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Reading akkadian PRayeRs & Hymns An Introduction

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80<br />

READING AKKADIAN PRAYERS AND HYMNS: AN INTRODUCTION<br />

tional—the Judahites, the prophet tells us, believe the results of Nebuchadnezzar’s<br />

divinations are false by their very nature (Ezek 21:28).<br />

Despite the lack of Iron Age archaeological evidence and textual witness,<br />

several scholars have argued that extispicy was practiced in ancient Israel and<br />

Judah. Sigmund Mowinckel claims that certain Psalms were, in fact, oracle questions<br />

posed to Yahweh before the ritual slaughter of an animal whose exta were<br />

to be examined. 2 Specifically, based on its usage in 2 Kgs 16:15 and Ps 5:4,<br />

Mowinckel makes the case that the verb רקב (normally translated “to inquire”) is<br />

a technical term referring to performing an extispicy. 3 Otto Loretz, building on<br />

Mowinckel’s study and citing the liver models from Ugarit as precedent, posits<br />

that the “signs,” תוֹתֹא, mentioned in Ps 74:4, 9 are, in fact, liver omina. 4 Frederick<br />

Cryer, looking at the time, location, equipment, procedure, language, and<br />

personnel described in the various descriptions of (condoned) divination in the<br />

Hebrew Bible, maintains that these accounts are modeled on NA extispicy reports<br />

and queries and implies that, under the heavily edited biblical narratives<br />

which report them, lies buried the remains of an Israelite hepatoscopic tradition.<br />

5 <strong>An</strong>ne Jeffers considers whether the participle דקֹנ, ֵ “sheep-tender” (used<br />

only twice in the Hebrew Bible, 2 Kgs 3:4 and Amos 1:1), might refer to one<br />

who not only raises sheep, but was actually involved in sacrifice and mantic<br />

liver examination. 6<br />

All of these proposals share certain elementary problems. Why are there no<br />

models of exta known from Iron Age sites in Israel and Judah, though they are<br />

attested in the Late Bronze Age? Why, if the biblical authors use specific technical<br />

terminology to refer to hepatoscopy (i.e., רקב and דקֹנ, ֵ as per Mowinckel,<br />

Loretz and Jeffers) do they not employ that terminology when referring to the<br />

practice in Ezek 21:26? Even if it is because they reject the foreign, but not domestic,<br />

practice of extispicy, the biblical authors are perfectly willing to call<br />

other illegitimate diviners by native technical terms (e.g., prophets of other deities:<br />

1 Kgs 18:19; 2 Kgs 10:19; Jer 2:8; 23:13; false prophets of Yahweh: 1 Kgs<br />

2 Sigmund Mowinckel, Psalmenstudien I (Amsterdam: P. Schippers, 1961), 145–49.<br />

3 Ibid., Psalmenstudien I, 146.<br />

4 Otto Loretz, Leberschau, Sündenbock, Asasel in Ugarit und Israel: Leberschau und Jahwestatue in<br />

Psalm 27, Leberschau in Psalm 74 (UBL 3; Altenberge: CIS–Verlag, 1985), 9–34, 81–112.<br />

5 Frederick Cryer, Divination in <strong>An</strong>cient Israel and its Near Eastern Environment: A Socio-Historical<br />

Investigation (JSOTSup 142; Sheffield: JSOT Press, 1994), 298–305. Notably, while Cryer astutely<br />

rejects the methods of Mowinckel (296) and Loretz (296–98), he accepts their conclusion that<br />

extispicy was known and practiced in ancient Israel. The fundamental problem with Cryer’s<br />

argument is that all mantic acts include the elements named above to a high degree since all<br />

divinatory acts are rituals conducted by special personnel, which respond in time and place to<br />

specific situations! Celestial divination, for example, for which we also have extensive reports<br />

dating to the NA period, mention all, some, or many of these elements. This does not mean that<br />

the biblical narrative, and ultimately the real practice which lies behind it, is based on Babylonian<br />

or native Israelite celestial divination.<br />

6 <strong>An</strong>ne Jeffers, Magic and Divination in <strong>An</strong>cient Palestine and Syria (SHCANE 8; Leiden: Brill,<br />

1996), 111–16.

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