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Vtus Testamentum BRILL

Vtus Testamentum 60 (2010) 15-32

bnll nl/vt

Zechariah s Vision of the Ephah (Zech. 5:5-11)

Elie Assis Bar Han University, Israel

Abstract The vision of the ephah (Zech 5 5-11) is probably the most obscure of all of Zechanah's visions Its symbolic meaning is not mentioned, and the prophet himself does not comprehend it Some commentators hold that the prophecy is a rebuke to the Judeans, others hold that the intention is to foretell the fall of Judah's enemies All interpretations of the vision do not address the problem, namely that wickedness will be reestablished in Shinar and will not be eliminated as expected Why would the prophet propose that a house be built for the sinner outside the land rather than inflict on wickedness the punishment prescribed in other biblical sources* The the sis advanced in this paper is that the vision of the ephah is an anti-Samaritan prophecy The woman in the ephah represents the Samaritans, the vision foresees their return to their original home in Babylon, where their temple would be erected This interpretation provides a full explanation of the tension between the reference to the woman as wickedness and her happy ending in her permanent home in the Land of Shinar The prophet wanted to advance the theological argument that the ultimate solution of the dispute between the two groups would be for the Samaritans to build their own house, that is, their own separate temple, in Shinar their original historical homelands, and far away from Yehud Keywords Zechariah 5 5 11, Ephah, Samaritans, Yehud, Temple, Shinar Then the angel who talked with me came forward and said to me, "Look up and see what this is that is coming out"
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1 said, "What is it ? " H e said, "This is an


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ephah coming out" And he said, "This is their eye in all the land" leaden cover was lifted, and there was a woman sitting in the ephah leaden weight down on its mouth
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Then a And he

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said, "This is Wickedness" So he thrust her back into the ephah, and pressed the Then I looked up and saw two women com10

ing forward The wind was in their wings, they had wings like the wings of a stork, and they lifted up the ephah between earth and sky Then I said to the angel who talked with me, "Where are they taking the ephah*" n He said to me, "To build for it a house in the land of Shinar, they will set the ephah down there on its base"

Koninklijke Brill NV Leiden 2010

DOI 10 1163/004249310X12597406253328

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The vision of the ephah (Zech. 5:5-11) is one of the most obscure of all of 1 Zechariahs visions. As in most of them, the symbolic meaning is far from clear. But whereas in some of them the interpretation is provided right after the vision, here no solution is ever provided. The prophet s difficulty in mak ing sense of his vision is also attested by the fact that this is the only one in which he looks up twice in an attempt to make sense of it (w. 5 and 9). 2 This is also the only time that the prophet himself does not know what he sees and accordingly asks, "What is it?" (v. 6). To which the angel replies, "this is an ephah" (ibid.).3 Because the prophet cannot fathom the symbolic meaning of the ephah, the angel solves it for him: "This is their eye in all the land". But the angels explanation remains obscure. Another indication of Zechariahs inability to comprehend his vision is the repetition of "he said" in v. 6. Both times it introduces what the angel says, but there is no break between the angels two statements. The obvious expla nation for this repetition is that there was an interruption between the angels two statements, requiring a new introduction. Evidently at this point the angel paused, waiting for the prophet to respond; but Zechariah remained mute. Only after he failed to respond did the angel speak again, which is why the text needs the second "he said".4 The narrators indication of the prophets

Some regard this vision as a continuation of the preceding one, 5 1-4, bringing the total number of visions to seven The prevalent opinion, however, is that the scroll vision (5 1-4) and the Ephah vision should be distinguished See H G Mitchell, Haggai and Zechariah (ICC, Edinburgh, 1912), pp 171-172, Chary, Aggee-Zachane-Malachie (Paris, 1969), 101 2) M L Ruffin, Symbolism m Zechariah A Study in Functional Unity (Ph D diss , Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, 1986), 163 3) The common understanding is that an ephah is a measure of volume, equal to approximately 40 liters, here it refers to a vessel of that size Because that is too small to hold a woman, Marenof suggested that the word ephah means byr\"temple" in Sumenanand is a loan word in biblical Hebrew This conjecture has not been adopted by commentators on the book See S Marenof, "Note Concerning the Meaning of the Word 'Ephah', Zechariah 5 5-11", AJSL 48 (1931-32), pp 264-267 But I see no problem in the fact that a real ephah cannot hold a human being The text in Zechariah is describing one of many imaginary visions, which are not restricted by realistic criteria See also A Kohler, Die Nachexilischen Propheten Der Weis sagungen 55 erste Hlfte, Cap 1-8 (Erlangen, 1861), 170, and Chary, Aggee-ZacharieMakchie, 101 See M Shiloach, "And he said And he said", A Weiser and Luna (eds ), Sefer Korngreen (Tel-Aviv, 1964), pp 251-267 (Hebrew) For a thorough critique of Shiloach s analysis see S A Meier, Speaking of Speaking Marking Direct Discourse m the Hebrew Bible (VTSup 46, Leiden, 1992), pp 68-91
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silence and of the angels expectation of a response is evidently intended to highlight the prophets bewilderment and failure to understand what has been set before his eyes, even after the angel tells them that it is an ephah. Given that the prophet cannot identify the object he is looking at and does not understand its symbolic meaning, we can understand why this prophecy has so perplexed scholars and commentators and why the explanations offered for it are so varied and frequently even contradictory. Many questions can be asked about these verses: What does the ephah represent, and why? What is the meaning of the lead weight? What is the wickedness that is being removed to the Land of Shinar? What is its transgression? Who are the two women who are taking the ephah to Shinar? Why do they have the wings of a stork? What is meant by the statement that a house will be built for wickedness in the Land of Shinar? Finally, why was it so difficult for the prophet to understand his vision? Is there an explanation for the mystery that enwraps this vision? A satisfactory reading of this prophecy should resolve all of these difficulties. The most difficult crux in this prophecy, which scholars have not taken into account, is the fact that a vision about the removal of wickedness ends with the construction of a house for it. If the woman in the ephah is indeed wickedness and is accordingly being removed from the land, why does the story end on a positive note, with the construction of a house for her? Any explanation of the prophecy must take this tension into account and resolve it.

Interpretations of the Vision The various explanations of the vision go in two main directions. Some commentators hold that the prophecy is a rebuke addressed to certain groups among the people; others hold that the intention is to foretell the fall of the enemies of Judah. Abraham Ibn Ezra took the first tack. In his view, the prophecy announces the punishment of the exiles who did not return from Babylonia. Their punishment is that they will remain in Babylon. This explanation seems unlikely, because in the vision wickedness is taken away to Shinar, whereas in Ibn Ezras reading it is not removed but remains in Babylon.5 It is also difficult to
5) R. David Kimchi adopted a variant of this approach: in his opinion the "wickedness" represents the ten tribes. (For an English translation of this commentary see A. M. Caul, Rabbi David Kimchis Commentary upon the Prophecies ofZechariah [London, 1837], pp. 48-49.)

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understand the punishment: what punishment is it for those who did not want to return to Judah and preferred to stay in Babylon that their house is built in Babylon, which is precisely what they wanted? Joseph Kara explained that the ephah alludes to the sin of false weights and measures, a context in which the ephah is mentioned several times in the Bible (Lev. 29:36; Deut. 25:14-15; Amos 8:5; Micah 6:10; Prov. 20:10). The prophecy, he believes, proclaims the doom of those who defraud their fellows using false weights.6 But this interpretation, too, is difficult, because even though the transgressors' banishment from Judah is a possible punishment, it is not clear why they should have a permanent house built for them in Baby lon. The punishment of exile, mentioned several times in the Bible, refers precisely to dispersion and strife for the exiles (see for example Lev. 26: 33, 36, 38; Deut. 28:65). Neither of these readings explains why wickedness is symbolized by a woman.7 Another possibility is that the sin is that of idolatry. Just as a woman repre sents idolatry in many other places in the Bible, here too wickedness is a woman.8 The import of the construction of a house in Shinar is the expulsion of idolatry from Judah and its transfer to Babylon, where a temple can be built for it.9 It is obvious that idolatry must be removed from the land. Even though we can understand why, according to this interpretation, wickedness is represented by a woman, it is more difficult to explain why the

A similar approach was adopted by D L Petersen, Haggai and Zechariah 1-8, A Commentary (OTL, Philadelphia, 1884), pp 256-257 7) Petersen's answer, that the woman symbolizes evil (as in Genesis 3), is very difficult to sus tain See Petersen, Haggai and Zechariah 1-8, pp 257-258 8) P R Ackroyd, Exile and Restoration A Study of Hebrew Thought of the Sixth Century BC (Lon don, 1968), 205, Mitchell, Haggai and Zechariah, pp 173-174, Chary, Aggee-ZacharieMalachie, 103, C Jeremas, Die Nachtgesichte des Sacharya Untersuchungen zu ihrer Stellung im Zusammenhang der Visionsberichte im Alten Testament und zu ihrem Bildmaterial (Forschungen zur Religion und Literatur des Alten und Neuen Testaments 117, Gottingen, 1977), pp 195-196, C L Meyers and M Meyers, Haggai, Zechariah 1-8 (AB, New York, 1987), pp 313-316 According to Dekor, the goddess referred to is Ishtar, see M Dekor, "La vision de la femme dans l'pha de Zech , 5, 5-11 la lumire de la littrature Hittite", in idem, Religion d'Israel et Proche Orient Ancien Des Phniciens aux Esseniens (Leiden, 1976), pp 420-428 Glazier-McDonald sees the woman as representing both idolatry and the danger of the integration of foreign women, which causes such cultural influence of idolatry See GlazierMcDonald, "Zechariah", in The Women's BibL Commentary, C A Newsom and S H Ringe (eds ) (London and Louisville, 1992), 231
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two figures who carry wickedness to Shinar are female (see further on this point below). It is especially hard to understand the ultimate good fortune of idolatry in its new home in Shinar. Not only does the prophet not speak of the elimination and extirpation of idolatry, as everywhere else in Biblical literature, he actually refers to the construction of a temple for a foreign god. Rothstein believed that we are dealing with an amalgamation of two kinds of transgressions, social sins and idolatry, with which the people were still infected. He derived this from the previous vision, that of the flying scroll (5:1-4), which he believes to be part of the vision of the ephah. The background for both, he held, is the idea that in the Zechariahs time the people were at the dawn of a new age, an age of redemption. Zechariah continues Ezekiels view on redemption. To realize this vocation the people and land of the Lord must be free of sin. The continued existence of sin in the land will frustrate the fulfillment of the divine promise. But unlike the period before the destruction of the Temple, when God removed the sinners from the land, in Zechariahs prophecy He removes the sin from the land but does not destroy the people.10 Hanhart went in a similar direction, but emphasized the contrast between Zechariah and Ezekiel. Ezekiel distinguished between those who remained in the land and those who lived in exile. According to Ezekiel, the guilt attached to those who remained in the land, and their only possible atonement is through their removal from it, while the exiles return there and the divine promise is realized through them. Zechariah, by contrast, does not distinguish between the exiles and those who remain, who constitute a single entity for him. The restoration will come from the removal of sin from the land, not the removal of the sinners.11 These explanations, too, do not account for the positive tone of the establishment of a house for idolatry, even if it is outside the land. Because these two scholars emphasize that redemption depends on the elimination of sin, it is even more difficult to understand why nothing is said about the destruction of sin, but only its relocation to Babylon. What good can this do? What need does this fulfill for the Jews to whom the prophecy was addressed? If this interpretation is correct, this is the only place in the entire Bible where we encounter, not the destruction of idolatry, but only its relocation.

J. W. Rothstein, Die Nachtgesichte des Sacharja Studien zur Sacharjaprophetie und zur judischen Geschichte im ersten nachexihschen Jahrhundert (Beitrage zur Wissenschaft vom Alten Testament 8; Leipzig, 1910), pp. 146-154. n) R. Hanhart, Sachatja (BKAT XIV/7,5; Neukirchen, 1975), pp. 362-363.

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According to Floyd, the vision of the ephah describes those who built alternative Israelite sanctuaries outside the land. The prophet rejects and mocks this cult. The woman inside the ephah represents the cult of a goddess, which the prophet opposes and denigrates as wickedness after sealing here inside the ephah with a lead weight. The prophecy is meant to counter those who believe that they can maintain a covenant with the Lord while promoting alternate ritual centers to Jerusalem.12 But here too it is hard to understand why the prophet foresees that those sinners, who had set up alternative cults, would reestablish their cult and flourish outside the land, in Shinar. According to Lurie, at the time of the rebuilding of the Temple (early fifth century BCE), Judah was the scene of a conflict between Joshua the High Priest and Zerubbabel, the scion of the House of David. He holds that Joshua won their contest and that Zerubbabel returned to Babylon. Lurie believes that this is the meaning of the woman's going back to Shinar to build her house.13 This explanation, too, poses a number of problems, but we will note only one. Although here the prophet refers to the woman removed from the land as "wickedness", nowhere in the book of Zechariah is Zerubbabel referred to as wicked. It is no accident that Lurie fails to mention the woman's wickedness in his explanation of this passage. The second approach to interpreting the vision hold that it does not refer to the evil deeds of Judah but to the removal of some anti-Judahite element from the land and its relocation in Babylona consolation for Judah. This idea is first found in an explanation that Abraham Ibn Ezra transmitted orally to his student. It will soon be published in Miqra'ot Gedolot Haketer and is now available in the electronic version of that edition. In this reading, wickedness is the Babylonian Empire; the two women who remove it, the Medes and Persians. The problem with this original explanation is that in Zechariahs day the Persian Empire had already supplanted Babylon. Uffenheimer also went in this direction. His starting point is "their eye" (v. 6). After an extensive discussion of the sense of this word he proposes that it means "the eye of the king"an official of the Persian king whose function was to spy on his subjects and report on their loyalty. "Their eye" accordingly

M. H. Floyd, "The Evil in the Ephah: Reading Zechariah 5:5-11 in Its Literary Context", CBQ5S (1996), pp. 51-68. 13) B.-Z. Lurie, "The Ninth Vision of Zechariah (5:5-11)", Proceedings of the Tenth World Congress of Jewish Studies, Division A (1990), pp. 25-29 (Hebrew).

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stands for the Persian administration in Yehud; only its removal can guarantee Judah's redemption.14 Sweeney believes that the woman in the ephah stands for a Babylonian goddess; but he does not speak about an Israelite sin of idolatry, as the commentators mentioned above do. He believes that the vision is an allegory of the expulsion of the Babylonian goddess from Yehud and her transfer to Babylonthat is, the restoration of the political independence of Judah.15 This interpretation was already advanced by Tanhum Yerushalmi, a Jewish commentator who lived in Egypt in the thirteenth century.16

A New Direction Each of the interpretations presented above is beset by problems, some of which I have mentioned. But there is one difficulty, also mentioned, that applies to all of them: Why does the wickedness that is removed end up in a comfortable situation when it reaches Shinar? This question is relevant to all the interpretations, whether the woman represents a sinful group from Judah or a foreign nation that has transgressed against the people of Yehud. Only a solution that takes account of this tension between wickedness' transgression and its ultimate good fortune can provide a suitable explanation. We must find a form of wickedness about which it is reasonable that the prophet seeks its removal and reestablishment outside the land, rather than its total destruction, as is usual in biblical prophecy.17 That is, we must propose why
B. Uffenheimer, The Visions of Zechariah: From Prophecy to Apocalyptic (Jerusalem, 1961), pp. 112-116 (Hebrew). 15) M. A. Sweeney, The Twelve Prophets (Volume Two; Collegeville, 2000), pp. 218-223. See also B. G. Curtis, Up the Steep and Stony Road: The Book of Zechariah in Social Location Trajectory Analysis (SBL 25; Atlanta, 2006), p. 142. 16) Tanhum ha-Yerushalmi's Commentary on the Minor Prophets (d. H. Shy, Jerusalem, 1991), pp. 288-289. 17) Ruffin adopted an original approach. In his opinion the wickedness represents the foreigners, who are forgiven for their sins and rewarded by relocation to Shinar. Ruffin is right to take the upbeat ending seriously. But to explain it in such a manner he had to find a way to invert the plain meaning of the text: there is no evidence in the text for the forgiveness of sin. Moreover, why was the woman relocated if her sin was absolved? See Ruffin, Symbolism in Zechariah, pp. 162-166. Love, too, is aware of the positive ending. He explains that the woman is a harlot who was forced into prostitution by her poverty. The prophet foresees her prosperity after she settles in Shinar. See M. C. Love, The Evasive Text: Zechariah 1-8 and the Frustrated Reader (JSOTSup 296; Sheffield, 1999), p. 212. For the woman in the ephah as a prostitute, see
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resettlement in Babylon is the best solution according to Zechariahs theology and the one most soothing to the ears of his audience of Judeans. The most persuasive explanation, I believe, is that the wickedness in the ephah represents the "adversaries of Judah and Benjamin" mentioned in Ezra iv, who are usually identified with the Samaritans.18 According to the biblical account, the Samaritans were foreigners from Babylonia, Cuthah, Awa, Hamath, and Sepharvaim, exiled by the Assyrians to the district of Samaria (2 Kings 17:24), where they adopted the Israelite faith out of fear and to save themselves from marauding lions (w. 27-41). The historical veracity of this tale is irrelevant to the present discussion; I merely want to show that the prophecy of the ephah fits with the tradition presented in 2 Kings 17. Schol ars distinguish between the inhabitants of the Samaria, and the religious community that worshiped in the temple on Mount Gerizim.19 Many schol ars are skeptical about the identification of the "adversaries of Judah" with the Samaritans.20 Here I adopt the view, accepted by many, that the adversaries of Judah are people who live north of Judah and are conventionally referred to as "the Samaritans", albeit a clear identification cannot be made.21 In this view, Samaria and Yehud were at odds from the very start of the post-exilic

G Wallis, "Die Nachgesichte des Propheten Sacharja \ Congress Volume Gottingen 1977 (VTSup 29, Leiden, 1978), pp [377-391] 388 Tigchelaar noticed that in this prophecy evil is not anni hilated but is rather removed from Judah (E J C Tigchelaar, Prophets of Old and the Day of the End Zechariah, the Book of Watchers and Apocalyptic [Leiden, 1996], 62) This, in my opin ion, is why he does not offer an explanation for the vision (ibid , 59 ) The only scholar who seems to have hinted this is M Zer-Kavod, Haggai, Zechariah, Mahchi (Jerusalem, 1957), pp 85-86 (Hebrew) See e g R J Coggins, Samaritans and the Jews The Origins of Samantanism Reconsidered (Atlanta, 1975), pp e g 162-165, R Egger, Josephus FUvius und die Samaritaner Eine termi nologische Untersuchung zur Identitatsklarung der Samaritaner (NTOA 4, Freiburg/Gottingen, 1986), H Eshel, "The Development of the Attribution of the Sanctity to Mount Gerizim", in E Stern and H Eshel (eds ), The Samaritans (Jerusalem, 2002), pp 192-209 (Hebrew), J Zan genberg, "Berg des Segens, Berg des Streits", Theologische Zeitschrift 63 (2007), pp 289-309, esp pp 296-297 See M Smith, Palestinian Parties and Politics that Shaped the Old Testament1 (London, 1987), pp 85-86, F M Cross, "Samaria and Jerusalem in the Era of the Restoration", in idem, From Epic to Canon History and Literature in Ancient Israel (Baltimore and London, 1998), pp 184-185 21) Many scholars identify the H2 as the Samaritans See, e g , R S Foster, The Restoration of Israel A Study in Exile and Return (London, 1970), pp 107-122, F C Fensham, The Books of Ezra andNehemiah (Grand Rapids, 1982), pp 65-76, M Cogan, "'For We, Like You, Worship Your God' Three Biblical Portrayals of Samaritan Origins", VT38 (1988), pp [286-292] 287
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period.22 The confrontation with the Samaritans seems to have begun as soon as the altar was built (Ezra 3:3).23 Aside from their efforts to prevent the building of the Temple, they also tried to prevent the construction of the walls of Jerusalem (Ezra 4-.17-23).24 The group that lived in Samaria saw itself as affiliated with the Jews who had come from Babylonia; but after the Jews refused their request to help rebuild the temple in Jerusalem this group (according to Ezra 4:1-5), became fiercely hostile to Judah and worked vigorously to interfere with the rebuilding of the Temple and Jerusalem.25 They succeeded at this for 20 years, during which time the construction work was suspended. Without going into the complex issue of the relations between Samaria and Yehud, according to the account in Ezra the Samaritans saw themselves as adherents of the Mosaic faith, because they worshiped the God of Israel (v. 2), whereas the leaders of the people in Yehud saw them as foreigners (v. 3). The text in Ezra describes the Samaritans' request to help build the temple in Jerusalem and the returnees' preference to isolate themselves and view the northerners as a separate entity. According to this passage, the confrontation between Yehud and Samaria stemmed from a disagreement about the national and religious identity of the residents of Samaria.261 believe that this is the backdrop against which we can understand the vision of the ephah. Many have already discussed the prophets' verbal attacks on the Samaritans.27

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J. Bright, A History of Israel1 (OTL; London, 1972), pp. 411-412; Cross, "Samaria and Jerusalem in the Era of the Restoration", pp. 179-192. 23) Fensham, The Books of Ezra and Nehemiah, pp. 60, 66. 24) See also A. Spiro, "Samaritans, Tobiads, and Judahites in Pseudo Philo", PAAJR 20 (1951), pp. 279-355. 25) Josephus identified this group with the Samaritans (Josephus, Antiquities, 11:84-86). See also Fensham, The Books of Ezra and Nehemiah, p. 66. Not all accept this; see, e.g., Coggins, Samaritans and the Jews, pp. 13-37.
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Bright, A History of Israel, pp. 445-447. I will mention only a few examples: The pericope in Haggai 2:10-14 has been interpreted as an anti-Samaritan polemic; see J. W. Rothstein, Juden und Samaritaner: Die grundlegende Scheidung von Judentum und Heidentum. Eine kritische Studie zum Buche Haggai und zur jdische Geschichte im ersten nachexilischen Jahrhundert (BWANT 3; Leipzig, 1908), pp. 5-41; F. Horst, Die zwlf kleinen Propheten II: Nahum bis Maleachi (HAT XIV; Tbingen, 1938), pp. 208-209; . Elliger, Das Buch der zwlf kleinen Propheten II (; Gttingen, 1967), pp. 93-96. See also E. Assis, "Haggai: Structure and Meanings", Biblica 87 (2006), pp. 531-541. According to Foster, Zechariah 7:1-7 is an anti-Samaritan prophecy (Foster, The Restoration of Israel, pp. 109110). In his opinion, Isa. 66:5 is to be understood as Deutero-Isaiah's positive attitude towards the Samaritans (ibid., pp. 113-114). On Browne's suggestion that Isa. 63:7-64:12 was written

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In light of the friction between the Samaritans and Yehud, it is plausible that Zechariah would refer to them as "wickedness", reflecting the Judeans' perception of them. If the wicked woman in the ephah represents the Samaritans, we can understand why Zechariah foresees their removal from the land. Because Babylon was one of their original homelands, we also understand that the vision of the removal of wickedness from the land and its relocation to Babylon means that they will be restored to their national birthplace.28 This proposal provides a full explanation of the tension between the reference to the woman as wickedness and her happy ending in her permanent home in the Land of Shinar. As already noted, it is hard to understand why the prophet promises that wickedness will "live happily ever after". But if the reference is to the Samaritans, who are at odds with the Judeans with regard to the temple in Jerusalem, it is understandable that, in Judean theology, the natural solution is to remove the Samaritans from the land. I agree with those scholars who think that the building of a house in the vision means to build a temple. Many have explained this to mean the construction of a temple for a pagan deity. This strikes me as problematic, because nowhere does the Bible speak positively of idolatrous cults. If, however, the reference is to the construction of a Samaritan temple, there are good theological reasons why the prophet would want it to be outside the Land of Israel. Because the Samaritans wanted to help build the temple in Yehud, in keeping with their view that they were members of the same ethnic group, the ultimate solution for the dispute between the two groups would be for the Samaritans to build their own house, that is, their own separate temple, in Shinar, far away from Yehud. If the prophecy refers to the Samaritans, we can understand why Zechariah emphasizes that their temple will be erected in the Land of Shinar. He is trying to counter their claim that they have a bond to the temple in Jerusalem by showing where they are truly rootedShinarand that that is where their temple will be built. This is why the root j"O occurs twice in v. 11, to emphasize that Shinar is their natural habitat and where their temple will be erected. According to this explanation we can understand why wickedness is transferred to Shinar, of all places. If the reference is to the Samaritans, some of whom came from Babylon, it makes sense that Zechariah holds that their transfer to Shinar would be tantamount to returning them to their home,
by a Samaritan prophet, see L. E. Browne, Early Judaism (Cambridge, 1920), p. 70-86; Foster, The Restoration of Israel, pp. 114-117. See also Coggins, Samaritans andJews, pp. 37-57. 28) See also Zer-Kavod, Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi, pp. 85-86.

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where they had lived before they were exiled to Samaria by the king of Assyria. Zechariahs view is consistent. Judah was exiled to Babylon and must return to its homeland in Judah; at the same time, the exile of Babylonians to Samaria will be reversed when they return to their homeland in Babylon. The removal of destructive elements is also found in Isaiah 49:17-19; there too some scholars believe that the intention is to the same group as that referred to in Ezra 4:1-5.29 The theory presented here can also explain the difficult expression "He said, 'This is an ephah coming out'. And he said, 'This is their eye (py) in all the land' " (Zech. 5:6). Here the Septuagint reading, adopted by many scholars, is "their iniquity" (DJ1JJ instead of Dry).30 However, because of the mismatch in this reading between the masculine noun pj? and the feminine deictic , the Masoretic text seems to be preferable.31 This word can be explained according to the conjecture that the prophecy deals with the Samaritans. According to the book of Ezra, the bulk of the Samaritans' actions against the people of Yehud involved transmitting information to the Persian authorities (Ezra 4:5; 4:8-24; according to some scholars, the Samaritans were partners in the hostile action against Yehud in the time of Zerubbabel by Tattenai, the governor of the province of Beyond the River [Ezra 5:l-6]).32 As noted, Uffenheimer suggested that "their eye" refers to a Persian official who kept an eye on developments in the far-flung empire and reported on them to the central government.33 The same designation could be applied to the Samaritans who informed the Persian authorities about what was taking place in Yehud. This is why it was so important for the resi dents of Yehud to remove the Samaritans from the land. But why is wickedness represented by a woman? Many explanations have been advanced. Some say is that she is related to the seductress who leads men astray, as in Genesis 3. 34 According to the reading that the sin is that of idolatry, scholars note that this transgression is frequently symbolized by
See, e.g., J. D. W. Watts, Isaiah 34-66(Revised Edition, WBC; Nashville, 2005), p. 744. Mitchell, Haggai and Zechariah, p. 176; W. Rudolph, Haggai-Sacharja 1-8-Sacharja 9-14Maleachi (; Gtersloh, 1976), p. 118; Petersen, Haggai and Zechariah 1-8, p. 256. 31) The MT is attested in the Vulgate and adopted by many; e.g., Meyers, Haggai, Zechariah 1-8, p. 297; Floyd, "The Evil Ephah", pp. 55, 58-59. 32) Cross, "Samaria and Jerusalem", p. 184. 33) Uffenheimer, The Visions ofZechariah, pp. 114-115. The word pj? with a similar meaning is found in Num. 10:31. 34) See Rudolph, Haggai-Sacharja 1-8-Sacharja 9-14-Maleachi, p. 120; Petersen, Haggai and Zechariah 1-8, pp. 257-258. Mason thinks that the motif of a land cleansed from wickedness
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harlotry.35 Wallis believes that the reference is not to the pagan cult but that the woman inside the ephah is an actual harlot.36 I find all of these explana tions rather problematic. The only point emphasized in the vision is the figure s gender; nor is there any hint either of prostitution per se or of prosti tution as metaphor for idolatry. Baldwin believes that the allegorical figure is female because nyun 'wickedness' is a feminine noun. 37 But this is not per suasive; the masculine PUH could have been used just as well. Consequently the link seems to run precisely in the opposite direction: the feminine noun is used because the symbolic figure is a woman.38 As noted, many explana tions have been advanced for the female identity of wickedness. More diffi cult to explain are the stork-winged women who remove wickedness from the land. Here scholars have not offered any persuasive suggestions; many agree that the problem remains an open riddle or that this part of the allegory may have no significance.39 According to Crafer, if wickedness is represented by a woman it is only natural that those who remove it from the land are also women.40 Conrad believed that these women, too, represent evil. But this explanation is implausible, not only because it ignores the play on words of *)JD 'wings of a stork' and 'pious person, but also and chiefly because these women play a positive role in the visionremoving wickedness from the land.41 Jeremas believes that they descend from the familiar iconographie image of the ancient Eastthe female form that is half beast and half human.42

personified as a woman is connected with the unclean woman in Ezekiel 36:17 (Mason, The Books of Haggai, Zechariah, andMalachi, p. 58). 35) Mitchell, Haggai and Zechariah, p. 173. See also Jeremas {Die Nachtgesichte des Sacharja, pp. 196-197), who claims that the woman in the ephah represents the "Queen of Heaven" worshiped by the women of Judah (Jer. 44:17-19). 36) G. Wallis, "Die Nachgesichte des Propheten Sacarja", Congress Volume Gottingen 1977 (VTSup 29; Leiden, 1978), pp. [377-391] 388. 37) J. G. Baldwin, Haggai, Zechariah, Makchi (The Tyndale Old Testament Commentaries; Leicester, 1972), p. 129. 38) Redditt, however, suggests that the feminine form of "wickedness" was determined by the gender of ephah (Redditt, Haggai, Zechariah, Makchi, p. 74). 39) Chary, Agge-Zacharie-Mahchie, p. 103; R. Mason, The Books of Haggai, Zechariah and Malachi (CBC; Cambridge, 1977), p. 58; Hanhart, Sacharja, pp. 358-359. 40) T. W. Crafer, The Books of Haggai and Zechariah (Cambridge, 1920), p. 99. 41) E. W Conrad, Zechariah (Sheffield, 1999), p. 120. 42) Jeremas, Die Nachtgesichte des Sacharya, p. 199 n. 19.

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The most common view seems to be that the women are angels of some sort.43 There are those who associate this vision with the cherubim44 or with the vision of the chariot of Ezekiel 1. Although these links are possible, they seem to violate the balance between the woman in the ephah and the women who remove her: the former is a personification of evil, whereas the winged women are angels. According to the theory presented here, this question, too, is resolved. How can we identify these women? Many theories could be proposed; in such an obscure vision the range of possibilities is vast. The first point we can settle, it seems to me, is that the figure inside the ephah and those who carry the ephah away are all women and consequently have some common denom inator. We can also discern an inverse relationship among them. The woman in the ephah is referred to as "wickedness", whereas the two women who carry her off to Shinar have the wings of a stork. Many scholars have noted the wordplay of 'stork' and 'pious person, 45 but without probing its meaning. According to my reading, the woman in the ephah represents the Samari tans. The use of a woman to stand for a nation is a biblical commonplace convention (see, for example, Ezek. 17 and 23; 2 'daughter' to personify a nation is very widespread in the biblical literature).46 According to the prin ciple that all the female figures in the vision have something in common, these two women must also represent nations. If the woman inside the ephah is wickedness, the two women with stork wings are not; their function in the vision is to take the ephah with wickedness inside it and remove it to Shinar. This fits with the biblical opposition of P^TI and , as in "He will guard the feet of his faithful ones (); but the wicked (D^ttm) shall be cut off in darkness; for not by might shall a man prevail" (1 Sam. 2:9; see also
Meyers, Haggai, Zechariah 1-8, pp. 306, 315. Exodus Rabbah sees the women as angels: Midrash Rabbah Exodus0 (trans S. M. Lehrman; London, 1983), pp. 303-304. See also Moses Maimonides, The Guide of the Perplexed, vol. 1 (trans. S. Pines; Chicago and London, 1963), chapter 49, pp. 108-110.
44) 43)

Sweeney, The Twelve Prophets, p. 622. Against this explanation see Meyers, Haggai, Zechariah 1-8, p. 306. 45) See bHullin 63a. Meyers, Haggai, Zechariah 1-8, p. 306; Baldwin, Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi, p. 129; M. C. Love, The Evasive Text, p. 206. Love does not accept this wordplay because the stork is an unclean bird (Lev 11:13). However, the fact that an animal is unclean does not mean that it can bear only negative connotations. For instance, the lion and donkey are both used positively in Gen 49:9, 14.
46)

See H. Haag, "bath", TDOT(vol. 2; Grand Rapids, 1975), pp. [332-338] 334-335.

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Ps. 37:28; 97: IO).47 If the wicked woman represents the Samaritans, we may conjecture that the women who are to be viewed favorably represent the Judeans. But there are two women, not one; if this has any significance, we must be dealing with Israel and Judah, the two groups descended from Jacob.48 The two women with storks' wings, then, represent Israel and Judah, who cooperate to remove the hostile Samaritans from their neighborhood. Elsewhere Zechariah refers to these two groups, Judah and Israel, sepa rately: "And I said to the angel who talked with me, <What are these?' And he answered me, "These are the horns which have scattered Judah, Israel, and Jerusalem' (Zech. 2:2 [1:19]); "and as you have been a byword of cursing among the nations, O house of Judah and house of Israel, so will I save you and you shall be a blessing. Fear not, but let your hands be strong" (8:13). They are also found in chapters 9-14, which are thought to be set against the backdrop of the Second Temple period: "For to the Lord belong the cities of Aram, even as all the tribes Israel" (9:1). "I will cut off the chariot from Ephraim and the war horse from Jerusalem; and the battle bow shall be cut off, and he shall command peace to the nations; his dominion shall be from sea to sea, and from the River to the ends of the earth" (9:10). "For I have bent Judah as my bow; I have made Ephraim its arrow. I will brandish your sons, O Zion, over your sons, O Greece, and wield you like a warrior's sword" (9:13). "Then Ephraim shall become like a mighty warrior, and their hearts shall be glad as with wine. Their children shall see it and rejoice, their hearts shall exult in the Lord" (10:7). "Then I broke my second staff, Union, annul ling the brotherhood between Judah and Israel" (11:14). Ezekiel, with his strong preference for the exiles over those who remained in the land (Ezek. 33:23-29), nevertheless prophesies the fusion of Judah and Israel into a single nation (37:15-28). Clearly Zechariah, who lived in Jerusa lem, saw before his eyes two legitimate fraternal groupsJudah and the rem nant of Israeland an illegitimate entitythe descendents of those whom the Assyrians had exiled from Babylon to Samaria. Understanding the vision as a prediction of the Samaritans' removal from the land and their resettlement in Babylon can also explain the surprising links between this prophecy and the story of the Tower of Babel in Genesis 11:1-9:

The words PUH and are paired opposites in rabbinic literature as well (e.g., Mishna Avot5:13). 48) See also Zer-Kavod, Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi, p. 86.

47)

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1. In both cases a human transgression is repaired by the Lord. 2. Both stories relate to the Land of Shinar. Except for these two passages, the use of Shinar to designate Babylonia is found only in Genesis 14 and Daniel 1:2. It is hard to avoid the feeling that the uncommon use of Shinar in Zechariah 5:5-11 is intended to create an association with the story in which Shinar is mentioned for the first time. 3. In both cases a building is erected in Shinar. In Genesis the people want to build "a city, and a tower with its top in the heavens" (Gen. 11:4); in the vision in Zech. 5:5-11 a house will be built in Shinar. 4. The story in Genesis begins with the fact that all human beings "settled there" in Shinar (Gen. 11:2). God's reaction is to "scatter them from there over the face of the earth" (v. 9). In Zechariahs vision the situa tion is precisely the opposite, and concludes with settling in Shinar: "they will set the ephah down there on its base" (Zech. 5:11). The roots pD in Zechariah and in Genesis have a similar sense; they are often employed in biblical parallelisms and belong to the same semantic field, as in "There He settles (iWl) the hungry and they establish () a city to live in" (Ps. 107:36).49 In all three verses cited here, from Gene sis and Zechariah, we encounter the locative adverb W 'there' linked to a verb that expresses settlement or dispersion. These connections strongly suggest that the vision of the ephah in Zechariah alludes to the story of the Tower of Babel. Some of these links have been noticed by scholars,50 but their significance has not always been explained. Rudolph explains that the reference to sin in Zechariah is meant to establish a link with the ancient sin of the rebellion against God in the story the Tower of Babel.51 But it is not clear why the author chose to compare the transgressions of the people of Yehud (as Rudolph interprets the vision) to the sin of the Tower of Babel. In fact, this association, too, can be explained by the idea that the woman Wickedness in Zechariah stands for the Samaritans.

49)

See also Num. 35:34; Judg. 5:17; 1 Kings 8:13, 39, 43, 49; Isa. 16:5; 18:3; 32:16; Obad. 3; Ps. 9:8; 101:7. 50) Some scholars have noted the connection between Gen. 11:1-9 and Zech. 5:5-11 but with no attempt to explain its meaning. See, e.g., Curtis, Up the Steep and Stony Road, p. 142. Love noted connections between Zechariah 1-8 and Genesis 11:1-9 (Love, The Evasive Text, pp. 207-208). 51) Rudolph, Haggai, Sacharja 1-8, Sacharja 9-14, Maleachi, pp. 120-121.

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Various explanations of why the Jews segregated themselves from the Samaritans have been offered.52 On the assumption that the "adversaries of Judah" in Ezra 4:1-5 are the Samaritans, we may infer that the Judeans viewed them as a foreign nation and alien element. The Samaritans, for their part, claimed that they were part of the same nation because they worshiped the same God. The story of the Tower of Babel can be incorporated into this dispute between separatists and inclusionists. The separatists could use the story of the Tower of Babel to show that the distinction among peoples is an ancient one and that any attempt to blur ethnic differences contradicts the nature of the human race, which is made up of separate peoples. The Samaritans' return to Shinar is not just removing them from the land; it also expresses the idea that they are going home. Babylon is their land and they will be sent back there. The allusion to the Tower of Babel supports the argument that one must not alter what was fixed in the original division of the nations when they were scattered in the wake of the Tower of Babel. That story reinforces the national and ethnic divisions between peoples and bolsters the Jews' view that the fact that the Samaritans worship the same God as they do does not obviate the ethnic differences in their origins and is not sufficient grounds for a merger of the two groups.53 If we broaden the canvas and look at relations with the Samaritans as one issue associated with the separatist agenda in Judah at the start of the return to Zion, of which the rejection of mixed marriages is another manifestation, we may be able to uncover how each position based itself on a different story in Genesis. Malachi's prophecy against foreign wives quotes the ideological claim of the proponents of intermarriage. "Have we not all one father? Has not one God created us? Why then are we faithless to one another, profaning the covenant of our ancestors?" (Mai. 2:10). Against the almost unanimous scholarly opinion that this sentence is addressed by the prophet to his people, I follow the fifteenth-century commentator, Isaac Abravanel, who holds that the prophet is quoting the argument invoked by the people to justify intermarriage with non-Jews. It reflects their universalist philosophy of the equality of all people and nations, based on the Genesis creation narrative in which Adam and Eve are the ancestors of all humans. They justified marriage with foreign women by a universal
52) 53)

For various views on the topic see Foster, The Restoration ofIsrael, pp. 110-111. Some have taken the connections between Zechariah and Genesis in the opposite direction. See J. E. Tollington, Tradition and Innovation in Haggai and Zechariah 1-8 (JSOTSup 150; Sheffield, 1993), pp. 241; Love, The Evasive Text, p. 208.

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humanism that regarded breaking down the barriers between Israel and the nations as positive and desirable. The universalists drew on the story of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden; the separatists, on the division of the nations after the Tower of Babel. Each group could base itself on the Genesis stories to define the nature of the human race. Another point bears mention. Many scholars have noted a connection between Zechariahs second vision (2:1-4 [1:18-21]) and that of the ephah (5:5-11).54 The reading offered here makes this link even stronger. Without going into all the details mentioned by scholars, let us consider the argument that both prophecies deal with the relations with Yehud and the world. Thus we can say that the second vision foretells calamity for those who caused Judah to be dispersed and exiled from its land. The sixth prophecy deals with the Samaritans, who have interfered with Judah's resettlement in its land. In the vision of the horns the prophet anticipates that those who exiled Israel will be scattered; in the vision of the ephah he foresees the removal from the land of those who would prevent Judah from being restored to its land. In conclusion, the anti-Samaritan explanation of this vision may also explain its lack of clarity. Because the Samaritans were very close to Judah, both linguistically and geographically, we may conjecture that it was better to keep the Samaritans from deciphering its content. If the prophecy deals with the bitter conflict with the neighbor to the north, it would be difficult to spread it widely and unwise to set off an even fiercer struggle with the Samaritans. The enigma that conceals the meaning of the prophecy may thus derive from the danger of publishing it. The mysterious character is meant to conceal its content.

Summary and Conclusions The thesis advanced in this paper is that the vision of the ephah is an antiSamaritan prophecy. The woman in the ephah represents the Samaritans; the vision foresees their return to their original home in Babylon, where their temple will be erected. Zechariah endeavors to forge a link between the Samaritans and Babylon and the temple that will be built for them there, to
See W. A. M. Beuken, Haggai-Sacharja 1-8: Studien zur berlieferungsgeschichte der frhnachexilischen Prophtie (Assen, 1967), pp. 252-255; Meyers, Haggai, Zechariah 1-8, pp. 311-312. On the overall structure of the book, in which these two oracles stand as parallels, see Baldwin, Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi, pp. 74-86.
54)

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bolster the position that denies their affiliation with the Judeans and to strengthen the argument that they should not be allowed to have anything to do with the Temple in Jerusalem. This thesis has major implications for an understanding of the relations between Samaria and Yehud in the post-exilic period. First of all, if the identification of the two women with storks' wings with Judah and Israel is correct, it means that the prophecy reflects the idea that there is no identity between the Samaritans and the people of the northern kingdom. This is compatible with the biblical tradition in 2 Kings 17 about the origins of the Samaritans.55 Second, the people of Yehud believed that the Samaritans had come from Babylon and hoped they would return to their original home. We may assume that they felt that this hope was realistic. Perhaps they saw the Samaritans' return to Babylon as a restoration of the status quo ante, just as they had returned to the land from which they had been exiled. Third, even if this hope was reasonable, it was not realized; we know of no movement of Samaritans back to Babylon. Zechariahs solution remained up in the air, at an ancient juncture in the history of Samaria and Yehud; the aspiration found no later expression in the tortuous relations between these two groups.

Kaufmann claimed that there was a clear distinction between those who were deported from Babylon to Samaria and the original Israelite population of the north. See Y. Kaufmann, Toledot haEmunah haYisreelite (vol. 8; Tel Aviv, 1963), pp. 185-188 (Hebrew).

55)

^ s
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