The Religion of the Patriarchs
By (Author) Augustine Pagolu
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Sheffield Academic Press
1st November 1998
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Criticism and exegesis of sacred texts
Judaism
296
Hardback
290
594g
Patriarchal religion was distinct from both ancient Near Eastern and Israelite religions, and compatible only with the patriarchal lifestyle portrayed in Genesis. Since Wellhausen, the study of patriarchal religion has been chiefly confined either to the divine names or to the social and legal practices attested in Genesis and has neglected the patriarchal cultic practices-altars, pillars, tithes, vows and purifications-frequently attested there. In this study, Pagolu investigates such aspects in the light of second-millennium ancient Near Eastern and Israelite parallels, concluding that the patriarchal practices bore no comparison to those of the ancient Near East or of Israel, in that the patriarchs themselves offered sacrifices, conducted prayer, raised pillars and offered worship, all without the aid of an established cult. Thus patriarchal religion was distinct both from ancient Near Eastern religions and from the religion of Israel itself. It is peculiar to the world of Genesis.
Augustine Pagolu is Professor and Head of the Department of Biblical Studies at the South Asian Institute of Advanced Christian Studies, Bangalore, India.