
A Comparison of the Egyptian Execration Ritual to Exodus 32:19 and Jeremiah 19
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Content
- Table of Contents (page 5)
- Abbreviations (page 11)
- Introduction (page 15)
- Chapter One: The Relationship Between Religion and Magic (page 23)
- I. Defining Religion (page 23)
- A. Experiential Method (page 25)
- B. Substantive Method (page 26)
- C. Functionalist Method (page 26)
- D. Family-Resemblance Method (page 27)
- II. Defining Magic (page 28)
- A. The Evolutionary Approach and the Animistic Approach (page 29)
- B. The Psychological Approach (page 31)
- C. The Prelogical/Prescientific Approach (page 32)
- D. The Sociological Approach (page 33)
- E. The Synthetic Approach (page 34)
- III. Magic in the Hebrew Bible (HB) (page 36)
- A. Genesis 30 (page 38)
- B. Exodus 17:8-16 (page 42)
- C. 2 Kings 13:14-19 (page 44)
- D. Urim, Thummim, and Ephod (page 46)
- E. Reactions Against Magical Practices (page 48)
- F. Non-Israelite Magical Practices in the HB (page 51)
- G. Selected HB Passages Influenced by Egyptian Practice (page 53)
- Exodus 7: Turning Serpents into Rods (page 54)
- Exodus 7-12: The Plagues Stories and the Egyptian Pantheon (page 56)
- Ability to Control Water (page 59)
- IV. Conclusion (page 62)
- Chapter Two: Egyptian Magic and the Execration Ritual (page 63)
- I. Egyptian Understanding and View of Magic (page 63)
- A. Key Terms in Understanding Ancient Egyptian Magic:Heka and Maat (page 63)
- Heka (page 63)
- Maat (page 65)
- B. Comparison of Egyptian Ideas of Magic and Religion (page 66)
- C. Power and Use of Magic in Ancient Egyptian Society (page 69)
- D. Core Magical Practices of Sound, Word, and HieroglyphicImages (page 71)
- E. Status and Role of the Magician in Ancient EgyptianSociety (page 76)
- II. Mythological and Ritual Background to the Execration Ritual (page 76)
- A. Apep (page 76)
- B. Seth (page 77)
- C. Egyptian Cosmology and Ritual Actions to Combat Evil (page 78)
- III. Archaeological Discoveries of Execration and Related Materials (page 90)
- A. Execration Materials Discovered in Egypt (page 90)
- B. Related Archaeological Finds in Palestine, Sinai, and Israel (page 93)
- C. The Story of Sinuhe (page 97)
- IV. Description of the Execration Ritual (page 98)
- V. Conclusion (page 109)
- Chapter 3: Study of Jeremiah 19 (page 111)
- I. Review of the Literature (page 111)
- A. Robert Carroll (page 112)
- B. William L. Holladay (page 114)
- C. William McKane (page 116)
- D. Carolyn Sharp (page 117)
- II. Exegesis of Jeremiah 19 by Carroll, McKane, and Holladay (page 120)
- III. Jeremiah, The Book of Jeremiah, and Possible Connections to Egypt (page 127)
- IV. Sympathetic Magic and Jeremiah's Symbolic Action (page 134)
- V. Similarities Between the Execration Ritual and Jeremiah (page 142)
- A. Chaotic Situation (page 142)
- B. Divine Representative Intervenes (page 144)
- C. Ritual is Witnessed by Others (page 146)
- D. Promise of Destruction/Annihilation of Opposition (page 147)
- E. Equation of Opposition with Ritually Smashed Item (page 148)
- VI. Conclusion (page 150)
- Chapter 4: Exodus 32:19 and the Execration Ritual (page 151)
- I. Review of the Literature (page 151)
- A. Modern Commentaries (page 153)
- William H. C. Propp (page 153)
- Brevard Childs (page 157)
- Martin Noth (page 161)
- Umberto Cassuto (page 164)
- Nahum Sarna (page 167)
- B. Other Modern Interpretations (page 169)
- William M. Schniedewind (page 169)
- Alan Millard (page 172)
- Dmitri Slivniak (page 173)
- Craig Evan Anderson (page 175)
- Carol Meyers, James K. Bruckner, Tremper Longman III, and William T. Miller, S.J. (page 177)
- Jeffrey M. Cohen (page 180)
- Rabbinic Exegesis (page 181)
- D. Early Christian Exegesis of Exod 32:19 (page 184)
- Exodus Through the Centuries (page 184)
- John Calvin (page 186)
- John Wesley (page 187)
- II. Study of ?The Breaking of the CovenantZ (page 188)
- A. Most Common Hebrew Expressions (page 188)
- ?to break, to destroyZ (page 190)
- ?to go through, to pass through, to transgressZ (page 193)
- ?to leave, to abandon, to forsakeZ (page 197)
- ?to forget, to fall into oblivionZ (page 197)
- ?to be taken into common use, to profaneZ (page 198)
- ?to not watch, to not guardZ (page 199)
- B. The Function of ??? "to break, to shatter" (page 199)
- III. Similarities Between the Execration Ritual and Exodus 32 (page 205)
- A. The Egyptian Setting of the Story (page 207)
- B. Divine Representatives (page 208)
- C. Situation of Chaos or Disorder (page 209)
- D. Identification of Offending Action or Party with ItemBroken (page 211)
- E. Priestly Assistance in Ritual Sacrifice (page 213)
- F. Word Studies (page 214)
- Conclusion (page 217)
- Bibliography (page 221)
- Index (page 247)
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