Latest Essays
Israel’s Incomplete Conquest of Canaan
Israel’s Incomplete Conquest of Canaan
Biblical authors struggled to explain why Canaanites remained on the land after Israel settled it. Exodus (23:29–30) and Deuteronomy (7:22) suggest that Israel needed time to settle the land. The opening of Joshua reimagines the past to include an Israelite Blitzkrieg that removed the inhabitants entirely. Other approaches see the remaining Canaanites as a punishment (Judges 2) or a test of Israel's resolve (Joshua 23).
I Have a Dream: Martin Luther King Jr.’s Biblical Prophetic Speech
I Have a Dream: Martin Luther King Jr.’s Biblical Prophetic Speech
Using biblical quotes, imagery, and rhetorical devices, Martin Luther King Jr. envisions the hopeful future of African American people in the United States in the voice of a biblical prophet.
Deborah, Yael and Sisera’s Mother, Themech
Deborah, Yael and Sisera’s Mother, Themech
Biblical Antiquities, circa 1st cent. C.E., retells the story of Judges 4–5. It expands the maternal imagery of Deborah and Yael, develops the character of Sisera’s mother, and adds sexual innuendo to Yael’s interactions with Sisera.
Raised as an Egyptian, How Does Moses Come to Identify as a Hebrew?
Raised as an Egyptian, How Does Moses Come to Identify as a Hebrew?
When Moses sees an Egyptian striking a Hebrew, he kills the Egyptian. Does Moses get involved because he knows he is a Hebrew or does he act out of a sense of justice?
“He Tethers His Donkey to the Vine” - Judah Exported Soreqa Wine
“He Tethers His Donkey to the Vine” - Judah Exported Soreqa Wine
Fine wine was appreciated in the ancient world just as it is today. Jacob, on his deathbed, blesses Judah that he will profit from the lucrative wine trade.
Solomon’s Divine Wisdom: Legitimizing His Kingship
Solomon’s Divine Wisdom: Legitimizing His Kingship
God grants the young Solomon divine wisdom in a dream at Gibeon. This account, which reads like an ancient Near Eastern royal novella, was an apologia for Solomon’s accession and his style of kingship.
Judah’s Speech to Joseph: The Subtext
Judah’s Speech to Joseph: The Subtext
After Joseph’s goblet is found in Benjamin’s sack, Judah makes a passionate speech to save Benjamin, in which he claims that if Benjamin leaves his father, “he will die.” Who will die? Why does the Torah phrase this so ambiguously?
Raise Up the Shepherd(s) – Maoz Tzur’s Eschatological Ending
Raise Up the Shepherd(s) – Maoz Tzur’s Eschatological Ending
Maʿoz Tzur ends with a request in two variants: God should either raise up the shepherd of the seven or the seven shepherds. These two versions point to different biblical verses and reflect divergent perspectives on what should happen at the end of days.
Joseph and Asenath
Joseph and Asenath
A text from Hellenistic Egypt (ca. 100 B.C.E. to 100 C.E.) tells a romantic story of Joseph and Asenath’s courtship. Initially, Asenath rejects Joseph, but then falls in love with him, only to have Joseph reject her because she is the daughter of an Egyptian priest. It’s only after she repents and changes her allegiance to Israel’s God that Joseph marries her.
Judea versus Judaism: Between 1 and 2 Maccabees
Judea versus Judaism: Between 1 and 2 Maccabees
Ancient tensions between Judaism and the Jewish state can be seen by comparing 1 Maccabees, a book that serves the interest of the Hasmonean dynasty, and 2 Maccabees, a work of the diaspora whose focus is on Judaism.
Jacob’s Struggle at Jabbok: The Limits of Strategy
Jacob’s Struggle at Jabbok: The Limits of Strategy
Jacob makes a series of strategic preparations in anticipation of meeting his estranged brother Esau. Instead of the expected confrontation, we get a totally unexpected, unanticipated, and unprepared for wrestling between Jacob and a mysterious stranger at the ford of Jabbok. By juxtaposing these two accounts, the narrative invites us to think about both the human impulse to control and its limitations.