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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > The Bible > Old Testament > General
This collaboration between two scholars from different fields of
religious studies draws on three comparative data sets to develop a
new theory of purity and pollution in religion, arguing that a
culture's beliefs about cosmological realms shapes its pollution
ideas and its purification practices. The authors of this study
refine Mary Douglas' foundational theory of pollution as "matter
out of place," using a comparative approach to make the case that a
culture's cosmology designates which materials in which places
constitute pollution. By bringing together a historical comparison
of Ancient Near Eastern and Mediterranean religions, an
ethnographic study of indigenous shamanism on Jeju Island, Korea,
and the reception history of biblical rhetoric about pollution in
Jewish and Christian cultures, the authors show that a cosmological
account of purity works effectively across multiple disparate
religious and cultural contexts. They conclude that cosmologies
reinforce fears of pollution, and also that embodied experiences of
purification help generate cosmological ideas. Providing an
innovative insight into a key topic of ritual studies, this book
will be of vital interest to scholars and graduate students in
religion, biblical studies, and anthropology.
Modern linguistics is a relative newcomer in the scientific world,
and text-linguistics, or discourse analysis, is one of its youngest
disciplines. This fact has inclined many toward scepticism of its
value for the Hebraist, yet much benefit is thereby overlooked. In
this work, the author examines recent contributions to Hebrew
text-linguistics by Niccacci, Andersen, Eskhult, Khan, and
Longacre, evaluating them against a twofold standard of theoretical
and methodological integrity, and clarity of communication. An
extensive introduction to one particularly promising model of text
analysis (from Longacre's tagmemic school) is given, and a
step-by-step methodology is presented. Analyses according to this
model and methodology are given of seven extended text samples,
each building on the findings of the previous analyses: Judg. 2;
Lev. 14.1-32; Lev. 6.1-7.37; parallel instructions and historical
reports about the building of the Tabernacle, from Exodus 25-40;
Judg. 10.6-12.7; and the book of Ruth in its entirety. Considerable
attention is given to the question of text-linguistics and reported
speech.
Ritual in Deuteronomy explores the symbolic world of Deuteronomy's
ritual covenant and curses through a lens of religious studies and
anthropology, drawing on previously unexamined Mesopotamian
material. This book focuses on the ritual material in Deuteronomy
including commands regarding sacrifice, prayer objects, and
especially the dramatic ritual enactment of the covenant including
curses. The book's most unique feature is an entirely new
comparative study of Deut 27-30 with two ritual texts from
Mesopotamia. No studies to date have undertaken a comparison of
Deut 27-30 with ancient Near Eastern ritual texts outside of the
treaty oath tradition. This fresh comparison illuminates how the
ritual life of ancient Israel shaped the literary form of
Deuteronomy and concludes that the performance of oaths was a
social strategy, addressing contemporary anxieties and reinforcing
systems of cultural power. This book offers a fascinating
comparative study which will be of interest to undergraduate and
graduate students in biblical studies, classical Hebrew, theology,
and ancient Near Eastern studies. The book's more technical aspects
will also appeal to scholars of the Pentateuch, Deuteronomy,
Biblical Law, Ancient Near Eastern History, Mesopotamian Studies,
and Classics.
Biblical Foundations Book Awards Runner Up and Finalist In the
biblical canon, two books lack any explicit reference to the name
of God: Song of Songs and Esther. God's peculiar absence in these
texts is unsettling, both for theological discourse and for
believers considering implications for their own lived experience.
Chloe T. Sun takes on the challenges of God's absence by exploring
the often overlooked theological connections between these two Old
Testament books. In Conspicuous in His Absence, Sun examines and
reflects on the Song of Songs and Esther using theological
interpretation. She addresses three main questions: What is the
nature of God as revealed in texts that don't use his name? How do
we think of God when he is perceived to be absent? What should we
do when God is silent or hidden? The experience of God's absence or
silence is an important part of the human condition. By exploring
the distinct themes and perspectives of Song of Songs and Esther,
as well as how they've been received in Jewish and Christian
history, Sun demonstrates how both books serve as counter texts to
the depiction of God and his work in the rest of the Hebrew
Scriptures. Thus both contribute to a fuller picture of who God is
and what it means to know him.
The father-daughter dyad features in the Hebrew Bible in all of
narratives, laws, myths and metaphors. In previous explorations of
this relationship, the tendency has been to focus on discrete
stories - notable among them, Judges 11 (the story of Jephthah's
human sacrifice of his daughter) and Genesis 19 (the dark tale of
Lot's daughters' seduction of their father). By taking the full
spectrum into account, however, the daughter emerges prominently as
(not only) expendable and exploitable (as an emphasis on daughter
sacrifice or incest has suggested) but as cherished and protected
by her father. Depictions of daughters are multifarious and there
is a balance of very positive and very negative images. While not
uncritical of earlier feminist investigations, this book makes a
contribution to feminist biblical criticism and utilizes methods
drawn from the social sciences and psychoanalysis. Alongside
careful textual analysis, Johanna Stiebert offers a critical
evaluation of the heuristic usefulness of the ethnographic
honour-shame model, of parallels with Roman family studies, and of
the application and meaning of 'patriarchy'. Following semantic
analysis of the primary Hebrew terms for 'father' ( ) and
'daughter' ( ), as well as careful examination of inter-family
dynamics and the daughter's role vis-a-vis the son's, alongside
thorough investigation of both Judges 11 and Genesis 19, and also
of the metaphor of God-the-father of daughters Eve, Wisdom and
Zion, Stiebert provides the fullest exploration of daughters in the
Hebrew Bible to date.
This book examines many of the laws in the Torah governing sexual
relations and the often implicit motivations underlying them. It
also considers texts beyond the laws in which legal traditions and
ideas concerning sexual behavior intersect and provide insight into
ancient Israel's social norms. The book includes extended
treatments on the nature and function of marriage and divorce in
ancient Israel, the variation in sexual rules due to status and
gender, the prohibition on male-with-male sex, and the different
types of sexualities that may have existed in ancient Israel. The
essays draw on a variety of methodologies and approaches, including
narrative criticism, philological analysis, literary theory,
feminist and gender theory, anthropological models, and comparative
analysis. They cover content ranging from the narratives in
Genesis, to the laws of Exodus, Leviticus, and Deuteronomy, to
later re-interpretations of pentateuchal laws in Jeremiah and texts
from the Second Temple period. Overall, the book presents a
combination of theoretical discussion and close textual analysis to
shed new light on the connections between law and sexuality within
the Torah and beyond.
This impressive semantic study, with a useful glossary of special
and technical terms, develops an original methodology, bringing new
insights into the meaning of a much-discussed word. Working with an
immense amount of data, obtained by examining every occurrence in
the Hebrew Bible of 35 field elements, the author achieves a new
degree of semantic refinement based on meticulous quantitative
analysis of distribution, collocations, parallels and syntagms.
Sense-relations are formulated between hesed and other related
terms. This study provides much material for a better understanding
of this crucial term for Hebrew thought, and also makes an
important theoretical contribution to Hebrew lexicography.
On the occasion of the twenty-first conference of the International
Organization for the Study of the Old Testament, Brill and the
editorial board of Vetus Testamentum present this publication of
ten articles published in the journal between 1950 and today. Most
of them have been seminal in one way or another, and all, we think,
continue to repay close study. The selection was made so as to
illustrate the diversity of subject matter, scholarly approach, and
geographic provenance that characterizes Vetus Testamentum.
This monograph demonstrates that the book of Deuteronomy is a
result of highly creative, hypertextual reworking of the book of
Ezekiel. Likewise, it shows that the books of Joshua-Judges, taken
together, are a result of one, highly creative, hypertextual
reworking of the book of Deuteronomy. In both cases, the detailed
reworking consists of almost 700 strictly sequentially organized
conceptual, and at times also linguistic correspondences. The
strictly sequential, hypertextual dependence on the earlier works
explains numerous surprising features of Deuteronomy and
Joshua-Judges. This critical analysis of Deuteronomy and
Joshua-Judges sheds entirely new light on the question of the
origin of the Pentateuch and the whole Israelite Heptateuch
Genesis-Judges.
A modern reader studying biblical narratives encounters various
literary approaches and ways of understanding interpretive
concepts. Hence an attempt to put forward a comprehensive
hermeneutical model of reading biblical narratives. Such a model
should aim at a synthesis of various approaches, and show how they
are interrelated. The book proposes a hermeneutical theory which
uses modern approaches to literary texts for the exegesis of
biblical narratives. The book discusses three spheres of the
reader's knowledge about reality: immanent, narrative, and
transcendental. The move from immanent to transcendental knowledge
through the mediation of narrative knowledge results from the
mediatory role played by the biblical text, which refers the reader
to a transcendent reality. This theory is then applied to the
exegesis of Genesis 21:1-21, and involves the evaluation of the New
Criticism, rhetorical criticism, structuralism and narrative
analysis, reader-response criticism, the historical-critical
method, as well as deconstruction. In order to satisfy the
postulate of pluralism in interpretation, the hermeneutical theory
draws upon a variety of ancient and modern sources such as
Aristotle, T. S. Eliot, Hans Urs von Balthasar, and Paul Ricoeur.
The Bible, Homer, and the Search for Meaning in Ancient Myths
explores and compares the most influential sets of divine myths in
Western culture: the Homeric pantheon and Yahweh, the God of the
Old Testament. Heath argues that not only does the God of the Old
Testament bear a striking resemblance to the Olympians, but also
that the Homeric system rejected by the Judeo-Christian tradition
offers a better model for the human condition. The universe
depicted by Homer and populated by his gods is one that creates a
unique and powerful responsibility - almost directly counter to
that evoked by the Bible-for humans to discover ethical norms,
accept death as a necessary human limit, develop compassion to
mitigate a tragic existence, appreciate frankly both the glory and
dangers of sex, and embrace and respond courageously to an
indifferent universe that was clearly not designed for human
dominion. Heath builds on recent work in biblical and classical
studies to examine the contemporary value of mythical deities.
Judeo-Christian theologians over the millennia have tried to
explain away Yahweh's Olympian nature while dismissing the Homeric
deities for the same reason Greek philosophers abandoned them: they
don't live up to preconceptions of what a deity should be. In
particular, the Homeric gods are disappointingly plural,
anthropomorphic, and amoral (at best). But Heath argues that
Homer's polytheistic apparatus challenges us to live meaningfully
without any help from the divine. In other words, to live well in
Homer's tragic world - an insight gleaned by Achilles, the hero of
the Iliad - one must live as if there were no gods at all. The
Bible, Homer, and the Search for Meaning in Ancient Myths should
change the conversation academics in classics, biblical studies,
theology and philosophy have - especially between disciplines -
about the gods of early Greek epic, while reframing on a more
popular level the discussion of the role of ancient myth in shaping
a thoughtful life.
Central to understanding the prophecy and prayer of the Hebrew
Bible are the unspoken assumptions that shaped them-their genres.
Modern scholars describe these works as "poetry," but there was no
corresponding ancient Hebrew term or concept. Scholars also
typically assume it began as "oral literature," a concept based
more in evolutionist assumptions than evidence. Is biblical poetry
a purely modern fiction, or is there a more fundamental reason why
its definition escapes us? Beyond Orality: Biblical Poetry on its
Own Terms changes the debate by showing how biblical poetry has
worked as a mirror, reflecting each era's own self-image of verbal
art. Yet Vayntrub also shows that this problem is rooted in a
crucial pattern within the Bible itself: the texts we recognize as
"poetry" are framed as powerful and ancient verbal performances,
dramatic speeches from the past. The Bible's creators presented
what we call poetry in terms of their own image of the ancient and
the oral, and understanding their native theories of Hebrew verbal
art gives us a new basis to rethink our own.
Thomas Merton presented numerous sets of conferences during his
decade (1955-1965) as novice master at the Cistercian Abbey of
Gethsemani. The two courses included in this volume - a thorough
examination of the book of Genesis that began in mid-1956 and
concluded on the Feast of Pentecost in 1957, and a series of
classes on the book of Exodus from 1957 and 1958 - are here
presented for the first time in a critical edition accompanied by
extensive annotation and a comprehensive introduction. These
courses comprise the only major surviving teaching notes on
particular books of Scripture dating from the years when Merton was
in charge of the novitiate. They provide direct access to his views
on the intellectual and spiritual contexts in which they should be
understood. As biblical scholar Pauline Viviano writes in her
preface, 'this edition of Thomas Merton's class notes brings us
into the workings of a great spiritual leader's mind as he reflects
upon Scripture. . . . all who are on a spiritual journey can gain
from his insights and the lessons he draws.'
This Oxford dissertation offers a fresh redactional analysis of the
Book of Amos. It starts with a critical survey of existing
approaches and an examination of the methodological issues involved
and proceeds with a detailed exegetical analysis of the prophetic
text which forms the basis for the redactional conclusions. It
steers a middle course between extreme conservative treatments
which trace all the material back to the prophet Amos and more
radical sceptical approaches which attribute most of the prophetic
oracles to the work of later redactors. The composition of the book
began with two collections: the Polemical scroll written not long
after the end of Amos' ministry and the Repentance scroll composed
shortly before 722 BC. The Repentance scroll was reworked in Judah
towards the end of the 8th century BC and the two scrolls were
combined to form a single work sometime during the 7th century BC.
The Book underwent only one redaction during the exilic period
which sought to actualise its message in a new historical context.
The study pays special attention to the literary structure, aim and
probable historical circumstances of the various collections which
gradually evolved into the present Book of Amos and seeks to show
how the prophetic message lived on and spoke to the various
communities which preserved and transmitted it.
Biblical Foundations Book Awards Finalist Deep within the human
psyche lies a sense that we were made for something more than this
broken world. We all share an experience of exile-of longing for
our true home. In this ESBT volume, Matthew S. Harmon explores how
the theme of sin and exile is developed throughout Scripture. He
traces a common pattern of human rebellion, God's judgment, and the
hope of restored relationship, beginning with the first humans and
concluding with the end of exile in a new creation. In this story
we encounter the remarkable grace of a God who wants to dwell with
his people, and we learn how to live well as exiles in a fallen
world. Rebels and Exiles makes clear how the paradigm of sin
leading to exile is foundational for understanding both the
biblical storyline and human existence. Essential Studies in
Biblical Theology (ESBT), edited by Benjamin L. Gladd, explore the
central or "essential" themes of the Bible's grand storyline.
Taking cues from Genesis 1-3, authors explore the presence of these
themes throughout the entire sweep of redemption history. Written
for students, church leaders, and laypeople, the ESBT offers an
introduction to biblical theology.
This collection of essays seeks to demonstrate that many biblical
authors deliberately used Classical and Hellenistic Greek texts for
inspiration when crafting many of the narratives in the Primary
History. Through detailed analysis of the text, Gnuse contends that
there are numerous examples of clear influence from late classical
and Hellenistic literature. Deconstructing the biblical and Greek
works in parallel, he argues that there are too many similarities
in basic theme, meaning, and detail, for them to be accounted for
by coincidence or shared ancient tropes. Using this evidence, he
suggests that although much of the text may originate from the
Persian period, large parts of its final form likely date from the
Hellenistic era. With the help of an original introduction and
final chapter, Gnuse pulls his essays together into a coherent
collection for the first time. The resultant volume offers a
valuable resource for anyone working on the dating of the Hebrew
Bible, as well as those working on Hellenism in the ancient Levant
more broadly.
This book suggests that Old Testament scholars should strengthen
their growing links with neighbouring academic disciplines and
encourage a number of interpretative interests within biblical
studies. Given such a pluralistic context, the author's contention
is that the 'canonical' approach to Old Testament study will have a
distinctive contribution to make to the discipline without
necessarily displacing other traditions of historical and literary
inquiry, as many scholars have assumed. Dr Brett offers a
comprehensive critique of the canonical approach as developed by
Brevard Childs, and examines the development of Childs's exegetical
practice, his hermeneutical theory, and the many critical responses
which his work has elicited. In responding to these criticisms, the
author examines the most problematic aspects of the canonical
approach (notably Childs's inadequate reply to those who emphasize
the ideological conflicts that lie behind biblical texts in their
final form) and seeks to reconstruct the approach in light of
contemporary discussions of interpretation in literary theory and
the social sciences.
The ancient Near Eastern mode of thought is not at all intuitive to
us moderns, but our understanding of ancient perspectives can only
approach accuracy when we begin to penetrate ancient texts on their
own terms rather than imposing our own world view. In this task, we
are aided by the ever-growing corpus of literature that is being
recovered and analyzed. After an introduction that presents some of
the history of comparative studies and how it has been applied to
the study of ancient texts in general and cosmology in particular,
Walton focuses in the first half of this book on the ancient Near
Eastern texts that inform our understanding about ancient ways of
thinking about cosmology. Of primary interest are the texts that
can help us discern the parameters of ancient perspectives on
cosmic ontology-that is, how the writers perceived origins. Texts
from across the ancient Near East are presented, including
primarily Egyptian, Sumerian, and Akkadian texts, but occasionally
also Ugaritic and Hittite, as appropriate. Walton's intention,
first of all, is to understand the texts but also to demonstrate
that a functional ontology pervaded the cognitive environment of
the ancient Near East. This functional ontology involves more than
just the idea that ordering the cosmos was the focus of the
cosmological texts. He posits that, in the ancient world, bringing
about order and functionality was the very essence of creative
activity. He also pays close attention to the ancient ideology of
temples to show the close connection between temples and the
functioning cosmos. The second half of the book is devoted to a
fresh analysis of Genesis 1:1-2:4. Walton offers studies of
significant Hebrew terms and seeks to show that the Israelite texts
evidence a functional ontology and a cosmology that is constructed
with temple ideology in mind, as in the rest of the ancient Near
East. He contends that Genesis 1 never was an account of material
origins but that, as in the rest of the ancient world, the focus of
"creation texts" was to order the cosmos by initiating functions
for the components of the cosmos. He further contends that the
cosmology of Genesis 1 is founded on the premise that the cosmos
should be understood in temple terms. All of this is intended to
demonstrate that, when we read Genesis 1 as the ancient document it
is, rather than trying to read it in light of our own world view,
the text comes to life in ways that help recover the energy it had
in its original context. At the same time, it provides a new
perspective on Genesis 1 in relation to what have long been
controversial issues. Far from being a borrowed text, Genesis 1
offers a unique theology, even while it speaks from the platform of
its contemporaneous cognitive environment.
This book focuses on the expressions used to describe Job's body in
pain and on the reactions of his friends to explore the moral and
social world reflected in the language and the values that their
speeches betray. A key contribution of this monograph is to
highlight how the perspective of illness as retribution is
powerfully refuted in Job's speeches and, in particular, to show
how this is achieved through comedy. Comedy in Job is a powerful
weapon used to expose and ridicule the idea of retribution.
Rejecting the approach of retrospective diagnosis, this monograph
carefully analyses the expression of pain in Job focusing
specifically on somatic language used in the deity attack
metaphors, in the deity surveillance metaphors and in the language
connected to the body and social status. These metaphors are
analysed in a comparative way using research from medical
anthropology and sociology which focuses on illness narratives and
expressions of pain. Job's Body and the Dramatised Comedy of
Moralising will be of interest to anyone working on the Book of
Job, as well as those with an interest in suffering and pain in the
Hebrew Bible more broadly.
This collection of significant literary studies by an older
generation of influential scholars makes available some often
neglected insights into the books of Samuel as works of literature.
The studies are of perhaps surprising relevance to recent literary
investigations of the Hebrew Bible. The contributors are: Hugo
Gressmann, 'The Oldest History-writing and Prophecy of Israel'
(Introduction, and studies of various individual narratives in
Samuel); Wilhelm Caspari, 'The Literary Type and Historical Value
of 2 Samuel 15-20'; Bernard Luther, 'The Novelle of Judah and Tamar
and other Israelite Novellen'; Alfons Schultz, 'Narrative Art in
the Books of Samuel'.
This volume is part of the Changing Perspectives sub-series, which
is constituted by anthologies of articles by world-renowned
biblical scholars and historians that have made an impact on the
field and changed its course during the last decades. This volume
offers a collection of seminal essays by Keith Whitelam on the
early history of ancient Palestine and the origins and emergence of
Israel. Collected together in one volume for the first time, and
featuring one unpublished article, this volume will be of interest
to biblical and ancient Near Eastern scholars interested in the
politics of historical representation but also on critical ways of
constructing the history of ancient Palestine.
In this volume, Brian Charles DiPalma examines masculinities in the
court tales of Daniel as a test case for issues facing the
burgeoning area of gender studies in the Hebrew Bible. In doing so,
it both analyses how the court tales of Daniel portray the
characters in terms of configurations of masculinity in their
socio-historical context, and also seeks to advance gender studies
in the Hebrew Bible on theoretical, methodological, and political
grounds. Masculinities in the Court Tales of Daniel is therefore of
interest not only to scholars working on Daniel, but also biblical
scholars studying gender in the Hebrew Bible more broadly,
including those engaged in feminist criticism, queer criticism, and
studies of masculinity, as well as anyone studying gender within an
ancient Near Eastern context.
This book provides a new reading of the biblical book of Numbers in
a commentary form. Mainstream readings have tended to see the book
as a haphazard junkyard of material that connects Genesis-Leviticus
with Deuteronomy (and Joshua), composed at a late stage in the
history of ancient Israel. By contrast, this book reads Numbers as
part of a wider work of Genesis-Joshua, a carefully crafted
programmatic settler colonial document for a new society in
Canaanite highlands in the late second millennium BCE that seeks to
replace pre-existing indigenous societies. In the context of the
tremendous influence that the biblical documents have had on the
world in the last 2,000-3,000 years, the book also offers pointers
towards reading these texts today. This volume is a fascinating
study of this text, and will be of interest not only to biblical
scholars, but to anyone with an interest in the history of the
ancient Levant, and colonisation and colonialism in the ancient
world more broadly.
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