The hubris of globalization is an important element in many modern readings of Babel. His name, in Hebrew, can also mean “Let us rebel.” But why would he wish to build a tower? The Jewish historian Josephus claims that Nimrod was a tyrant who exploited the fear of the Babelites following the flood, convincing them that he “would build a tower higher than the waters could reach and he would execute vengeance also for the destruction of his forefathers” ( Jewish Antiquities 1.114). Gen 10:8-10 mentions Nimrod in connection with Shinar, the location of the building of the tower ( Gen 11:2). Humanity was not content with staying in its proper place.īut what of that mysterious trespasser? He is Nimrod, and adding him to the story was a way for Breughel to highlight the supposed arrogance and impiety of the builders. But let us go and make a tower for ourselves and we will put an idol on its summit and we will place a sword in the idol’s hand so as to give the impression that it is waging war against God” ( Genesis Rabbah 38.6.5). ![]() The rabbis (circa fifth century C.E.) imagine the builders claiming, “It is not up to Him to select the heavens for himself and to give us the lower realm. One early Jewish commentary even suggested that the builders hoped to use the tower as a platform to wage war against God. This lone detail was read as indicating that the builders were trying to encroach upon the realm of the divine. Such a reading was encouraged by the image of the tower with its “top in the heavens” ( Gen 11:4). Babel and its tower point to humanity’s ever-present desire to reach beyond its grasp. The story of Babel has most often been read as a caution against hubris of various sorts. ![]() This mysterious trespasser points to one of the main ways in which later readers constructed meaning from the words of the biblical narrative of Babel. Close readers of Gen 11, however, will notice that no such figure is mentioned in the biblical account. A bearded man towers above the gathered workers. If you look closely in the bottom left-hand corner of the Dutch artist Pieter Brueghel’s famous painting of the tower of Babel, you will spy a trespasser.
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