Wie is Thomas Römer?

Thomas Römer is ’n liberale Duitse teoloog. Hier volg ’n kort opsomming van sy loopbaan:

  • 1974-1980: Duitsland: Studeer teologie by Universiteit van Heidelberg and Universiteit van Tübingen in Duitsland.
  • 1980-1982: École pratique des hautes études (Parys): Studeer godsdiensstudies.
  • 1984-1993: Genève (Switserland): Navorsings assistent van Albert de Pury, senior dosent en assistent professor.
  • 1993-2007: Lausanne (Switzerland)
  • 2007-2020*: Collège de France

Hy is sedert 2013 besoe­ken­de professor by Tukkies (volgens Römer maan teen Bybelse pieng-pong).

Hy kan homself beswaarlik ’n Christen noem. In sy boeke skryf hy “god” met ’n kleinletter en glo dat God ’n menslike uitvindsel is. Hy glo nie dat een van die Ou Testament karakters voor die 6de eeu (600 tot 500 vC) geleef het nie.

Hy is die outeur van onder andere:

  • Dark God: Cruelty, Sex, and Violence in the Old Testament (2 Maart 2009)
  • The Invention of God (14 Desember 2015)
  • Egypt’s Role in the Hebrew Bible – Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections 18 (16 Augustus 2018)

Hier volg iemand se kommentaar uit ’n beoordeling van een van sy boeke:

“I would add that this book will be a very tough read for people committed to the notion that scripture is somehow divinely inspired, or that it tells a single story, or that the stories in the OT have much historical worth (in the modern secular sense of a retelling of the past that at least strives for objectivity). Reading this book challenges such assumptions on almost every page–and shreds them, I’d say.”

Oor The Invention of God word die volgende geskryf:

Who invented God? When, why, and where? Thomas Römer seeks to answer these questions about the deity of the great monotheisms—Yhwh, God, or Allah—by tracing Israelite beliefs and their context from the Bronze Age to the end of the Old Testament period in the third century BCE.

That we can address such enigmatic questions at all may come as a surprise. But as Römer makes clear, a wealth of evidence allows us to piece together a reliable account of the origins and evolution of the god of Israel. Römer draws on a long tradition of historical, philological, and exegetical work and on recent discoveries in archaeology and epigraphy to locate the origins of Yhwh in the early Iron Age, when he emerged somewhere in Edom or in the northwest of the Arabian peninsula as a god of the wilderness and of storms and war. He became the sole god of Israel and Jerusalem in fits and starts as other gods, including the mother goddess Asherah, were gradually sidelined. But it was not until a major catastrophe—the destruction of Jerusalem and Judah—that Israelites came to worship Yhwh as the one god of all, creator of heaven and earth, who nevertheless proclaimed a special relationship with Judaism.

A masterpiece of detective work and exposition by one of the world’s leading experts on the Hebrew Bible, The Invention of God casts a clear light on profoundly important questions that are too rarely asked, let alone answered.

Is the Bible dangerous?

Op Dinsdag 10 September 2019 het Römer die lesing “Is the Bible dangerous…?” aangebied by die die Universiteit van Pretoria se teologiese fakulteit. Die volgende is deur die teologiese fakulteit op hulle webblad geplaas:

Is the Bible dangerous?

Posted on September 26, 2019

Throughout history, people have killed in the name of God. God’s name has been, and continues to be used to legitimise wars, genocide and even apartheid.

Well-known stories such as the “fall story” of Adam and Eve could be used to legitimise man’s dominion over woman. At face value, the “flood story” suggests that God decides to annihilate all of humanity, except for Noah and his family. So, does this make the Bible dangerous?

World-renowned theologian and Old Testament scholar Professor Thomas Römer, Rector of the prestigious Collège de France, delved into this big question during a lecture hosted by the University of Pretoria’s (UP) Faculty of Theology and Religion recently.

He said the Bible (referring to the Hebrew Bible, which many know as the Old Testament) could become a dangerous book if we refused to understand the historical contexts in which different texts were written. “We have to take seriously the ‘difficult texts’ of the Hebrew Bible, and not judge them according to what we think is ‘theoretically correct’,” he cautioned.

In Christianity, different attitudes persist when it comes to these difficult texts. Some may reject the Old Testament completely, opposing the violent demiurge of the Old Testament with a God of love in the New Testament. Others may justify the violence. Prof Römer countered these attitudes and stressed the importance of examining texts, contexts and documents outside of the actual Bible. The Bible should therefore be taught in a responsible way and read with an understanding of the history in which these stories developed.

Failure to understand or consider the context of the book of Joshua, for example, highlights the damage that can be caused in a country. These texts were used in the ideology of land occupation in South Africa. “It is dishonest to trivialise these texts in the book of Joshua by ‘spiritualising’ them,” Prof Römer said.

Mirroring the story in the book of Joshua, apartheid South Africa legitimised oppression, domination and even extermination, in the name of God. But analysis of the historical context of the book of Joshua has found that this book is not even a historical document and the events detailed never happened in history. Prof Römer said the first records were likely to have been drafted at a time of Assyrian domination when military propaganda was rife. On closer inspection, some texts even reflect Assyrian laws.

Prof Römer said it was highly unlikely that a single author wrote the texts, but rather, the Bible was developed over time, in specific historical contexts. These texts also came from oral traditions.

“Looking at texts in their historical context informs us that they are often copies or even counter-stories of Assyrian texts, often served as ways to protest against Assyrian occupation, even to show God being as powerful as the Assyrian gods,” said Prof Römer. By understanding the historical contexts, these texts then become resistance statements as opposed to stories that legitimate violence and dominance. Out of context, however, these stories have a very different message, and wrongly make the Bible dangerous.

Further to the importance of understanding the historical context, Prof Römer said the social context of the reader and user of these texts was just as important to consider. “We cannot throw ‘violent’ texts out of the Bible since they confront us with or own violence.” [Kommentaar: Dit is baie ironies. Hy sê dat ons nie hierdie tekste kan uitgooi nie. Sy oplossing: hy ontken dat dit gebeur het. Daar is egter ’n baie beter manier om hierdie kwessie te verklaar. Kyk Sal ’n God van liefde opdrag gee om vroue en kinders dood te maak?] Prof Römer continued: “We have the right and duty to disagree with biblical texts.

Texts should also be considered in relation to other texts. In the “flood story”, for example, God at first responds to human violence with the violence of the flood, destroying humankind. But then God removes the possibility for himself to reiterate such a vengeance, saying: “I will never again curse the ground because of humankind, for the inclination of the human heart is evil from youth; nor will I ever again destroy every living creature as I have done.” (Genesis 8:21)

“This text emphasises the primacy of compassion, relativising all the texts that stage a violent and vengeful God,” explained Prof Römer.

So, is the Bible dangerous? “It becomes dangerous when we refuse to take into account the situations in which the biblical texts were written, as well as our own situation… If we refuse to do so, we will fall back into obscurantism,” Prof Römer warned.

* Prof Römer’s visit forms part of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the Collège de France and comes from a longstanding relationship between UP’s Department of Old Testament and Hebrew Scriptures and Prof Römer, who has been Extraordinary Professor there, since 2012. UP’s faculties of Theology and Religion; Humanities and Natural and Agricultural Sciences are part of the agreement which includes the exchange of staff members between the two institutions, as well as the possibility for doctoral students and postdoctoral fellows to be hosted at the other institutions.

2 thoughts on “Wie is Thomas Römer?”

  1. Wat sou die rede wees waarom so ’n liberale teoloog al sedert 2013 uitgenooi word om by die Universiteit van Pretoria as gas op te tree? Wat beoog die Fakulteit Teologie daarmee? Die Here is tog baie duidelik in Sy Woord dat Christen-gelowiges van hierdie vreemde beïnvloeding moet wegbly, omdat hulle hierdeur verlei kan word. En dit lyk asof dit presies is wat besig is om te gebeur. Wat het van gehoorsaamheid en waaksaamheid geword?

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