Bibliodraw: Drawing the Bible
Exploring the Bible, a chapter a day, through drawing and writing
Sunday, November 17, 2024
Judges: Chapter 13
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
Judges 12: In Writing
All day they watch with gimlet eyes
measure every atom of cake
clock the syllables of speech.
Her piece was bigger!
I should get two.
Why did his have chocolate?
every crumb filed and accounted for.
I didn’t get pita, so I should
get for lunch and they shouldn’t
get any –the not-get
more important than the get.
My Imma, the baby smiles
with gleaming milkteeth
shoving his sister off my chest.
I love you into the shark's mouth
and all the way up to the sky, she says
heart against my heart
as her leg draws back
to kick her brother–
behind every offering, the buried dagger.
Why does your face fall?
God asks Cain.
Whose picture do you like better?
Winter swallows the sun early
I want to go home,
my daughter whines
but every home is a warzone’
about to detonate from within.
Friday, November 8, 2024
Judges: Chapter 12
"I summoned you, but you did not save me" he counters--a childish non-sequitur that once again reveals his almost naked vulnerability, his damaged psyche as a rejected child. Ephraim, after all, did not ask to lead the war and "save" Gilead--they asked why they were not summoned to join the battle once it was happening. In contrast to Gilead who uses his "word" (d'v'r) to "defuse their spirit when he spoke this speech" (בדברו הדבר הזה), Jephtha rallies Gilead to "slaughter" over 40000 members of Ephraim in a murderous spree that puts Abimelekh to shame.
There is a price to Jephtha's fanatical commitment to the reality of language. Gideon can use language diplomatically, to sooth and loosten. Jephtha, by contrast, destroys. In the previous chapter, his commitment to the "blurting" of his mouth cost him his daughter. Here, he makes pronunciation itself a matter of life and death: Ephraim are judged on the literal placement of the tongue, as saying an "s" instead of "sh" condemns them to slaughter.
It is ironic and telling that this first civil war takes place between the "sons of Joseph", the twin tribes who throughout the Book of Joshua hover between two and one, so close they are almost a single entity, as alike as the almost interchangable "s" and "sh". "You are fugitives of Ephraim," the Ephraimites taunt, "Gilean is within Ephraim and within Menasseh."
To Jephtha, a fugitive betrayed by his own brothers, this taunt is unbearable. Unable to appease his brother-tribe, he seeks instead to assert a demarcation as clear as the definitive river, as life and death. In doing so, he moves the Book of Judges to its darkest point yet.]
Monday, October 28, 2024
Judges 11: In Writing
Why are we talking about this? you say
Because I remember it, I say
searing replay in infinite regress
myself seeing myself hearing and hearing it again
There are words, I say
that are etched. When someone tells
you who they are. You need to remember
to believe them.
You shrug. Look away.
We can't keep going back:
it's a new day. And I wish
we couldn't. Wish
we could delete, restart.
Walk the circle counterclockwise
to before. Uncross the crossings.
Crawl back into the childhood bunkbed
curl under the blanket,
and leg my legs dangle over darkness
as I sit, fishing the hurts from the emptyness
winding them into a tight ball of string
that can be bunched in a fist
and thrown away.
Sunday, October 27, 2024
Judges: Chapter 11
Monday, September 30, 2024
Chapter 10: In Writing
My baby spins
burnished gold
etched in time
by the dying light.
Please don't uproot the rooted
don't forget the hope
the children sing, oblivious
as mothers weep into their hair.
Return me, and I will return
each word overripe with import.
The planes' overhead whine
mingles with the oud's dirge.
when will we manage
full confession?
In this golden hour
I give chocolate.
In this golden hour,
I give juice
I give all the sweet
that is too sweet
unable to hold back.
Let us fall into the hands of God
for his mercies are great
the music beats
as the wide-wombed
evening embraces all of us.
Sunday, September 29, 2024
Judges: Chapter 10
Monday, September 23, 2024
Judges 9: In Writing
My old garden was guarded
by the silver-scaled armor
of two olive trees, that lobbed
globed black grenades all over the floor
which my baby stuffed in his mouth
black grease bursting on my fingers
as I forced them out.
No flowers grew by those gnarled roots
poisoned by the trees' bitter solitude.
The man who planted that garden
gathered the olives carefully in jars
mixing some with garlic
some with the bright red peppers
he grew in pickle jars on the sill.
The first year I diligently gathered
them in a pillowcase.
washed them in the rain,
and watched white mold bloom.
In my new garden,
I dreamt of figs, open-palmed
and generous. The fruit,
purpling and swelling
till they burst with milk,
and the sweet scent of green.
But my neighbor warns their roots dig deep
overturn the floor.
They need to be planted far away, he says.
No where near a home.
So now I look at vines,
how they curl their fingers around every support
gripping for dear life
how they climb and climb
covering every scar
in riotous green and clusters
redeeming the ruin.
Sunday, September 22, 2024
Judges: Chapter 9
We sprout
from the earth's navel
dragging along the hills, trees and thorns
in the ever-battle
of fathers and sons
If the previous chapter set Gideon within a wider family context, this family now takes center stage, as the Gideon saga continues to resonate forward and backwards in time. Certain key elements of his story are retroactively highlighted when seen in this broader context.
Abimelech, the son of Gideon’s concubine, introduced at the closing of the previous chapter, moves to the center, as he acts decisively to take the kingship his father had rejected. In an Oedipal drama, Abimelech moves to his “mothers family’s”, claiming their kinship and brotherhood, while murderously turning on his brother’s-through-his father.
This Oedipal killing of the father highlights that Gideon’s journey simlarily began by killing his father’s sacred bull. The initial, sublimated, struggle ended up bringing father and son together: Yoash defended his son, and brought to his symbolic rebirth as Jerubal.
Abimelekh, by contrast, turns on Jerubal, killing his 70 sons on “one stone.” Yet throughout, he expresses and works through elements of his father’s own personality, revisiting key moments and struggles. Like Gideon, Abimelekh has a special focus on “the sons of my mother.” Both father and son are related to the symbolic number of 70, with Gideon’s 70 sons countered by Abimelekh’s 70 pieces of silver. Abimelekh seems to be the only of Gideon’s sons to have inherited his father’s military might and strategy—like his father, he “divides the camp.” Like his father, he leads by example, telling his men to “watch and do as I do.”Gideon retraced Jacob’s journey to Cannan via Penuel and Succoth; Abimelekh takes the next step to Shechem. Gideon externalizes Jacob’s interior and lonely battle in Penuel, turning Jacob’s mysterious struggle where he “sees God face to face” into a ruthless battle over his authority with the people of Penuel. Abimlekeh revisits and heightens the treachery and violence that Jacob found in Shechem (indeed, the chapter highlights the intertextual connection by openly alluding to “Shechem the son of Hamor”).
Abimelekh—“My father is king”—his very name refers to the troubled relationship with his father, and specifically around the issue of authority and power. Indeed, it is Gideon himself who “puts” (veyasem, rather than the usual “ve yikra”) this name on him, pointing to unresolved tensions in the issue of kingship. Gideon is first offered the kingship after he uses the very elements of the earth—brambles and thorns—to punish the people of Succoth who mock his authority. Abimelekh, described by Yotam as a “thornbush,” fights Gaal from the “navel of the earth” (Tabur haAretz), and his army appears like the shadows of the hills. He later cuts down trees and walks with them (in a Macbeth-like scene) to attack the rebels in the tower. Whereas Gideon razes the tower of Penuel, Abimelekh is killed by a grindstone flung by a woman in the tower.
“I will not rule over you, nor will my son rule over you. God will rule over you,” Gideon declared. Yet once the idea of earthly authority was raised, it seems impossible to contain. You will be ruled, Abimelkh tells the people of Shechem. So better by me your kinsmen, than by Gideon’s 70 other sons. The people of Shechem accept this argument, and crown Abimelekh, who “acts with authority (veyesar) over them.” When they tire of Abimelkh’s rule, they turn to Gaal the son of Eved (lit. servant, slave), who explicitly centers the argument around the issue of avdut-slevery/ service. Why should we serve Abimeklkh, he asks, we might as well serve Hamor. The issue is only power and who wields it.
An alternative to this power-based vision of the inevitable domination of the strong is offered by Yotam, Gideon’s youngest and only surviving son. Yotam (lit “the orphaned one”) presents an opposing vision—both of kingship, and of Gideon. If Abimelkh expresses Gideon’s ruthless assertion of authority, Yotam highlights his vulnerability, his deep fear and bravery—how he “sent forth his soul to save you.” In a similar fashion, Yotam’s famous parable of the trees presents kingship as an insufficiency of self, rather than the right of might: the olive, the fig, the vine, are all too full of their own blessings to seek to lord over others. It is only the barren thornbush that is willing to rule, as it has nothing intrinsic to lose. What is more, kingship, Yotam argues, is a mutual system: if Abimelekh was raised justly, “rejoice in him and let him rejoice in you.” But if the rise of Abimelekh was unjust, “let a fire shoot forth from Abimelkh and destroy Shechem and a fire set forth from Shechem and destroy Ebimelkh.” The ruler and the ruled each define the other, building or destroying each other simultaneously. Rather than a hierarchal relationship in which one dominates the other, it is a circular relation of mutual definition.
Yotam delivers his parable from atop Har Grizim, location of the primal covenant with God, in order to “Make the people of Shechem heard to God.” This also introduced a fundamental difference between Gideon and Abimelekh’s Odeipal struggles: Gideon acts on God’s command, and fights on God behest. Though he asserts authority, he seeks to make “God rule over you.” Yotam and Abimelekh struggle over their father’s legacy, and Yotam calls God in on his side. The story ends with the victory of Yotam’s narrative: the fire indeed sets forth and destroys both Shechem and Abimelkh. “God repaid Abimelech for the evil he had done to his father by slaying his seventy brothers; and God likewise repaid the people of Shechem… so the curse of Jotham son of Jerubbaal was fulfilled…”.]
Wednesday, September 18, 2024
Judges 8: In Writing
Come, I say
but she hangs back
curling herself to a ball.
Up the steps.
Two than four.
I'm waiting.
She falls to the ground.
Screams, You come to ME!
as I walk forward
hoping she'll be behind me
in a game of chicken
I will always lose
because I can't leave
and her screams
could tumble a tower
Where's Mommy, asks each passerby
Mommy is here, I grit
Mommy is waiting
Knowing I should be grateful
they care. Wishing
they were elsewhere.
I'm waiting, I say
in our daily disemboweling
tug of war