Bulletin for Biblical Research (BBR) 1998
Bulletin
for Biblical Research 8 (1998) 1-13 [©
1998 Institute for Biblical Research]
The Metonymical Curse as
Propaganda in the Book of Jeremiah
JEFF S. ANDERSON
WAYLAND BAPTIST UNIVERSITY—ALASKA CAMPUS
In
eight prose texts in Jeremiah, the curse serves a polemical function that
justifies
the existence of one particular socioreligious community (the Baby-
lonian
exiles), while marginalizing others (the remnant in Judah, Judeans
who
fled to Egypt, and foreign nations). This curse is not used as an in-
vocation
of misfortune but has a metonymical sense which describes the
embodiment
of that misfortune. Although specific curse terminology and
order
vary, the phrase "you will be a reproach, a byword, a taunt, and a
curse"
is directed against these three rivals to the Babylonian community
and
foreshadows the heterogenous constitution of the Judean communities
in
the Exilic, Postexilic, and Second Temple Periods.
Key
Words: Babylonian exiles, curse, Deuteronomistic, metonymy, Jeremiah
There
is power in language to constitute reality, not just describe it.
This
was as true in antiquity as it is today, perhaps to a greater
extent.
J. L. Austin has argued that there are some utterances, which
he
calls performatives, that have a particular ability to bring about a
thing
rather than merely describe it.1 For example, if someone were
getting
married and were to stand before a minister or judge and
say,
"I do," he/she would not merely be describing reality but would
be
engaging in it. It is, therefore, inherent within the nature of
language
for performatives to go beyond the descriptive realm and
enter
the constitutive realm of activity. One of the most powerful
performatives
is the curse. As is well known, cursing is a widespread
phenomenon
in many cultures throughout history, and the ancient
Near
East is no
exception. The curse is pervasive in the literature of
1.
John Austin, How to Do Things with Words (Cambridge: Harvard University
Press,
1962).
2 Bulletin for Biblical Research 8
ancient
Israel as well, being regularly employed in texts of varied
genres
and from disparate periods of Israel's history.
Curses
are used broadly in the Hebrew Bible, so it is important
that
one be sensitive to their nuances. Generally speaking, curses are
employed
along two different lines. First, a curse can be understood
to
be a speech act, either as an invocation for harm to come upon an
individual
or group or as profanely insolent language directed against
a
hated enemy. Second, a curse can refer to the embodiment of that
evil
or misfortune which comes as if in response to an imprecatory
speech
act. In this second sense, the curse can refer to something
which
is itself cursed or is the cause of great harm or misfortune.
Curses
have a wide variety of social functions in the Hebrew
Bible.
There are times when a curse is uttered as a protective device
for
contractual/covenantal agreements (Deut 11:26-32, 27-29). It can
be
pronounced as an oath on oneself to ensure truth and reliability
(Job
31; Ps 7:4-6) or upon one's enemies to invoke evil on their behalf
(Judg
5:23; 1 Sam 17:43; 27:18). At times the curse can serve as an eti-
ological
explanation for some physical or natural phenomenon (Gen
3:14,
17). It can be used for purposes of retribution and punishment
(Gen
4:11-12; 49:7; Deut 21:23) and even in legal adjudicatory mat-
ters
(Num 5:19-22). Curses can also be uttered simply to protect per-
sonal
or sacred property (Judg 17:2; Josh 7:26).
One
dimension of the social function of the curse is particularly
pertinent
to the focus of this present study. Since a curse ordinarily
has
a pronounced social function, it is often a powerful tool of ideo-
logical
rhetoric.2 In a significant number of cases in the Hebrew Bible,
a
curse is employed as a polemical device used as propaganda to
exclude
or at least marginalize a particular community, while legit-
imating
the community which utters the curse. Some representative
examples
of this might include the following: the curse of Cain and
the
subsequent ostracizing of his line (Gen 4:11); the curse of Canaan
which
reduces the descendants of Ham to be slaves forever (Gen
9:25);
the curse of the Gibeonites, who, because of their deception, are
reduced
to the status of slavery (Joshua 9); the curse of the Shechem-
ites
by Jotham, with its later implications for the Samaritan com-
munity
(Judges 9); and the marginialization of the foreign wives by
means
of a curse (Nehemiah 13). Curses were also employed by the
Qumran covenantors against
"the lot of Satan," presumably to ex-
clude
those outside of the yahiad (1QS 1).
2.
See Lewis S. Ford, "The Divine Curse Understood in Terms of
Persuasion,"
Semeia 24 (1982) 82; and Keith
Thomas, Religion and the Decline of Magic (New York:
Scribners,
1971) 502.
ANDERSON: The Metonymical Curse as Propaganda 3
In
the representative selection of cases below from the prose texts
of
Jeremiah, certain marginalized communities are the object of a
curse.
This curse is not always a verbal imprecation, but by the
operation
of metonymy refers to the person or group suffering mis-
fortune.
In the examples from Jeremiah that will be examined in this
study,
curse terminology serves a polemical function which justifies
the
existence of one particular socioreligious community (the Baby-
lonian
exiles), while marginalizing others (the remnant in Judah,
Judean
communities in Egypt, and foreign nations).
THE
METONYMICAL CURSE IN THE BOOK OF JEREMIAH
It
is widely recognized that the book of Jeremiah was influenced
substantially
by Deuteronomistic theology. However, the nature and
extent
of that influence is strongly debated.3 It is unclear whether
Jeremiah
himself was strongly influenced by Deuteronomic perspec-
tives
or whether the Jeremiah tradition went through a period when
Deuteronomic
ideas were fashionable or if a particular group of
Deuteronomists
added layers to the Jeremianic tradition. Regard-
less,
Deuteronomistic terminology, clichés, and theology are overtly
present
in Jeremiah, particularly in the prose texts. In Deuteronomic
fashion,
the book of Jeremiah portrays the fall of Jerusalem as a re-
sult
of the fulfillment of the covenant curse (Deuteronomy 27-28). The
prophet
Jeremiah shares the heritage of prophets who sought unsuc-
cessfully
to warn the people of God against breaking the covenant.
However,
the curse is extended in the book of Jeremiah in a
unique
way, by means of the rhetorical principle of metonymy.4 A
3.
The conflicting views of this discussion are presented in detail by Robert Car-
roll, Jeremiah (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1986) 38-50, 65-82; John Bright, Jeremiah (AB
21;
New York: Doubleday, 1965) lv—lxxiii; J. A. Thompson, The Book of Jeremiah (NICOT;
Grand
Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1980) 27-49; R. E. Clements, Jeremiah (Interpretation; Atlanta:
John
Knox, 1988) 10-12; and William Holladay, Jeremiah 2 (Hermeneia; Minneapolis:
Fortress,
1989) 10-24, 53-64.
4.
For discussions on metonymy, see Roman Jakobson and Morris Halle, "The
Met-
aphoric
and Metonymic Poles," in Fundamentals of Language (2d ed.; New York: Mouton,
1971)
90-96. Jakobson adopts the Saussurian principle that language has a two-fold
character:
selection and combination. Linguistic entities are first selected and then
combined
into linguistic units of higher degrees of complexity. He argues that although
metonymy
and metaphor are transformations of literal statements, they are generated
according
to opposite principles. Metaphor belongs to the selection axis and metonymy
and
synechdoche belong to the combination axis.
Also
see the discussions in David Lodge, The Modes of Modern Writing: Metaphor,
Metonymy,
and the Typology of Modern Literature (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1977)
75ff.;
Janet Martin Soskice, Metaphor and Religious Language (Oxford:
Clarendon, 1985)
57ff.
4 Bulletin for Biblical Research 8
metonym
is basically a trope or figure of speech in which there is a
substitution
of the name of one thing for that of another with which
it
is associated. This can take place in several ways. The first is for an
adjunct
to stand for a whole. For example, if it were stated, "the
White
House said yesterday," we would clearly understand that the
adjunct
"White House" is being substituted for the whole, the ad-
ministration
of the presidency. Another way in which this substitu-
tion
takes place is for a proper name to be substituted for one of its
qualities
or visa versa. If someone is called a "Benedict Arnold," it is
clear
that he/she is being portrayed as a traitor.
Metonymy
can also be employed when a cause is substituted for
effect
or effect for cause. It is this substitution of cause for effect that
is
important in understanding the curse in Jeremiah. Josef Scharbert
has
argued that curse terminology in the Hebrew Bible can some-
times
be used metonymically as "a noun for persons on whom the
curses
pronounced come as devastating calamities."5 This, in effect,
is
a metonymical substitution of effect for cause. If, therefore, one
wanted
to curse someone else, he/she might refer to the dubious fate
of
that person who had been placed in such a dreadful situation that
his/her
whole existence could be considered cursed.6
In
selected prose texts of Jeremiah, the people of Judah and
Jerusalem are not just the
recipients of the curse, but they actually
become
a curse incarnate. These people are portrayed as inhabitants
of
the land of the curse and have themselves become "a curse for all
the
nations of the earth."7 This metonymic use of the curse is
found
elsewhere
in the Hebrew Bible as well. In the ordeal of Numbers 5,
when
the woman drinks the water which brings the curse, the priest
is
instructed to say, ". . . the Lord make you a curse and an
oath." Sim-
5.
Josef Sharbert, "’ālāh," TDOT 1.264-65.
6.
Herbert Schneidau (Sacred Discontent: The Bible and Western Tradition [Baton
Rouge:
Louisiana State University Press, 1976] 248-306) contrasts the mythological
world
which is dominated by metaphor with the literature of the Bible which is
dominated
by metonymy. He sees biblical literature as a sort of "historicized
fiction"
which
is in direct conflict with the world of legend and myth. Robert Alter sums up
Schneidau's
work with a brief quote, "Where myth is hypotactic metaphors, the Bible
is
paratactic metonymies." He concludes that Schneidau's dichotomy between
myth
and
historized fiction is overstated but applauds Schneidau's affirmation of a
"vigor-
ous
movement of biblical writing away from the stable closure of the mythological
world
and toward the indeterminacy, the shifting causal concatenations, the ambigu-
ities
of a fiction made to resemble the uncertainties of life in history" (The
Art of Biblical
Narrative [New York: Basic Books,
1982] 26).
7.
Johannes Pedersen points to the irony that those who were originally intended
to
be a blessing to all the families of the earth are now described as being a
curse
among
all the nations of the earth (Der Eid bei den Semiten [Strassburg: Trübner,
1914]
73-74).
ANDERSON: The Metonymical Curse as Propaganda 5
ilarly,
Isa 65:15 (the implications of which will be examined below)
states,
"You shall leave my name to your chosen for a curse."
The
metonymical curse is found in nine instances in the prose
texts
of Jeremiah, expressed in a formulaic string of words specified
below.8
I
will make them a horror to all the kingdoms of the earth, to
be a reproach, a byword, a taunt, and a curse in all the places
where
I shall drive them. (24:9)
So
I took the cup from the Lord's hand, and made all the nations
to
whom the Lord sent me drink it: Jerusalem and the cities of
Judah,
its kings and princes, to make them a desolation and a
waste,
a hissing, and a curse as at this day. (25:17-18)
Then
I will make this house like Shiloh, and I will make this city
a
curse for all the nations of the earth. (26:6)
I
will pursue them with sword, famine, and pestilence, and I
will
make them a horror to all the kingdoms of the earth, to be
a
curse, a terror, a hissing, and a reproach among all the nations
where
I have driven them. (29:18)
You
shall become an execration, a horror, a curse, and a taunt.
You
shall see this place no more. (42:18)
Why
do you provoke me to anger with the works of your hands,
burning
incense to other gods in the land of Egypt where you
have
come to live, that you may be cut off and become a curse
and
a taunt among all the nations of the earth. (44:8)
.
. . the remnant of Judah . . . from the least to the greatest, they
shall
die by the sword and by famine; and they shall become an
execration,
a horror, a curse, and a taunt. (44:12)
.
. . therefore, your land has become a desolation and a waste
and
a curse,
without inhabitant, as it is to this day. (44:12)
For
I have sworn by myself, says the Lord, that Bozrah shall
become a horror, a taunt, a waste, and a curse and all her cities
shall
be perpetual wastes. (49:13)
8.
Herbert Brichto (The Problem of "Curse" in the Hebrew Bible [SBLMS 13; Phila-
delphia:
Society of Biblical Literature] 171, 188-89, 197-98) argues that the words
which
make up these strings should not be translated individually but should be seen
as
a hendiadys—thus "a byword for scorn" or "a proverb for
humiliation" or a "by-
word
for curse," and so forth. However, this argument has not been convincing
to
major
commentators and translations.
6 Bulletin for Biblical Research 8
This
curse formula is found in three definable units of Jeremiah: four
times
in chaps. 24-29 (24:9; 25:17-18; 26:6; 29:18), a unit which be-
gins
and ends with the metaphor of the rotten figs; four times in the
narratives
regarding the Judeans who fled to Egypt in chaps. 42-44
(42:18;
44:8, 12, 22); and once in the Oracles against the Nations in
49:7-22
(49:13).9 The order and vocabulary vary, but these nine pas-
sages
have a number of elements in common.10 First, they are all
from
the prose sections of Jeremiah. Second, the clichéd nature of the
expressions
parallels terminology in Deuteronomy and the Deuter-
onomistic
history.11 Third, the noun qĕlālāh is employed
in every in-
stance
except 29:18, where ’alah is used.12 In two cases, both qĕlālāh
and ’ālāh occur (42:18; 44:12). Fourth, there are numerous
expansions
in
the larger units surrounding most of these texts, presumably in-
dicating
their importance to the exilic and postexilic communities.13
Finally
and most importantly, the object of the metonymical curse is
always
one of three groups: the Jewish community in Jerusalem and
Judah,
the Judeans which fled to Egypt, or a foreign nation. In other
words,
the phrase refers to someone, indeed anyone, outside of the
Babylonian
exiles.
What
is meant by this particular clichéd string of words? One
could
assume from the juxtaposition of the synonyms "reproach,"
"taunt,"
"hissing," and "byword" to the word qĕlālāh that the curse in
these
cases refers to an object of ridicule and scorn, something to be
made
light of, which is one basic meaning of the root qll. Rather than
a
curse which involves an actual utterance or imprecation, the word
9.
Jer 24:9 and 25:18 lie in Mowinckel's source A; 26:6; 29:1, 8; 42:18; 44:18;
and
44:22
lie in Source B; and 44:8 lies in source C. The oracle against Edom is deemed a
later
addition by Mowinckel. See the discussion in Holladay, Jeremiah 2,
10-24.
10.
This phrase is used without the term "curse" in several instances.
Two words
or
more occur in 19:8; 25:9, 11, 18; and 44:6. A single word occurs in 7:34; 22:5;
and 26:6.
There
are two particularly helpful studies which examine in detail the use of
Deuteronomistic
language in the book of Jeremiah: Louis Stulman, The Prose Sermons
of
the Book of Jeremiah (Atlanta:
Scholars Press, 1986); and Winfred Thiel, Die deuter-
onomistische
Redaktion von Jeremia 26-45 (WMANT 82; Neukirchen-Vluynsocioreligious
Neukirchener
Verlag, 1981).
11.
With the exception of chaps. 24 and 49 which were not a part of his study,
Thiel
finds Deuteronomistic influence in each of the remaining passages under dis-
cussion
(Die deuteronomistische Redaktion, 3-5, 17-19, 65, 69-81). M. Weinfeld
also com-
ments
on these texts as "retrospective religious surveys, not necessarily
reflecting the
historical
reality of Jeremiah's time" (Deuteronomy and the Deuteronomic School [Oxford:
Clarendon,
1972; reprinted Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 1992] 30-31).
12.
In two cases (42:18; 44:12), both terms are used. Variations of the phrase em-
ploying
synonyms occur in several instances. Two synonyms or more occur in 19:8; 25:9,
11,
18; and 44:6. A single synonym occurs in 7:34; 22:5; and 26:6.
13.
Texts most often cited as expansions are 24:9; 29:16-19; 44:8; and 49:12-13.
ANDERSON: The Metonymical Curse as Propaganda 7
qĕlālāh metonymically refers to
the material misfortune itself.14 It is
not
an invocation of misfortune but the actual embodiment of that
misfortune.
Thus, the object of this formula becomes an example of
calamity
and a proverb of disaster. Ironically, in dialectical fashion,
this
metonymical curse can then again become a derogatory speech
act
uttered against someone else by referring to that individual or
group
as a curse. As Isaiah referred to the inhabitants of Judah as
"you
rulers of Sodom" and "people of Gomorrah" (Isa 1:9), a group
considered
cursed can become an object of material misfortune.
In
the Exilic and Postexilic Periods, there were three broad Jew-
ish
communities: the remnant in Judah, the community which fled to
Egypt, and the exiles in Babylon. In the Postexilic Period, there was
a
great amount of conflict between the returning exiles from Babylon
and
the people who had remained in Judah. Could it be that these
postexilic
tensions are reflected in the curses of the Jeremiah tradi-
tion?
To consider this question requires a brief examination of each of
the
texts introduced above.
JEREMIAH 24-29: THE ROTTEN FIGS
Jeremiah
24:1-10: The Vision of the Two Figs
The
Vision of the Two Figs in Jeremiah 24 employs the fourfold for-
mula
of the curse. This text portrays the exiles of Judah who were
deported
to Babylon as the "good figs," while those who remained in
Judah
and those who dwelled in the land of Egypt were the "bad
figs."
The clichéd phrase under study is found in v. 9 and is seen by
Niditch
as an addition.15 These bad figs will be "a horror to all the
kingdoms
of the earth, to be a reproach, a byword, a taunt, and a
curse
[wĕliqlālāh] in all the places where I shall drive
them" (24:9).
The
implications of this text and its parallels in Ezekiel 11 for the
exilic
and postexilic situation are far-reaching. What or who might be
the
source for such a blatant condemnation of the exiles of Judah? It
is
not clear whether this vision was a de novo creation of the Deuter-
onomist
or if it was an earlier oracle which simply served to encour-
age
the exiles. Holladay notes that the terminology in this fourfold
curse
is most similar to the terminology in the Deuteronomistic his-
tory
(Deut 28:37; 1 Kgs 9:7); but since its parallels in Deuteronomy 28
are
almost certainly late, it is impossible to determine which text is
14.
Brichto, Problem of "Curse," 197-99.
15.
Susan Niditch, The Symbolic Vision in Biblical Tradition (Chico, Calif.: Scholars
Press,
1980) 62.
8 Bulletin for Biblical Research 8
dependent
on the other.16 Niditch hints at the polemical implications
of
this passage. She asks, "Does vs. 9 reflect a strain of anti–Egyptian-
Jew
sentiment on the part of the orthodox Babylonian returnees?"17
Other
scholars have not been quite so cautious. Nicholson states,18
the
composition of chapters 24-29 was motivated primarily by a spe-
cifically
theological and polemical intention, for they seek to assert the
claims
of the Babylonian diaspora to be the true remnant of Israel
through
whom alone renewal and restoration would be wrought by
Yahweh
as against those who either remained in Judah or lived in
Egypt during the exilic period.
Carroll
extends this even further,19
The
vision of 24 does not mean that all deportees in Babylon are the
hope
for the future, but only that group which can be identified with
those
who went into captivity with Jeconiah. It is an echo of seniority
claims
and differentiations made by the returning groups wishing to
gain
power in Jerusalem during its reconstruction.
At
first glance, Carroll's statement may appear extreme, but it makes
sense
in light of the texts presently under consideration. It is worth
noting
that the book of Jeremiah concludes as Jehoiachin is given
favor
by the king of Babylon. Although the intent of the passage
could
be interpreted as ambivalent toward the Israelite monarchy, it
is
certainly possible, in any respect, that the book of Jeremiah con-
cludes
with a positive note of hope for the returning exiles (cf. 2 Kgs
25:27-30).20
Jeremiah
26:1-24: The Temple Sermon
Jeremiah
26 is a narrative reporting the disturbance which Jeremiah's
Temple sermon provoked,
leading to the demand from the priests
and
prophets that Jeremiah be killed for blaspheming God and Tem-
ple.
Jeremiah's sermon bears numerous parallels to the Temple ser-
mon
in chap. 7, and the subsequent narrative in 26:7-19 contains
the
most detailed account of a trial in the Hebrew Bible. Chapter 26
is
integrally related to a larger section of material which runs from
chaps.
26-29. The primary theme of this larger unit is to distinguish
between
true and false prophecy and to point out Judean rejection of
the
words of Jeremiah. Chapter 26 depicts the confrontation between
16.
Holladay, Jeremiah 2, 655.
17.
Niditch, Symbolic Vision, 62.
18.
E. W. Nicholson, Preaching to the Exiles (Oxford: Blackwell, 1970) 110.
19.
Carroll, Jeremiah, 483.
20.
For a discussion of opposing views to the purpose behind this passage, see
Nicholson, Preaching to the Exiles, 78-80.
ANDERSON: The Metonymical Curse as Propaganda 9
Jeremiah
and the prophets and priests at the Temple. In chap. 27, Jer-
emiah
contends with the prophets who tell Zedekiah that the exile
will
be brief, and chaps. 28-29 recount the prophet's confrontations
with
Hananiah and Shemaiah. It is significant to note that the unit
begins
(26:6) and ends (29:18, 22) with a curse. Nicholson broadens
the
unit to include chaps. 24-25, because this larger unit begins and
ends
with the theme of the rotten figs. He argues the polemical in-
tent
of the unit to assert the claims of the Babylonian diaspora as the
true
remnant of Israel in contrast to those who remained in Judah or
lived
in Egypt.21 The metonymical curse is present in the apodosis
of
the conditional sentence in 26:6, uttered in the confines of the Tem-
ple,
"Then I will make this house like Shiloh, and I will make the city
a
curse [liqlālāh] for all the nations of the earth." Just
as Shiloh was
once
the place where Yahweh caused his name to dwell and was sub-
sequently
destroyed, Jerusalem will likewise suffer the same fate.22
The
curse prompts rejection by the people because the curse against
Temple and city are equivalent
to blasphemy. The words spark a riot
whereby
the leaders demand Jeremiah's death.23
Jeremiah
29:16-19: The Letter to the Exiles
A
similar viewpoint is confirmed in the Letter to the Exiles of chap. 29.
As
with much of the surrounding material in which the clichéd curse
phrase
is located, this chapter is permeated by a large number of
plusses
in the Masoretic Text over the LXX, which are possibly Deu-
teronomistic
expansions. The section in v. 16-19, which is not in the
LXX,
is almost certainly an expansion. Here, the kinspeople of the
exiles
who remained in Judah are referred to as "a curse [lĕ’lāh],
a
terror,
a hissing, and a reproach among all the nations of the earth"
(29:18).
This addition is intentionally polemical. The picture presented
draws
a sharp contrast between the exiles, whose future is peaceable,
and
the remnant of Judah, who will be utterly driven from their land.
The
image of the rotten figs in chap. 24 resumes but is used in a
different
way. Here the Judean community is portrayed as vile figs
which
are so bad that they cannot be eaten. One suspects that the
interests
served by such strong polemics are those of the community
in
Babylon. Such hatred for the Jerusalem community betrays an
21.
Ibid., 110.
22.
The recent study of Donald G. Schley (Shiloh: A Biblical City in
Tradition and
History [JSOTSup
63; Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1989] 178-82) argues that
the
references to Shiloh in Jer 26:6 and 7:12-15 pertain to a destruction
concurrent
with
the fall of Samaria and not during the hypothetical Philistine invasion of 1050
BCE.
In
either case, Shiloh became a paradigm for a cult center that had been
devastated.
23.
Carroll, Jeremiah, 515-16; Thompson, The Book of Jeremiah, 525.
10 Bulletin for Biblical Research 8
unbridled
hostility for every community which might compete with
the
primacy of the Babylonian community.
Jeremiah
42-44: The Judeans in Egypt
More
than ten years later, after the fall of Jerusalem and the sub-
sequent
murder of Gedaliah, Johanan and his forces, when worried
about
the reprisals of the Babylonians, ask Jeremiah whether they
should
flee to Egypt. Jeremiah warns against this, stating that those
who
flee to Egypt will become "an execration [lĕ’ālāh],
a horror, a
curse
[wĕliqlālāh ], and a taunt" (Jer 42:18). The order
of events de-
scribed
in chaps. 42 and 43 is in some doubt, but a rough reconstruc-
tion
of the depicted events is as follows: Jeremiah promises that only
those
who remain in Judah will be spared. Johanan accuses Jeremiah
of
lying and flees to Egypt anyway, along with the entire remnant
of
Judah. Oddly, the text states that Johanan took to Egypt "all the
remnant
of Judah who had returned to live in the land from all the
nations
to which they have been driven" (43:5). Indeed, Jeremiah
himself
states, "Behold this day they [cities of Judah] are a desola-
tion
and no one dwells in them" (44:2). So the issue of the situation
in
Judah is a moot point—at least rhetorically. The remnant might
have
been spared, but the entire remnant fled to Egypt. There is lit-
erally no one left in the land. Such hyperbole is self-serving ideolog-
ical
propaganda pointing to the vested interests of the Babylonian
community.
Later,
after Jeremiah is taken away by Johanan to Egypt, he sum-
mons
all the Judean communities in Egypt (Jeremiah 44). Jeremiah
chides
them for continuing to burn incense to other gods, again citing
the
formula that they will "be cut off and become a curse [liqlālāh]
[which
is omitted in the LXX] and a taunt among all the nations of
the
earth" (44:8). The remnant which fled to Egypt will face a future
without
hope and will become "an execration, a horror, a curse [wĕliq-
lālāh], and a taunt"
(44:12). Finally, the land of Judah which they left
is
depicted as "a desolation and a waste and a curse [wĕliqlālāh],
with-
out
inhabitant, as it is this day" (44:22). Relegating both the land in
which
they live (Egypt) and the land from which they fled (Judah) to
the
curse, this ideological rhetoric effectively cuts off any alternative
for
both Jewish communities: the Judeans in Egypt and the inhabit-
ants
of Judah.
What
are we to make of the picture presented in chaps. 42-44?
Do
these texts betray the heterogenous constitution of the Judean
communities
in the Exilic or Postexilic Period? How are these com-
munities
to be viewed? In chaps. 42-44, the Judeans who fled to
Egypt are portrayed as pagan
worshipers of foreign gods. Yahweh
ANDERSON: The Metonymical Curse as Propaganda 11
states,
"My name shall no more be invoked by the mouth of any man
of
Judah in all the land of Egypt saying, 'As the Lord God lives'
(44:26).
Nicholson comments that those who fled to Egypt are con-
demned
"in language which is amongst the most bitter and vehe-
ment
of the whole book."24 On the other hand, the land of Judah is
portrayed
as being without inhabitant. Sources indicate that this was
anything
but true. Enno Janssen has argued25 that Palestine contin-
ued
to be a center of religious activity after the destruction of Jeru-
salem. While Noth overstates
the case that the community in Babylon
was
a "mere outpost," it is clear that a devout community of Yahweh
worshipers
remained in Judah.26 The Hebrew Bible gives witness to
a
significant amount of literature which might have arisen from the
Palestinian
community. In fact, Jer 41:5 presents an account of people
from
Shiloh and Samaria coming to present offerings at the Temple
after
its destruction. In fascinating reversal, this same metonymical
curse
may have been later invoked by the Palestinian community27
against
the Babylonian returnees, as Isa 65:13-15 states:
Therefore
thus says the Lord God: "Behold my servants shall eat, but
you
shall be hungry; behold my servants shall drink, but you shall be
thirsty;
behold my servants shall rejoice, but you shall be put to shame;
behold
my servants shall sing for gladness of heart, but you shall cry
out
for pain of heart, and shall wail for anguish of spirit. You shall leave
your
name to my chosen for a curse [lišbûāhl, and the Lord God will
slay
you; but his servants he will call by a different name."
While
such curse language may have been employed against the
Babylonian
returnees at a later time, the Deuteronomic texts of Jer-
emiah
are colored by ideology. The result is obvious; both Judah and
Egypt become the lands of the
curse. By the simple process of elim-
ination,
it is only the Babylonian community that is left to be the
exclusive
possessor of hope for a future restoration of Israel.
24.
Nicholson, Preaching to the Exiles, 111.
25.
Enno Janssen, Juda in der Exilszeit: Ein beitrag zur Frage der Enstehung des
Juden-
turns (Göttingen: Vandenhoek
and Ruprecht, 1956) 17-18.
26.
See the discussion in Daniel L. Smith, The Religion of the Landless: The
Social
Context
of the Babylonian Exile (Bloomington: Meyer Stone, 1989) 32-33.
27.
Building on the work of Janssen and others, Paul Hanson argues that a faith-
ful
community of Yahwists existed in Palestine throughout the years of the exile.
The
texts
which portray Palestine as empty or containing an inferior rabble of
syncretizers
are
either oversimplified or polemical. Hanson argues that Isaiah 65 portrays the
ten-
sion
between the Zadokite authorities which had power and the Palestinian commu-
nity
which did not. In Isa 65:15, this Zadokite community is depicted as a curse.
The
Palestinian
community is given a new name and are true priests of Yahweh. The series
of
contrasts in Isa 65:13-15 are representative of blessings and curses (Dawn
of Apoc-
alyptic [Philadelphia: Fortress, 1975] 93).
12 Bulletin for Biblical Research 8
Jeremiah
25:15-38; 49:7-22: The Oracle against the Nations
In
the Oracles against the Nations (OAN), there are two final in-
stances
where the clichéd turn of phrase is used. The first of these
is
25:15-38 which in the MT is not a part of the OAN but in the LXX
is
placed with the OAN. Space prohibits debating these complicated
textual
problems here, but it is intriguing to consider the ideological
implications
of this text's inclusion in OAN by the LXX. Astonishingly,
the
rhetorical result of doing so is that Jerusalem is placed among
the
foreign nations as though it were a foreign city. Verse 18 states,
"Jerusalem and the cities of Judah, its kings and its princes, to make
them
a desolation and a waste, a hissing and a curse [wĕliqlālāh],
as
at
this day." In biting polemic, Jerusalem and its daughter cities are
seen
in the same light as Babylon, Philistia, Edom, Moab, Ammon,
and
a host of other traditional enemies of Israel. Such inflammatory
rhetoric
effectively challenges the legitimacy of the Jewish commu-
nities
in Jerusalem and the surrounding cities of Judah.
The
second passage in the OAN is the poetic oracle against Edom
(Jer
49:7-22), where a prose insertion states, "Bozrah shall become a
horror,
a taunt, a waste, and a curse [wĕliqlālā]" (49:13).
The exilic and
postexilic
disdain for Edom is well attested elsewhere in the HB.28 Its
capital
city becomes a metonym for that which is anathema. These
two
passages, when viewed together, effectively do away with any
competing
group which might pose a religious threat to the primacy
of
the Babylonian community. The capital of the foreign nation of
Edom and the capital of Judah are reduced to the same position as
cursed
cities.
CONCLUSION
This
study has sought to demonstrate that, in the prose strands of the
book
of Jeremiah, curse terminology is a part of a recurring polemical
phrase
used, most likely by the Deuteronomist, to exclude any com-
munity
outside of the exiles in Babylon and possibly even any com-
munity
outside of the exiles of the first deportation. This clichéd
phrase
varies in order and vocabulary and, in many cases, is viewed
as
a later addition. In these texts, this curse is not an imprecation
or
speech act but by the principle of metonymy is the practical evil
which
comes in response to the Deuteronomic curse. One might say
28.
Bozrah is associated with the Edomite kings in Gen 36:33 and 1 Chr 1:44. The
only
other references in the HB to Bozrah are in the Oracles against the Nations
(Isa
34:6;
63:1; Jer 49:13, 22; Amos 1:12; and possibly Mic 2:12) where identification
with
Edom is not as clear. See ABD 1.774.
ANDERSON: The Metonymical Curse as Propaganda 13
that
these texts represent the theology of Deuteronomy but with a
vengeance.
Parallels in Deuteronomy and the Deuteronomistic history
attest
to this.
The
experience of the destruction of Jerusalem and the exile in
Babylon wrought numerous
changes which led to a heterogenous
constitution
of the Jewish people in the Exilic, Postexilic, and Second
Temple
Periods.29 Suspicions were raised not merely against foreign
influences
but against any religious community outside of one's own.
This
is well attested in the postexilic literature, as well as in the doc-
uments
from Qumran and the history of the Second Temple Period.
In
the book of Jeremiah, two important remnant Judean communities
and
the foreign nation of Edom are anathematized in order to legit-
imize
a single Judean community in Babylon. Ideology has reduced
all
distinctions to the same level in order to issue a blanket condem-
nation
of all of these peoples. Thus, by the simple process of elimi-
nation,
the stage is set for what will become a matter of tremendous
importance
for the period of the restoration. Because those who re-
mained
in Judah were portrayed as being a curse, the returning ex-
iles
felt justified in prohibiting this community from taking part in
the
restoration.
This
polemical rhetoric is consistent with evidence elsewhere in
the
Hebrew Bible where curses are used as propaganda designed to
exclude
a particular community. Once a community becomes disaffil-
iated
through a curse, especially if it is presumed that the deity is the
subject
of this curse, the door is opened for a self-justified oppression
of
that community. Thus, religious curses in particular have the abil-
ity
to foster an unparalleled degree of control upon a community. The
use
of curses in this way is one which has not been fully explored in
scholarship
and presents an exciting opportunity for future study.
29.
See Shemaryahu Talmon, "The Emergence of Jewish Sectarianism in the Early
Second
Temple Period," King, Cult and Calendar in Ancient Israel: Collected Studies |