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If one attempts to achieve deity or to have the holy, he is thrown back he is refused. His language is taken from him. He can no longer even communicate. That's the Tower of Babel.
Frank Moore Cross
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Frank Moore Cross
Age: 91 †
Born: 1921
Born: July 13
Died: 2012
Died: October 16
Archaeologist
Historian
Theologian
University Teacher
Marin County
California
Longer
Tower
Achieve
Deities
Taken
Refused
Language
Attempts
Back
Towers
Even
Thrown
Communicate
Babel
Holy
Deity
More quotes by Frank Moore Cross
I think we may very well, in many areas, get likelihood, but not certitude. We don't want certitude anyway, do we?
Frank Moore Cross
When you come to the New Testament you can't even swing a cat without hitting three demons and two spirits. And magic becomes something that is everywhere. In the Hebrew Bible this sort of thing doesn't go on.
Frank Moore Cross
I have referred to [Rabbi Shlomo ben Isaac] on occasion, but I doubt that you will find his name in any of my indices. In my view, he is important in the history of interpretation and that is a subject I have not approached directly.
Frank Moore Cross
The Hebrew Bible defines Judaism. It's certainly true that the Talmudic interpretations become authoritative and normative, but they are interpretations of the Hebrew Bible. So that is always there.
Frank Moore Cross
I guess what this is reflecting is my own search for answers that I can't find. Frank [Moore Cross] and I have examined a lot of archaeological materials in the hope of finding out.
Frank Moore Cross
We are thrown back on the text, for the most part. Archaeology can give us background. It doesn't either confirm or disprove the Bible, but it may illuminate it.
Frank Moore Cross
Israel defined its God and its relation to that God in existential, relational terms. They did not, until quite late, approach the question of one God in an abstract philosophical way.
Frank Moore Cross
Elie [Wiesel], when you ask, Why do I want to know, I'm trying to grab the holy. And I'm getting thrown back.
Frank Moore Cross
That is to say, the inspiration, the interpretive richness of the text is what Elie [Wiesel] does publicly, and his interest in history is his private reserve he knows that he is not an expert in dissecting the text the way Frank [Moore Cross] does.
Frank Moore Cross
I grew up in a household in which the Bible played very little role.
Frank Moore Cross
I would not speak of Judaism as a Talmudic or Rabbinic religion. It's a Biblical religion.
Frank Moore Cross
My own interest is far more in the Hebrew Bible. My religion is more personally related to the Hebrew Bible than it is to the New Testament.
Frank Moore Cross
I do think that the Josianic return to the archaic form of the Passover is appropriate and, indeed, historical. Josiah does go back to a different, earlier tradition, the time of a central sanctuary in which the law code was read. But then there were accretions to the Book of Deuteronomy.
Frank Moore Cross
There was certainly an old law code which stands behind the earliest form of Deuteronomy. Presumably that is what was lost.
Frank Moore Cross
What is public for you, Elie [Wiesel], is private for Frank [Moore Cross], and the reverse.
Frank Moore Cross
Certainly professionally, yes [I was interested more in history]. And literary criticism, the structure of poetry. But it is primarily as a historian that I work, although text criticism and literary criticism are very much a part of my interests.
Frank Moore Cross
I became intimately acquainted with the Bible only as a theological student.
Frank Moore Cross
You have miracles [in the Hebrew Bible], yes, but they're not the work, normally, of demons.
Frank Moore Cross
Furthermore, I think there was, in fact, a celebration of Passover in the era of the Judges in which the epic was recited in the context of the central sanctuary. That tradition was displaced by the Feast of Enthronement beginning in the Solomonic era.
Frank Moore Cross
We want to live in ambiguity. This is the human condition.
Frank Moore Cross