Latest Essays
Did Jacob and Esau Reconcile?
Did Jacob and Esau Reconcile?
Upon meeting again after twenty years, Esau approaches his brother with a buoyant spirit and a warm embrace. Jacob, however, is formal and submissive. Why doesn’t he reciprocate Esau’s overtures?
Where Do Isaac and Rebecca Live When Jacob Leaves Home?
Where Do Isaac and Rebecca Live When Jacob Leaves Home?
Isaac and Rebecca live in Beersheba (Gen 26:23), Beer-lahai-roi (Gen 25:11) and Kiryat-arba (Gen 35:27). When Jacob sets off to Laban’s house, where is he leaving from?
Bride-Price: The Story of Jacob’s Marriage to Rachel and Leah
Bride-Price: The Story of Jacob’s Marriage to Rachel and Leah
To marry a woman, a man had to first pay her father a מֹהַר (mohar), “bride-price.” Although Laban allows Jacob to marry Rachel before working off his debt, she only has her first child at the end of the seven-year period.
Hunting: How It Became Un-Jewish
Hunting: How It Became Un-Jewish
In the Torah, Nimrod and Esau are hunters, Isaac enjoys game, and the legal collections take it for granted that hunting for food is common and permissible. Once Judaism decided that even wild animals must be ritually slaughtered, the Jewish attitude towards hunting took a sharp negative turn.
The Denigration of Esau
The Denigration of Esau
Why does Esau in Jewish tradition come to be known as עשו הרשע “Esau the Wicked”? The answer has to do with the history of Judea’s relationship with Esau’s eponymous descendants, the Edomites, and the connection Jews made between them, Rome, and Christianity. The negative view of Esau is expressed nowhere more forcefully than in Rashi’s commentary.
Bathsheba the Kingmaker
Bathsheba the Kingmaker
Bathsheba first appears as the object of David’s lust, then as the mother of Solomon, who pleads with the king to make her son his heir. And yet, a close look at her actions shows her to be someone with agency, able to manipulate her husband and even her son to ensure Solomon’s safety and rule.
Abraham Visits Ishmael and His Wives: Between Jewish and Islamic Tradition
Abraham Visits Ishmael and His Wives: Between Jewish and Islamic Tradition
Abraham banishes Ishmael as a lad, and the break between them seems final. To reconcile father and son, Jewish and Islamic traditions tell a story about Abraham going to visit Ishmael and meet his wives. Despite being similar, the two stories are used for different purposes.
Abraham and Sarah in Egypt: A Story Composed to Prefigure the Exodus
Abraham and Sarah in Egypt: A Story Composed to Prefigure the Exodus
The sister-wife story of Abraham and Sarah in Egypt reworks the sister-wife story of Isaac and Rebekah in Gerar. The passage is an intertextual bricolage, composed to have Abraham, the paradigmatic “first Israelite,” personally experience the nation's core redemptive event.
Language Is Baffling – The Story of the Tower of Babel
Language Is Baffling – The Story of the Tower of Babel
The Tower of Babel story (Genesis 11:1-9) is not only about the downfall of Babylon or the origin of languages. It is a reflection on how languages work differently, on the limitations of one language to convey the sense of another, and the insufficiency inherent in translation.
The Mesopotamian Origin of the Biblical Flood Story
The Mesopotamian Origin of the Biblical Flood Story
In the Gilgamesh epic, Utanapishti tells Gilgamesh the story of the great flood and how he survived it. Scholars have often held that this story lies behind the biblical account of Noah and the flood. However, a good case can be made that an even more ancient tale, the Atrahasis epic, on which the flood story in Gilgamesh draws, is the source of the biblical flood story.
Why Did Cain Kill Abel?
Why Did Cain Kill Abel?
God rejects Cain’s sacrifice while accepting Abel’s, then in the next scene, Cain kills his brother. Does this mean that Cain killed Abel out of jealousy, or could other factors have been present? Ancient interpreters explore many possible motivations, from the simple to the bizarre.
Did God Originally Intend the World to Be Vegetarian?
Did God Originally Intend the World to Be Vegetarian?
In the creation story, God tells humans to eat plants. Only after the flood, does God permit them to eat animals. Interpreters have understood this to mean that vegetarianism was God’s original plan for humanity. Gersonides found the claim that God changed His mind scandalous, but this is more about countering Christian claims than the simple meaning of the text.
The Torah Begins with Creation to Defend Israel’s Right to the Land?
The Torah Begins with Creation to Defend Israel’s Right to the Land?
The theme of a divine creator’s right to assign territory to his people is pervasive in the Bible and ancient Near Eastern literature. Perhaps the rabbinic midrash which suggests that the Torah begins with creation to defend Israel against the accusation they stole the land of Canaan were onto something.
Demigods and the Birth of Noah
Demigods and the Birth of Noah
The Sons of Elohim sleeping with women and producing demigods (Genesis 6:1-4) is sandwiched between the birth of Noah and the flood. This juxtaposition of passages prompted 1 Enoch and Genesis Apocryphon to question whether Lamech was Noah's father or whether Noah was a demigod.
YHWH Is Enthroned at Gad’s Temple: The Site of Moses’ Tomb
YHWH Is Enthroned at Gad’s Temple: The Site of Moses’ Tomb
YHWH comes from the south to be enthroned by the tribes of Israel in Ashdot-hapisgah (Deuteronomy 33:2), a later name for the city of Nebo. The Mesha Stele documents the presence of a YHWH worship site, whose hieros logos is tied to the tomb of Moses, the “plot of the lawgiver” (v. 21) located in the territory of Gad.
The Two Blessings of the Twelve Tribes: Varying Perspectives, Similar Function
The Two Blessings of the Twelve Tribes: Varying Perspectives, Similar Function
The Torah frames two different poetic descriptions of the tribes as the deathbed blessings of Jacob and Moses, pivotal points in Israel's history. Nevertheless, these poems express varying perspectives on the relative importance of the tribes and were once likely independent collections.
Kohelet: An Israelite Form of Meditation
Kohelet: An Israelite Form of Meditation
Ecclesiastes is a cynical reflection on life’s futility. The constant sonorous repetition, visualizations, and references to breath serve as a sustained meditation to help free the reader’s soul from the agonizing struggle of life.
Yom Kippur: Afflicted but Angelic
Yom Kippur: Afflicted but Angelic
Self-affliction and fasting heightens awareness of our bodies; at the same time, it helps us to transcend our immanent selves. This tension was embraced by the 6th century poet Yannai in his qerova, who beseaches God to forgive Israel both out of pity for their wretchedness and on account of their resemblance to angels.
The Binding of Isaac, a Sacred Legend for the Jerusalem Temple
The Binding of Isaac, a Sacred Legend for the Jerusalem Temple
The Akedah (binding of Isaac) takes place on a mountain in the obscure land of Moriah. When a Judahite scribe later revised the story to have the angel of YHWH stop Abraham from killing his son, he connected Moriah with the Jerusalem Temple, thereby giving it a new hieros logos—a sacred founding legend, to compete with the northern worship site Beth-El.
Moses Pleads with God: Why Must I Die?
Moses Pleads with God: Why Must I Die?
Moses, on his last day, recites two poems—the Song of Moses and Blessing of Moses (Deut 32, 33). In this spirit, the eighth century Tiberian Pinchas Hakohen poetically describes Moses excusing his sins and offering alternatives to his death.
Scapegoat: The Origins of the Crimson Thread
Scapegoat: The Origins of the Crimson Thread
During the Second Temple period, the scapegoat was tied with a crimson thread. While the Torah requires a crimson thread as part of the purification ritual for tzaraʿat (skin disease), it does not mention it by the scapegoat. Nevertheless, parallel practices found in 2nd millennium B.C.E. Hittite texts of Luwian origin imply that the use of a crimson thread is not a late innovation but an ancient part of the rite.