Latest Essays
From the Primordial Light to Shabbat: How Creation Became Seven Days
From the Primordial Light to Shabbat: How Creation Became Seven Days
The creation account was divided in the post-exilic period into six days to provide an etiology for Shabbat. This necessitated creating light on day one to distinguish between day and night. In turn, it required assigning significance to the sun and moon on day four beyond their role as sources of light.
Genesis’ Two Creation Accounts Compiled and Interpreted as One
Genesis’ Two Creation Accounts Compiled and Interpreted as One
Already the editors of the Torah recognized the discrepancies between the two creation stories in Genesis 1 and 2–3 and made redactional alignments so the two stories would read better next to each other. Such awareness is also evident among the earliest interpreters of the Bible, including the book of Jubilees and the Septuagint.
Five Alternatives to the Etrog
Five Alternatives to the Etrog
The etrog has been identified as the Torah’s פְּרִי עֵץ הָדָר, “fruit of trees of beauty” (Leviticus 23:40), since the Second Temple period. Here are five other interpretations of this verse.
Is the Soul Immortal?
Is the Soul Immortal?
Is there a difference between human and animal souls? Is there a hereafter at all, and if so, does righteousness or wickedness affect it? These questions, discussed by Greek philosophers, inspired the Judean discourse of the Hellenistic period. Ecclesiastes on one side, 1 Enoch and the Wisdom of Solomon on the other.
The Etrog: Fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil
The Etrog: Fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil
The etrog tree, according to midrash, fulfilled God’s command in creation, such that the tree tasted like its fruit. It was also the tree of Knowledge from which Eve ate. By taking the etrog on Sukkot along with the other species, we atone for this primordial sin.
Is Kohelet’s Wisdom Vanity of Vanities?
Is Kohelet’s Wisdom Vanity of Vanities?
In his idealistic youth, Shadal argued in favor of the earlier rabbis’ contention that Kohelet is heretical and should have been suppressed. With age, he came to appreciate it as a lesson about the search for happiness and meaning in life.
Abraham’s Prayer—and Ours: A Yom Kippur Illustration
Abraham’s Prayer—and Ours: A Yom Kippur Illustration
In a Yom Kippur afternoon (minhah) liturgical poem (piyyut) about Abraham, the artist of the 13th century Leipzig Mahzor chooses a scene of Abraham standing up to Nimrod and God saving him from death by fire.
Crimson to White: Yom Kippur’s Miraculous Thread
Crimson to White: Yom Kippur’s Miraculous Thread
In the Second Temple period, a crimson thread was placed on the horn of the Yom Kippur scapegoat and tied to a stone in the desert before the goat was pushed off the cliff. After the verse “If your sins be as scarlet they shall be as white as snow” (Isaiah 1:18) was used as a prooftext for this non-biblical practice, the Talmud envisaged a magical ritual in which a second crimson thread would turn white on Yom Kippur to signal God’s acceptance of the people’s repentance.
Jonah Struggles with God’s Compassion
Jonah Struggles with God’s Compassion
Jonah is resentful when God is ready to forgive the wicked city of Nineveh, and his book ends with God trying to change Jonah’s perspective. Whether or not God was successful, on Yom Kippur we read the words of Micah (7:18–20) as if Jonah finally accepts God’s compassionate nature.
How YHWH Became King of the Universe
How YHWH Became King of the Universe
Israel’s deity becomes a universal God and the political power behind human affairs. This is just one of seven historical shifts in how the Bible conceives of “theocracy,” divine political power.
Enuma Elish: Babylonia’s Creation Myth and the Enthronement of Marduk
Enuma Elish: Babylonia’s Creation Myth and the Enthronement of Marduk
The new year and Akitu festivals in Babylonia were celebrated in the spring, during which the high priest of Marduk’s Esagil temple would read the Babylonian creation story, Enuma Elish. This narrative tells how the young god Marduk became king of the gods by saving them from Tiamat and her army of monsters.
ʾEm: An Ancient Honorific Title for Women
ʾEm: An Ancient Honorific Title for Women
The title ʾem, “mother,” is found in a synagogue inscription, and is used in the Talmud to refer to Abaye’s foster mother. ʾEm is likely also used as a title when it is applied to biblical Eve, Deborah, and the wise woman of Abel of Beth-maacah. It reflects their honored position, not their role as child-bearing women.
Deuteronomy: Rewritten to Reflect on the Exile and Future Redemption
Deuteronomy: Rewritten to Reflect on the Exile and Future Redemption
Revised in the post-exilic period in the voice of Moses, Deuteronomy describes Judah’s destruction and exile to a foreign land כַּיּוֹם הַזֶּה “as it is still the case” (Deuteronomy 29:27), but reassures the people that, at the end of days, Israel will be reconciled with YHWH, who will circumcise their hearts to ensure their permanent loyalty.