학술논문

ʿōlāh: The Rhetoric of Burnt Offerings
Document Type
research-article
Source
Vetus Testamentum, 2006 Jan 01. 56(1), 125-137.
Subject
Jewish rituals
Animal behavior
Burnt offerings
Sacrifices
Priests
Ritual offerings
Ritual killings
Deities
Religious practices
Religious rituals
Language
English
ISSN
00424935
Abstract
The ʿōlāh offering receives pride of place in most lists of sacrifices in the Hebrew Bible, including the ritual rules of Leviticus. Its prominence in these texts suggests that the writers expected its mention to have an effect on their audience. This rhetorical effect must be evaluated and understood before the references to the ʿōlāh can be used to reconstruct ancient religious practices reliably. A comparative analysis of the rhetoric about the ʿōlāh suggests that its priority burnished the image of priests as devoted selflessly to divine worship and drew attention away from their economic interests in the sacrificial system mandated in the Torah. The effect of this rhetoric in later Jewish and Christian traditions was to separate the ideal of "sacrifice" from any necessary connection to actual animal offerings.