Latest Essays
Does God Punish People Who Are Close to Him More Harshly?
Does God Punish People Who Are Close to Him More Harshly?
A midrash on the phrase venikdash bikhevodi, “and it shall be sanctified by my glory” (Exod 29:43) suggests that God is unusually strict when He punishes those who are close to Him. Rashbam strenuously objected to this popular midrash.
Walled Cities “from the Time of Joshua” Celebrate Shushan Purim – Why?
Walled Cities “from the Time of Joshua” Celebrate Shushan Purim – Why?
Hidden behind the strange rabbinic definition of walled cities is a polemical response to the notorious claim of Emperor Hadrian, who rebuilt Jerusalem as the pagan city Aelia Capitolina.
“My God, My God, Why Have You Forsaken Me?” — Jesus or Esther?
“My God, My God, Why Have You Forsaken Me?” — Jesus or Esther?
A midrash imagines Queen Esther reciting Psalm 22 the moment she was about to enter Ahasuerus' inner court. Are the rabbis responding to the Passion Narrative, in which Jesus, in his final moments, recites this lament on the cross?
Menorah, Its “Branches” and Their Cosmic Significance
Menorah, Its “Branches” and Their Cosmic Significance
Midrash Tanchuma relates how Moses didn’t understand God's instructions for how to construct the menorah. This highlights the complexity of the Torah’s instructions, which commentators from antiquity until today struggled to visualize. One approach, taken by Philo and Josephus, was to interpret the menorah symbolically.
Deathblows to a Pregnant Woman – What Restitution Was Required?
Deathblows to a Pregnant Woman – What Restitution Was Required?
When a man accidentally kills a pregnant woman in a brawl, Exodus requires him to pay “life for a life.” This is generally understood as either capital punishment or monetary repayment. Its legal formulation in context, however, suggests substitution, i.e., the offender has to hand over a woman from his own family.
39 Melachot of Shabbat: What Is the Function of This List?
39 Melachot of Shabbat: What Is the Function of This List?
In halakha, the 39 melachot of Mishnah Shabbat 7:2 functions as a comprehensive list of primary categories of forbidden labor. A closer look at the list in context, however, reveals that it was composed and added as a supplement, to clarify a detail in the previous mishnah.
Pre-Biblical Aaron, Miriam, and Moses
Pre-Biblical Aaron, Miriam, and Moses
In the Torah, Aaron, Miriam, and Moses are siblings; Aaron is the biological ancestor of all priests, Moses is the redeemer of Israel from Egypt, and Miriam, their sister, leads the Israelite women in song. But what can we reconstruct about who these ancient figures may have been?
Miriam’s Song of the Sea: A Women’s Victory Performance
Miriam’s Song of the Sea: A Women’s Victory Performance
Miriam and the Israelite women echo briefly the famous Song of the Sea sung earlier in Exodus 15… or do they? A closer examination reveals a more prominent role for Miriam and provides information about women as musical performers using song, dance, and drums in ancient Israel.
Composing the Song of Deborah: Empirical Models
Composing the Song of Deborah: Empirical Models
The Song of Deborah in Judges 5 is similar to both Arabic qaṣīdā poetry and ancient Egyptian epic poetry. How should we categorize it? Is it like the former, and composed orally by a bard, or like the latter, and composed by a royal scribe?
Hazor’s Standing Stones: What Do They Commemorate?
Hazor’s Standing Stones: What Do They Commemorate?
The Canaanite city of Hazor was destroyed in the Late Bronze Age. When the Israelites resettled the city in the Early Iron Age, they placed standing stones in three different places on the destroyed remains. What were these stones meant to signify?
Erev Rav: A Mixed Multitude of Meanings
Erev Rav: A Mixed Multitude of Meanings
When the Israelites left Egypt, they were accompanied by an ʿerev rav (Exodus 12:38). This obscure term has been interpreted in different ways throughout two millennia of Bible interpretation, both positively and negatively, and modern scholars still debate its exact meaning. The term survives in modern Jewish discourse as a slur against other Jews.
God Took Us Out of Egypt “Because of This”
God Took Us Out of Egypt “Because of This”
Traditional commentators offer various interpretations of the cryptic phrase בַּעֲבוּר זֶה in Exodus 13:8, generally translated “because of this” or “this is because.” But a well-known midrash from the Passover Haggadah holds the key to an entirely different translation which may indeed be the simple meaning of the text.
Questioning God’s Call: Moses Versus Gideon
Questioning God’s Call: Moses Versus Gideon
Moses and Gideon are each called upon to deliver Israel from its enemies, and each poses questions in response. And yet, a close comparison of the stories demonstrates a sharp contrast between the two characters; surprisingly, Gideon is more faithful than Moses.
Did Israel Always Have Twelve Tribes?
Did Israel Always Have Twelve Tribes?
The Bible presents Israel as having twelve tribes from both northern Israel and southern Judah. In older northern lists, however, the southern tribes do not appear, and the full list seems to have developed in Judah, after the destruction of Israel. Moreover, the idea that the tribes are descended from Jacob developed even later.
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?