Burning Bush

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Russian icon of Moses with Burning Bush, XVIII c.

The burning bush is an object described by the Book of Exodus as being located on Mount Horeb; according to the narrative, the bush was on fire, but was not consumed by the flames, hence the name[1]. In the narrative, the burning bush is the location at which Moses was appointed by Yahweh to lead the Israelites out of Egypt and into Canaan.

The Hebrew word used in the narrative, that is translated into English as bush, is seneh (סנה), which refers in particular to brambles[2][3][4]; seneh is a biblical dis legomenon, only appearing in two places, both of which describe the burning bush[5]. It is possible that the reference to a burning bush is based on a mistaken interpretation of Sinai (סיני), a mountain described by the Bible as being on fire, and scholars think that the reference to the burning bush in Deuteronomy, in particular, is a copyist's error, and was originally a reference to Sinai[6][7].

Biblical narrative

Icon of Moses receiving the Law. The Burning Bush is depicted at his feet, lower left (Saint Catherine's Monastery, c. 1050).

In the narrative, an angel of Yahweh is described as appearing in the bush[8], and God is subsequently described as calling out from it to Moses, who had been grazing Jethro's flocks there[9]. When Yahweh notices Moses starting to approach, God tells Moses to first take off his sandals, due to the place being holy ground[10], and Moses hides his face[11]. Textual scholars regard the account of the burning bush as being spliced together from the Jahwist and Elohist texts, with the Angel of Yahweh and the removal of sandals being part of the Elohist version, and the Yahwist's parallels to these being God and the turning away of Moses' face, respectively[12][13]

When challenged on his identity, Yahweh replies that he is the God of the Patriarchs - Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob -[14] and that he is Yahweh[15]. The text derives Yahweh (יהוה) from the Hebrew word hayah (אהיה)[16], meaning he who is, or I am that I am[17]; the Kabbalah takes this to mean that Yahweh himself is equal to his name. Biblical scholars regard the triconsonantal root of hawah (הוה), as a more likely origin for the name Yahweh (יהוה)[18][19]; hawah literally means blow/fall, and thus Yahweh would be he who blows/he who [makes certain things] fall, which seems particularly fitting for a storm deity[20][21].

The text portrays Yahweh as telling Moses that he is sending him to the (unspecified) Pharaoh in order to bring the Israelites out of Egypt, an action that Yahweh is described as having decided upon as a result of noticing that the Israelites were being oppressed by the Egyptians[22]. Yahweh tells Moses to tell the elders of the Israelites that Yahweh would lead them into the land of the Canaanites, Hittites, Amorites, Hivites, and Jebusites[23], a region generally referred to as a whole by the term Canaan; this is described as being a land of milk and honey[24].

According to the narrative, Moses was given supernatural powers, in order to help Moses persuade the Egyptians and Israelites of his commission; these included the ability to turn his staff into a snake[25], the ability to make his hand (temporarily) become leprous[26], and the ability to turn water into blood[27]. In the text, Yahweh subsequently instructs Moses to take this staff in his hands, in order to perform miracles with it[28], as if it is a staff given to him, rather than his own[29]; textual scholars argue that this latter instruction is the Elohist's version of the more detailed earlier description, where Moses uses his own staff, which they attribute to the Yahwist[30][31].

Despite the signs, Moses is described as being very reluctant to take on the role, arguing that he lacked eloquence, and that someone else should be sent instead[32]; in the text, Yahweh reacts by angrily suggesting that Aaron is sent to assist Moses, since Aaron is eloquent and was already on his way to meet Moses[33]. This is the first time in the Torah that Aaron is mentioned, and here he is described as being Moses' prophet, as if Moses were Aaron's god[34].

St Catherine's Monastery

The bush at St. Catherine's Monastery, Sinai, which monastic tradition identifies as The Burning Bush.

Christian hermits originally gathered at Mount Serbal, believing it to be the biblical Mount Sinai. However, in the 4th century, under the Byzantine Empire, the monastery built there was abandoned in favour of the newer belief that Mount Saint Catherine was the Biblical Mount Sinai; a new monastery - St. Catherine's Monastery was built at its foot, and the alleged site of the biblical burning bush was identified. The bush growing at the spot (a bramble, scientific name Rubus sanctus[35]), was later transplanted several yards away to a courtyard of the monastery, and its original spot was covered by a chapel dedicated to the Annunciation, with a silver star marking where the roots of the bush had come out of the ground. The Monks at St. Catherine's Monastery, following church tradition, believe that this bush is, in fact, the original bush seen by Moses, rather than a later replacement[citation needed], and anyone entering the chapel is required to remove their shoes, just as Moses was in the biblical account.

However, in modern times, it is not Mount Saint Catherine, but the adjacent Jebel Musa (Mount Moses), which is currently identified as Mount Sinai by popular tradition and guide books; this identification arose from bedouin tradition. Mount Serbal, Jebel Musa, and Mount Saint Catherine, all lie at the southern tip of the Sinai peninsula, but the peninsula's name is a comparatively modern invention, and it was not known by that name at the time of Josephus or earlier. Most modern scholars, as well as many modern theologians, dismiss the idea that the biblical Sinai was at the south of the peninsula, instead favouring locations in the Hijaz (at the north west of Saudi Arabia), northern Arabah (in the vicinity of Petra, or the surrounding area), or occasionally in the central or northern Sinai Peninsula. Hence, the majority of academics and theologians agree that if the burning bush ever existed, then it is highly unlikely to be the bush preserved at St Catherine's Monastery.

Views of Eastern Orthodoxy

Traditional icon of Our Lady of the Burning Bush (Neopalimaya Kupina).

In Eastern Orthodoxy a tradition exists, originating in the Orthodox Fathers of the Church and its Ecumenical Synods (or Councils), that the flame Moses saw was in fact God's Uncreated Energies/Glory, manifested as light, thus explaining why the bush was not consumed. Hence, it is not interpreted as a miracle in the sense of an event, which only temporarily exists, but is instead viewed as Moses being permitted to see these Uncreated Energies/Glory, which are considered to be eternal things; the Orthodox definition of salvation is this vision of the Uncreated Energies/Glory, and it is a recurring theme in the works of Greek Orthodox theologians such as John S. Romanides.

In Eastern Orthodox parlance, the preferred name for the event is The Unburnt Bush, and the theology and hymnography of the church view it as prefiguring the virgin birth of Jesus; Eastern Orthodox theology refers to Mary, the mother of Jesus as the God bearer, viewing her as having given birth to Incarnate God without suffering any harm, or loss of virginity, in parallel to the bush being burnt without being consumed[36]. There is an Icon by the name of the Unburnt Bush, which portrays Mary in the guise of God bearer; the icon's feast day is 4 September (Russian: Неопалимая Купина, Neopalimaya Kupina).

While God speaks to Moses, in the narrative, Eastern Orthodoxy believes that the angel was also heard by Moses; Eastern orthodoxy interprets the angel as being the Logos of God, regarding it as the Angel of Great Counsel mentioned by the Septuagint version of Isaiah [37] (it is Counsellor, Almighty God in the masoretic text).

Shanon's hallucinogen theory

Benny Shanon, professor of cognitive psychology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem wrote a paper, "Biblical Entheogens: a Speculative Hypothesis", in the philosophy journal Time and Mind, which suggests Moses may have been under the influence of a hallucinogenic substance when he witnessed the burning bush.[38][39] In the abstract, Shanon states that entheogens found in arid regions of the Sinai peninsula and in the south of Israel (i.e. Negev) were commonly used for religious purposes by the Israelites.[38][39] The plants he suggests may have caused the vision are Peganum harmala,[38] used by the Bedouin people in present times but not identified with any plant mentioned in the Bible,[39] and acacia, mentioned frequently in the Bible, and also used in traditional Bedouin and Arab medicine.[38][39] The effects of certain species of acacia are comparable to the effects of ayahuasca, which can cause users to "see music".[40]

Symbolic uses of the burning bush

File:CofSBurningBushLogo.JPG
The Burning Bush emblem of the Church of Scotland, above the entrance to the Church Offices in Edinburgh
File:Pci burningbush.PNG
Burning Bush of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland

The burning bush has been popular symbol among Reformed churches since it was first adopted by the Huguenots (French Calvinists) in 1583 during its 12th National Synod:

  • The current symbol of the Reformed Church of France is a burning bush with the Huguenot cross.
  • The motto of the Church of Scotland is Nec tamen consumebatur - Latin for Yet it was not consumed, an allusion to the biblical story of the burning bush, and a stylised depiction of the burning bush is used as the Church's symbol.
  • The Burning Bush is also used as the basis of the symbol of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland, which uses the Latin motto Ardens sed virens, meaning Burning but flourishing, and based on the same passage. The same logo is used from the separated Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster.
  • The burning bush is also the symbol for the Presbyterian Church in Canada, Presbyterian Church in New Zealand and the Presbyterian Church in Taiwan.
  • The Burning Bush is the name of Far Eastern Bible College's theological journal.

The logo of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America is also an image of the Burning Bush with the phrase and the bush was not consumed in both English and in Hebrew[41].

The burning bush which does not consume itself has been said[attribution needed] to symbolically represent the sun, an unquenchable fire which burns without ceasing. [citation needed]

Notes

  1. Exodus 3:4
  2. Cheyne and Black, Encyclopedia Biblica
  3. Jewish Encyclopedia
  4. Peake's commentary on the Bible
  5. Jewish Encyclopedia
  6. Cheyne and Black, Encyclopedia Biblica
  7. Jewish Encyclopedia
  8. Exodus 3:2
  9. Exodus 3:4
  10. Exodus 3:5
  11. Exodus 3:6
  12. Jewish Encyclopedia, Book of Exodus
  13. Peake's commentary on the Bible
  14. Exodus 3:16
  15. Exodus 3:14
  16. Exodus 3:14
  17. Peake's commentary on the Bible
  18. Jewish Encyclopedia
  19. Peake's commentary on the Bible
  20. Jewish Encyclopedia
  21. Peake's commentary on the Bible
  22. Exodus 3:7
  23. Exodus 3:17
  24. Exodus 3:17
  25. Exodus 4:2-4
  26. Exodus 4:6-7
  27. Exodus 4:9
  28. Exodus 4:9
  29. Peake's commentary on the Bible
  30. Peake's commentary on the Bible
  31. Jewish Encyclopedia, Book of Exodus
  32. Exodus 4:10-13
  33. Exodus 4:14
  34. Exodus 4:15-16
  35. Popa's Tales: The Burning Bush
  36. The Octoechos, Volume II (St. John of Kronstadt Press, Liberty, TN, 1999), Dogmaticon, Tone II
  37. Isaiah 9:6 (LXX)
  38. 38.0 38.1 38.2 38.3 Benny Shanon (March 2008). "Biblical Entheogens: a Speculative Hypothesis" (PDF). Time and Mind. Retrieved 2008-03-28.
  39. 39.0 39.1 39.2 39.3 Ofri Ilani (2008-03-05). "Researcher: Moses was tripping at Mount Sinai" (in English, Hebrew). Haaretz. Retrieved 2008-03-28.
  40. "Moses was high on drugs: Israeli researcher". Breitbart.com (2008-03-04). Retrieved 2008-03-28.
  41. The Jewish Theological Seminary - Home Page

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