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Golden calf

According to the Bible, the golden calf (עֵגֶל הַזָּהָב ‘ēgel hazzāhāv) was an idol (a cult image) made by the Israelites when Moses went up to Mount Sinai. In Hebrew, the incident is known as ḥēṭə’ hā‘ēgel (חֵטְא הָעֵגֶל) or "the sin of the calf". It is first mentioned in the Book of Exodus.[1]

Bull worship was common in many cultures. In Egypt, whence according to the Exodus narrative the Hebrews had recently come, the Apis Bull was a comparable object of worship, which some believe the Hebrews were reviving in the wilderness;[2] alternatively, some believe Yahweh, the national god of the Israelites, was associated with or pictured as a calf/bull deity through the process of religious assimilation and syncretism. Among the Canaanites, some of whom would become the Israelites,[3] the bull was widely worshipped as the Lunar Bull and as the creature of El.[4]

Biblical narrative

 
The Worship of the Golden Calf by Filippino Lippi (1457–1504)

When Moses went up into Mount Sinai to receive the Ten Commandments (Exodus 24:12–18), he left the Israelites for forty days and nights. The Israelites feared that he would not return and demanded that Aaron make them "a god to go before them". Aaron gathered up the Israelites' golden earrings and ornaments, constructed a "molten calf" and they declared: "'This is thy god, O Israel, which brought thee up out of the land of Egypt" (Exodus 32:1–4).

Aaron built an altar before the calf and proclaimed the next day to be a feast to the LORD. So they rose up early the next day and "offered burnt-offerings, and brought peace-offerings; and the people sat down to eat and to drink, and rose up to play." (Exodus 32:6) God told Moses what the Israelites were up to back in camp, that they had turned aside quickly out of the way which God commanded them and he was going to destroy them and start a new people from Moses. Moses besought and pleaded that they should be spared and "the LORD repented of the evil which He said He would do unto His people." (Exodus 32:11–14)

Moses went down from the mountain, but upon seeing the calf, he became angry and threw down the two Tablets of Stone, breaking them. Moses burnt the golden calf in a fire, ground it to powder, scattered it on water, and forced the Israelites to drink it. When Moses asked him, Aaron admitted to collecting the gold, and throwing it into the fire, and said it came out as a calf (Exodus 32:21–24).

Exclusion of the Levites and mass execution

The Bible records that the tribe of Levi did not worship the golden calf. "Moses stood in the gate of the camp, and said: 'Whosoever is on the LORD's side, let him come unto me.' And all the sons of Levi gathered themselves together unto him. And he said unto them: 'Thus saith the LORD, the God of Israel: Put ye every man his sword upon his thigh, and go to and fro from gate to gate throughout the camp, and slay every man his brother, and every man his companion, and every man his neighbour.' And the sons of Levi did according to the word of Moses; and there fell of the people that day about three thousand men."(Exodus 32:26–28)

Other mentions in the Bible

 
Moses destroying the tables (watercolor c. 1896–1902 by James Tissot)

The golden calf is mentioned in Nehemiah 9:16–21.

"But they, our ancestors, became arrogant and stiff-necked, and they did not obey your commands. They refused to listen and failed to remember the miracles you performed among them. They became stiff-necked and in their rebellion appointed a leader in order to return to their slavery. But you are a forgiving God, gracious and compassionate, slow to anger and abounding in love. Therefore you did not desert them, even when they cast for themselves an image of a calf and said, 'This is your god, who brought you up out of Egypt', or when they committed awful blasphemies.

"Because of your great compassion you did not abandon them in the wilderness. By day the pillar of cloud did not fail to guide them on their path, nor the pillar of fire by night to shine on the way they were to take. You gave your good Spirit to instruct them. You did not withhold your manna from their mouths, and you gave them water for their thirst. For forty years you sustained them in the wilderness; they lacked nothing, their clothes did not wear out nor did their feet become swollen."

The language suggests that there are some inconsistencies in the other accounts of the Israelites and their use of the calf. As the version in Exodus and 1 Kings are written by Deuteronomistic historians based in the southern Kingdom of Judah, there is a proclivity to expose the Israelites as unfaithful. The inconsistency is primarily located in Exodus 32:4 where "gods" is plural despite the construction of a single calf.[5]

The episode of the golden calf is also mentioned in the New Testament, by the apostle Paul, in 1 Corinthians chapter 10, as a warning against idolatry.

"Now these things occurred as examples to keep us from setting our hearts on evil things as they did. Do not be idolaters, as some of them were (...)."

Jeroboam's golden calves at Bethel and Dan

 
Worshiping the Golden Calf

According to 1 Kings 12:26–30, after Jeroboam establishes the northern Kingdom of Israel, he contemplates the sacrificial practices of the Israelites.

Jeroboam thought to himself, "The kingdom will now likely revert to the house of David. If these people go up to offer sacrifices at the temple of the LORD in Jerusalem, they will again give their allegiance to their lord, Rehoboam king of Judah. They will kill me and return to King Rehoboam." After seeking advice, the king made two golden calves. He said to the people, "It is too much for you to go up to Jerusalem. Here are your gods, Israel, who brought you up out of Egypt." One he set up in Bethel, and the other in Dan. And this thing became a sin; the people came to worship the one at Bethel and went as far as Dan to worship the other.

His concern was that the tendency to offer sacrifices in Jerusalem, which is in the southern Kingdom of Judah, would lead to a return to King Rehoboam. He makes two golden calves and places them in Bethel and Dan. He erects the two calves in what he figures (in some interpretations) as substitutes for the cherubim built by King Solomon in Jerusalem.[6]

However, in the Antiquities of the Jews (v. VIII: 8), which is taken from the Septuagint, Josephus states: "He made two golden heifers, and built two little temples for them, the one in the city Bethel, and the other in Dan...and he put the heifers into both the little temples in the forementioned cities." This is quite incompatible with any resemblance of the "calves" to the Egyptian Apis Bull, but quite indicative of the Egyptian goddess Hathor, to whom in the Egyptian text "Destruction of Mankind" is attributed cataclysmic events similar to those recounted in Exodus.[citation needed]

Richard Elliott Friedman says "at a minimum we can say that the writer of the golden calf account in Exodus seems to have taken the words that were traditionally ascribed to Jeroboam and placed them in the mouths of the people." Friedman believes that the story was turned into a polemic, exaggerating the throne platform decoration into idolatry, by a family of priests sidelined by Jeroboam.[7]

The declarations of Aaron and Jeroboam are almost identical:

  • 'These are your gods, O Israel, who brought you up from the land of Egypt' (Exod 32:4, 8);
  • 'Behold your gods, O Israel, who brought you up from the land of Egypt (1 Kings 12:28)

After making the golden calf or golden calves both Aaron and Jeroboam celebrate festivals. Aaron builds an altar and Jeroboam ascends an altar (Exod 32:5–6; 1 Kings 12:32–33).[8]

Jewish views

 
The Levites killed about 3,000 Israelites who worshipped the Golden Calf (1984 illustration by Jim Padgett).

In Legends of the Jews, the Conservative rabbi and scholar Louis Ginzberg wrote that the worship of the golden calf was the disastrous consequence for Israel who took a mixed multitude in their exodus from Egypt. Had not the mixed multitude joined them, Israel would not have been misled to worship this molten idol. The form of the calf itself came from a magical virtue of an ornament leaf with the image of the bull which is made by Aaron.[9]

The devotion of Israel to this worship of the calf was partly explained by a circumstance at passing through the Red Sea, when they beheld the most distinct creature about the Celestial Throne which is the resemblance of ox, then they thought it was an ox who had helped God in their journey from Egypt.[9] After seeing Hur son of Miriam who was carelessly murdered by the people following his rebuke of their ingratitude action to God, Aaron was willing rather to take a sin upon himself to make an idol than to cast the burden of an evil deed upon the people if they commit so terrible sin of killing a priest and prophet among them.[9]

Also there would be among the Israelites no priestly caste, and the nation would have been a nation of priests only if Israel had not sinned through worshiping the golden calf that the greater part of the people lost the right to priesthood, except the tribe of Levi as the only tribe who remained faithful to God and did not partake in this sinful deed.[10]

According to Nachman of Breslov, everyone contributed to the building of the Tabernacle, and the contribution that each Jew made was his or her good points. Thus, the Tabernacle was built by the good points found in each person; this was sufficient to counteract the blemish of the golden calf.[11] The “good points” are reflected in the “gold, silver and copper” that the Jews donated. The various colors of these metals reflect the Supernal Colors and the beauty of a person's good deeds.[12]

Christian views

Justus Knecht gives two important moral points from the episode of the golden calf: 1) The Mercy of God. "The people of Israel had sinned horribly against God by their idolatry, and yet, at Moses’ intercession, He forgave them." 2) Idolatry. "The weak people were most ungrateful and faithless to God. The Lord had done such great things for them! Only forty days before, full of holy fear, they had heard His voice and had repeatedly promised obedience to His Commandments; and now they transgressed the first and most important of them, and forsook God to worship idols. St Paul calls lust and covetousness idolatry. Whenever a man loves anything more than he loves God, he is guilty of idolatry."[13]

Islamic narrative

The incident of the worship of the golden calf is narrated in the second chapter of the Quran, named Al-Baqarah, and other works of Islamic literature. The Quran narrates that after they refused to enter the promised land, God decreed that as punishment the Israelites would wander for forty years. Moses continued to lead the Israelites to Mount Sinai for divine guidance. According to Islamic literature, God ordered Moses to fast for forty nights before receiving the guidance for the Israelites.[14][15] When Moses completed the fasts, he approached God for guidance. During this time, Moses had instructed the Israelites that Aaron was to lead them.[15]

The Israelites grew restless, since Moses had not returned to them, and after thirty days, a man the Quran names as Samiri raised doubts among the Israelites. Samiri claimed that Moses had forsaken the Israelites and ordered his followers among the Israelites to light a fire and bring him all the jewelry and gold ornaments they had.[16] Samiri fashioned the gold into a golden calf along with the dust on which the angel Gabriel had trodden, which he proclaimed to be the God of Moses and the God who had guided them out of Egypt.[17] There is a sharp contrast between the Quranic and the biblical accounts of the prophet Aaron's actions. The Quran mentions that Aaron attempted to guide and warn the people from worshipping the golden calf. However, the Israelites refused to stop until Moses had returned.[18] The righteous separated themselves from the pagans. God informed Moses that he had tried the Israelites in his absence and that they had failed by worshipping the golden calf.

Returning to the Israelites in great anger, Moses asked Aaron why he had not stopped the Israelites when he had seen them worshipping the golden calf. The Quran reports that Aaron stated that he did not act due to the fear that Moses would blame him for causing divisions among the Israelites. Moses realized his helplessness in the situation, and both prayed to God for forgiveness.[19] According to Qur’anic sources Moses then questioned Samiri for the creation of the golden calf;[20] Samiri justified his actions by stating that he had thrown the dust of the ground upon which Gabriel had tread on into the fire because his soul had suggested it to him.[21][16] Moses informed him that he would be banished and that they would burn the golden calf and spread its dust into the sea.[22] Moses ordered seventy delegates to repent to God and pray for forgiveness.[23] The delegates traveled alongside Moses to Mount Sinai, where they witnessed the speech between him and God but refused to believe until they had witnessed God with their sight. As punishment, God struck the delegates with lightning and killed them with a violent earthquake.[24] Moses prayed to God for their forgiveness. God forgave and resurrected them and they continued on their journey.[citation needed]

In the Islamic view, the calf-worshipers' sin had been shirk (Arabic: شرك), the sin of idolatry or polytheism. Shirk is the deification or worship of anyone or anything other than Allah, or more literally the establishment of "partners" placed beside God, a most serious sin.

Criticism and interpretation

According to modern scholarship, there are two versions of the Ten Commandments story, in Elohist (Exodus 20) and Jahwist (Exodus 34), this gives some antiquity and there may be some original events serving as a basis to the stories. The Golden Calf story is only in the E version and a later editor added in an explanation that God made a second pair of tablets to give continuity to the J story.[25] The actual Ten Commandments as given in Exodus 20 were also inserted by the redactor who combined the various sources.[26]

Current historiography considers that this episode was introduced into the Exodus account in the time of Josiah (622) or later to discredit the custom rooted in the Kingdom of Israel (North) of identifying Yahweh with a bull. The cult of the bull was rooted in Palestine from pre-Israelite times, as attested by the archaeological find of a bronze bull in the sanctuary of the acropolis of Jasor dated to the late Bronze Age. A bronze bull has also been found in an Israelite sanctuary east of Tel Dothan, in the mountains of Samaria, dated to around the 11th century.[27]

Albertz says that when we read in 1Kings 12:28 that the first monarch of the northern kingdom, Jeroboam, had introduced the worship of golden calves in Bethel and Dan, we must interpret that what Jeroboam really does is to return to the traditional Israelite religion, as opposed to the syncretistic innovations introduced by David and Solomon in centralizing the cult in Jerusalem.[28]

According to Michael Coogan, it seems that the golden calf was not an idol for another god, and thus a false god.[29] He cites Exodus 32:4–5 as evidence:

He [Aaron] took the gold from them, formed it in a mold, and cast an image of a calf; and they said, "These are your gods, O Israel, who brought you up out of the land of Egypt!" When Aaron saw this, he built an altar before it; and Aaron made proclamation and said, "Tomorrow shall be a festival to the LORD (Yahweh)."

Importantly, there is a single calf in this narrative. While the people refer to it as representative of the "gods", this is a possessive form of the word Elohim (אֱלֹהֶיךָelo'hecha, from אֱלֹהִים‎), which is a name of God as well as general word for "gods". While a reference to singular god does not necessarily imply Yahweh worship, the word usually translated as 'lord' is Yahweh יהוה‎ in the original, so at least it can't be ruled out.[29] In the chronology of Exodus the commandment against the creation of graven images had not yet been given to the people when they pressed upon Aaron to help them make the calf, and that such behavior was not yet explicitly outlawed.[29]

Another understanding of the golden calf narrative is that the calf was meant to be the pedestal of Yahweh. In Near Eastern art, gods were often depicted standing on an animal, rather than seated on a throne.[29] This reading suggests that the golden calf was merely an alternative to the ark of the covenant or the cherubim upon which Yahweh was enthroned.[29]

The reason for this complication may be understood as

  1. a criticism of Aaron, as the founder of one priestly house that rivaled the priestly house of Moses, and/or
  2. as "an attack on the northern kingdom of Israel."[29] The second explanation relies on the "sin of Jeroboam," who was the first king of the northern kingdom, as the cause of the northern kingdom's fall to Assyria in 722 BCE.[29] Jeroboam's "sin" was creating two calves of gold, and sending one to Bethel as a worship site in the south of the Kingdom, and the other to Dan as a worship site in the north, so that the people of the northern kingdom would not have to continue to go to Jerusalem to worship (see 1 Kings 12:26–30). According to Coogan, this episode is part of the Deuteronomistic history, written in the southern Kingdom of Judah, after the fall of the northern kingdom, which was biased against the northern kingdom.[29] Coogan maintains that Jeroboam was merely presenting an alternative to the cherubim of the Temple in Jerusalem, and that calves did not indicate non-Yahwehistic worship.[29]

The documentary hypothesis can be used to further understand the layers of this narrative: it is plausible that the earliest story of the golden calf was preserved by E (Israel source) and originated in the Northern kingdom. When E and J (Judah source) were combined after the fall of northern kingdom, "the narrative was reworked to portray the northern kingdom in a negative light," and the worship of the calf was depicted as "polytheism, with the suggestion of a sexual orgy" (see Exodus 32:6). When compiling the narratives, P (a later Priest source from Jerusalem) may have minimized Aaron's guilt in the matter, but preserved the negativity associated with the calf.[29]

Alternatively it could be said that there is no golden calf story in the J source, and if it is correct that the Jeroboam story was the original as stated by Friedman, then it is unlikely that the golden calf events as described in Exodus occurred at all. Friedman states that the smashing of the Ten Commandments by Moses when he beheld the worship of the golden calf, is really an attempt to cast into doubt the validity of Judah's central shrine, the Ark of the Covenant. "The author of E, in fashioning the golden calf story, attacked both the Israelite and Judean religious establishments."[30]

As adoration of wealth

A metaphoric interpretation emphasizes the "gold" part of "golden calf" to criticize the pursuit of wealth.[31] This usage can be found in Spanish[32] where Mammon, the Gospel personification of idolatry of wealth, is not so current.

In popular culture

Eponymous subjects

Others

See also

References

  1. ^ (Exodus 32:4
  2. ^ The early Christian Apostolic Constitutions, vi. 4 (c. 380), mentions that "the law is the decalogue, which the Lord promulgated to them with an audible voice, before the people made that calf which represented the Egyptian Apis."
  3. ^ Finklestein, Israel; Silberman, Neil Asher (2002). The Bible Unearthed. Touchstone. p. 118. ISBN 0-684-86913-6. Most of the people who formed early Israel were local people—the same people whom we see in the highlands throughout the Bronze and Iron Ages. The early Israelites were—irony of ironies—themselves originally Canaanites!
  4. ^ Friedman, Richard Elliott (2019) [First published 1987]. Who Wrote the Bible?. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1-9821-2900-2. The calf, or young bull, was often associated with the god El, the chief god of the Canaanites, who was in fact referred to as Bull El.
  5. ^ Coogan, 2009, pg. 116–117.
  6. ^ Coogan, pg. 117, 2009
  7. ^ Friedman, Richard Elliott "Who Wrote the Bible?" 1987 pp 72–3
  8. ^ Harvey, John E. (2004). Retelling the Torah: the Deuteronomistic historian's use of Tetrateuchal Narratives. New York; London: T & T Clark International. p. 2. ISBN 9780567080950. OCLC 276852204.: "The subsequent declarations of Aaron's people and Jeroboam are almost identical: 'These are your gods, O Israel, who brought you up from the land of Egypt' (Exod 32:4, 8); 'Behold your gods, O Israel, who brought you up from the land ..."
  9. ^ a b c Ginzberg, Louis (1909). The Legends of the Jews Volume III : The Golden Calf (Translated by Henrietta Szold) Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society
  10. ^ Ginzberg, Louis (1909) The Legends of the Jews Volume III : The Revelations in the Tabernacle (Translated by Henrietta Szold) Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society
  11. ^ Likutey Halakhot I
  12. ^ Rebbe Nachman of Breslov. Exodus-Leviticus Jerusalem/New York, Breslov Research Institute
  13. ^ Knecht, Friedrich Justus (1910). "XXXVII. The Golden Calf" . A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture. B. Herder.
  14. ^ (Quran 2:51)
  15. ^ a b (Quran 7:142)
  16. ^ a b M. Th Houtsma (1993). First encyclopaedia of Islam: 1913-1936. p. 136. ISBN 9004097961.
  17. ^ Abdul-Sahib Al-Hasani Al-'amili. The Prophets, Their Lives and Their Stories. p. 354. ISBN 9781605067063.
  18. ^ IslamKotob, Sayyed Abul Hasan Ali Nadwi. Stories of the Prophets - قصص الانبياء. p. 115.
  19. ^ (Quran 7:167-174)
  20. ^ "(Quran 20:95)". Retrieved 2022-07-09.
  21. ^ "(Quran 20:96)".
  22. ^ "(Quran 20:97)".
  23. ^ IslamKotob, Sayyed Abul Hasan Ali Nadwi. Stories of the Prophets - قصص الانبياء. p. 113.
  24. ^ Iftikhar Ahmed Mehar (2003). Al-Islam: Inception to Conclusion. p. 123. ISBN 9781410732729.
  25. ^ Friedman, Richard Elliott. 2003. The Bible with Sources Revealed, p 177.
  26. ^ Friedman, Richard Elliott. 2003. The Bible with Sources Revealed, p 153.
  27. ^ Pedro Giménez de Aragón Sierra. (2007). Historia de la Salvación, Una antigua fuente judeocristiana Traducción y comentario de Recognitiones I,27-42,2. Miño y Dávila srl. pp. 238.
  28. ^ ALBERTZ, R: Historia de la religión de Israel en tiempos del Antiguo Testamento. Göttingen, 1992. Madrid, 1999.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Coogan, M. (2009). A Brief Introduction to the Old Testament: The Hebrew Bible in its context. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 115.
  30. ^ Friedman, Richard Elliott (1987). Who Wrote the Bible?. p. 74.
  31. ^ Squires, Nick (2013-05-17). "Pope blames tyranny of capitalism for making people miserable". The Age. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
  32. ^ "becerro de oro". Diccionario de la Real Academia Española.
  33. ^ Trump's golden statue compared to Golden Calf in online derision The Jerusalem Post
  34. ^ Castronuovo, Celine (26 February 2021). "Golden statue of Trump at CPAC ridiculed online". thehill.com. The Hill. Retrieved 28 February 2021.
  35. ^ Beauchamp, Zach (26 February 2021). "This golden statue of Trump at CPAC is a perfect metaphor for the state of the GOP". Vox.com. Vox. Retrieved 28 February 2021.
  36. ^ Chait, Jonathan (26 February 2021). "Donald Trump, CPAC and Republican Cult of Losing". nymag.com. Retrieved 28 February 2021.
  37. ^ DeCandido, Keith (September 16, 2016). "Holy Rewatch Batman! "Batman's Anniversary" / "A Riddling Controversy"". Tor.com. Macmillan Publishers. from the original on September 17, 2016.

Further reading

  • Driscoll, James F. (1909). "Golden Calf" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 6. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • Friedrich Justus Knecht (1910). "Chapter XXXVII. The Golden Calf" . A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture. B. Herder.

External links

  • The Golden calf from a Jewish perspective at Chabad.org
  • The Golden calf from Ein Hod perspective
  • Islamic interpretation of the story of the Golden calf in the Qur'an
  • Jewish Encyclopedia: Calf, Golden
  • Online Quran Project 20.83

golden, calf, other, uses, disambiguation, according, bible, golden, calf, ēgel, hazzāhāv, idol, cult, image, made, israelites, when, moses, went, mount, sinai, hebrew, incident, known, ḥēṭə, ēgel, calf, first, mentioned, book, exodus, adoration, golden, calf,. For other uses see Golden calf disambiguation According to the Bible the golden calf ע ג ל ה ז ה ב egel hazzahav was an idol a cult image made by the Israelites when Moses went up to Mount Sinai In Hebrew the incident is known as ḥeṭe ha egel ח ט א ה ע ג ל or the sin of the calf It is first mentioned in the Book of Exodus 1 The Adoration of the Golden Calf picture from the Hortus deliciarum of Herrad of Landsberg 12th century Bull worship was common in many cultures In Egypt whence according to the Exodus narrative the Hebrews had recently come the Apis Bull was a comparable object of worship which some believe the Hebrews were reviving in the wilderness 2 alternatively some believe Yahweh the national god of the Israelites was associated with or pictured as a calf bull deity through the process of religious assimilation and syncretism Among the Canaanites some of whom would become the Israelites 3 the bull was widely worshipped as the Lunar Bull and as the creature of El 4 Contents 1 Biblical narrative 1 1 Exclusion of the Levites and mass execution 2 Other mentions in the Bible 3 Jeroboam s golden calves at Bethel and Dan 4 Jewish views 5 Christian views 6 Islamic narrative 7 Criticism and interpretation 7 1 As adoration of wealth 8 In popular culture 8 1 Eponymous subjects 8 2 Others 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksBiblical narrative Edit The Worship of the Golden Calf by Filippino Lippi 1457 1504 When Moses went up into Mount Sinai to receive the Ten Commandments Exodus 24 12 18 he left the Israelites for forty days and nights The Israelites feared that he would not return and demanded that Aaron make them a god to go before them Aaron gathered up the Israelites golden earrings and ornaments constructed a molten calf and they declared This is thy god O Israel which brought thee up out of the land of Egypt Exodus 32 1 4 Aaron built an altar before the calf and proclaimed the next day to be a feast to the LORD So they rose up early the next day and offered burnt offerings and brought peace offerings and the people sat down to eat and to drink and rose up to play Exodus 32 6 God told Moses what the Israelites were up to back in camp that they had turned aside quickly out of the way which God commanded them and he was going to destroy them and start a new people from Moses Moses besought and pleaded that they should be spared and the LORD repented of the evil which He said He would do unto His people Exodus 32 11 14 Moses went down from the mountain but upon seeing the calf he became angry and threw down the two Tablets of Stone breaking them Moses burnt the golden calf in a fire ground it to powder scattered it on water and forced the Israelites to drink it When Moses asked him Aaron admitted to collecting the gold and throwing it into the fire and said it came out as a calf Exodus 32 21 24 Exclusion of the Levites and mass execution Edit Main article Levite The Bible records that the tribe of Levi did not worship the golden calf Moses stood in the gate of the camp and said Whosoever is on the LORD s side let him come unto me And all the sons of Levi gathered themselves together unto him And he said unto them Thus saith the LORD the God of Israel Put ye every man his sword upon his thigh and go to and fro from gate to gate throughout the camp and slay every man his brother and every man his companion and every man his neighbour And the sons of Levi did according to the word of Moses and there fell of the people that day about three thousand men Exodus 32 26 28 Other mentions in the Bible Edit Moses destroying the tables watercolor c 1896 1902 by James Tissot The golden calf is mentioned in Nehemiah 9 16 21 But they our ancestors became arrogant and stiff necked and they did not obey your commands They refused to listen and failed to remember the miracles you performed among them They became stiff necked and in their rebellion appointed a leader in order to return to their slavery But you are a forgiving God gracious and compassionate slow to anger and abounding in love Therefore you did not desert them even when they cast for themselves an image of a calf and said This is your god who brought you up out of Egypt or when they committed awful blasphemies Because of your great compassion you did not abandon them in the wilderness By day the pillar of cloud did not fail to guide them on their path nor the pillar of fire by night to shine on the way they were to take You gave your good Spirit to instruct them You did not withhold your manna from their mouths and you gave them water for their thirst For forty years you sustained them in the wilderness they lacked nothing their clothes did not wear out nor did their feet become swollen The language suggests that there are some inconsistencies in the other accounts of the Israelites and their use of the calf As the version in Exodus and 1 Kings are written by Deuteronomistic historians based in the southern Kingdom of Judah there is a proclivity to expose the Israelites as unfaithful The inconsistency is primarily located in Exodus 32 4 where gods is plural despite the construction of a single calf 5 The episode of the golden calf is also mentioned in the New Testament by the apostle Paul in 1 Corinthians chapter 10 as a warning against idolatry Now these things occurred as examples to keep us from setting our hearts on evil things as they did Do not be idolaters as some of them were Jeroboam s golden calves at Bethel and Dan EditMain article Jeroboam Worshiping the Golden Calf According to 1 Kings 12 26 30 after Jeroboam establishes the northern Kingdom of Israel he contemplates the sacrificial practices of the Israelites Jeroboam thought to himself The kingdom will now likely revert to the house of David If these people go up to offer sacrifices at the temple of the LORD in Jerusalem they will again give their allegiance to their lord Rehoboam king of Judah They will kill me and return to King Rehoboam After seeking advice the king made two golden calves He said to the people It is too much for you to go up to Jerusalem Here are your gods Israel who brought you up out of Egypt One he set up in Bethel and the other in Dan And this thing became a sin the people came to worship the one at Bethel and went as far as Dan to worship the other His concern was that the tendency to offer sacrifices in Jerusalem which is in the southern Kingdom of Judah would lead to a return to King Rehoboam He makes two golden calves and places them in Bethel and Dan He erects the two calves in what he figures in some interpretations as substitutes for the cherubim built by King Solomon in Jerusalem 6 However in the Antiquities of the Jews v VIII 8 which is taken from the Septuagint Josephus states He made two golden heifers and built two little temples for them the one in the city Bethel and the other in Dan and he put the heifers into both the little temples in the forementioned cities This is quite incompatible with any resemblance of the calves to the Egyptian Apis Bull but quite indicative of the Egyptian goddess Hathor to whom in the Egyptian text Destruction of Mankind is attributed cataclysmic events similar to those recounted in Exodus citation needed Richard Elliott Friedman says at a minimum we can say that the writer of the golden calf account in Exodus seems to have taken the words that were traditionally ascribed to Jeroboam and placed them in the mouths of the people Friedman believes that the story was turned into a polemic exaggerating the throne platform decoration into idolatry by a family of priests sidelined by Jeroboam 7 The declarations of Aaron and Jeroboam are almost identical These are your gods O Israel who brought you up from the land of Egypt Exod 32 4 8 Behold your gods O Israel who brought you up from the land of Egypt 1 Kings 12 28 After making the golden calf or golden calves both Aaron and Jeroboam celebrate festivals Aaron builds an altar and Jeroboam ascends an altar Exod 32 5 6 1 Kings 12 32 33 8 Jewish views Edit The Levites killed about 3 000 Israelites who worshipped the Golden Calf 1984 illustration by Jim Padgett In Legends of the Jews the Conservative rabbi and scholar Louis Ginzberg wrote that the worship of the golden calf was the disastrous consequence for Israel who took a mixed multitude in their exodus from Egypt Had not the mixed multitude joined them Israel would not have been misled to worship this molten idol The form of the calf itself came from a magical virtue of an ornament leaf with the image of the bull which is made by Aaron 9 The devotion of Israel to this worship of the calf was partly explained by a circumstance at passing through the Red Sea when they beheld the most distinct creature about the Celestial Throne which is the resemblance of ox then they thought it was an ox who had helped God in their journey from Egypt 9 After seeing Hur son of Miriam who was carelessly murdered by the people following his rebuke of their ingratitude action to God Aaron was willing rather to take a sin upon himself to make an idol than to cast the burden of an evil deed upon the people if they commit so terrible sin of killing a priest and prophet among them 9 Also there would be among the Israelites no priestly caste and the nation would have been a nation of priests only if Israel had not sinned through worshiping the golden calf that the greater part of the people lost the right to priesthood except the tribe of Levi as the only tribe who remained faithful to God and did not partake in this sinful deed 10 According to Nachman of Breslov everyone contributed to the building of the Tabernacle and the contribution that each Jew made was his or her good points Thus the Tabernacle was built by the good points found in each person this was sufficient to counteract the blemish of the golden calf 11 The good points are reflected in the gold silver and copper that the Jews donated The various colors of these metals reflect the Supernal Colors and the beauty of a person s good deeds 12 Christian views EditJustus Knecht gives two important moral points from the episode of the golden calf 1 The Mercy of God The people of Israel had sinned horribly against God by their idolatry and yet at Moses intercession He forgave them 2 Idolatry The weak people were most ungrateful and faithless to God The Lord had done such great things for them Only forty days before full of holy fear they had heard His voice and had repeatedly promised obedience to His Commandments and now they transgressed the first and most important of them and forsook God to worship idols St Paul calls lust and covetousness idolatry Whenever a man loves anything more than he loves God he is guilty of idolatry 13 Islamic narrative EditSee also Moses in Islam Islamic view of Aaron and Al Baqarah The incident of the worship of the golden calf is narrated in the second chapter of the Quran named Al Baqarah and other works of Islamic literature The Quran narrates that after they refused to enter the promised land God decreed that as punishment the Israelites would wander for forty years Moses continued to lead the Israelites to Mount Sinai for divine guidance According to Islamic literature God ordered Moses to fast for forty nights before receiving the guidance for the Israelites 14 15 When Moses completed the fasts he approached God for guidance During this time Moses had instructed the Israelites that Aaron was to lead them 15 The Israelites grew restless since Moses had not returned to them and after thirty days a man the Quran names as Samiri raised doubts among the Israelites Samiri claimed that Moses had forsaken the Israelites and ordered his followers among the Israelites to light a fire and bring him all the jewelry and gold ornaments they had 16 Samiri fashioned the gold into a golden calf along with the dust on which the angel Gabriel had trodden which he proclaimed to be the God of Moses and the God who had guided them out of Egypt 17 There is a sharp contrast between the Quranic and the biblical accounts of the prophet Aaron s actions The Quran mentions that Aaron attempted to guide and warn the people from worshipping the golden calf However the Israelites refused to stop until Moses had returned 18 The righteous separated themselves from the pagans God informed Moses that he had tried the Israelites in his absence and that they had failed by worshipping the golden calf Returning to the Israelites in great anger Moses asked Aaron why he had not stopped the Israelites when he had seen them worshipping the golden calf The Quran reports that Aaron stated that he did not act due to the fear that Moses would blame him for causing divisions among the Israelites Moses realized his helplessness in the situation and both prayed to God for forgiveness 19 According to Qur anic sources Moses then questioned Samiri for the creation of the golden calf 20 Samiri justified his actions by stating that he had thrown the dust of the ground upon which Gabriel had tread on into the fire because his soul had suggested it to him 21 16 Moses informed him that he would be banished and that they would burn the golden calf and spread its dust into the sea 22 Moses ordered seventy delegates to repent to God and pray for forgiveness 23 The delegates traveled alongside Moses to Mount Sinai where they witnessed the speech between him and God but refused to believe until they had witnessed God with their sight As punishment God struck the delegates with lightning and killed them with a violent earthquake 24 Moses prayed to God for their forgiveness God forgave and resurrected them and they continued on their journey citation needed In the Islamic view the calf worshipers sin had been shirk Arabic شرك the sin of idolatry or polytheism Shirk is the deification or worship of anyone or anything other than Allah or more literally the establishment of partners placed beside God a most serious sin Criticism and interpretation EditAccording to modern scholarship there are two versions of the Ten Commandments story in Elohist Exodus 20 and Jahwist Exodus 34 this gives some antiquity and there may be some original events serving as a basis to the stories The Golden Calf story is only in the E version and a later editor added in an explanation that God made a second pair of tablets to give continuity to the J story 25 The actual Ten Commandments as given in Exodus 20 were also inserted by the redactor who combined the various sources 26 Current historiography considers that this episode was introduced into the Exodus account in the time of Josiah 622 or later to discredit the custom rooted in the Kingdom of Israel North of identifying Yahweh with a bull The cult of the bull was rooted in Palestine from pre Israelite times as attested by the archaeological find of a bronze bull in the sanctuary of the acropolis of Jasor dated to the late Bronze Age A bronze bull has also been found in an Israelite sanctuary east of Tel Dothan in the mountains of Samaria dated to around the 11th century 27 Albertz says that when we read in 1Kings 12 28 that the first monarch of the northern kingdom Jeroboam had introduced the worship of golden calves in Bethel and Dan we must interpret that what Jeroboam really does is to return to the traditional Israelite religion as opposed to the syncretistic innovations introduced by David and Solomon in centralizing the cult in Jerusalem 28 According to Michael Coogan it seems that the golden calf was not an idol for another god and thus a false god 29 He cites Exodus 32 4 5 as evidence He Aaron took the gold from them formed it in a mold and cast an image of a calf and they said These are your gods O Israel who brought you up out of the land of Egypt When Aaron saw this he built an altar before it and Aaron made proclamation and said Tomorrow shall be a festival to the LORD Yahweh Importantly there is a single calf in this narrative While the people refer to it as representative of the gods this is a possessive form of the word Elohim א ל ה יך elo hecha from א ל ה ים which is a name of God as well as general word for gods While a reference to singular god does not necessarily imply Yahweh worship the word usually translated as lord is Yahweh יהוה in the original so at least it can t be ruled out 29 In the chronology of Exodus the commandment against the creation of graven images had not yet been given to the people when they pressed upon Aaron to help them make the calf and that such behavior was not yet explicitly outlawed 29 Another understanding of the golden calf narrative is that the calf was meant to be the pedestal of Yahweh In Near Eastern art gods were often depicted standing on an animal rather than seated on a throne 29 This reading suggests that the golden calf was merely an alternative to the ark of the covenant or the cherubim upon which Yahweh was enthroned 29 The reason for this complication may be understood as a criticism of Aaron as the founder of one priestly house that rivaled the priestly house of Moses and or as an attack on the northern kingdom of Israel 29 The second explanation relies on the sin of Jeroboam who was the first king of the northern kingdom as the cause of the northern kingdom s fall to Assyria in 722 BCE 29 Jeroboam s sin was creating two calves of gold and sending one to Bethel as a worship site in the south of the Kingdom and the other to Dan as a worship site in the north so that the people of the northern kingdom would not have to continue to go to Jerusalem to worship see 1 Kings 12 26 30 According to Coogan this episode is part of the Deuteronomistic history written in the southern Kingdom of Judah after the fall of the northern kingdom which was biased against the northern kingdom 29 Coogan maintains that Jeroboam was merely presenting an alternative to the cherubim of the Temple in Jerusalem and that calves did not indicate non Yahwehistic worship 29 The documentary hypothesis can be used to further understand the layers of this narrative it is plausible that the earliest story of the golden calf was preserved by E Israel source and originated in the Northern kingdom When E and J Judah source were combined after the fall of northern kingdom the narrative was reworked to portray the northern kingdom in a negative light and the worship of the calf was depicted as polytheism with the suggestion of a sexual orgy see Exodus 32 6 When compiling the narratives P a later Priest source from Jerusalem may have minimized Aaron s guilt in the matter but preserved the negativity associated with the calf 29 Alternatively it could be said that there is no golden calf story in the J source and if it is correct that the Jeroboam story was the original as stated by Friedman then it is unlikely that the golden calf events as described in Exodus occurred at all Friedman states that the smashing of the Ten Commandments by Moses when he beheld the worship of the golden calf is really an attempt to cast into doubt the validity of Judah s central shrine the Ark of the Covenant The author of E in fashioning the golden calf story attacked both the Israelite and Judean religious establishments 30 As adoration of wealth Edit A metaphoric interpretation emphasizes the gold part of golden calf to criticize the pursuit of wealth 31 This usage can be found in Spanish 32 where Mammon the Gospel personification of idolatry of wealth is not so current In popular culture EditEponymous subjects Edit See also Golden calf disambiguation Le veau d or est toujours debout The Golden Calf is still standing an aria in Charles Gounod s opera Faust Cave of the Golden Calf a notorious nightclub in Edwardian London created by Frida Uhl The Golden Calf and the Altar an episode in the unfinished opera Moses und Aron a three act uncompleted opera by Arnold Schoenberg The Golden Calf a sculpture by conceptual artist Damien Hirst The Golden Calf a song on the Prefab Sprout album From Langley Park to Memphis Mooby the Golden Calf a fictional character featured in the works of Kevin Smith The Little Golden Calf a satirical novel by Soviet authors Ilf and Petrov Dance Around the Golden Calf a painting by Emil Nolde The Calf of Dan a sculpture by James W Washington Jr The 2021 Conservative Political Action Conference CPAC featured a golden statue of former United States President Donald Trump Online commentators compared the figure with the Exodus s golden calf considering Trump s largely evangelical and conservative Christian base 33 34 35 36 Others Edit In Episode 79 of Batman a Golden Calf full of money was stolen by The Riddler 37 See also EditBull of Heaven Cattle in religion Erev Rav Gugalanna Ki Tissa and Eikev Torah parshiot dealing with the Golden Calf Red heifer Sacred bull TauroctonyReferences Edit Exodus 32 4 The early Christian Apostolic Constitutions vi 4 c 380 mentions that the law is the decalogue which the Lord promulgated to them with an audible voice before the people made that calf which represented the Egyptian Apis Finklestein Israel Silberman Neil Asher 2002 The Bible Unearthed Touchstone p 118 ISBN 0 684 86913 6 Most of the people who formed early Israel were local people the same people whom we see in the highlands throughout the Bronze and Iron Ages The early Israelites were irony of ironies themselves originally Canaanites Friedman Richard Elliott 2019 First published 1987 Who Wrote the Bible Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 9821 2900 2 The calf or young bull was often associated with the god El the chief god of the Canaanites who was in fact referred to as Bull El Coogan 2009 pg 116 117 Coogan pg 117 2009 Friedman Richard Elliott Who Wrote the Bible 1987 pp 72 3 Harvey John E 2004 Retelling the Torah the Deuteronomistic historian s use of Tetrateuchal Narratives New York London T amp T Clark International p 2 ISBN 9780567080950 OCLC 276852204 The subsequent declarations of Aaron s people and Jeroboam are almost identical These are your gods O Israel who brought you up from the land of Egypt Exod 32 4 8 Behold your gods O Israel who brought you up from the land a b c Ginzberg Louis 1909 The Legends of the Jews Volume III The Golden Calf Translated by Henrietta Szold Philadelphia Jewish Publication Society Ginzberg Louis 1909 The Legends of the Jews Volume III The Revelations in the Tabernacle Translated by Henrietta Szold Philadelphia Jewish Publication Society Likutey Halakhot I Rebbe Nachman of Breslov Exodus Leviticus Jerusalem New York Breslov Research Institute Knecht Friedrich Justus 1910 XXXVII The Golden Calf A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture B Herder Quran 2 51 a b Quran 7 142 a b M Th Houtsma 1993 First encyclopaedia of Islam 1913 1936 p 136 ISBN 9004097961 Abdul Sahib Al Hasani Al amili The Prophets Their Lives and Their Stories p 354 ISBN 9781605067063 IslamKotob Sayyed Abul Hasan Ali Nadwi Stories of the Prophets قصص الانبياء p 115 Quran 7 167 174 Quran 20 95 Retrieved 2022 07 09 Quran 20 96 Quran 20 97 IslamKotob Sayyed Abul Hasan Ali Nadwi Stories of the Prophets قصص الانبياء p 113 Iftikhar Ahmed Mehar 2003 Al Islam Inception to Conclusion p 123 ISBN 9781410732729 Friedman Richard Elliott 2003 The Bible with Sources Revealed p 177 Friedman Richard Elliott 2003 The Bible with Sources Revealed p 153 Pedro Gimenez de Aragon Sierra 2007 Historia de la Salvacion Una antigua fuente judeocristiana Traduccion y comentario de Recognitiones I 27 42 2 Mino y Davila srl pp 238 ALBERTZ R Historia de la religion de Israel en tiempos del Antiguo Testamento Gottingen 1992 Madrid 1999 a b c d e f g h i j Coogan M 2009 A Brief Introduction to the Old Testament The Hebrew Bible in its context Oxford Oxford University Press p 115 Friedman Richard Elliott 1987 Who Wrote the Bible p 74 Squires Nick 2013 05 17 Pope blames tyranny of capitalism for making people miserable The Age Retrieved 2019 09 25 becerro de oro Diccionario de la Real Academia Espanola Trump s golden statue compared to Golden Calf in online derision The Jerusalem Post Castronuovo Celine 26 February 2021 Golden statue of Trump at CPAC ridiculed online thehill com The Hill Retrieved 28 February 2021 Beauchamp Zach 26 February 2021 This golden statue of Trump at CPAC is a perfect metaphor for the state of the GOP Vox com Vox Retrieved 28 February 2021 Chait Jonathan 26 February 2021 Donald Trump CPAC and Republican Cult of Losing nymag com Retrieved 28 February 2021 DeCandido Keith September 16 2016 Holy Rewatch Batman Batman s Anniversary A Riddling Controversy Tor com Macmillan Publishers Archived from the original on September 17 2016 Further reading EditDriscoll James F 1909 Golden Calf In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 6 New York Robert Appleton Company Friedrich Justus Knecht 1910 Chapter XXXVII The Golden Calf A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture B Herder External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Golden calf The Golden calf from a Jewish perspective at Chabad org Rabbi Fohrman s Lectures on the Golden Calf The Golden calf from Ein Hod perspective Islamic interpretation of the story of the Golden calf in the Qur an Story of Muses and Aaron in the Qur an Jewish Encyclopedia Calf Golden Online Quran Project 20 83 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Golden calf amp oldid 1151063823, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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