Latest Essays
Judaism Transforms in the Diaspora During the Second Temple Period
Judaism Transforms in the Diaspora During the Second Temple Period
Even before the destruction of the Temple in 70 C.E., the Jews of the Greco-Roman Diaspora successfully created Judaic systems that provided them with identity, purpose, new ways of thinking, and alternative points of access to the divine, independent of the Temple rituals in far-off Jerusalem.
Daughter Zion, Jerusalem Personified
Daughter Zion, Jerusalem Personified
We first meet Bat Tzion as YHWH’s defiant virgin daughter in Isaiah’s prophecy against the Assyrian king Sennacherib. The metaphor turns dark when Jerusalem is ravaged by the Babylonians.
Isaiah’s Warning: Piety without Justice Leads to the Fall of Jerusalem
Isaiah’s Warning: Piety without Justice Leads to the Fall of Jerusalem
“What need have I of all your sacrifices?” says YHWH. “Devote yourselves to justice; aid the wronged. Uphold the rights of the orphan; defend the cause of the widow” (Isaiah 1:11, 17). By placing a reminiscence of the Assyrian invasion of Judah right before this rebuke (1:7–8), the opening chapter of Isaiah sends the message that Judah can survive only when society takes care of its most vulnerable members.
Psalms for Our Times: Rashi Counters Christological Readings
Psalms for Our Times: Rashi Counters Christological Readings
In medieval Latin Christendom, the Psalms were highly beloved, with commentators interpreting them as prophecies about Christ and the Church. Aware of this prevailing interpretation, Rashi often deviates from the plain meaning of the text to read the Psalms as a reflection of the Jewish people’s experience and suffering in his own time.
Zelophehad’s Daughters Challenge the Law and Moses is Speechless
Zelophehad’s Daughters Challenge the Law and Moses is Speechless
Mahlah, Noah, Hoglah, Milcah, and Tirzah skillfully structure their petition to inherit land not by confronting the patriarchy, but by couching their request as an attempt to preserve their father’s name.
Tiberius Alexander: The Jewish General Who Destroyed Jerusalem
Tiberius Alexander: The Jewish General Who Destroyed Jerusalem
The most powerful Jew in antiquity, Tiberius Julius Alexander, served as procurator of Judea, governor of Egypt, and general in the Roman army. Without his support, Vespasian wouldn’t have become emperor, and his son Titus wouldn’t have led the siege of Jerusalem in 70 C.E. Though his uncle Philo and Josephus Flavius may have disapproved of some of his choices, Tiberius acted out of loyalty to Rome, not apostasy from Judaism.
Rashi’s Revolutionary Commentary Deviates from Midrash, Why?
Rashi’s Revolutionary Commentary Deviates from Midrash, Why?
Saint Bruno the Carthusian’s (1030–1101) method of biblical interpretation took literary structure and grammar into consideration in applying select Christological readings. Rashi, a younger contemporary, created a similar methodology by incorporating only midrashim that conform to peshuto shel miqra, “the plain sense of Scripture.” Was this Rashi’s response to the threat of Bruno’s influential work?
Judah’s Restoration: The Meaning of Ezekiel’s Vision of the Dry Bones
Judah’s Restoration: The Meaning of Ezekiel’s Vision of the Dry Bones
Ezekiel’s vision of the dry bones did not assume personal resurrection, a belief that entered Judaism in a later period. In its original context, the imagery of bones rearticulating and coming back to life draws upon the ancient burial practices of Judahite family tombs, offering a message of hope to the exiles in Babylon that YHWH will return them to their land.
Moses Strikes the Rock: His Sin Depends on Your Worldview
Moses Strikes the Rock: His Sin Depends on Your Worldview
Do miracles enhance faith? Rashi and Maimonides’ diametrically opposed positions on this question lead them to very different explanations for Moses’ sin. In between them is Ibn Ezra, who has a secret as to how miracles work and why Moses failed to perform his correctly. Avvat Nephesh, in the 14th century, rejects his predecessors’ explanations, and instead critiques Moses and Aaron’s passivity and lack of leadership; they waited for God to provide answers instead of taking initiative.
King Saul’s Downfall: Sight and Sound
King Saul’s Downfall: Sight and Sound
Saul’s failure to see and be seen when the Bible first introduces him signals his dismal prospects for a successful reign. Afraid of his soldiers, Saul listens to the wrong voices instead of YHWH.
Seila, Jephthah’s Daughter: A Sacrifice Like Isaac
Seila, Jephthah’s Daughter: A Sacrifice Like Isaac
Jephthah is compelled by a vow to sacrifice his daughter. Why is YHWH silent? Biblical Antiquities, ca. 1st century C.E., expands the story, giving Jephthah’s daughter a name and agency, and presenting her sacrifice as God’s punishment of Jephthah.
Biblical Pseudepigraphy: Are Falsely Attributed Biblical Texts Deceptive?
Biblical Pseudepigraphy: Are Falsely Attributed Biblical Texts Deceptive?
Is editing and writing in the guise of Moses, Solomon, or Daniel a legitimate literary convention, justified because of the author’s inspired state? Or is this practice a form of deceit, even forgery?
Israel’s Acceptance of the Covenant with YHWH: A Leap of Faith?
Israel’s Acceptance of the Covenant with YHWH: A Leap of Faith?
In the final blood ceremony formalizing the covenant at Sinai, how informed is Israel about the covenant’s details when they declare, na’aseh v’nishma, “let us do and [then] let us hear”?
Why Should the Scientific Study of the Bible Matter to Us?
Why Should the Scientific Study of the Bible Matter to Us?
In a 1927 speech at the inauguration of the Hebrew University’s Institute for Jewish Studies, Dr. Rabbi Felix Perles called on Jewish scholars to be on the forefront of critical Bible study. He compares this effort to how Maimonides, even though he was accused of abrogating the Torah, incorporated philosophical study into Judaism.
Yehezkel Kaufmann: An Academic Defender of Israel’s Religious Spirit
Yehezkel Kaufmann: An Academic Defender of Israel’s Religious Spirit
Israelite religion developed from a revolutionary idea: monotheism. And religion alone, not external factors, accounted for the remarkable preservation of Jewish national identity and consciousness in exile.
Ruth the Moabite Breaks a Pattern of Seduction
Ruth the Moabite Breaks a Pattern of Seduction
Lot’s older daughter gets him drunk and conceives the forefather of the Moabites. Tamar, Boaz’s foremother, conceals her identity from her father-in-law, Judah, to bear his child. Although Naomi encourages Ruth to seduce Boaz, Ruth reveals her identity to him, thereby correcting the legacy of her foremothers, including that of the daughters of the Moabites, who seduced the Israelites into apostasy.
Israel Was Instructed to Ascend Sinai, but Were Afraid of Revelation
Israel Was Instructed to Ascend Sinai, but Were Afraid of Revelation
“When the ram’s horn sounds a long blast, they shall go up on the mountain” (Exodus 19:13). The original intention was for all Israelites to be like priests, and experience YHWH’s revelation on the mountain top. But when YHWH descends and the horn sounds, the people recoil and remain below.
To Explain the First Crusade, Jews and Christians Turned to the Bible
To Explain the First Crusade, Jews and Christians Turned to the Bible
In 1096, the Crusaders captured the Holy Land from the Seljuk Turks. On the way, they stopped in Jewish communities throughout the Rhineland and massacred them in the name of Christ. Robert the Monk drew on the biblical song of the sea to highlight God’s support for the crusade, while the Chronicle of Solomon bar Simson used Psalms and Lamentations to articulate Jewish suffering and martyrdom.
Commentaries Were Written as Soon as Ancient Texts Were Composed
Commentaries Were Written as Soon as Ancient Texts Were Composed
The creative exegetical methods of reading texts both literally and non-literally are not limited to the interpretation of the Bible. Commentaries on ancient cuneiform literature from Mesopotamia have been found dating all the way back to the end of the 8th century B.C.E.
Michal’s Unrequited Love for David
Michal’s Unrequited Love for David
The story of Michal, King Saul’s daughter and David’s first wife—the only woman in the Bible described as being in love with a man—is framed by two window scenes. In the first, she is the spunky, loving bride who helps David escape his pursuers through her back window. In the second, embittered and depleted in spirit, she watches the triumphant David through the window with contempt. What happened in between?