Latest Essays
Die Schrift: A Non-Territorial Translation of “The Land”
Die Schrift: A Non-Territorial Translation of “The Land”
Martin Buber and Franz Rosenzweig's translation of the Bible strictly adheres to the text's wording and structure. The eminent thinkers sought to let German readers experience the resonance of the Bible's Hebrew and to capture its primordial meaning. Their rendition of Haazinu presents a provocative interpretation of the bond between God, Israel and its land as both universal and singular.
Yom Kippur’s Seder Avodah Begins with God’s Creation of the World
Yom Kippur’s Seder Avodah Begins with God’s Creation of the World
Arguably, the highlight of the prayer service on Yom Kippur is the Seder Avodah, a type of piyyut (liturgical hymn) that poetically reenacts in every detail the ritual service performed by the high priest on Yom Kippur in the Jerusalem Temple. But why do these poems begin with the creation story?
Did the Exodus Generation Die in the Wilderness or Enter Canaan?
Did the Exodus Generation Die in the Wilderness or Enter Canaan?
In the context of the Pentateuch, Deuteronomy is read as a continuation of Numbers, in which God decrees that the exodus generation must wander in the wilderness until they have all died, and that only their children may enter the land. Yet Deuteronomy’s core narrative presents Moses addressing the same Israelites who left Egypt and wandered forty years in the wilderness on the eve of their entry into the Promised Land.
When Did the Bible Become Monotheistic?
When Did the Bible Become Monotheistic?
It is often said that monotheism is one of Judaism’s greatest contributions to Western culture; however, it is far from clear that the Hebrew Bible is monotheistic. What is monotheism and when did it first develop?
Abraham Passes the Test of the Akedah But Fails as a Father
Abraham Passes the Test of the Akedah But Fails as a Father
The story of the Akedah appears to present Abraham’s actions in a uniformly positive light. However, Isaac’s absence at the end of the story, and Sarah’s death immediately afterwards, suggested to some traditional and modern commentators a criticism of Abraham.
Rachel Weeps in Ramah: Of All the Patriarchs, God Listens Only to Her
Rachel Weeps in Ramah: Of All the Patriarchs, God Listens Only to Her
Rachel weeps over her exiled descendants and God hears her plea (Jeremiah 31:14–16). Expanding on this passage, the rabbis in Midrash Eichah Rabbah envision Jeremiah awakening the patriarchs and Moses to plead with God to have mercy on Israel. Upon their failure to move God, the matriarch Rachel intervenes successfully.
Reciting Ready-Made Prayers in Biblical Times and Today
Reciting Ready-Made Prayers in Biblical Times and Today
The haftarah (prophetic reading) for the first day of Rosh Hashanah features Channah's two prayers. In the second prayer, she thanks God for the birth of Samuel by reciting a ready made royal hymn about defeating one's enemies, hardly relevant to her situation. Why does the Bible choose such a prayer and how might this help us better understand prayer in the context of the contemporary Rosh Hashanah?
Sheger, Ashtoret and Ashtor – The Patron Gods of Transjordanian Shepherds
Sheger, Ashtoret and Ashtor – The Patron Gods of Transjordanian Shepherds
Deuteronomy uses unusual parallel terms “the shegar of your herd and the ashtorot of your flock” to describe the offspring of livestock. These are names of the ancient West Semitic fertility goddess known as Ashtoret or by her less familiar bi-name Sheger. Her consort is (sometimes) the god Ashtor. What do we know about these deities and what do they have to do with livestock?
How Jewish Was Herod?
How Jewish Was Herod?
Despite the negative evaluations of Herod found in traditional Jewish sources, archaeological evidence suggests that, with some notable exceptions, Herod viewed himself as connected to the Jewish religion and made efforts to adhere to its laws, even in his personal lifestyle.
Do Biblical Laws Reflect a Tribal Society?
Do Biblical Laws Reflect a Tribal Society?
Was Israel ever a tribal society? Although some scholars accept the Bible’s depiction of Israel’s pre-monarchic society as a confederation of tribes, others have dismissed this as ahistorical. Can a study of biblical law help us resolve this question?
Megiddo’s Stables: Trading Egyptian Horses to the Assyrian Empire
Megiddo’s Stables: Trading Egyptian Horses to the Assyrian Empire
Megiddo was a major Israelite city that was transformed into a horse training center, with large stables and arenas where the palaces once stood. Scholars once attributed these stables to Solomon, but they are actually from the 8th century B.C.E., built by Jeroboam II to provide war horses to the Assyrian Empire.
The Place(s) that YHWH will Choose: Ebal, Shiloh, and Jerusalem
The Place(s) that YHWH will Choose: Ebal, Shiloh, and Jerusalem
Jews have long understood “the place that YHWH will choose” to mean Mount Zion in Jerusalem, while Samaritans have interpreted it as Mount Gerizim near Shechem. Archaeology and redaction criticism converge on a compromise solution: it refers to a series of places, one place at a time.
Manasseh’s Genealogies: Why They Change Between Numbers, Joshua, and Chronicles
Manasseh’s Genealogies: Why They Change Between Numbers, Joshua, and Chronicles
The genealogy of the tribe of Manasseh appears in Numbers 26 and again in Joshua 17 with slight differences. It appears a third time, in 1 Chronicles 7, wholly reconceived, highlighting how certain biblical genealogies represent tribal kinship patterns that shift over time.
Two Versions of the Decalogue: Ibn Ezra’s Non-Explanation
Two Versions of the Decalogue: Ibn Ezra’s Non-Explanation
Ibn Ezra gives a surprising non-explanation for why Deuteronomy’s version of the Decalogue differs from that of Exodus: Is it really such a problem if Moses changed the words a little as long as he got the point right?
The Many Recensions of the Ten Commandments
The Many Recensions of the Ten Commandments
Beyond the two versions of the Decalogue in Exodus and Deuteronomy, and the usual differences between MT, SP, and LXX, in Second Temple times, liturgical texts in Qumran (4QDeutn) and Egypt (Nash Papyrus), Greek references in the New Testament and Philo, and even tefillin parchments, reflect slightly different recensions of the text.
Assyrian Deportation and Resettlement: The Story of Samaria
Assyrian Deportation and Resettlement: The Story of Samaria
In 722 B.C.E., Assyria conquered the kingdom of Israel, and deported many of the residents of Samaria and its surroundings to other Assyrian provinces, and brought deportees from other conquered territories to Samaria to take their place. Excavations at Tel Hadid, near Lod in Israel, have unearthed material remains that contribute to our understanding of these transformative years.
Reconstructing the Features of Solomon’s Temple
Reconstructing the Features of Solomon’s Temple
A small shrine model, found in an archaeological excavation of the 10th century B.C.E. city at Khirbet Qeiyafa, together with a 9th century B.C.E. Temple excavated at Motza, help us better understand the Temple of Solomon, known only from the biblical text.
The Daughters of Zelophehad: A Historical-Geographical Approach
The Daughters of Zelophehad: A Historical-Geographical Approach
The Samaria ostraca and a close look at biblical verses help us locate Mahlah, Noa, Hoglah, Milkah, and Tirzah, in the territory of Manasseh.
The Settlement of Reuben and Gad: A Rhetorical Case for Transjordan as Part of the Promised Land
The Settlement of Reuben and Gad: A Rhetorical Case for Transjordan as Part of the Promised Land
Moses misunderstands the request of the Gadites and Reubenites to settle in the Transjordan as a result of unwillingness to participate in the conquest of Canaan with the rest of the Israelites. Once he realizes that they do mean to fight, he accepts their request. The author of Numbers 32 creates a rhetorically rich argument that the Transjordan is part of the Promised Land—but not everyone was buying what this author was selling.
Dibon-Gad Between the Torah and the Mesha Stele
Dibon-Gad Between the Torah and the Mesha Stele
In the southern Transjordanian Mishor (plateau), an area that changed hands between Israelites and Moabites, there once lived two neighboring tribes, Gadites and Dibonites.
Sedition at Moab: Josephus’ Reading of the Phinehas Story
Sedition at Moab: Josephus’ Reading of the Phinehas Story
The Torah describes Phinehas as a zealot, who kills Zimri in an act of vigilante fervor, and is rewarded by God with eternal priesthood. Anticipating the rabbis’ discomfort with Phinehas’ vigilantism, Josephus transforms Phinehas into a military general and Zimri’s sin into a dangerous sedition requiring a military response.
The Account of Balaam’s Donkey: A Late Polemical Burlesque
The Account of Balaam’s Donkey: A Late Polemical Burlesque
Already in 1877, Marcus Kalisch, one of the first Jewish scholars to engage in the critical study of the Bible, noted that the story of Balaam’s donkey is a late insertion which contradicts the rest of the story, both narratively and ideologically. Indeed, in the main story, Balaam is a prophetic character to be respected, while the supplement lampoons him.
Balaam the Seer Is Recast as a Villain
Balaam the Seer Is Recast as a Villain
The oldest biblical sources see Balaam as a great seer, but as time goes on, biblical texts portray him in an increasingly negative light. The key to this shift lies in Deuteronomy’s attitude to Israel and gentiles.
Navigating the Torah’s Rough Narrative Terrain into the Land
Navigating the Torah’s Rough Narrative Terrain into the Land
The route the Israelites take through the Transjordan in Numbers 21 is choppy: They are in the Negev then suddenly they are back in the Transjordan; they are moving south and suddenly they are north; they are in western Moab then suddenly they are in the eastern desert. Though traditional commentators attempt to tease out an overall route, it seems more likely we are looking at a palimpsest that includes contradictory versions of the story.
Moses Strikes the Rock in Exodus and Numbers: One Story or Two?
Moses Strikes the Rock in Exodus and Numbers: One Story or Two?
In Numbers 20, when the Israelites are without water, God tells Moses to get water from a stone, which he does by striking it, and is punished. Yet in Exodus 17, Moses does the same thing and the story ends positively. What is the relationship between these two accounts? Remarkably, R. Joseph Bekhor Shor says that they are two accounts of the same story.