Page:03.BCOT.KD.HistoricalBooks.B.vol.3.LaterProphets.djvu/1627

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worship has no knowledge of the act of adoration by throwing a kiss; and the Avesta recognises in the sun and moon exalted genii, but created by Ahuramazda, and consequently not such as are to be worshipped as gods. On the other hand, star-worship is everywhere the oldest and also comparatively the purest form of heathenism. That the ancient Arabs, especially the Himjarites, adored the sun, שׁמשׁ, and the moon, שׂין (סין, whence סיני, the mountain dedicated to the moon), as divine, we know from the ancient testimonies,[1] and many inscriptions[2] which confirm and supplement them; and the general result of Chwolsohn's[3] researches is unimpeachable, that the so-called Sabians (Arab. ṣâbı̂wn with or without Hamza of the ), of whom a section bore the name of worshippers of the sun, shemsı̂je, were the remnant of the ancient heathenism of Western Asia, which lasted into the middle ages. This heathenism, which consisted, according to its basis, in the worship of the stars, was also spread over Syria, and its name, usually combined with צבא השּׁמים (Deu 4:19), perhaps is not wholly devoid of connection with the name of a district of Syria, ארם צובה; certainly our poet found it already there, where he heard the tradition about Job, and in his hero presents to us a true adherent of the patriarchal religion, who had kept himself free from the influence of the worship of the stars, which was even in his time forcing its way among the tribes.
It is questionable whether Job 31:28 is to be regarded as a conclusion, with Umbr. and others, or as a parenthesis, with Ew., Hahn, Schlottm., and others. We take it as a conclusion, against which there is no objection according to the syntax,

  1. Vid., the collection in Lud. Krehl's Religion der vorislamischen Araber, 1863.
  2. Vid., Osiander in the Deutsche Morgenl. Zeitschr. xvii. (1863) 795.
  3. In his great work, Ueber die Ssabier und den Ssabismus, 2 Bdd. Petersburg, 1856.