Language:
English
Year of publication:
2007
Titel der Quelle:
Journal of Hebrew Scriptures
Angaben zur Quelle:
7 (2007) 25 pp.
Keywords:
Bible. Criticism, interpretation, etc.
;
Worship (Judaism)
;
Gods History To 333 B.C.
;
Yom Kippur in the Bible
Abstract:
Significant evidence suggests that biblical עזאזל was originally the homophone עזזאל “Powerful God,” whose abode on earth was in the desert. The ritual described in Lev 16:5-26 was to the same God, potentially being at two locations -- the Temple or the desert, and identified as יהוה and עזזאל respectively. On the unique Day of Atonement God (as יהוה and עזזאל) was approached at both locations. In later times, God’s abode in the Temple or Jerusalem completely displaced God’s desert abode, relegating it to evil forces as was the belief in Near-Eastern cultures. In this process עזזאל, or a derivative of this name, became a satanic figure.
Note:
Appeared also in the journal's print version "Perspectives on Hebrew Scriptures" 4 (2008) 197-220.
DOI:
10.5508/jhs.2007.v7.a8
URL:
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