Latest Essays
Finding Meaning in Incoherence: The Joseph Story Beyond Source Criticism
Finding Meaning in Incoherence: The Joseph Story Beyond Source Criticism
The story of Joseph is replete with narrative contradictions. Source criticism has long dominated the quest for textual coherence. But how are we to make sense of the integrated text?
Mariamme, the Last Hasmonean Princess
Mariamme, the Last Hasmonean Princess
The Hasmonean princess Mariamme is best known today for her tempestuous and doomed marriage to Herod the Great. During her lifetime, however, Mariamme was a Jewish celebrity in her own right. As a descendant of the Hasmonean family on both her maternal and paternal sides, Mariamme was the closest thing that Jews had to royalty.
Joseph and the Famine: The Story’s Origins in Egyptian History
Joseph and the Famine: The Story’s Origins in Egyptian History
During the reign of Pharaoh Siptah, Egypt had a powerful vizier from the Levant named Baya, who dominated even the Pharaoh. Archaeological records and climatological studies show that this was right in the middle of a lengthy famine that affected the entire Mediterranean.
Channah, Daughter of Mattathias: Instigator of the Maccabean Rebellion
Channah, Daughter of Mattathias: Instigator of the Maccabean Rebellion
1 Maccabees recounts how Mattathias instigated a rebellion against the Greeks out of zealotry against Jewish idolatry. Later midrashim tell how Mattathias’ daughter Channah goaded her father and brothers into fighting the Greeks to protect her from being raped by the local governor.
The Jewish Origins of the Christmas Story
The Jewish Origins of the Christmas Story
The narratives of Jesus’ conception and birth as presented in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke echo Jewish history and cite Jewish prophecy. In that sense, the Christmas story can be said to have Jewish origins.
A Women’s Voice in the Psalter: A New Understanding of Psalm 113
A Women’s Voice in the Psalter: A New Understanding of Psalm 113
The liturgical compilation Hallel (“praise”) opens with Psalm 113. Originally, this psalm was recited by women who gave birth after being barren, reminiscent of the song of Channah in 1 Samuel 2. A close look, however, suggests that its opening verses are a later supplement meant to introduce the larger Hallel collection.
If Jacob Is Returning to Canaan, Why Send Messengers to Esau in Seir?
If Jacob Is Returning to Canaan, Why Send Messengers to Esau in Seir?
Traditional commentators have grappled with why Jacob risks Esau’s wrath by sending him a message that he is on his way. Understanding the history of the text shows that in an older version of this story, Jacob had no choice: he was heading to his parents’ home in the Seir region.
Edomite Kings List: Is It Post-Mosaic?
Edomite Kings List: Is It Post-Mosaic?
Genesis 36:31 introduces a list of kings who ruled “before a king ruled in Israel,” ostensibly a reference to Saul. Traditional commentators, committed to the Mosaic authorship of the Torah, have long struggled to reinterpret this phrase against its plain meaning, though some accepted its implications.
Hosea’s Characterization of Jacob
Hosea’s Characterization of Jacob
As part of a complaint by God against Israel and Judah, Hosea 12 mentions several stories about Jacob, intended to serve as a model for behavior. But is Jacob a good or bad role model?
Rashi on the Torah: What Kind of Commentary Is It?
Rashi on the Torah: What Kind of Commentary Is It?
Rashi (Rabbi Solomon b. Isaac) wrote the most famous Jewish Bible commentary in history. Over 900 years later, scholars still argue about the nature of the commentary: Is it an attempt to explain peshat, the plain meaning of the biblical text, or is it an anthology of midrash?
Ishmael, King of the Arabs
Ishmael, King of the Arabs
Throughout the Bible, “Ishmaelite” is a collective term for nomads living in the wilderness, east of Canaan. Why is their eponymous ancestor Ishmael, Abraham’s exiled son, presented as living in the wilderness region near Egypt, west of Canaan? The answer can be found in the political realities of Persian period Yehud.
Reconciling Hagar and Sarah: Feminist Midrash and National Conflict
Reconciling Hagar and Sarah: Feminist Midrash and National Conflict
Hagar and Sarah are the matriarchs of the Arabs and the Jews in Jewish and Muslim interpretation. In the Bible, the feud between the two women is never mended, but Jewish and Muslim feminist readers have used midrash-style poetry to rewrite the ending of their story, in hope of reconciling the contemporary conflict between their putative descendants.
“Take Your Only Son Isaac” – What Happened to Ishmael?
“Take Your Only Son Isaac” – What Happened to Ishmael?
In the introductory verses of the Akedah (Binding of Isaac), God refers to Isaac as Abraham’s only son, ignoring the existence of Ishmael. Ishmael’s absence has bothered even the earliest readers of the text, but a documentary approach obviates the problem. The key is understanding the relationship between Abraham and Hagar.
Abraham and Lot’s Bedouin-Style Hospitality
Abraham and Lot’s Bedouin-Style Hospitality
Bedouin culture goes back 4,500 years. Owing to the unchangeability of desert conditions, this culture remained largely unchanged and is recognizable in the Bible. The stories of Abraham and Lot hosting angels illustrate one of the most renowned and cherished social values in Bedouin society, namely the practice of hospitality.
What Was Life like in Biblical Times?
What Was Life like in Biblical Times?
The Bible focuses on questions of religion and politics, overwhelmingly emphasizing city life at the expense of rural life. Archaeology, in contrast, can help us to better understand the life of most Israelites, who did not live in cities, and supplies a better understanding of such mundane questions as what they did for a living and what they ate.
Ur Kasdim: Where Is Abraham’s Birthplace?
Ur Kasdim: Where Is Abraham’s Birthplace?
Ur-Kasdim is generally identified with the great Sumerian city of Ur in southern Iraq. And yet, a look at the geography in Genesis 11 points to a different location much farther north.
The Flood Changes God Not Humanity
The Flood Changes God Not Humanity
When YHWH sees the evil ways of humanity, he initially decides to wipe them out, but then determines to save Noah’s family. After the flood and Noah’s sacrifice, YHWH promises that He will never again destroy the earth and all life, even though humanity will continue in its evil ways. Thus, the story chronicles not the moral and emotional advancement of humanity but of YHWH.
Noah, Hero of the Great Primeval Famine
Noah, Hero of the Great Primeval Famine
Noah’s name expresses his father’s hope that Noah will bring comfort from the pain of the curse of the land, and before he plants his vineyard, he is called “a man of the land” (איש האדמה). These and other verses point to an older core narrative which spoke not of a flood but of a primeval famine that Noah brings to an end.
Feminist Biblical Interpretation: History and Goals
Feminist Biblical Interpretation: History and Goals
Feminist biblical interpretation is more than simply paying attention to texts about women. It is also a means of achieving a more accurate understanding of life in ancient Israel and of the composition of the Bible.
The Genesis of Time
The Genesis of Time
The simple meaning of Genesis 1–2:4 is that God created the world out of primordial elements. And yet, one important new initiative was the construction of time, embracing the day, the month, the year, and the week. The week, however, does not depend on a cosmic phenomenon but served to introduce the concept of a people holy to a creator God.
Creation from Primordial Matter: Did Rashi Read Plato’s Timaeus?
Creation from Primordial Matter: Did Rashi Read Plato’s Timaeus?
Rashi interprets the opening verses of the creation story as describing God’s use of primordial substances to form the world. This idea appears in various forms in rabbinic literature but some of Rashi’s particular notions are only found in Plato’s Timaeus. Could this be one of Rashi’s sources?
Moses’ Blessing Through the Eyes of a Karaite Poet and Commentator
Moses’ Blessing Through the Eyes of a Karaite Poet and Commentator
Aaron ben Joseph (ca. 1250–1320), a Karaite exegete from Constantinople, wrote poetry for each Torah reading. His poem for Moses’ blessing of the tribes, in conjunction with his prose commentary, Sēfer ha-miḇḥār, offer a glimpse into the world of Byzantine Karaite biblical interpretation.
Shemini Atzeret: Redacting a Missing Festival into Solomon’s Temple Dedication
Shemini Atzeret: Redacting a Missing Festival into Solomon’s Temple Dedication
Deuteronomy does not have the festival of Shemini Atzeret (“the eighth day of assembly”), while Leviticus and Numbers do. This difference can help explain why the festival is absent in the story of Solomon’s dedication of the Temple in Kings but appears in the version of this same story in Chronicles.
Viewing the Promised Land, Moses Looks Even at the Transjordan
Viewing the Promised Land, Moses Looks Even at the Transjordan
Several biblical passages assume that the promised land is limited to Canaan, i.e., the Cisjordan. But this view was not universally shared. Scribes who saw the Transjordan as part and parcel of it adjusted multiple passages in Deuteronomy, including the third and final take of Moses’s death, to make this episode fit their idea about the extent of the land.
Sukkot, the Festival of Future Redemption for Jews and Gentiles
Sukkot, the Festival of Future Redemption for Jews and Gentiles
The book of Zechariah envisions a time when all the nations will come to the Temple in Jerusalem on Sukkot. The festival’s eschatological significance in the Second Temple period is hinted at in the book of Enoch, in the book of Revelation, and on coins minted during the great rebellion and the Bar Kochba rebellion.