“In the course of my research, I have been struck by how much American Jews’ response to the topic of angels in Jewish culture depends on their understanding of Judaism vis-à-vis modern Protestant Christian conceptualizations.”
Read MoreBecoming a Man: The Apostle Paul and Masculinity
My doctoral thesis intervenes in this discussion by focusing this relatively new analytical gaze on Paul’s self-presentation in his undisputed letters to argue that the apostle evades straightforward classification as either disrupting or conforming to masculine norms.
Read MoreInterpreting the New Testament Through Inscriptions: An Introduction
My new book, Studying the New Testament Through Inscriptions: An Introduction, introduces Greco-Roman inscriptions to a broader audience, interprets them as archaeological artifacts, and then demonstrates the benefit of epigraphs for interpreting the New Testament through five case studies.
Read MoreTime and Difference in Rabbinic Judaism
Time and Difference in Rabbinic Judaism examines conceptions and organizations of time in rabbinic sources, composed between 200 and 600 CE in Palestine and Babylonia but with lasting influence on subsequent Jewish communities, to the present day.
Read MoreLeviticus as a Mission Statement
The point I’m trying to make is that P’s laws of sacrifice are hardly a handbook intended to provide a young priest with everything he needs to know to do his job. Rather, they appear to be outward-facing (if you’ll forgive the jargon), a priestly mission statement (to use another piece of jargon), directed at the people of Israel as a whole.
Read MoreDissertation Spotlight | Religious Identity and Spatiality in Hasmonean and Herodian Galilee
Ritual immersion pool in a domestic context at Magdala: Photo Credit - Joseph Scales
Ritual immersion pool in a domestic context at Magdala: Photo Credit - Joseph Scales
This thesis answers the following two questions: how did ancient Jews create meaningful spaces of religious activity in ancient Galilee, and how did those spaces in turn influence the constitution of ancient Judaism?
Read MoreWhen Moses Goes to Ikea: the Introduction of Systematic Sacrifice
Dr. Andrew McGowan responds on “Priestly Narratives: a 2021 NYU review panel and book launch for Liane Feldman’s Story of Sacrifice.”
Read MoreLegal Discourse as World-Building
Dr. Hindy Najman responds on “Priestly Narratives: a 2021 NYU review panel and book launch for Liane Feldman’s Story of Sacrifice.
Read MoreProcedure as Imaginative Art
Dr. Mira Balberg responds on “Priestly Narratives: a 2021 NYU review panel and book launch for Liane Feldman’s Story of Sacrifice.
Read MoreDissertation Spotlight | Domestic Labor and Marital Obligations in the Ancient Jewish Household
Terracotta Lekythos by the Amasis Painter depicting women spinning and weaving. Image courtesy of Wikimedia.
Terracotta Lekythos by the Amasis Painter depicting women spinning and weaving. Image courtesy of Wikimedia.
How does a household function? Who owes what to whom, and how did people conceive of their relationships to one another? How did the realities of work in an agricultural society shape these relationships?
Read MoreMore New Testament Apocrypha Series
Ancient Jew Review is pleased to host a series of articles on the second volume of the series New Testament Apocrypha: More Noncanonical Scriptures (ed. Tony Burke; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2020; vol. 1 ed. Tony Burke and Brent Landau; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2016).
Read MoreRethinking Conventional Genre Categories: How the Acts of Christ and Peter in Rome Breaks the Mold.
Many modern collections of Christian apocrypha group texts under headings such as “gospels,” “acts,” “epistles,” and “apocalypses.” But do these conventional genre categories help or hurt?
Read MoreThe Exhortation of Peter: Interpreting Peter with Late Ancient Monastic Communities
Apocryphal narratives and traditions about the apostle Peter abounded among early Christian communities.
Read MoreAnother Tale of Thomas: The Acts of Thomas and His Wonderworking Skin
When it comes to narratives about the apostle Thomas, however, the well-known Acts of Thomas is far from the only game in town, so to speak. In our contribution to MNTA 2, Janet Spittler and I had the opportunity to translate for the first time into English the Greek text of another apocryphal narrative about Thomas: the Acts of Thomas and His Wonderworking Skin.
Read More“Bringing the West Back East, or How to Make Sure the Magdalene Belongs to Byzantium: The Life of Mary Magdalene”
The mingling of competing versions of the Magdalene’s life also tells us about how emerging veneration for her competed with and complemented cults of the Virgin Mary.
Read MoreTranslating the Traitor: A Medieval Life of Judas
My contribution for the second volume of New Testament Apocrypha: More Noncanonical Scriptures is a translation of the earliest Latin Life of Judas, published along with Mari Mamyan’s translation of an Armenian version of the same work.
Read MoreMore New Testament Apocrypha? Yes please.
Scholars of Christian apocrypha no longer see themselves as a service industry to New Testament studies, simply searching for insights into the historical Jesus or the sources for the canonical gospels.
Read MoreDissertation Spotlight | Nestorius Latinus: The Latin Reception and Critique of Nestorius of Constantinople
Cassian's foray into Christology has been regarded as a misstep by most scholars who have written on it, though this is an admittedly small cohort. I show instead Cassian’s profound insight into Nestorius' thought.
Read MoreMaking it “Count”: Translating your Teaching Innovations into Research Output
Many academics only write about their teaching at three key moments: composing application dossiers, writing course syllabi, and perhaps when reflecting for annual reviews or tenure submissions. But there are many venues that, with the right framing, could showcase how you translate your expertise for students and what you’ve learned from the trial-and-error repetition of activities, paper prompts, and entire courses.
Read MoreIn Favor of Fancasting
What actor should play this person in a movie about their life? In my classes on ancient Judaism, I ask students this question a lot.
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