William F. Albright
A Study of W.F. Albright and How Biblical Archeology Helped Shape His
Worldview
William Foxwell Albright was first and foremost a believer in the religion of Christianity, a fact that greatly influenced his role as a Biblical archeologist, or "historian of religion," according to critical scholars like J. Edward Wright and David Noel Freedman.
Yet Albright himself never claimed to be anything more than dedicated to interpreting "the unfolding scroll of history," in which he saw the Revelation of Christianity -- the fulfillment of the prophets of the Old Testament.
Or, more appropriately, as Albright himself wrote in 1940, the purpose of his work was "to show how man's idea of God developed from prehistoric antiquity to the time of Christ, and to place this development in its historical context."
In other words, Albright sought to illustrate in a real, contextual way the truth of the Christian Scriptural verses, which depicted the life of Christ and the works of the first Apostles in the Near East. While this scholarly mission of his made him renowned among adherents to Christianity, he garnered little more than criticism from scholars who rejected what they perceived to be his religious bias. This paper will show how Albright's acceptance of Christianity as a religion established by God both aided his development as a Biblical archeologist and marked him by critics as one (so they argued) whose view of history was prejudiced toward the Christian perspective.
Background: A Controversial Figure
If Albright is today something of a controversial figure within certain circles of Biblical scholarship, it may stem from the clash of worldviews made inevitable by the evolution of scientific inquiry since the abandonment of scholastic inquiry at the end of the Middle Ages. In one sense, Albright represented the old worldview, in which the historical account of the world (as in, for example, the Book of Genesis) could be taken at face value once one accepted the idea that Scripture was itself the inspired Word of God and could not err. As a new worldview, motivated by skepticism and empiricism, began to dominate the field of scientific inquiry in the Age of Enlightenment, the old worldview found itself in contention with the new. The Bible became just another historical artifact: Its veracity as a historical document was only accepted by religionists. Since faith, however, was viewed by some empiricists as unscientific, it has become inevitable that Albright should today figure in the field of Biblical scholarship as something of a controversial figure. That the ultimate clash should be framed by two religious worldviews which echo the ancient dichotomy that separated Christians from Jews in the first century is telling of conflict at the heart of the matter: Albright was a Christian believer, while many of his critics denied the divinity of Christ.
For Albright, proof of the divinity of Christ was clear from the narratives recorded in the New Testament. If doubt was cast upon the idea of whether the events recorded in Scripture really occurred, Albright spent his life and career in study of the Near East in order to verify the claims of the New Testament. The evidence he uncovered he used to support the claims of the New Testament and to show how Jesus Christ was the fulfillment of the Mosaic Covenant with the Jews. However, in spite of the empirical evidence he collected, some scholars refuse to accept Albright's premise. The fact remains that Albright's scholarship is viewed by those who reject the idea of Christ as Messiah as nothing more than the effect of cultural bias on his part. In other words, Albright is viewed as having set out to prove something unverifiable -- namely, that Christ is God. Since the existence of Christ Himself remains a supernatural mystery, some empiricists (especially those like Tatum, Wright, and Thomas Thompson) contend that Albright himself was misled by his own desire to verify a religious belief. In short, it is the argument of the new worldview of skepticism and agnosticism against the old of scholasticism and faith.
As William P. Brown shows in his "Introduction" A History of Israel, written by a John Bright, an early disciple and pupil of Albright's, Albright's lesson was clear -- "that a full grasp of ancient Israel's identity required not only a rigorous historical method but also a sensitivity to Israel's religion."
Brown's indication serves primarily to highlight the primary idea that was central to Albright's work, which was the evolution of Semitic religious belief and how Christianity...
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