Latest Essays
An Evolving Torah from an Evolving God
An Evolving Torah from an Evolving God
Process Theology posits that God is not a static Being but evolves along with the universe and human action. Our ancestors saw the divine light in the Torah, which we can reclaim by continuing reinterpretation.
A Testy YHWH
A Testy YHWH
YHWH continuously tests Israel in the wilderness with water, manna, and quail. When they fail, YHWH threatens to leave them and then punishes them with fire and plague. J's depiction of YHWH as an emotional deity is already reflected in the stories of Eden and the flood.
The Sotah Ritual: Mistrusting Women and Their Torah Study
The Sotah Ritual: Mistrusting Women and Their Torah Study
A male priest recites and inscribes a curse that the sotah is compelled to orally ingest and disclose the “truth” without listening to her words. Set in the wilderness period, and framed as a narrative passed down from mother to daughter, the short story of Iʿezer and Shifra by David Frischmann (a 20th century Hebrew fiction writer) highlights how, when she is accused of being a sotah, Shifra’s ignorance of Torah dooms her.
The Dark Side of the Book of Ruth: Sexual Harassment in the Field
The Dark Side of the Book of Ruth: Sexual Harassment in the Field
When Boaz sees Ruth gleaning in the field, and learns who she is, he offers her protection from his own workers’ predatory behavior, giving us a glimpse at what poor women, gleaning in the field, had to contend with.
The Book of Ruth: When Bad Things Happen to Good People
The Book of Ruth: When Bad Things Happen to Good People
With its sensitively portrayed characters and quotidian contexts, the story of Ruth and Naomi underscores questions about the good path in life, the choices we make, and especially the role of the deity who controls all. The narrative also touches upon a wide array of issues concerning gender, economic deprivation, the status of the migrant, and other matters.
Celebrating Marriage in Ancient Israel and the Origins of Sheva Berakhot
Celebrating Marriage in Ancient Israel and the Origins of Sheva Berakhot
Jacob and Samson celebrate their marriages for seven days. The earliest mention of marriage blessings, however, is in the apocryphal book of Tobit and the Dead Sea Scrolls, both from the late second Temple times. 3, 5, 6 and even 7 blessings circulated in Jewish society before the rabbis formalized the series as the “Sheva Berakhot” by early medieval times. Their recitation by guests during the celebratory week was promoted by the rabbis as occasions to engage in an “act of lovingkindness” (gemilut ḥasadim).
Forgotten Shavuot History: The 4 B.C.E Rebellion and the Therapeutae
Forgotten Shavuot History: The 4 B.C.E Rebellion and the Therapeutae
The Shavuot rebellion and consequent burning of the Temples’ porticoes during the time of Augustus Caesar made no impression on subsequent Jewish historiography, despite the later humiliating defeat of the rebellion’s suppressor, Varus, in the Battle of Teutoburg Forest. Another lost memory of Shavuot is the all-night vegetarian feast, prayer, and Torah study of the Therapeutae, an egalitarian ascetic Jewish community in Egypt.
Hosea’s Abusive Marital Metaphor Ends with Courtship, Not Violence
Hosea’s Abusive Marital Metaphor Ends with Courtship, Not Violence
Hosea’s depiction of the marital relations with a promiscuous woman, as a metaphor for YHWH’s relationship with Israel, is problematic in ancient and modern terms. The structure of Hosea 2, however, suggests that we have been overlooking the prophet’s message: YHWH rejects and repudiates violence in favor of gentle persuasion and courtship.
A Fetus Is Not an Independent Life: Abortion in the Talmud
A Fetus Is Not an Independent Life: Abortion in the Talmud
The rabbis distinguish four stages in the fetus’ development towards personhood. For the duration of the pregnancy, until the commencement of active labor, “a fetus is like its mother’s thigh” (עוּבָּר יֶרֶךְ אִמוֹ).
Is Logic Enough to Prohibit Father-Daughter Incest?
Is Logic Enough to Prohibit Father-Daughter Incest?
The absence of an explicit prohibition in the Torah against father-daughter incest led to a debate among the talmudic-era rabbis, and eventually among medieval Rabbanites and Karaites, about whether such a prohibition should be derived from a logical a fortiori (קל וחומר) argument or from a hermeneutic (גזרה שוה) one.
The Bible is Silent on Abortion, but Vocal about When Life Begins
The Bible is Silent on Abortion, but Vocal about When Life Begins
Egyptian and Mesopotamian abortion-inducing recipes attest to the practice of abortion in the ancient Near East. While the Middle Assyrian Laws prohibit the practice, the Torah offers no ruling. Nevertheless, throughout the Bible, expressions like נִשְׁמַת חַיִּים, “the breath of life” (Genesis 2:7), imply that life begins at first breath.
The Astragali of Abel Beth Maacah
The Astragali of Abel Beth Maacah
A hoard of 406 astragali (“knucklebones”), a bone that was used for divination in the ancient world, was discovered at Tel Abel Beth Maacah. Was this city, featured in the rebellion of Sheba against King David, a center for divination?
At 33, You Will Discover Azazel’s Secret
At 33, You Will Discover Azazel’s Secret
On Yom Kippur, one goat is sacrificed to YHWH and another is sent to Azazel in the wilderness. Who is Azazel? The 12th-century commentator Abraham ibn Ezra hints that the answer lies in reaching 33.
Tzaraʿat Purification: A Vestige of Demonic Exorcism
Tzaraʿat Purification: A Vestige of Demonic Exorcism
In Priestly law, impurity is stripped of its mythic origins in the demonic realm but still retains its dangerous, physical presence, and must be mitigated by specific acts of ritual cleansing and banishing, depending on the type of impurity. Purification from the skin disease tzaraʿat (Leviticus 13–14) offers the starkest example of such a ritual.
Leviticus’ More Priestly Version of the Dietary Laws
Leviticus’ More Priestly Version of the Dietary Laws
Deuteronomy and Leviticus drew on common Vorlage (source text) to develop their regulations about the consumption of land, marine, and winged creatures. While Deuteronomy only lightly modifies this Vorlage, the editors of Leviticus expanded the text in several stages to align it with Priestly ideology.
David’s Double Narration of YHWH’s Salvation: Psalm 18
David’s Double Narration of YHWH’s Salvation: Psalm 18
In verses 2–31, YHWH is a mythic warrior, with smoke coming from his nostrils, riding a cherub and wielding weapons of lightning and thunder against the enemy. In contrast, in verses 32–51, YHWH strengthens and equips the psalmist to fight his own battles. The combined psalm celebrates YHWH’s complex involvement in human affairs.
The Song of Songs: Five Relationships, One Love Story?
The Song of Songs: Five Relationships, One Love Story?
Royal lovers, a female goatherd and male shepherd, King Solomon and his bride, an urban relationship that ends violently, and a sister and her protective brothers. Is it possible to read these episodes as a single love story?
Song of Songs: Four Approaches to Love in Commentary and Music
Song of Songs: Four Approaches to Love in Commentary and Music
Known by the acronym Pardes, four approaches—peshat, the literal, remez, the philosophical-allegorical, derash, the midrashic-allegorical, and sod, the mystical—can be found not only in commentaries on the Song of Songs but also in a variety of musical settings.
It Came to Pass at Midnight—From the Amidah to the Passover Haggadah
It Came to Pass at Midnight—From the Amidah to the Passover Haggadah
The seventh part of the qedushta for the ancient triennial Torah reading וַיְהִי בַּחֲצִי הַלַּיְלָה, “It Came to Pass at Midnight,” was preserved in the Haggadah. This is the only poem of Yannai’s (ca. 5th/6th cent. C.E.) to be retained in the liturgy.