Friday, June 27, 2008

Moses Deconstructed (Prolegomenon)

The following is an act of outright plagiarism of CUNY professor emeritus of philosophy Edith Wyschogrod and her article, "Eating the Text, Defiling the Hands." The weblogger will move seamlessly in and out of Wyschogrod's text so as to create uncertainty regarding the authorship of ideas, effectively resulting in a boosting of credit in the weblogger's favor and at the expense of Wyschogrod's good name.

Moses descended from Mount Sinai with two stone tablets in hand, and happened upon the scene of the greatest act of blasphemy in human history. The Israelites had given up their finest jewelry for Aaron to melt down and fashion into a golden calf. It was a beautiful calf, the people were pleased, and they said, "These be thy gods, O Israel, which brought thee up out of the land of Egypt." It looked exactly like this:


Moses, who, as we all know, wrote the book of Exodus in real time, as it was happening (this is how he managed to write his own epitaph - he wrote it as he was dying), had only to scroll back to Chapter 20, verses 2-3, to perceive that something was awry: "I am the LORD thy God, which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage. Thou shalt have no other gods before me." Moses did an on-the-fly synchronic textual analysis of this commandment and the Israelites' above-quoted pronouncement, and identified the polar opposition between the two. Aaron and the Israelites almost seemed to have gone out of their way to invert the First Commandment word for word. Moses was indignant, and he looked exactly like this:

We tend to have either of two reactions to this. Aaron and the Israelites either had a terrible memory, and simply couldn't remember the First Commandment, or Aaron was a great blasphemer who wanted to Stick It To The Man for making them wait so long in the desert.

Then we read a bit more carefully and see that Aaron was a righteous man, and he evidently had the makings of a good pastor. Right after the erection of the calf, Scripture reads, "And when Aaron saw it, he built an altar before it; and Aaron made proclamation, and said, To morrow is a feast to the LORD." The golden calf was raised up in the name of the Lord. The people, weary of merely hearing of God's promises, needed a concrete way to see and experience their God, who was distant from them. Aaron gave them the calf as a visual and imaginative aid to their conception of YHWH, as a sign of hope that their God was real and would fulfill his covenant with them. While this was a good move pastorally for Aaron, he was out of step theologically: In Egypt the Israelites would have been accustomed to seeing grand idols in the Egyptian gods' honor, so showing the grandness of Israel's God through a golden idol would have, in some sense, legitimized YHWH in their eyes. However, YHWH was the imageless God, the God beyond all materiality and all understanding, and Moses knew this. YHWH could not be contained in any human categories, could not be emulated visually, indeed, could not even be named.

We've all heard this before. But here is where I think it gets interesting. (This is an explicitly theological-philosophical reading, not an attempt to capture the "original intent" of the text, pace trained biblical exegetes.) Moses descended Mount Sinai with the two stone tablets - the Very Word of God - in hand, and suddenly realized he was complicit in their sin. The tablets he carried were in effect authoritative representations of God's own will, God's own intentionality. He understood this, and had to act:

And it came to pass, as soon as he came nigh unto the camp, that he saw the calf, and the dancing: and Moses' anger waxed hot, and he cast the tables out of his hands, and brake them beneath the mount.

Moses and Aaron represent the twin modes of understanding God: Aaron embodies the power of the image, of the phenomenal manifestation of the divine in the physical world; Moses stands for the ideality of God, the law, the words that create understanding of an invisible and unimaginable God. Both men are in the business of bearing and communicating the divine in human categories so that their people may believe. Moses recognized the people's proclivity for idolatry and understood that, if the golden calf had to be dismantled and burned, the tablets must be broken also. The idea of an original set of tablets, an original inscription of God's very words, simply carried too much potential for idolatry. So he smashed them against the rocks and wrote a second copy, so that all would know that the best we can lay claim to is a copy, which is really a copy of a copy.

Which is really a copy of a copy of a copy, right? Moses' breaking of the stones was a symbolic act, the function of which was to underscore the unattainableness of any kind of original foundation that we can confidently seize and claim as our own. Umberto Eco supposedly said somewhere that the universe is like an onion, and an onion is all peel. You peel back layers trying to find a core, but what you get are more layers. We try to peel back the layers of church history to find the "true Christian community" in the primitive church, and then we see that the early church was riddled with problems, and probably didn't have the kind of robust theology we'd like to credit them with. Then we try to peel back layers of Paul's letters to find the manuscripts that contain the best representation of the Apostle's "original intent", and then we realize that he's reflecting on his experience of seeing Christ. So we take it to the gospels. But after enough layer-peeling we realize that it is impossible to access the man of Jesus independent of a shroud of texts - texts layered over texts layered over texts. Matthew and Luke are layered over Mark, Mark's account was layered over Peter's testimony, Peter's testimony is layered with his cultural and historical assumptions (an "archi-text", if you will).

This is not to say that theology is ultimately meaningless since there's no escape from the endless layer-peeling. It is to say, however, that theology is to be found in the layers, in the shifting sands of our finite knowledge. It is the discomfort with layers that results in all our incessant calf-building - materialism, nationalism, humanism, fundamentalism, scientism, individualism, and, the most difficult golden calf to dismantle, our understanding. The orgiastic Israelites at the foot of Mt. Sinai suddenly look much different when we identify ourselves in them. We are uncomfortable with the uncertainty, the wandering in the desert, the waiting for Moses to descend from the mountain and deliver the goods. Moses will arrive, eventually, and when he does we might be disappointed to find that all he carries are broken tablets, tablets that only defer to what is beyond and behind them, that is, the One who is beyond all names.

...

And the LORD passed by before him, and proclaimed, The LORD, The LORD God, merciful and gracious, longsuffering, and abundant in goodness and truth, keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, and that will by no means clear the guilty; visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children, and upon the children's children, unto the third and to the fourth generation.

Exodus 34:6-7

6 comments:

Bryce said...

I want to propose that theology/life within the layers poses bigger problems than just discomfort and uncertainty. Allow me to explain: If an attempt to find a stable foundation is always being deferred to the point that it becomes impossible to attain, where does that leave us? I claim that it leaves us with a renewed value of situatedness. This is both a blessing and a problem. In one sense it releases us from the quest to get things right. Right is knowledge that is beyond us, and perhaps we should be cultivating, as the Scriptures often tell us, the fear of the Lord or Awe as an appropriate response to our human experience. The problem, as I see it, becomes the great inequality among life experiences that a lack of foundation makes utterly unbearable. What can be done? If I have explained myself enough, (highly debatable but I will improve as this thing chugs along)I think the answer lies in virtue ethics. We need to develop modes of life that directly correlate with our actions. We need to become rather than assent. Thanks for getting this started.

Anonymous said...

First of all, I really enjoyed your explication of the duality between Moses's tablets and Aaron's golden calf! I think its interesting how, in my limited inductive reasoning, it seems that a lot of people are unsatisfied with either ends of the spectrum--a foundationless theology found in the the layers or complete confidence in foundationlism or human reason.

I'm not sure if we can find a middle ground, or if it is even something to be desired. I'd like you (Bryce D...or anyone who wants) to explain where/how virtue ethics fits into this discussion.

p.s. has anyone read "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance" where Pirsig discusses the Ghost of Rationality? The main character is on a quest to invent an entirely new version of human rationality. He was writing in the 70's during the beginnings of post-structuralism...

Johnnywalkergold said...

God/Jesus Christ!!! What the fuck are you guys talking about and WHY??!!! Hasn't Christianity caused enough emotional, psychological and spiritual torment, guilt and indecision for you guys?? Great conversation, however, this conversation seems more relevant in the after-life (if there is one).
I have personally wasted so much time, energy and resources trying to to find out something about God, but is it really necessary??Why can't we just be-just be human? I think just trying to be human has enough problems in its own, let alone trying to live according to and manipulating others with abstract concepts that we can only assent to. Life is beautiful and rewarding in itself and I feel really sorry for people that need to glorify their own lives by attaching eternal meaning to everything they do. Christianity is a good survival technique, but a poor social and personal policy.
I guess what I'm saying is why not talk about yourselves within the world we live a little more stop trying to create/use theological realms that are neither here nor there. AKA, fuck theology. Embrace your own lives!!!

Jim Riley said...

Ok, I'll comment because its an interesting passage and Nic's commentary provokes thought.

First, sexually: you made an interesting remark in stating that "Right after the erection of the calf, Scripture reads, 'And when Aaron saw it, he built an altar before it; and Aaron made proclamation, and said, To morrow is a feast to the LORD.' The golden calf was raised up in the name of the Lord." The golden calf was raised after Aaron admired its erection. This is an interesting Freudian slip regarding one of recognitions of psychoanalysis on the sexual economy of the great Christian myths. From Julia Kristeva in 'About Chinese Women': "by the many religions of which Christianity is the chief, the psychoanalyst sees an emanation not of the glottal but of the anal sphincter" (as quoted in Moi 1986: 147). I do not deny the sacreligiosity in this statement for it is a sacrelgious theory, confirmed by the analysands, "tend[ing] to prove that impregnation by the fart (hiding behind its sublimination into Word)" is highly compatible with the "fantasy of anal pregnancy"-- i.e. "of penetration or auto-penetration by an anal penis," and, consequently, "a confusion of anus and vagina"; in short, what we are left with is a denial of sexual difference, i.e. the 'Biblical' supremecy of the masculine being as it is culminated in homo-erotic behavior (Kristeva in Moi 1986: 147). Essentially the point here is that, within this certain homosexual economy of Christian thought, Christianity will only recognize 'womb-man' in what it demands of her in order to include her in the symbolic order: she must live and think of herself as a virgin impregnated by the Word-- she is, within this sexual economy, a male homosexual. I'm not saying this is the fundamental goal of your message, when deconstructed, but it is an interesting 'on the side'. I think St Augustine said it best, though: "No one, however, to my way of thinking would prefer virginity to martyrdom" (in 'Holy Virginity' XLVII: 47).

You also mentioned that: "Moses stands for the ideality of God, the law, the words that create understanding of an invisible and unimaginable God."
Moses doesn't stand for God (in my opinion); Moses is the Human Ethic of God. If it weren't for Moses (not God), or some other 'prophet' (who we're not sure [would have] existed), the Jews would still be Egyptian slaves (well, not 'slaves', per se, but you know what I mean... they'd be living in the lower eschelon of Egytian society if they weren't all dead by now). I think we give God too much ethical credit sometimes- He seemed like a bit of a tyrant, if you ask me. I mean if it was my wife getting raped by some Egyptian for 4000 (or whatever Biblical figure) years I might worship a golden calf, myself- certainly not the God I prayed to everyday for allowing the rape of my wife and the death of my son to continue happening.

Ok, dude again. On "[t]he orgiastic Israelites at the foot of Mt. Sinai": is God really the one that needs our sympathy here? I'm not really sure.

Now, Jesus... that guy had Soul.

I'll comment more on this Moses stuff later, but I think you'd benefit from reading Sugmund Freud's 1938 'Moses and Monotheism' (perhaps Freud's most 'Christian', 'hyper-Catholic, and 'post-catholic work).

Also, R. Girard makes interesting and relevant remarks in Violence and the Sacred (particularly his constructions of 'scapegoat mechanism' and 'mimetic desire').

Anonymous said...

this has to be the sexiest communal blog out there. look at those profile pics.

btw, Jim, I'm a novice fan of Girard's stuff. Maybe we could get Nic to post his Pentateuch scapegoat mechanism paper at some point.

Johnny, hope all is well. I may be misreading you here. You're assuming that being/becoming human and the stuff of Jesus are two different/disconnected things? not sure I'd go with you there. Theosis--becoming like God--is the journey to being fully human. For me, Jesus is the best way toward that end that I've come across. Grant it, I haven't explored this out to the lengths that many others have. But the two--God/Jesus Christ and being human are, for me, inseparable. I can't do anthropology without theology. And really, how I understand the latter determines the former.

Nurse J said...

First of all, Cuz, I am proud to be your cousin, and proud you share such great thoughs. I'm also more than a little bummed I don't know as many big words as you do, and don't have (or make) as much time to spend thinking and reading as you do. You are lucky/blessed in that regard. I tried to read Zen and the Art of whatever (mostly because I love motorcycles), but only got half-way before I drowned. Anyway, Nick, about your writing, I loved it. Lots of tasty good stuff to think about.