Latest Essays
Nadav and Avihu Diminish YHWH’s Glory at the Tabernacle’s Inauguration
Nadav and Avihu Diminish YHWH’s Glory at the Tabernacle’s Inauguration
To highlight how Israelite ritual is not meant to be a secret known only to the priests, the Tabernacle’s inauguration is conducted publicly, before all the people, including rituals usually carried out in the sanctum. Herein lies the sin of Nadav and Avihu: offering incense before YHWH in the privacy of the sanctum.
The Book of Jonah: A Parody of the Northern Prophet Jonah Son of Amittai
The Book of Jonah: A Parody of the Northern Prophet Jonah Son of Amittai
The post-exilic book of Jonah opposes the chest-thumping that was prevalent during the northern kingdom’s resurgence under Jeroboam II, as displayed by the historical Jonah of Gath-hepher (2 Kings 14:25). It insists that YHWH is a universal god and that Israel must reconcile itself to living in a world where all penitents, regardless of nationality, are pardoned.
The Cause of Nadav and Avihu’s Death: Incense Smoke?
The Cause of Nadav and Avihu’s Death: Incense Smoke?
Immediately after the death of two of Aaron’s sons, Nadav and Avihu, YHWH warns Aaron that priests are prohibited from consuming wine before serving in the Tabernacle. Is their mysterious death the result of some form of intoxication?
Persia’s Achaemenid Dynasty—If You Read the Bible Without History
Persia’s Achaemenid Dynasty—If You Read the Bible Without History
Ezra-Nehemiah mentions only four of the twelve kings who ruled the Persian empire: Cyrus, Darius, Xerxes, and Artaxerxes. The book of Daniel also speaks of four Persian kings, and adds a fictional Darius the Mede as their precursor. Historically, the Achaemenid period lasted 220 years, but using only the kings mentioned in the Bible, rabbinic texts reconstruct a 52-year Persian period.
The Story of Esther, Revised to Furnish Purim with a History
The Story of Esther, Revised to Furnish Purim with a History
Ahasuerus grants Haman permission to kill the Jews. Why, then, does Haman delay the attack for almost a year based on a lottery, and why, if the attack was to cover all 127 provinces, does he limit its scope to only one day?
Genesis and the Twilight of the Gods
Genesis and the Twilight of the Gods
The creation accounts, the Garden of Eden, the innovations and life spans of early humans, and the flood story are best understood as an Axial Age critique of polytheistic, mythical cosmology.
Mask and Masekhah: Are the English and Hebrew Terms Related?
Mask and Masekhah: Are the English and Hebrew Terms Related?
Partzufim, “faces,” is the original term for Purim masks. Modern Hebrew uses the biblical term masekhah instead, which sounds suspiciously like the English term “mask,” whose etymology is itself a riddle. Thus the mask succeeds in staying anonymous.
Dovid Steinberg’s Ultra-Orthodox Agenda
Dovid Steinberg’s Ultra-Orthodox Agenda
TheTorah.com engages the Documentary and Supplementary Hypotheses, source, redaction, and textual criticism, and even offers moral critiques of Torah laws and narratives, but what is Steinberg really trying to accomplish?
Prostration to God and Humans—A Biblical Practice
Prostration to God and Humans—A Biblical Practice
Falling face-down on the ground, with hands and feet outstretched, was a common gesture of honor and respect in the Bible. Why is prostration only performed today on the High Holidays?
Building the Tabernacle in Your Mind
Building the Tabernacle in Your Mind
What is the actual size of the Tabernacle? How thick are the planks? How do the covers drape over the structure? These questions suggest that the biblical text was composed not to facilitate the physical construction of a three-dimensional structure but to engender visualization, much like the texts accompanying the construction of mandalas.
After the Golden Calf, Is the Covenant Renewed with a Ritual Decalogue?
After the Golden Calf, Is the Covenant Renewed with a Ritual Decalogue?
YHWH instructs Moses to carve a second set of tablets and come up the mountain (Exodus 34). YHWH then presents a set of laws, including: Don’t intermarry with the Canaanites; don’t make idols; and do observe Matzot, Shabbat, Shavuot, Ingathering, and Passover. What is the nature of this collection of laws?
Moses’ Name Is Erased from Tetzaveh
Moses’ Name Is Erased from Tetzaveh
Moses issues an ultimatum to God: “If you don’t forgive Israel, erase me from Your book” (Exodus 32:32). God forgives Israel but erases Moses from the Torah portion of Tetzaveh anyway because the curse of a Torah scholar always comes true. Here is the story of how this medieval midrash came about, and how it developed into the modern myth that Tetzaveh is the only portion after Moses’ birth that is missing his name.
The Priestly Garments: Recreating Them Just from the Text?
The Priestly Garments: Recreating Them Just from the Text?
The medieval commentators, most famously Rashi, tried to describe the ephod and the choshen by reconciling the various biblical accounts. Azariah dei Rossi (ca. 1511–ca. 1578) argues that such efforts are futile; only eyewitness reports are helpful.
Are Torah Rituals Just Literary Compositions? A Comparison with Namburbis
Are Torah Rituals Just Literary Compositions? A Comparison with Namburbis
Both namburbi anti-omen rituals (1st millennium B.C.E.) and priestly Torah rituals were preserved in collections in multiple versions that show evidence of intertextuality and innovation. Were these rituals meant to be performed?
YHWH, the God of Israel, Doesn’t Just Command Charity for the Poor
YHWH, the God of Israel, Doesn’t Just Command Charity for the Poor
Hellenistic religion didn’t require charity. In contrast, the biblical command for charity is founded not only on YHWH’s commitment to reward the generous, but on YHWH adopting the voice of the poor, a critical factor in the vibrancy of early Judaism and Christianity.
Did Ezra Reconstruct the Torah or Just Change the Script?
Did Ezra Reconstruct the Torah or Just Change the Script?
In the second century C.E., 4 Ezra and Irenaeus tell a story of how the Torah was burned by Nebuchadnezzar and reconstructed by Ezra through divine inspiration. Rabbinic texts know of this tradition, but in their version, Ezra’s contribution is changing the Torah into Aramaic writing, or even Aramaic language.
Baruch Hashem: Only Non-Israelites Bless God in the Torah
Baruch Hashem: Only Non-Israelites Bless God in the Torah
Noah, Melchizedek, Abraham’s servant, Laban, and Jethro all bless YHWH, but, as Rabbi Pappias notes in the Mekhilta, the Israelites don’t. Only later in the Bible do we find David and Solomon blessing YHWH, but so do Hiram King of Tyre and the Queen of Sheba.
Qatlanit: The “Killer-Wife”
Qatlanit: The “Killer-Wife”
Tamar, Judah’s daughter-in-law, is twice-widowed, but the Torah still expects Judah to allow his third son Shelah to marry her. In the Second Temple period book, Tobit marries his seven-times widowed cousin upon the advice of the angel Raphael. And yet, the Talmud prohibits marrying twice widowed women, for fear they are dangerous.
Control the Calendar, Control Judaism
Control the Calendar, Control Judaism
Calendrical disputes, which recurred frequently in ancient and medieval Jewish communities, created alternative dates for festivals such as Yom Kippur and Passover. Here, we look at four disputes and the different ways that communities navigated them.
Serach, Jacob’s Immortal Granddaughter
Serach, Jacob’s Immortal Granddaughter
Serach, daughter of Asher, is mentioned by name twice in the Torah—in the list of Jacob’s descendants who go down to Egypt and in the census in Numbers—without any details about her life. As a reward for breaking the news to Jacob that Joseph is still alive, the Midrash grants her immortality, gives her a key role during the exodus, and identifies her as the wise woman during King David’s reign.
Traumatized and Sleepless, the Psalmist Seeks Comfort in God’s Immanence
Traumatized and Sleepless, the Psalmist Seeks Comfort in God’s Immanence
In an existential crisis, the author of Psalm 77 is so incapacitated by his troubles that he struggles to speak. He attempts to bring to mind past memories of God’s kindness, but God has changed and is no longer manifest in his life. In an unexpected turn, the psalmist focuses on Israel’s memory of the Sea crossing at the Exodus. How does this meditation help him move from despair to hope?