Boekbesprekings I Book Reviews Smith, Morton, (ed) by Shaye J D Cohen, - Studies in the Cult of Yahweh, I: mstorical Method, Ancient Israel, Ancient Judaism Leiden: E J Brill Publishers. 334 pages. Price: Unknown Reviewer: Prof P M Venter The editor of this book is a former student of Morton Smith. Cohen collected twenty essays from Smith's work, published between 1952 and 1983, and arranged them according to three topics. The first essay deals with historical method, the following six with ancient Israel and the last thirteen with ancient Judaism. In this collection the reader gets a bird's eye view of the research and the methods Smith used when he studied the different aspects of ancient Israel and ancient Judaism. When reading the essays one gets the impression of thorough and comprehensive research. Smith was not satisfied with general statements. He found it unacceptable to investigate history from documents which are not contemporaneous with the events. His approach to history was comprehensive, studying events within the framework of the society at large and in terms of all its role players. According to Smith the historian's task is to calculate the most probable explanation o/the preserved evidence (p.7). For Smith that evidence primarily came from written texts and sometimes from archaeological investigation. Smith proved himself to be a master of reading and analyzing ancient texts. Although socio-scientific methodology was not as developed as today, the tendency in Smith's work was towards the social context of history and the role community structures played in events. Smith saw ancient Israel as an integral part of the ancient Near East. According to him Israel shared a common theology with all of its neighbours, but had its own culture, brought about by the uniqueness of its topography. Smith warned against the fundamentalistic trend in research of what lJ.e called pseudorthodoxy (p 39), which is inclined to isolate Israel from its neighbours. In Smith's view the Israelites invaded the land during the iron age, bringing typical Mediterranean culture with them. In the pseudepigraphy of Israel he found common ground with the Greco-Roman literary tradition. Smith came to the conclusion that the technique of attaching and inserting material found in pseudepigraphical material, was a continuation of a trend already present in the forming of the Pentateuch. In Isaiah 40-55 he found material borrowed from the Persians during the 6th century BCE mainly for the apologetic needs of the Yahwist community in the Diaspora and for purposes of devotional rhetoric within the Israelite tradition. Even in Israel's law codes from the 8th through 6th century BCE, the social and eco nomic situation prevalent in the eastern Mediterranean is reflected. When investigating the history of ancient Judaism, Smith tried to understand all events within the context of different social groups interacting at a specific place and a specific time. His ability to demolish received truths (as stated on the dust jacket) is shown in his ability to invert questions and search for answers from an alternative perspective. In discussing the works of Jervell, Goodenough, and Moore he often criticized their simplistic use of the ancient material, differing from them in its inter- pretation. The scenario of ancient Judaism which he reconstructed was one of different groups having different, even clashing viewpoints on matters, for example the image of God, and the messianic figures. The Dead Sea groups conSisted, according to his view, conflicting groups, mirroring the differences between the groups from which they developed. Like ancient Israel, ancient Judaism existed within the context of the Mediterranean world, as illustrated in Smith's essays on the wine god and the concept of 902 HTS 53/3 (1997) Digitised by the University of Pretoria, Library Services