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Allen S. Maller

Who lived in Ancient Israel before the Jews?

The land changed hands many times. The Amorites came down from Syria, and the Philistines came in from across the sea 2-3 centuries after Prophet Abraham, the first Hebrew (Genesis 14:13) crossed over the Jordan river, at God’s command.

The Canaanites were there before the Jews who escaped from Egypt, and the Philistines arrived. They all built cities with stone walls. They worked–bronze and copper in hot fires. They farmed and raised sheep and goats on the rocky hills. The Jews and their many Prophets struggled to develop an imageless, monotheistic, ongoing religion.

Before the Canaanites; came the Natufians. They were hunters who learned to stay in one place. They made their homes in caves and built stone houses. They ground wild wheat with stone tools. The climate was changing then, getting warmer.

Even earlier were the first modern humans who reached this land. They came up from Africa around 80,000 to 100,000 years ago. They lived in small groups and hunted with stone tools. They buried their dead with care. The caves at Mount Carmel still hold their bones.

The Qur’an is the last of the four surviving Abrahamic scriptures (Torah, Psalms, Gospels and Qur’an), so it often refers to events and personalities in the distant past. As the Torah, Psalms and the Hebrew Prophets are the early books of the four surviving Abrahamic books of revelation; they refer much more frequently to future events leading to the Messianic Age of world wide peace and justice.

The Book of Exodus marks the transitions from the family narratives of Genesis to the national ethnic narratives of the rest of the Torah and the history books of Judges, Prophet Samuel and the post David and Solomon Jewish Prophets.

The first chapter of Genesis starts out with God’s creation of material nature. But chapters two to three speak poetically about the nature of all human feelings of loneliness, desire, temptation, and morality.

With the introduction of Prophet Abraham the Hebrew (Genesis 14:13), we see the beginnings of the three Abrahamic Religions; Judaism, Christianity and Islam. There are hundreds of millions of people today who have two, three or more self-identities. This was also true even 3,600 years ago; although to a much lesser extent than today.

For example, Prophet Abraham is called a Muslim in the Arabic Qur’an; and in the Hebrew Bible he is called a Hebrew [speaker] and an immigrant who crossed the over the Jordan River.

The term ivri (the Hebrew) first appears in the Torah, when Prophet Abraham is called “the Hebrew: “And it was told to Abram the Hebrew” (Genesis 14:13) And Prophet Joseph uses the name as both a geographical and an socio-ethnic class term: “I was kidnapped from the land of the ivrim” (Genesis 40:15), and “The Egyptians could not eat with the ivrim, since that would be an abomination” (Genesis 43:32)

The three Abrahamic religions; Christianity, Islam, and Judaism, are closer to each other than each of them is to any non-Abrahamic religion. Yet each of the three religions is unique; and each relates to the other two in its own unique way.

There could be no Christians before the birth of Prophet Jesus; and although there have been many hanif Muslim monotheists, they could not be members of the Muslim Ummah prior to the revelation of the Qur’an to Prophet Muhammad.

Judaism is unique because the Hebrew people actually proceeded the Jewish religion.

Thus Qur’an 3.67 states: Abraham was not a Jew, nor a Christian; but he was one pure of faith and a muslim (who submitted to the one God with a sound heart). He was never of those who associate partners with God.”

Abraham could not be a Jew or a Christian, as both the Torah and Gospel were revealed centuries after Abraham. Historically, Judaism and Christianity are the names given to the religions revealed to Prophet Moses and Prophet Jesus respectively, for their own faithful followers.

The Christian community and the Muslim Ummah were formed by those individuals who became faithful believers in the Gospel or the Qur’an.

But the Banu Israel-the Jewish People only received the Torah after many generations of oppression in Egypt, when the Jewish People escaped and stood at Mount Sinai and received the Torah from Prophets Moses and Aaron. This is why the history of the people of Israel makes up such a large place in the Hebrew Bible.

Indeed, the name “Israel” is mentioned 2,319 individual times in the Hebrew Bible as the historical experiences of the nation of Israel (the descendants of Jacob/Israel) is the central focus of most of the books in the Hebrew Scriptures; with the major exception of the Book of Job; which some rabbis thought was written by a non-Jewish saint or prophet.

The word Muslim is a religious identity term that refers to faithful monotheistic believers like Jews and Unitarian Christians. The word Hebrew is a linguistic, geographical and ethnic identity term like German the language, Germany the homeland and Germans the people. The word descendent is a biological inherited birth identity term like nobility or tribe.

Prophet Abraham’s grandson Prophet Jacob, whose name is changed to Israel, becomes the name the People of Israel, who in the book of Exodus, were delivered from Egyptian oppression. Prophet Jacob receives the name Israel that will become the name of the Jewish nation for the next 3,500 years and this is the name used by both the Christian New Testament and the Muslim Qur’an.

During the 12-13 centuries between Prophet Moses and Prophet Jesus the People of Israel were the only ongoing monotheistic community. The temptation to assimilate, especially when most Jews lived outside the Land of Israel was tremendous.

According to the 2001 Census, India has 122 major languages plus 1599 smaller languages; for a total of 1721 official spoken languages. That means that the hundreds of tribes and peoples must have received at least 2-3,000 different prophets when you add in the hundreds of no longer spoken languages in India.

But in the very large collection of Hindu and Buddhist sacred scriptures, there are no records of any series of anti-iconic, monotheistic prophets.

Because, of all the tribes or nations they spoke to, none heeded their warnings or accepted their message, and thus they were all destroyed; or if they did form monotheistic, anti-iconic, religious communities, those they formed slipped back into polytheism and idolatry over the following few generations and centuries.

Not every Jew was faithful to all the teachings of the Torah, but enough were so that Judaism and the Jewish People never died out; and the covenant between God and the People of Israel remained an ongoing partnership to the present day.

Jews still believe that we can help fulfill the 2700 year old vision of Prophet Isaiah: “In that day there will be a highway from Egypt to Assyria. The Assyrians will go to Egypt, and the Egyptians to Assyria. The Egyptians and Assyrians will worship together. In that day Israel will join a three-party alliance with Egypt and Assyria, a blessing upon the heart. The LORD of Hosts will bless them saying, “Blessed be Egypt My people, Assyria My handiwork, and Israel My inheritance.”…(Isaiah 19:23-5)

About the Author
Rabbi Allen S. Maller has published over 850 articles on Jewish values in over a dozen Christian, Jewish, and Muslim magazines and web sites. Rabbi Maller is the author of "Tikunay Nefashot," a spiritually meaningful High Holy Day Machzor, two books of children's short stories, and a popular account of Jewish Mysticism entitled, "God, Sex and Kabbalah." His most recent books are "Judaism and Islam as Synergistic Monotheisms' and "Which Religion Is Right For You?: A 21st Century Kuzari" both available on Amazon.
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