neuroscience and anthropology, the author charts a trajectory that follows something like a child's development of the sense of self, from the world as "not-us," "this undifferentiated Outside that did almost everything," to a place that we navigate and even master. At first, Kugel writes, God appeared, lifting the veil of illusion. Later, that work was done by intermediaries--by angels and souls and psalms that marked a newfound "steady gaze inward," as if self-regarding humans somehow came to say, don't worry, we've got this, even as God replied through the likes of "a human-sized angel who could communicate with prophets and sages by addressing them face-to-face." Readers may feel that Kugel himself is a little nostalgic for the Yahweh who needed no temples or cedar palaces but instead found his home among the tents and tabernacles. Even so, the author is at home in every era from that of the ancient texts to our own, and he makes for an excellent guide. Biblical exegesis at its best: a brilliant and sensitive reading of ancient texts, all with an eye to making them meaningful to our time by making sense of what they meant in their own.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      September 1, 2017

      Renowned Orthodox Jewish scholar Kugel (professor emeritus, Hebrew literature, Harvard Univ.; How To Read the Bible) here attempts to enter the world of the Hebrew Bible, to answer the question: "What was the actual, lived reality of God in biblical times, and why have most people lost it today?" Using the tools of modern scholarship from a variety of disciplines, Kugel goes beyond the typical dismissal of the biblical experience as primitive and naive. Instead, he writes from a position of faith, allowing for the possibility of something real behind these divine-human encounters, even as human consciousness has evolved. This book thoughtfully explores the experiences of biblical figures such as Abraham, Moses, and the prophet Isaiah, drawing on clues from the ancient contexts of the scriptures' writers. Much of this work also focuses on the dramatic shift that occurs during the biblical era on topics such as prayer, the soul, and, most significantly, one's sense of self. This shift lays the foundation for many modern experiences of God as seemingly more distant than was the case in biblical times. VERDICT Recommended for spiritual seekers and those interested in biblical scholarship.--Brian Sullivan, Alfred Univ. Lib., NY

      Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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