Religion in Culture Lecture
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At 2:30 p.m. on March 17, 2004, Professor
Gabriele Fassbeck of our own Department delivered a public
lecture as part of the Religion
in Culture Series. Her lecture was entitled "Endogamy
Saves, or How to Keep the Demon out of Your Wedding Bed: The
Book of Tobit as an Early Jewish Test Case."
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As part of her approach to the New Testament, Dr. Fassbeck
studies the canonical scriptures with regard to all available
contemporary historical sources (both literary and nonliterary).
Given her interest in turn-of-the-era Judaism and the historically
earliest forms of Christianity, she has a special interest
in the study of non-canonical Jewish and Christian texts (in
other words, those ancient texts not included in the
Bible, collections of which are known as the Apocrypha [a
collection of early Jewish writings not included in the Hebrew
Bible] and the Pseudepigrapha [a collection of ancient texts,
from between 200 BCE and 200 CE, that were not included in
Biblical collections]). It is therefore no accident that she
started her major research project with an evaluation of a
non-canonical text, namely the second century BCE book of
Tobit -- which was the topic of her Religion in Culture
lecture.
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Although the Book of Tobit (read
the Revised Standard Version's translation of this text) was
not included in the composition of the Hebrew Bible, it was
added to its Greek translations, and is today included among
what are known as the Deuterocanonical writings of the Roman
Catholic Bible (writings outside the Bible that eventually
were recognized as having canonical status). The Book of Tobit
probably dates to sometime around 200 BCE, but it is not clear
where in the ancient world it was written, by whom, and for
what purpose.
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The Book of Tobit recounts the story of a righteous Israelite
named Tobit and his family, who were exiled to the ancient
city of Nineveh (in what is today northern Syria) after the
Assyrian conquest of Judah in the late 8th century BCE. Although
at first the family lived a prosperous life there, the book
recounts how they soon lost all their possessions while Tobit
himself became blind. Following these tragedies, Tobit's son,
Tobiah, is sent to seek out a relative in the east to regain
some of his father's possessions. Tobiah accomplishes the
task, with the help of the angel named Raphael, who, during
the course of the journey, instructs him in the magical and
medicinal properties of fish entrails. This enables Tobiah
not only to exorcise a demon from the daughter of close relatives--thereby
gaining her as his wife--but, upon returning home, he also
cures his father's blindness.
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In her lecture--which was accompanied by a number of 17th
C artistic depictions of the story of Tobit by such painters
as Rembrandt)--Dr. Fassbeck explored the story's strong emphasis
on family and its tendency to restrict religious behavior
to those aspects affecting domestic life. However, despite
outward appearances, the book does not easily yield concrete
information about the actual practice of religion within the
ancient Jewish family because the book's characters are idealized.
For example, the character of Tobit represents the exilic
fate of the people of Israel as a whole rather than simply
providing an example for the religious conduct of a family
patriarch in early Hellenistic times. She concluded that the
purpose of the book is not to mirror the religious life of
families from this ancient period but to deliver a message
of hope for Israel's final restoration.
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Dr. Fassbeck has a long and distinguished career in several
of the great German universities. In 1985 she received her
first degree, or Zwischenprüfung, in history, Judaic studies
and Protestant theology from the Cologne University. In 1991
she passed the Erstes Kirchliches Examen from the Protestant
Church of the Rhineland (based on her study of Protestant
theology at the universities of Marburg, Bonn, and Heidelberg).
In 1996 she received the degree Doctor of Theology in New
Testament Studies from the University of Heidelberg (magna
cum laude). And in 1998 she passed the Zweites Kirchliches
Examen from the Protestant Church of the Rhineland (based
on her Vikariat -- or internship -- in Berlin and at the German
Protestant Institute of Archaeology Jerusalem.
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She is the author of numerous articles and book reviews.
In addition to editing one book she is also the author of
Der
Tempel der Christen: Traditionsgeschichtliche Untersuchungen
zur Aufnahme des Tempelkonzepts im frühen Christentum
(2000) [trans. The Christian Temple: A Tradition-history
Study of the Reception of the Temple Concept in Early Christianity].
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As with all recent Religion in Culture Lectures, Prof.
Fassbeck's lecture was made possible by funds from the College
of Arts & Sciences' Anonymous Lecture Fund for the Humanities.
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Prof. Trost, who organizes the Department's
public lectures, introduces Prof. Fassbeck.
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Prof. Gabriele Fassbeck, Visiting Assistant
Professor of Religious Studies, begins her public lecture
titled, "Endogamy Saves, or How
to Keep the Demon out of Your Wedding Bed: The Book of Tobit
as an Early Jewish Test Case."
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During the lecture, Prof. Fassbeck showed
a fragment of the Book of Tobit, which is part of the Dead
Sea Scrolls. An exhibit of the scrolls will come to the
Gulf Coast Exploreum in Mobile, AL, from January 20 through
April 24, 2005 (information
on this upcoming exhibit).
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One of the 17th C images that accompanied the lecture,
painted by Rembrandt near the start of his career, entitled,
"Tobit and Anna" (1626). The original hangs
in the Rijksmuseum
in Amsterdam.
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(from left to right)
Kara Sullivan, Religious Studies student, Rachel Dobson,
slide curator for the Art Department, and Prof. Kurtis Schaeffer.
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(from left to right)
REL Minor Chad Pinchon and REL Major Miller Ford.
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REL Graduate Mark Hopkins and REL Minor
Rachel Maguire.
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(from back to front)
Geologist and Blount student Jerrod Bowman with
REL Majors Matt Satcher, Josh McDonough (barely visible
due to his severe shyness), and John Parrish. All three
are among the most recent group of Silverstein Fellows.
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A view of the post-lecture reception held
on the Manly Hall veranda.
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The eating and drinking continued into the
wee hours of the afternoon.
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REL Majors Miller Ford (foreground)
and professional soccer player, Josh McDonough (whose camera
shyness had apparently disappeared after a few strawberries
and some punch).
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