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During the past few decades a great amount of scholarly work has
been done on the various prayer cultures of antiquity, both
Graeco-Roman and Jewish and Christian. In Jewish studies this
burgeoning research on ancient prayer has been stimulated
particularly by the many new prayer texts found at Qumran, which
have shed new light on several long-standing problems. The present
volume intends to make a new contribution to the ongoing scholarly
debate on ancient Jewish prayer texts by focusing on a limited set
of prayer texts, scil. , a small number of those that have been
preserved only in Greek. Jewish prayers in Greek tend to be
undervalued, which is regrettable because these prayers shed light
on sometimes striking aspects of early Jewish spirituality in the
centuries around the turn of the era. In this volume twelve such
prayers have been collected, translated, and provided with an
extensive historical and philological commentary. They have been
preserved on papyrus, on stone, and as part of Christian church
orders into which some of them have been incorporated in a
christianized from. For that reason these prayers are of great
interest to scholars of both early Judaism and ancient
Christianity.
Before the Bible reveals the landscape of scripture in an era prior
to the crystallization of the rabbinic Bible and the canonization
of the Christian Bible. Most accounts of the formation of the
Hebrew Bible trace the origins of scripture through source critical
excavation of the archaeological "tel" of the Bible or the analysis
of the scribal hand on manuscripts in text-critical work. But the
discoveries in the Dead Sea Scrolls have transformed our
understanding of scripture formation. Judith Newman focuses not on
the putative origins and closure of the Bible but on the reasons
why scriptures remained open, with pluriform growth in the
Hellenistic-Roman period. Drawing on new methods from cognitive
neuroscience and the social sciences as well as traditional
philological and literary analysis, Before the Bible argues that
the key to understanding the formation of scripture is the
widespread practice of individual and communal prayer in early
Judaism. The figure of the teacher as a learned and pious sage
capable of interpreting and embodying the tradition is central to
understanding this revelatory phenomenon. The book considers the
entwinement of prayer and scriptural formation in five books
reflecting the diversity of early Judaism: Ben Sira, Daniel,
Jeremiah/Baruch, Second Corinthians, and the Qumran Hodayot
(Thanksgiving Hymns). While not a complete taxonomy of scripture
formation, the book illuminates performative dynamics that have
been largely ignored as well as the generative role of interpretive
tradition in accounts of how the Bible came to be.
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