Page of Rashi’s Commentary on the Megillot, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons
With a “flipped classroom” format, this graduate seminar enabled students to create a commentary on key psalms with a focus on the history of Israelite religion.
Read MorePage of Rashi’s Commentary on the Megillot, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons
Page of Rashi’s Commentary on the Megillot, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons
With a “flipped classroom” format, this graduate seminar enabled students to create a commentary on key psalms with a focus on the history of Israelite religion.
Read More“This lesson plan has been an effective means of reinforcing the physical, manuscript-based analysis of textual criticism, over against the theoretical texts of source criticism.”
Read MoreCadenhead’s thoughtful historical framing of Gregory’s familial, ecclesial, political, and monastic contexts undergirds this study and provides the context for understanding Gregory’s views on the body and desire.
Read More“[A] liturgy ought not to be reduced to some type of verbal worship or praying activity directed toward the divine.”
Read More“Are we correct to presume that early rabbinic liturgy had a textual tradition coherent with the models we know, including from their predecessors at Qumran? Did early rabbis have a system of memorized, orally transmitted yet fixed texts, or did their worship operate in a more free-form system?”
Read More“One of the chief hurdles in the consideration of the psalms found in 1QHᵃ as compositions that may have been read aloud in communal settings is the use of the term “liturgical” to characterize such settings and texts.”
Read More“Prophecy and prayer, performance, composition of scriptures and their interpretation were all intertwined in vital and vibrant ways... The two prayers in Jonah offer illustrations of two of the many patterns of how prayer might intersect with scriptural tradition.”
Read MorePreaching Christology in the Roman Near East makes a significant contribution to both Syriac studies and late ancient studies.
Read MoreIn fact, binitarianism is even found in a number of late antique rabbinic texts as well, ultimately signaling that binitarian ideas did not necessarily serve as a form of proto-trinitarianism, remaining a part of Jewish thought even after the founding of Christianity.
Read MoreAnthony Keddie joins this rising movement of scholars interacting with class in a serious way, and his Class and Power in Roman Palestine: The Socioeconomic Setting of Judaism and Christian Origins stands as a welcome addition to recent provocative publications.
Read MoreI argue that the construction of Judeanness — like all collective identities — was a complex, contextual, and continuous process of identity formation that was undertaken, consciously or unconsciously, by individuals and communities throughout the Babylonian and Persian empires.
Read MoreJesus and Nicodemus by Crijn Hendricksz, 1616–1645
Jesus and Nicodemus by Crijn Hendricksz, 1616–1645
“Evangelical Christian faith and Jewish faith, with all their nuances and varieties, have every right to dialogue, debate, and disagreement, but when criticism of the Pharisees crosses the line into maligning persons with whom we differ we need to raise a flag of denunciation.”
Read MoreParable of the Pharisees and the Tax-Collector, from Das Plenarium, print, Hans Schäufelein (MET, 61.663.364)
Parable of the Pharisees and the Tax-Collector, from Das Plenarium, print, Hans Schäufelein (MET, 61.663.364)
“My comments intend to address primarily those who have not yet read the book, to provide a brief taste of my assigned chapters, and to reflect on the significance of this work for Jewish-Christian relations, especially in terms of community engagement and education.”
Read More“Christ and a Pharisee,” early 17th century by Anthony van Dyck at the Met.
“Christ and a Pharisee,” early 17th century by Anthony van Dyck at the Met.
“Who needs the Pharisees?” – it seems that, on the whole, we today, both Jews and Christians, need them more than anyone has ever done before, but for very different reasons. And we need them in academic historical, non-polemical form.
Read More“Christ and the Pharisees” by Lawrence W. Ladd ca. 1880. Smithsonian American Art Museum
“Christ and the Pharisees” by Lawrence W. Ladd ca. 1880. Smithsonian American Art Museum
“This literary image of Pharisees has been conflated with Jews generally and been attributed to real people in the here and now of all centuries over and over again. The narratives have been read historically, as accurately real life people – with all the horrific consequences emanating from this equation.”
Read More“The Pharisees includes historical studies that range from archaeology and etymological investigation to contributions that take up the Pharisees in association with Dead Sea Scrolls, 1 Maccabees, Josephus, selections from the New Testament, and rabbinic literature.”
Read MoreRoman Funerary Relief from Nijmegen, showing a school scene. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
Roman Funerary Relief from Nijmegen, showing a school scene. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
The study of fragmented remains of manuscripts shows how an approach will always be in need of adjustment when we use it on new and different materials. Both my study and the studies that documentary papyrologists do, start with the material remains. However, in my study of the Syriac manuscripts, I have had access to whole codices, even some medieval bindings, to colophons and notes, to churches that still stand, and to monasteries that are still active.
Read MoreSyriac Gospel Lectionary, British Library Add MS 7170
Syriac Gospel Lectionary, British Library Add MS 7170
“But if we wished to correlate other embodiments of this work, whether whole or partial, in Bible manuscripts, lectionaries, and catenae, in order to approximate the richness of Lied’s study of the embodiments of 2 Baruch—even if we were to confine ourselves just to the Syriac versions of Isaiah—we would quickly find ourselves swimming in deep waters, with a veritable tidal wave of varied manuscripts and possible contexts of use piling up and threatening to overwhelm us.”
Read More“Enoch and Elias” British Library Royal 6 E IX f. 2v
“Enoch and Elias” British Library Royal 6 E IX f. 2v
“What if, as is suggested by Lied, 2 Baruch is not so easily traced to the earliest centuries CE, on account of its far later and Christian manuscripts?”
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