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In the course of along and noteworthy career, Dr Andrew Macintosh
has trained a large number of students in the language and
literature of the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament. Some of these have
gone on to achieve recognition as leading biblical scholars, while
others have occupied positions of influence in education and
religion. All have been shaped by the honorand's unquenchable
enthusiasm for the Hebrew language and its employment in texts
ancient, medieval, and modern. In addition to his own estimable
scholarly publications, Dr Macintosh has been a valued and
appreciated colleague to others in his field. A select number of
those colleagues - some of whom learned Hebrew as the honorand's
pupils - present cutting-edge essays on the language, literature,
and context of the Hebrew Bible and Old Testament as a gesture of
respect to their friend, mentor, and colleague. From drunken Noah
to behind closed doors in the Davidic monarchy, from the biblical
genesis of humanity to the biblical lexicon of wine-making, senior
scholars here present discerning essays that address the wide range
of biblical studies which characterizes the career and contribution
of their colleague A.A.Macintosh.
Paying special attention to chapters 56-66, David Baer analyses the
labour that resulted in the Greek Isaiah. He compares the Greek
text with extant Hebrew texts and with early biblical versions to
show that the translator has approached his craft with homiletical
interests in mind. This earliest translator of Isaiah produces a
preached text, at the same time modifying his received tradition in
theological and nationalistic directions which would reach their
full flower in Targumic and Rabbinical literature. In basic
agreement with recent work on other portions of the Septuagint, the
Greek Isaiah is seen to be an elegant work of Hellenistic
literature whose linguistic fluidity expresses the convictions and
longings of a deeply Palestinian soul.>
In the course of a long and noteworthy career, Dr Andrew Macintosh
has trained a large number of students in the language and
literature of the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament. Some of these have
gone on to achieve recognition as leading biblical scholars, while
others have occupied positions of influence in education and
religion. All have been shaped by the honorand's unquenchable
enthusiasm for the Hebrew language and its employment in texts
ancient, medieval, and modern. In addition to his own estimable
scholarly publications, Dr Macintosh has been a valued and
appreciated colleague to others in his field. A select number of
those colleagues-some of whom learned Hebrew as the honorand's
pupils- present cutting-edge essays on the language, literature,
and context of the Hebrew Bible and Old Testament as a gesture of
respect to their friend, mentor, and colleague. From drunken Noah
to behind closed doors in the Davidic monarchy, from the biblical
genesis of humanity to the biblical lexicon of wine-making, senior
scholars here present discerning essays that address the wide range
of biblical studies which characterizes the career and contribution
of their colleague A.A.Macintosh.
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