Melchizedek, King of Sodom: How Scribes Invented the Biblical Priest-King

Updated by: 
Shiran Shevah
Research notes: 
SHS/not checked/09/09/2019
Reference type: 
Book
Author(s): 
Cargill, Robert R.
year: 
2019
Full title: 

Melchizedek, King of Sodom: How Scribes Invented the Biblical Priest-King

Place of Publication: 
Oxford
Publisher: 
Oxford University Press
Work type: 
Essay/Monograph
Abstract: 

This book argues that the biblical figure Melchizedek mentioned in Gen. 14 as the king of Shalem originally appeared in the text as the king of Sodom. Textual evidence is presented to demonstrate that the word סדם‎ (Sodom) was changed to שׁלם‎ (Shalem) in order to avoid depicting the patriarch Abram as receiving a blessing and goods from the king of Sodom, whose city was soon thereafter destroyed for its sinfulness according to the biblical tradition. This change from Sodom to Shalem caused a disjointed narrative in Gen. 14:18–20, which many scholars have wrongly attributed to a later interpolation. This book also provides textual evidence of minor, strategic redactional changes to the Hebrew Bible and the Samaritan Pentateuch that demonstrate the evolving, polemical, sectarian discourse between Jews and Samaritans as they were competing for the superiority of their respective temples and holy mountains. These minor strategic changes to the HB were used as the ideological motivation in the Second Temple Jewish literary tradition for the relocation of Shalem away from the Samaritan religious center at Mt. Gerizim to the Levitical priestly center in Jerusalem. This book also examines how the possible reference to Melchizedek in Ps. 110 may have influenced later Judaism’s understanding of Melchizedek.

Label: 
16/09/2019
Record number: 
105 780