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Legal Revision and Religious Renewal in Ancient Israel (Hardcover, New)
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Legal Revision and Religious Renewal in Ancient Israel (Hardcover, New)
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This book examines the doctrine of transgenerational punishment
found in the Decalogue that is, the idea that God punishes sinners
vicariously and extends the punishment due them to three or four
generations of their progeny. Though it was God-given law, the
unfairness of punishing innocent people merely for being the
children or grandchildren of wrongdoers was clearly recognized in
ancient Israel. A series of inner-biblical and post-biblical
responses to the rule demonstrates that later writers were able to
criticize, reject, and replace this problematic doctrine with the
alternative notion of individual retribution. From this
perspective, the formative canon is the source of its own renewal:
it fosters critical reflection upon the textual tradition and
sponsors intellectual freedom. To support further study, this book
includes a valuable bibliographical essay on the distinctive
approach of inner-biblical exegesis showing the contributions of
European, Israeli, and North American scholars. An earlier version
of the volume appeared in French as L Hermeneutique de l
innovation: Canon et exegese dans l Israel biblique. This new
Cambridge release represents a major revision and expansion of the
French edition, nearly doubling its length with extensive new
content. Legal Revision and Religious Renewal in Ancient Israel
opens new perspectives on current debates within the humanities
about canonicity, textual authority, and authorship. Bernard M.
Levinson holds the Berman Family Chair of Jewish Studies and Hebrew
Bible at the University of Minnesota. His research focuses on
biblical and cuneiform law, textual reinterpretation in the Second
Temple period, and the relation of the Bible to Western
intellectual history. His book Deuteronomy and the Hermeneutics of
Legal Innovation (1997) won the 1999 Salo W. Baron Award for Best
First Book in Literature and Thought from the American Academy for
Jewish Research. He is also the author of The Right Chorale:
Studies in Biblical Law and Interpretation (2008), and editor or
coeditor of four volumes, most recently, The Pentateuch as Torah:
New Models for Understanding Its Promulgation and Acceptance
(2007). The interdisciplinary significance of his work has been
recognized with appointments to the Institute for Advanced Study
(1997); the Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin/Berlin Institute for
Advanced Study (2007); and, most recently, the National Humanities
Center, where he will serve as the Henry Luce Senior Fellow in
Religious Studies for the 2010 2011 academic year."
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