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Malbim's Job - The Book of Job: Newly Translated and Interpreted According to the Commentary of Rabbi Meir Lebush Malbim (Paperback)
Loot Price: R555
Discovery Miles 5 550
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Malbim's Job - The Book of Job: Newly Translated and Interpreted According to the Commentary of Rabbi Meir Lebush Malbim (Paperback)
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Loot Price R555
Discovery Miles 5 550
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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R. Meir Lebush Malbim composed and published his monumental
commentary on the Hebrew Bible between 1845 and 1870. It was the
first work of its kind since medieval times. Not since the likes of
Rashi, Gersonides and Abrabanel had a biblical commentary of
comparable size and scope been written; and not since the golden
age of Jewish philosophy had such a far ranging Jewish theology
been formulated or had such a determined and focused attempt been
made to grapple with the challenges presented by secular learning
and mores to the loyalties of contemporary Jews. On the narrative
level, Malbim's interpretation of Job is quite straightforward; it
is all a matter of tests and trials. The person Job is being
tested; first by prosperity and then by adversity. It is, however,
on other levels that Malbim's Job really comes into its own. Malbim
believed the Massoretic (Hebrew) text of the Book of Job to be a
coherent whole, that faithfully records what the book's original
author, Moses, actually wrote. As such, its standing in matters of
moral and natural philosophy must be on a par with that the Torah.
Just as the whole of the Oral Law is inherent in the text of the
Torah, so must all the wisdom of philosophy and metaphysics be
present in the Book of Job, there in its poetry and imagery.
Moreover, Malbim asserted, whereas previous commentators had failed
to show how the text of Job supported the philosophical affinities
they had attributed to Job and his friends, or how these
designations helped to elucidate the text, he claims to do both.
Exhibiting an originality of interpretation and a love of the
Hebrew language that matched the Haskalah of his contemporaries,
Malbim finds support for all his ideas in the actual words of the
Book of Job itself. Whether or not his interpretation is truly the
sense of Job, what Malbim produced is undoubtedly a masterpiece of
theology and exegesis.
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