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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Non-Christian sacred works & liturgy > Sacred texts > General
Jews have sometimes been reluctant to claim Jesus as one of their
own; Christians have often been reluctant to acknowledge the degree
to which Jesus' message and mission were at home amidst, and shaped
by, the Judaism(s) of the Second Temple Period. In The Jewish
Teachers of Jesus, James, and Jude David deSilva introduces readers
to the ancient Jewish writings known as the Apocrypha and
Pseudepigrapha and examines their formative impact on the teachings
and mission of Jesus and his half-brothers, James and Jude.
Knowledge of this literature, deSilva argues, helps to bridge the
perceived gap between Jesus and Judaism when Judaism is understood
only in terms of the Hebrew Bible (or ''Old Testament''), and not
as a living, growing body of faith and practice. Where our
understanding of early Judaism is limited to the religion reflected
in the Hebrew Bible, Jesus will appear more as an outsider speaking
''against'' Judaism and introducing more that is novel. Where our
understanding of early Judaism is also informed by the Apocrypha
and Pseudepigrapha, Jesus and his half-brothers appear more fully
at home within Judaism, and giving us a more precise understanding
of what is essential, as well as distinctive, in their
proclamation. This comparative study engages several critical
issues. How can we recover the voices of Jesus, James, and Jude
from the material purporting to preserve their speech? How can we
assess a particular text's influence on Jews in early first-century
Palestine? How can we be sufficiently sensitive to the meanings and
nuances in both the text presumed to influence and the text
presumed to be influenced so as not to distort the meaning of
either? The result is a portrait of Jesus that is fully at home in
Roman Judea and Galilee, and perhaps an explanation for why these
extra-biblical Jewish texts continued to be preserved in Christian
circles.
As the world becomes increasingly globalised Islam faces some
important choices. Does it seek to "modernise" in line with the
cultures in which it is practised, or does it retain its traditions
even if they are at odds with the surrounding society? This book
utilizes a critical rationalist viewpoint to illuminate many of the
hotly contended issues in modern Islam, and to offer a fresh
analysis. A variety of issues within Islam are discussed in this
book including, Muslims and modernity; Islam, Christianity and
Judaism; approaches to the understanding of the Quran; Muslim
identity and civil society; doctrinal certainty and violent
radicalism. In each case, the author makes use of Karl Popper's
theory of critical rationalism to uncover new aspects of these
issues and to challenge post-modern, relativist, literalist and
justificationist readings of Islam. This is a unique perspective on
contemporary Islam and as such will be of significant interest to
scholars of Religious Studies, Islamic Studies and the Philosophy
of Religion.
This volume discusses various conceptions of family and kinship in
the context of deuterocanonical literature. After analyzing the
topic family in a narrow sense of the term, the articles
investigate general ideas of morality, respect, or love and take a
critical look at representations of gender, power, and social norms
in Judaism and Early Christianity.
The Upanisads are among the most sacred foundational scriptures in
the Hindu religion. Composed from 800 BCE onwards and making up
part of the larger Vedic corpus, they offer the reader "knowledge
lessons" on life, death, and immortality. While they are essential
to understanding Hinduism and Asian religions more generally, their
complexities make them almost impenetrable to anyone but serious
scholars of Sanskrit and ancient Indian culture. This book is
divided into five parts: Composition, authorship, and transmission
of the Upanisads; The historical, cultural, and religious
background of the Upanisads; Religion and philosophy in the
Upanisads; The classical Upanisads; The later Upanisads. The
chapters cover critical issues such as the origins of the
Upanisads, authorship, and redaction, as well as exploring the
broad religious and philosophical themes within the texts. The
guide analyzes each of the Upanisads separately, unpacking their
contextual relevance and explaining difficult terms and concepts.
The Upanisads: A Complete Guide is a unique and valuable reference
source for undergraduate religious studies, history, and philosophy
students and researchers who want to learn more about these
foundational sacred texts and the religious lessons in the Hindu
tradition.
What accounts for the seemingly atypical pattern of scriptural
exegesis that Paul uses to interpret Exodus 34 in 2 Cor 3:7-18?
While previous scholars have approached this question from a
variety of angles, in this monograph, Michael Cover grapples
particularly with the evidence of contemporaneous Jewish and
Greco-Roman commentary traditions. Through comparison with Philo of
Alexandria's Allegorical Commentary, the Pseudo-Philonic homilies
De Jona and De Sampsone, the Anonymous Theaetetus Commentary, the
Dead Sea Scrolls, Seneca's Epistulae morales, and other New
Testament texts, Paul's interpretation of Exodus emerges as part of
a wider commentary practice that Cover terms "secondary-level
exegesis." This study also provides new analysis of the way ancient
authors, including Paul, interwove commentary forms and epistolary
rhetoric and offers a reconstruction of the context of Paul's
conflict with rival apostles in Corinth. At root was the legacy of
Moses and of the Pentateuch itself, how the scriptures ought to be
read, and how Platonizing theological and anthropological
traditions might be interwoven with Paul's messianic gospel.
Jenny R. Labendz investigates rabbinic self-perception and
self-fashioning within the non-Jewish social and intellectual world
of antique Palestine, showing how the rabbis drew on Hellenistic
and Roman concepts for Torah study and answering a fundamental
question: was rabbinic participation in Greco-Roman society a
begrudging concession or a principled choice? As Labendz
demonstrates, Torah study was an intellectual arena in which rabbis
were extremely unlikely to look beyond their private domain. Yet
despite the highly internal and self-referential nature of rabbinic
Torah study, some rabbis believed that the involvement of non-Jews
in rabbinic intellectual culture enriched the rabbis' own learning
and teaching. Labendz identifies a sub-genre of rabbinic texts that
she terms "Socratic Torah, " which portrays rabbis engaging in
productive dialogue with non-Jews about biblical and rabbinic law
and narrative. In these texts, rabbinic epistemology expands to
include reliance not only upon Scripture and rabbinic tradition,
but upon intuitions and life experiences common to Jews and
non-Jews. While most scholarly readings of rabbinic dialogues with
non-Jews have focused on the polemical, hostile, or anxiety-ridden
nature of the interactions, Socratic Torah reveals that the
presence of non-Jews was at times a welcome opportunity for the
rabbis to think and speak differently about Torah. Labendz
contextualizes her explication of Socratic Torah within rabbinic
literature at large, including other passages and statements about
non-Jews as well as general intellectual trends in rabbinic
literature, and also within cognate literatures, including Plato's
dialogues, Jewish texts of the Second Temple period, and the New
Testament. While she focuses on non-Jews in the Palestinian Talmud
and midrashim, the book includes chapters on the Babylonian Talmud
and on the liminal figures of minim and Matrona. The passages that
make up the sub-genre of Socratic Torah serve as the entryway for a
much broader understanding of rabbinic literature and rabbinic
intellectual culture.
This book makes the Qur'an accessible to the English-speaking
student who lacks the linguistic background to read it in the
original Arabic by offering accessible translations of, and
commentary on, a series of selected passages that are
representative of the Islamic scripture. Mustanstir Mir, Director
of the Center for Islamic Studies at Youngstown State University,
offers clear translations and analysis of 35 selected passages of
the Qur'an that will help students understand what kind of book the
Qur'an is, what the scripture says, and how it says it.
Shaykh Tantawi Jawhari was an Egyptian exegete known for having
produced a scientific interpretation of the Qur'an. A pioneering
scholar in terms of familiarising the people of his time with many
previously neglected matters regarding Islam and science, his
publications shocked the Cairo educational system and other Muslim
places of learning in the early twentieth century. This book
examines the intersection between Tantawi Jawhari and Egyptian
history and culture, and demonstrates that his approach to science
in the Qur'an was intimately connected to his social concerns.
Divided into three parts, part one contains three chapters which
each introduce different aspects of Tantawi Jawhari himself. The
second part explores the main aspects of his tafsir, discussing his
approach to science and the Qur'an, and how he presented Europeans
in his tafsir, and then addressing the impact of his tafsir on
wider Muslim and non-Muslim society. The third section draws
attention to the themes from all 114 suras of the Qur'an that are
discussed within his commentary. It then analyses the current
status of his views and the post-Jawharism perspective on science
and the Qur'an, both today and in an imaginary future, in 2154.
Providing new English translations of Tantawi Jawhari's work, the
book delivers a comprehensive assessment of this unique figure, and
emphasises the distinctive nature of his reading of the Qur'an. The
book will be a valuable resource for anyone studying modern Egypt,
the Qur'an, Islam and Science, and scientific interpretation and
inimitability.
This book examines culture, religion and polity in the context of
Buddhism. Gananath Obeyesekere, one of the foremost analytical
voices from South Asia develops Freud's notion of 'dream work', the
'work of culture' and ideas of no-self (anatta) to understand
Buddhism in contemporary Sri Lanka. This work offers a restorative
interpretation of Buddhist myths in contrast to the perspective
involving deconstruction. The book deals with a range of themes
connected with Buddhism, including oral traditions and stories, the
religious pantheon, philosophy, emotions, reform movements,
questions of identity and culture, and issues of modernity. This
fascinating volume will greatly interest students, teachers and
researchers of religion and philosophy, especially Buddhism,
ethics, cultural studies, social and cultural anthropology, Sri
Lanka and modern South Asian history.
This is the most complete, up-to-date, one-volume,
English-language edition of the renowned library of fourth-century
Gnostic manuscripts discovered in Egypt in 1945, which rivaled the
Dead Sea Scrolls find in significance. It includes the Gospel of
Thomas, the Gospel of Mary, and the recently discovered Gospel of
Judas, as well as other Gnostic gospels and sacred texts. This
volume also includes introductory essays, notes, tables, glossary,
index, etc. to help the reader understand the context and
contemporary significance of these texts which have shed new light
on early Christianity and ancient thought.
The Wisdom of Love strives to challenge the discrepancy between the
way source texts relate to love and the way they are perceived to
do so, introducing readers to the extensive, profound, and
significant treatment of love in the Jewish canon. This is a book
about love, not its repression; it is an opportunity to study the
wisdom of love, not those who lack such wisdom and are unlikely to
ever acquire it. The Wisdom of Love brings about not only a change
in perception recognizing the existence of the wisdom of love per
se but also the realization that this wisdom is the very foundation
of religious wisdom as a whole, rather than a peripheral branch of
it. All love derives from a single source: love between man and
woman. It is from this source that all other manifestations of
love, such as love of God, love of wisdom, and love of one s
fellow, draw their meaning.
The author examines three 20th/21st century Muslims' accounts of
reading the Quran. To master contemporary social challenges, Fazlur
Rahman (d. 1988), Muhammad Arkoun (d. 2010), and Nasr Hamid Abu
Zayd (d. 2010) call for revisiting the Islamic heritage, plus a
fresh look onto the Quranic 'spirit'. The investigation leads
through following concepts: the nature of the Quran, revelation and
prophecy, the role of Muhammad and Prophethood. Discoursing the
philosophers' reform ideas leads to an analysis of their exegetical
methods. Do the proposed Quran hermeneutics support their reform
projects? This book uncovers pros and cons of these
socio-intellectual innovations. It finally concludes: the thinkers'
scholarly and philosophical attitude exposes itself as a humanistic
endeavour.
Advaita Vedanta is one of the most important and widely studied
schools of thought in Hindu religion and the Vivekacudamani is one
of the most important texts in the Advaita tradition and the most
popular philosophical work ascribed to the great Indian
philosopher, Sankara. Sankara (c.650-700) is considered to be a
giant among giants and probably the most venerated philosopher in
India's long history. The Vivekacudamani is in the form of a
dialogue between a preceptor (guru) and a pupil (sisya) expounding
the quintessence of Advaita in which the pupil humbly approaches
the preceptor and, having served the teacher selflessly, implores
to be rescued from worldly existence (samsara). The guru promises
to teach the way to liberation (moksa) which culminates in the
ecstatic experience of one's own Self. This book presents an
accessible translation of the entire text and also includes
Upanisadic cross-referencing to most of its 580 verses, extensive
notes, a lengthy Introduction, list of variant readings, an
extensive bibliography, and an index to the verses. All those
interested in Indian religion and philosophy, Hindu studies, or
Sanskrit, will find this readable English translation of an Indian
philosophical classic invaluable.
1997 was the 50th anniversary of the discovery of the Dead Sea
Scrolls. Calendars in the Dead Sea Scrolls explores the evidence
about calendars in the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Hebrew Bible and other
ancient Jewish texts. James C. VanderKam examines the pertinent
texts, their sources and the different uses to which people put
calendrical information in the Christian world. Calendars in the
Dead Sea Scrolls provides a valuable addition to the Dead Sea
Scrolls Series and contributes to the elucidation of the scroll
texts themselves and their relation to other Biblical texts.
This is the only complete English translation of the classic Jewish
text known as Ein Yaakov. Ein Yaakov is a collection of all the
agaddah (the non-legal) material of the Talmud, compiled by Rabbi
Yaakov ibn Chaviv, the fifteenth century talmudist. Scattered among
the more than 2,700 pages of the Talmud, aggadah focuses on the
ethical and inspirational aspects of the Torah way of life. Through
a wealth of homilies, anecdotes, allegories, pithy sayings, and
interpretations of biblical verses, it has been said that the
aggadah brings you closer to God and his Torah.
A balanced selection from Buddhist writings, including scriptures
used by the Zen School, with chapters on the Buddha, Tibetan
Buddhism, Concentration and Meditation, the Buddhist Order, and
Nirvana. With sources, glossary and index.
The largely Arabo-centric approach to the academic study of tafsir
has resulted in a lack of literature exploring the diversity of
Qur'anic interpretation in other areas of the Muslim-majority
world. The essays in The Qur'an in the Malay-Indonesian World
resolve this, aiming to expand our knowledge of tafsir and its
history in the Malay-Indonesian world. Highlighting the scope of
Qur'anic interpretation in the Malay world in its various
vernaculars, it also contextualizes this work to reveal its place
as part of the wider Islamic world, especially through its
connections to the Arab world, and demonstrates the strength of
these connections. The volume is divided into three parts written
primarily by scholars from Malaysia and Indonesia. Beginning with a
historical overview, it then moves into chapters with a more
specifically regional focus to conclude with a thematic approach by
looking at topics of some controversy in the broader world.
Presenting new examinations of an under-researched topic, this book
will be of interest to students and scholars of Islamic studies and
Southeast Asian studies.
Qur'anic Studies Today brings together specialists in the field of
Islamic studies to provide a range of essays that reflect the depth
and breadth of scholarship on the Qur'an. Combining theoretical and
methodological clarity with close readings of qur'anic texts, these
contributions provide close analysis of specific passages, themes,
and issues within the Qur'an, even as they attend to the
disciplinary challenges within the field of qur'anic studies today.
Chapters are arranged into three parts, treating specific figures
appearing in the Qur'an, analysing particular suras, and finally
reflecting on the Qur'an and its "others." They explore the
internal dimensions and interior chronology of the Qur'an as text,
its possible conversations with biblical and non-biblical
traditions in Late Antiquity, and its role as scripture in modern
exegesis and recitation. Together, they are indispensable for
students and scholars who seek an understanding of the Qur'an
founded on the most recent scholarly achievements. Offering both a
reflection of and a reflection on the discipline of qur'anic
studies, the strong, scholarly examinations of the Qur'an in this
volume provide a valuable contribution to Islamic and qur'anic
studies.
Papers collected in this volume try to illuminate various aspects
of philosophical theology dealt with by different Jewish and early
Christian authors and texts (e.g. the Acts of the Apostles, Philo,
Origen, Gregory of Nazianzus), rooted in and influenced by the
Hellenistic religious, cultural, and philosophical context, and
they also focus on the literary and cultural traditions of
Hellenized Judaism and its reception (e.g. Sibylline Oracles,
Prayer of Manasseh), including material culture ("Elephant Mosaic
Panel" from Huqoq synagogue). By studying the Hellenistic
influences on early Christianity, both in response to and in
reaction against early Hellenized Judaism, the volume intends not
only to better understand Christianity, as a religious and
historical phenomenon with a profound impact on the development of
European civilization, but also to better comprehend Hellenism and
its consequences which have often been relegated to the realm of
political history.
'Letters of Light' is a translation of over ninety passages from a
well-known Hasidic text, 'Ma'or va-shemesh', consisting of homilies
of Kalonymus Kalman Epstein of Krakow, together with a running
commentary and analysis by Aryeh Wineman. With remarkable
creativity, the Krakow preacher recast biblical episodes and texts
through the prism both of the pietistic values of Hasidism, with
its accent on the inner life and the Divine innerness of all
existence, and of his ongoing wrestling with questions of the
primacy of the individual vis-a-vis of the community. The
commentary traces the route leading from the Torah text itself
through various later sources to the Krakow preacher's own reading
of the biblical text, one that often transforms the very tenor of
the text he was expounding. Though composed almost two centuries
ago, 'Ma'or va-shemesh' comprises an impressive spiritual
statement, many aspects of which can speak to our own time and its
spiritual strivings.
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