Prof. William Morrow is Emeritus Professor of Hebrew and Hebrew Scriptures, Queen’s Theological College and Queen’s University, Kingston Ontario, where he taught from 1987–2019. He holds an M.A. and Ph.D. from the Department of Near Eastern Studies, University of Toronto. His books include Protest Against God: The Eclipse of a Biblical Tradition (Sheffield Phoenix, 2006) and An Introduction to Biblical Law (Eerdmans, 2017). In general, his scholarship has focused on legal traditions in the Hebrew Bible in comparison with those found elsewhere in the ancient Near East.
Last Updated
February 13, 2024
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Both namburbi anti-omen rituals (1st millennium B.C.E.) and priestly Torah rituals were preserved in collections in multiple versions that show evidence of intertextuality and innovation. Were these rituals meant to be performed?
Both namburbi anti-omen rituals (1st millennium B.C.E.) and priestly Torah rituals were preserved in collections in multiple versions that show evidence of intertextuality and innovation. Were these rituals meant to be performed?