fallingblood
Agnostic Theist
Recently, I have been researching and writing a book on suffering. Throughout my research, I have spent a considerable amount of time on the wisdom literature in the Hebrew Bible (especially Job). For me, this is some of the most interesting aspects of the Hebrew Bible, and I think it is also a portion that many tend to skip over.
Throughout my research, one thing kept sticking out though. That is the lack of belief in an afterlife. Such a stance causes problems in regards to why people suffer. Unlike the commonly held belief of many Christians, which holds that one is rewarded in the afterlife, which justifies suffering in this life.
Yet, when dealing with the topic of suffering in the Hebrew Bible, we get a very different pictures. For instance, in the story of Job, Job states that we only have this one life to live. The implication is that after we die, it is all done.
However, even with Job, it is not quite that easy. In Job 14:13 we actually catch a glimpse of Job hoping for an afterlife. Contrary to the common idea at that time, Job speculates on a vague possibility that he may live again. However, Job quickly brushes away such an idea, and accepts what was the common thought at that time: when you died you died (which is the general idea portrayed in Job, as Solomon Freehof points out in his commentary on Job). As Raymond Scheindlin writes in his commentary of Job, even though Job has a vision of an afterlife, it is quickly dismissed, as he knew there was no afterlife.
It is not just in Job that we see this suggestion that the life we have now is the only life there is. Qoheleth is another great example of this doubt in an after life. Chapter 3:19-21 states that we all die, and return to dust, just like animals do. In death, there really is no difference between humans and other animals, as we all go to the same place (we turn into dust). As Kathleen O'Connor points out, the author did not have the benefit of a notion in life after death. In fact, such a notion doesn't appear until the very end of the OT period. For those who observed death, all just returned from where they came, the Earth (as in dust to dust).
So there is no need for a belief in an afterlife to explain anything, even within religious traditions.
Edit** I just want to make it clear that what I'm saying here isn't true of all Israelites, throughout all history. I'm talking about a specific period of time, which would be around the time in which this wisdom literature was written. As briefly alluded to, later on, a different notion did form, one of an after life (which throughout the Bible, takes on different forms).
Throughout my research, one thing kept sticking out though. That is the lack of belief in an afterlife. Such a stance causes problems in regards to why people suffer. Unlike the commonly held belief of many Christians, which holds that one is rewarded in the afterlife, which justifies suffering in this life.
Yet, when dealing with the topic of suffering in the Hebrew Bible, we get a very different pictures. For instance, in the story of Job, Job states that we only have this one life to live. The implication is that after we die, it is all done.
However, even with Job, it is not quite that easy. In Job 14:13 we actually catch a glimpse of Job hoping for an afterlife. Contrary to the common idea at that time, Job speculates on a vague possibility that he may live again. However, Job quickly brushes away such an idea, and accepts what was the common thought at that time: when you died you died (which is the general idea portrayed in Job, as Solomon Freehof points out in his commentary on Job). As Raymond Scheindlin writes in his commentary of Job, even though Job has a vision of an afterlife, it is quickly dismissed, as he knew there was no afterlife.
It is not just in Job that we see this suggestion that the life we have now is the only life there is. Qoheleth is another great example of this doubt in an after life. Chapter 3:19-21 states that we all die, and return to dust, just like animals do. In death, there really is no difference between humans and other animals, as we all go to the same place (we turn into dust). As Kathleen O'Connor points out, the author did not have the benefit of a notion in life after death. In fact, such a notion doesn't appear until the very end of the OT period. For those who observed death, all just returned from where they came, the Earth (as in dust to dust).
So there is no need for a belief in an afterlife to explain anything, even within religious traditions.
Edit** I just want to make it clear that what I'm saying here isn't true of all Israelites, throughout all history. I'm talking about a specific period of time, which would be around the time in which this wisdom literature was written. As briefly alluded to, later on, a different notion did form, one of an after life (which throughout the Bible, takes on different forms).
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