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About the Author

William G. Dever is professor emeritus of Near Eastern archaeology and anthropology at the University of Arizona, Tucson, and the foremost American authority on Syro-Palestinian archaeology, with more than fifty years of experience in the field. His other books include Who Were the Early Israelites show more and Where Did They Come From? and Did God Have a Wife? Archaeology and Folk Religion In Ancient Israel. show less

Works by William G. Dever

Has Archaeology Buried the Bible? (2020) 27 copies, 1 review

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11 reviews
Of the various books I have now read about Asherah and ancient Hebrew religion, William Dever's Did God Have a Wife? is the most recent, the most comprehensive, and the most confrontational. The author addresses the book to "ordinary people" and wants it to be "accessible to nonspecialists" (ix, xii), but it is not a light, popularizing account. It is a thorough argument with careful attention to method, reaching across multiple disciplines despite its principal grounding in archaeology. It show more does not have a full footnoted apparatus, but it includes two significant survey/reviews of prior scholarship, a fifteen-page bibliography of "basic sources," and many other references to Dever's predecessors and peers in researching the topic. There is a subject matter index and an index by scripture references.

The emphasis in this volume is on lived, popular religion in ancient Palestine, as contrasted with the ideal of the elite minority represented in the Hebrew Bible. Dever is of course at odds with those whose biblically-based presuppositions make Yahwist monotheism the normative Hebrew religion from "the time of Moses" (or Abraham!) onward. But he is also arguing against a form of "revisionist" biblical scholarship that reduces the entire text to etiological myths retrojected from the sixth century b.c.e. or later. His position is that there is historical value in the biblical narratives, when they are used as one supplementary source (among others) to contextualize the archaeological record, and subjected to a careful hermeneutic that takes into account their origins and the partisan interests of their authors/redactors.

Dever shows little if any sympathy for theology, repeatedly observing how theological interests have worked to mystify and obscure past realities. He does have a concern for the religious vitality of "symbol, ritual and myth" (61). Accordingly, he is dismissive of academic attempts to dilute the evidence for popular worship of the goddess Asherah with concepts like "hypostasis of the feminine aspect of Yahweh" and "symbolic furniture." ("Symbolic of what?" he demands.) He is also forthright about the inextricability of magic from popular religion in antiquity (125-34).

The archaeological materials covered demonstrate that the popular religion of the monarchical period of Israelite history was in fact characterized by just those elements that the Yahwist reformers of the Hebrew Bible indicted and called to be suppressed: magic, "high places," incense burned to gods other than Yahweh, recognition of Asherah in the temple, standing stones, veneration of the sun and stars, unauthorized divination, and so forth. The Deuteronomistic reformers were clear about their targets, and they were "right" inasmuch as the reforms failed (212). This elite minority could neither coerce nor persuade the larger population to forgo their immemorial customs.

Dever then tackles the task of supplying a historical narrative that accounts for the rise and eventual success of Hebrew monotheism. I found this late section of the book quite persuasive, and the element that was most eye-opening for me was the role of the construction of Solomon's temple in motivating the invention of an exclusive Yahwism. The nationalist project of a splendid, Phoenician-style temple needed to be justified, given its costly imposition on the country. (Rich irony: Hebrew slaves building the pyramids in Egypt are bunk, but "conscripted labor" to build the Jerusalem temple was for real.)

Bringing his story forward toward the present, Dever even treats the medieval reinvention of Asherah (understood as a feminine consort/counterpart to the Jewish God) in kabbalistic Shekinah mysticism. His closing sections discuss archaeological, biblical studies, feminist, multicultural, and popular consequences of the historical conclusions that Dever offers about Asherah's reality as an ancient goddess. As a non-theist convert to Reform Judaism (from a "fire-breathing fundamentalist" Protestant background, by way of an academic and archaeological odyssey, x-xi) he is not making any personal pleas for a revival of Asherah worship as such. But he does advance an appeal for understanding extended across the divisions of history, social class, gender, and religions.
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In his book What Did the Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It? What Archaeology Can Tell Us about the Reality of Ancient Israel, Dever presents in an extremely lucid manner what will turn out to be a shocking expose in the realm of archaeology and interdisciplinary scholarship. Beginning with a discussion on just how useful the Bible really is to the current age, Dever makes a bold claim: this is “a time when the biblical literature—indeed the entire biblical tradition—is show more being dismissed by so many as ‘irrelevant,’ even by those in Synagogue, Church, and Seminary” (3). Dever deals predominately in his text with the effects on archaeology due to the spread of the post-modernistic movement. To his way of thinking, “honest inquiry, scholarly documentation, and reasoned discourse have been replaced by ideology and politics in many social science disciplines” (247).

The central theme to Dever’s argument is that there must be a historical ancient Israel; the documentation of its existence is proven through archaeological discovery. To prove his point, Dever spends a good amount of pages in the middle of his book discussing various finds that to his mind prove the truthfulness of historicity of Israel. Bullae (206), idols (193), engravings (128), and pottery (232) among others are brought into play by Dever to support his thesis. Repeatedly he presents evidence, and uses it to make the point that there is no possible way due to the age of the find and the way it fell out of common use that writers “making up” a historical Israel would have known enough about the objects to include such details as are found in the Biblical record (157).


The remainder of the book deals with the conundrum of just who makes history (105). Should it be the people who are in power? The masses? The elite? Though some amount of fallacy is inevitable in any historical recounting, Dever sets out some applicable guidelines which he feels can be of help in evaluating the validity of historical accounts (107-108).

Overall, the book is an amazing expose of the dangers from revisionists threatening the archaeological and religious community. Dever’s writing is impassioned and erudite. For someone with only a casual interest in archaeology there is enough interdisciplinary information in the book to make the information applicable and relevant to other fields. For an archaeologist, especially one with religious interests, the book should serve as a massive wake up call, and additionally a call to action. If revisionism is allowed to continue creeping into every area as quietly as it has in the past, Dever points out that the only possibility left is to react, and weak and hardly effective position. What Dever ultimately calls for is a proactive movement- to take back Biblical scholarship before the current “scholars” destroy it (295-298).
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Dr. Dever takes a sensible, pragmatic view of what we can learn of the history of ancient Israel from both the material culture findings of archaeologists and the nuggets of historical information that can be found in the Biblical narration by "reading between the lines". He decries the recent trend among scholars who espouse the "low chronology" to simply dismiss the entire Old Testament as an elaborate fiction created only in Hellenistic or Roman times, and therefore having no real show more historical value.
Devers points out that, while the Biblical writers clearly had a strong theological bias, they often mention facts or use expressions that refer to the workings of daily life, many of which link their narrations to known historical events or specific time periods. These references can be linked to material archaeological findings. For example, there are numerous references to specific weights, measures and scales in Old Testament scriptures relating to the period of the Divided Monarchy (approximately 9th through early 6th Centuries BCE). These can be directly linked to scores of standardized limestone weights labelled with Egyptian hieratic numerals found in dig strata dating to precisely this period. Yet, this measurement system was abandoned after the Babylonian captivity and the Hellenistic conquest of Palestine; hence, it would not have been used in documents created during the Hellenistic period. Such correlations both teach us about actual daily life in ancient Israel, and delineate the actual period during which each of these scriptures was composed.
On the down side, Dr. Devers has a habit of putting the chapters with criticism of other scholars at the beginning of his books, as he has done here, so that one has to search through several chapters before reaching the actual "meat" to which the title of the book refers. These chapters are of more interest to scholars in the field than to intelligent laymen, who would be best advised to skip ahead to the more topical chapters first.
Otherwise, this book, like his others, does a fascinating job of revealing a "truth" about the history of ancient Israel that encompasses both the material findings of archaeology and the nuggets of information contained in that remarkable archive of ancient documents we know as the Bible.
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This is the first book by Dever that I have read. It was a fascinating and easy read. There are no footnotes to plod through, but there is a helpful bibliography at the end.

The basic premise of the book is that pre-exilic Israel needs to be understood in light of archaeological evidence which uncovers the realities of "folk-religion" as practice by the common Israelites as opposed to the literati who fashioning and fighting for monotheism through the "book-religion" that we have inherited show more from the work of the Deuteronomist and later redactors.

As I said, Dever's work is accessible. In the past I have found works by archaeologists to be dry and boring. Dever's work is anything but. He carefully unfolds his arguments from chapter to chapter, relying first on artifacts, then secondly, on biblical and other textual sources. In the end his conclusions about ancient Israelite worship are reasonable.

Dever's writing style is personable and he doesn't resort to sensationalism (like I found in Greenberg's 101 Myths of the Bible. On the other hand, he does tend to do some self-promoting throughout the book which I found a little off-putting.

On the whole, this is a wonderful book, deserving a place on the bookshelf of every student of the Bible. even if you do not agree with him, you will gain considerable background information on the works of archaeologists to the present time on the matter of ancient Israelite religion.
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