Articles
- Impact of the Bible
- The cultural influence of the Bible and Christianity in England
- Bible in English culture, The
- English Bible Translations
- Influence of the Book of Common Prayer on the English language
- A history of the church in England
- Culture and sung Christian worship
- Famous stories from the Bible
- Literary titles from the Bible
- Common Sayings from the Bible
- Big ideas from the Bible
- Adoption
- Angels
- Anger
- Anointing
- Apocalypse, Revelation, the End Times, the Second Coming
- Armour
- Ascent and descent
- Atonement and sacrifice
- Babel, language and comprehension
- Baptism
- Betrayal
- Blood
- Bread
- Bride and marriage
- Cain and Abel
- Christians
- City and countryside
- Cleansing
- Clothing
- Community, church, the body of Christ
- Covenant
- Creation, creativity, image of God
- Cross, crucifixion
- Curtain/veil
- Darkness
- Death and resurrection
- Desert and wilderness
- Devils
- Donkey, ass
- Doubt and faith
- Dove
- Dreams, visions and prophecy
- Earth, clay, dust
- Exile
- Feasting and fasting
- Fire
- Forgiveness, mercy and grace
- Fruit, pruning
- Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve, 'Second Adam'
- Gateway, door
- Goats
- Grass and wild flowers
- Harvesting
- Heaven
- Hell
- Incarnation (nativity)
- Inheritance and heirs
- Jewels and precious metals
- Jews, Hebrews, Children of Israel, Israelites
- Journey of faith, Exodus, pilgrims and sojourners
- Judgement
- Justice
- Kingship
- Last Supper, communion, eucharist, mass
- Light
- Lion
- Lost, seeking, finding, rescue
- Messiah, Christ, Jesus
- Miracles
- Mission, evangelism, conversion
- Moses
- Music
- Names
- Noah and the flood
- Numbers in the Bible
- Parables
- Parents and children
- Passover
- Path, way
- Patriarchs
- Peace
- Penitence, repentance, penance
- Poverty and wealth
- Prayer
- Promised Land, Diaspora, Zionism
- Psalms
- Rabbi, Pharisee, teacher of the law
- Redemption, salvation
- Rest
- Rock and stone
- Salt
- Seed, sowing
- Serpent, Devil, Satan, Beast
- Servant-hood, obedience and authority
- Sheep, shepherd and lamb
- Sin
- Slavery
- Soul
- Temple, tabernacle
- Temptation
- Ten Commandments, The
- Trees
- Trinity, Holy Spirit
- Vine, vineyard
- Water
- Weeds, chaff, briar, thorn
- Wisdom and foolishness
- Women in the Bible
- Word of God
- Work and idleness
- Investigating the Bible
- Literary allusions to the Bible
- Pilgrimage in literature
- Biblical style in poetry
- Biblical imagery in metaphysical poetry
- Bible/Literature intertextuality
- The cultural influence of the Bible and Christianity in England
Goats
Goats and sheep were, and still are, kept together by many farmers. In the Bible, references to goats not only reflect the nomadic way of life of the early settlers of the Middle East, who travelled from pasture to pasture, but also have symbolic significance.
Goats used for sacrifice
Leviticus, one of the earliest books in the Old Testament of the Bible, records the laws given by God to the Israelites, including instructions about sacrifices, often using goats. For example, if a ruler offended against the laws of God, ‘when he is made aware of the sin he committed, he must bring as his offering a male goat without defect' (Leviticus 4:23).
Scapegoat
Leviticus also states that there should be a day of atonement for sin, when the priest should lay his hands on the head of a living goat, confessing the sins of the people, and then the goat should be sent out into the wilderness, ceremonially and symbolically carrying away the sins of everyone (Leviticus 16:20-22). This was the scapegoat.
The Old Testament idea of a scapegoat also continues into the New Testament. The description of Jesus as the redeemer who carries the sins of humankind refers back to the idea of the Old Testament scapegoat. A similar, more frequent symbol of Jesus is as a sacrificial lamb (see Big ideas: Sheep, shepherd, lamb).
Judgement
In the New Testament, goats appear in the story told by Jesus to describe the Last Judgement. He taught that those who have lived in obedience to God will be taken to heaven, whilst those who ignored God's commandments will be kept out. The imagery used is that God will separate the people one from another as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats. He ‘will put the sheep on his right and the goats on his left' (Matthew 25:33).
Scapegoats in literature
The word scapegoat is still used today for someone who is made to take the blame for the wrong-doings of others.
George Orwell, in his novel 1984, invented a person, Goldstein, who is used by the government as the focus for the hatred of the masses and hence to draw attention away from the horrors of the regime. Orwell intensifies the idea of a goat by describing Goldstein as having ‘a small goatee beard' and a face ‘which resembled the face of a sheep.'
Related topics
Big ideas: Sheep, shepherd, lamb
Other cultural references
George Orwell's 1984
- English Standard Version
- King James Version
- English Standard Version
- King James Version
- English Standard Version
- King James Version
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