front cover of Current Issues in Priestly and Related Literature
Current Issues in Priestly and Related Literature
The Legacy of Jacob Milgrom and Beyond
Roy E. Gane
SBL Press, 2015

New directions and fresh insight for scholars and students

The single greatest catalyst and contributor to our developing understanding of priestly literature has been Jacob Milgrom (1923-2010), whose seminal articles, provocative hypotheses, and comprehensively probing books vastly expanded and significantly altered scholarship regarding priestly and related literature. Nineteen articles build on Milgrom's work and look to future directions of research. Essays cover a range of topics including the interpretation, composition and literary structure of priestly and holiness texts as well as their relationships to deuteronomic and extra-biblical texts. The book includes a bibliography of Milgrom's work published between 1994 and 2014.

Features:

  • Comparisons with Mesopotamian Hittite texts
  • Essays from a diverse group of scholars representing a variety of backgrounds, perspectives, and methodologies
  • Charts and tables illustrate complex relationships and structures
  • [more]

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    Women at Work in the Deuteronomistic History
    Mercedes L. García Bachmann
    SBL Press, 2013

    A thorough study of the socio-economic and literary contexts of women in the Deuteronomistic History

    Mercedes L. García Bachmann examines the key texts in the Deuteronomistic History that mention women in service occupations: slaves and dependents, cooks, wet nurses, childcare givers, prostitutes, and scribes. The mostly anonymous women who performed this work for others are sometimes mentioned only in a single verse. Consequently, they often are as unrecognized in modern scholarship as they seem in the biblical text. García Bachmann shows that these women were honored not in relation to matters such as sexual purity or marital faithfulness but on account of the valuable service that they provided.

    • A close examination of unnamed women
    • A review of previous work in feminist, ancient Near Eastern, biblical, and social-scientific studies
    • Extensive coverage of Hebrew terms used for women workers
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    front cover of Growing Up in Ancient Israel
    Growing Up in Ancient Israel
    Children in Material Culture and Biblical Texts
    Kristine Henriksen Garroway
    SBL Press, 2018

    The first expansive reference examining the texts and material culture related to children in ancient Israel

    Growing Up in Ancient Israel uses a child-centered methodology to investigate the world of children in ancient Israel. Where sources from ancient Israel are lacking, the book turns to cross-cultural materials from the ancient Near East as well as archaeological, anthropological, and ethnographic sources. Acknowledging that childhood is both biologically determined and culturally constructed, the book explores conception, birth, infancy, dangers in childhood, the growing child, dress, play, and death. To bridge the gap between the ancient world and today’s world, Kristine Henriksen Garroway introduces examples from contemporary society to illustrate how the Hebrew Bible compares with a Western understanding of children and childhood.

    Features:

    • More than fifty-five illustrations illuminating the world of the ancient Israelite child
    • An extensive investigation of parental reactions to the high rate of infant mortality and the deaths of infants and children
    • An examination of what the gendering and enculturation process involved for an Israelite child
    [more]

    front cover of Body as Landscape, Love as Intoxication
    Body as Landscape, Love as Intoxication
    Conceptual Metaphors in the Song of Songs
    Brian P. Gault
    SBL Press, 2019

    Explore metaphors in the exquisite and enigmatic poetry of Song of Songs

    One of the chief difficulties in interpreting the Song's lyrics is the unusual imagery used to depict the lovers' bodies. Why is the maiden's hair compared to a flock of goats (4:1), the man’s cheeks likened to garden beds of spice (5:13), and the eyes of both lovers described as doves (4:1; 5:12)? While scholars speculate on the significance of these images, a systematic inquiry into the Song's body metaphors is curiously absent. Based on insights from cognitive linguistics, this study incorporates biblical and comparative data to uncover the meaning of these metaphors surveying literature in the eastern Mediterranean (and beyond) that shares a similar form (poetry) and theme (love). Gault presents an interpretation of the Song's body imagery that sheds light on the perception of beauty in Israel and its relationship to surrounding cultures.

    Features

    • Exploration of the Song's use of universal themes and culturally specific variations
    • Discussion of the Song's literary structure and unity
    [more]

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    The Hebrew Bible and Philosophy of Religion
    Jaco Gericke
    SBL Press, 2012
    This study pioneers the use of philosophy of religion in the study of the Hebrew Bible. After identifying the need for a legitimate philosophical approach to Israelite religion, the volume traces the history of interdisciplinary relations and shows how descriptive varieties of philosophy of religion can aid the clarification of the Hebrew Bible’s own metaphysical, epistemological, and moral assumptions. Two new interpretative methodologies are developed and subsequently applied through an introduction to what the biblical texts took for granted about the nature of religious language, the concept of deity, the properties of Yhwh, the existence of gods, religious epistemology, and the relation between religion and morality.
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    front cover of Theology and Anthropology in the Book of Sirach
    Theology and Anthropology in the Book of Sirach
    Bonifatia Gesche
    SBL Press, 2020

    New research on Sirach for scholars and students

    The present volume of English and German essays includes the proceedings of an international conference held in Eichstaett, Germany, in 2017. Themes of creation, emotions, life, death, wisdom, knowledge, the individual and society, family, gender, mercy, justice, and freedom are but a few of the topics that contributors explore in this new collection. Essays explore the rich intertextual connections between Sirach and other biblical texts.

    Features:

    • Attention to theological distinctions presented in the Hebrew, Greek, Syriac, and Latin versions of the book of Sirach
    • Examination of the reception of Sirach in the New Testament and the early modern era
    • English abstracts for German-language essays and German abstracts for English-language essays
    [more]

    front cover of Prayers and the Construction of Israelite Identity
    Prayers and the Construction of Israelite Identity
    Susanne Gillmayr-Bucher
    SBL Press, 2019

    Substantial insights into various identity discourses reflected in the biblical prayers

    This collection of essays from an international group of scholars focuses on how biblical prayers of the Persian and early Hellenistic periods shaped identity, evoked a sense of belonging to specific groups, and added emotional significance to this affiliation. Contributors draw examples from different biblical texts, including Genesis, Samuel, Kings, Chronicles, Ezra and Nehemiah, Psalms, Jonah, and Daniel.

    Features

    • Thorough study of prayers that play a key role for a biblical book’s (re)construction of the people’s history and identity
    • An examination of ways biblical figures are remodeled by their prayers by introducing other, sometimes even contradictory, discourses on identity
    • An exploration of different ways in which psalms from postexilic times shaped, reflected, and modified identity discourses
    [more]

    front cover of Paul Unbound
    Paul Unbound
    Other Perspectives on the Apostle
    Mark D. Given
    SBL Press, 2022

    "As long as there are readers of Paul, there will be always be other perspectives."

    The essays in this second edition of Paul Unbound: Other Perspectives on the Apostle provide introductions to Paul's relationship to and views on the Roman Empire, first-century economic stratification, his opponents, ethnicity, the law, Judaism, women, and Greco-Roman rhetoric. Contributors Warren Carter, Charles H. Cosgrove, A. Andrew Das, Steven J. Friesen, Mark D. Given, Deborah Krause, Mark D. Nanos, and Jerry L. Sumney have added addendums to their original essays and updated the bibliography to take into account scholarship produced in the decade since the publication of the first edition. The collection provides essential background and sets out new directions for study useful to students of the New Testament and Paul's letters.

    [more]

    front cover of Adopting the Stranger as Kindred in Deuteronomy
    Adopting the Stranger as Kindred in Deuteronomy
    Mark R. Glanville
    SBL Press, 2018

    Investigate how Deuteronomy incorporates vulnerable, displaced people

    Deuteronomy addresses social contexts of widespread displacement, an issue affecting 65 million people today. In this book Mark R. Glanville investigates how Deuteronomy fosters the integration of the stranger as kindred into the community of Yahweh. According to Deuteronomy, displaced people are to be enfolded within the household, within the clan, and within the nation. Glanville argues that Deuteronomy demonstrates the immense creativity that communities may invest in enfolding displaced and vulnerable people. Inclusivism is nourished through social law, the law of judicial procedure, communal feasting, and covenant renewal. Deuteronomy’s call to include the stranger as kindred presents contemporary nation-states with an opportunity and a responsibility to reimagine themselves and their disposition toward displaced strangers today.

    Features:

    • Exploration of the relationship of ancient Israel’s social history to biblical texts
    • An integrative methodology that brings together literary-historical, legal, sociological, comparative, literary, and theological approaches
    • A thorough study of Israelite identity and ethnicity
    [more]

    front cover of 4QInstruction
    4QInstruction
    Matthew J. Goff
    SBL Press, 2013
    The wisdom tradition of ancient Israel, represented in the Hebrew Bible by Proverbs, Job, and Ecclesiastes and in the Apocrypha by Ben Sira and the Wisdom of Solomon, is also well-attested in the texts from Qumran. 4QInstruction (1Q26, 4Q415–418, 4Q423), the largest wisdom text of the Dead Sea Scrolls, is considered a sapiential text primarily because of its explicit and insistent pedagogical nature. To make this significant wisdom text more widely available, this volume offers a critical edition, translation, and commentary on the main fragments of 4QInstruction. It examines particular texts of 4QInstruction as well as broader issues, including its date, genre, main themes, and place in Second Temple Judaism. Finally, in order to contextualize this pivotal work, 4QInstruction’s relationship to the sapiential and apocalyptic traditions is also explored.
    [more]

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    Constructs of Prophecy in the Former and Latter Prophets and Other Texts
    Lester L. Grabbe
    SBL Press, 2011

    Explore the ancient context of prophecy and prophetic figures

    This collection of essays examines the construction of prophecy in the Former and Latter Prophets, Chronicles, Daniel, and even in the Quran. This unique anthology recognizes that these texts do not simply describe the prophetic phenomena but rather depict prophets according to various conventional categories or their own individual points of view. Each essay analyzes how these writings portray prophecy or prophets to better understand how the respective authors structured their writings.

    Features

    • Introduction and twelve essays cover prophecy in the Hebrew Bible and the Quran
    • Essays examine the relationship between the prophets and the cult, oral pronouncements and written collections, and divination, prophecy, and apocalypticism
    • Additional essays raise questions about the prophetic persona and examine the prophets in hermeneutical perspective
    [more]

    front cover of Jerome, Epistle 106 (On the Psalms)
    Jerome, Epistle 106 (On the Psalms)
    Michael Graves
    SBL Press, 2022

    A fresh interpretation of the nature, purpose, and date of Jerome’s Epistle 106

    In this volume of the Writings from the Greco-Roman World series, Michael Graves offers the first accessible English translation and commentary on Jerome’s Epistle 106, an important work of patristic biblical interpretation. In his treatise Jerome discusses different textual and exegetical options according to various Greek and Latin copies of the Psalms with input from the Hebrew. Epistle 106 provides insightful commentary on the Gallican Psalter, Jerome’s translation of Origen’s hexaplaric edition. Jerome’s work offers a unique window into the complex textual state of the Psalter in the late fourth century and serves as an outstanding example of ancient philological scholarship on the Bible. Graves’s translation and commentary is an essential resource for scholars and students of patristic exegesis, biblical textual criticism, and late antique Christianity.

    [more]

    front cover of Second Wave Intertextuality and the Hebrew Bible
    Second Wave Intertextuality and the Hebrew Bible
    Marianne Grohmann
    SBL Press, 2019

    An innovative collection of inner-biblical, intertextual, and intercontextual dialogues

    Essays from a diverse group of scholars offer new approaches to biblical intertextuality that examine the relationship between the Hebrew Bible, art, literature, sociology, and postcolonialism. Eight essays in part 1 cover inner-biblical intertextuality, including studies of Genesis, Judges, and Qoheleth, among others. The eight postbiblical intertextuality essays in part 2 explore Bakhtinian and dialogical approaches, intertextuality in the Dead Sea Scrolls, canonical critisicm, reception history, and #BlackLivesMatter. These essays on various genres and portions of the Hebrew Bible showcase how, why, and what intertextuality has been and presents possible potential directions for future research and application.

    Features:

    • Diverse methods and cases of intertextuality
    • Rich examples of hermeneutical theory and interpretive applications
    • Readings of biblical texts as mutual dialogues, among the authors, traditions, themes, contexts, and lived worlds
    [more]

    front cover of Lydia as a Rhetorical Construct in Acts
    Lydia as a Rhetorical Construct in Acts
    Alexandra Gruca-Macaulay
    SBL Press, 2016

    A new sociorhetorical study of Acts

    In Lydia as a Rhetorical Construct in Acts, Gruca-Macaulay explores the sociorhetorical function of the story of Lydia, a named Lydian woman ancient interpreters would have associated with cultural stereotypes of Lydians. As a rhetorical figure, Lydia both influenced and was influenced by the ideology of the surrounding text in Acts 16, as well as the approach Luke–Acts as a whole takes to people who are somehow like Lydia.

     

    Features:

    • Displays the rhetorical-cultural portrayal of women in Luke-Acts from the perspective of a first-century Mediterranean audience as compared with the history of scholarship, specifically through a sociorhetorical interpretation of the role of Lydia in Acts
    • Investigates the rhetorical function of Mediterranean social-cultural topoi in qualitative argumentation, with a focus on Greco-Roman physiognomy generally, and Lydian ethnography especially
    • Introduces the rhetorical use of conceptual blending, particularly its application for gaining insight into the function of military discourse in developing the rhetorical force of the Lydia episode in Acts
    [more]

    front cover of Textual Criticism and the New Testament Text
    Textual Criticism and the New Testament Text
    Theory, Practice, and Editorial Technique
    Eberhard W. Güting
    SBL Press, 2020

    The fruit of more than three decades of research

    This collection of fourteen essays by Eberhard W. Güting covers important aspects of editorial science with a particular focus on New Testament textual criticism. Essays cover textual emendation, text-critical procedures, literary criticism, history of scholarship, advantages and disadvantages of online manuscripts, and text-critical studies of words and phrases. The addition of a substantial introduction to text criticism makes this a valuable resource for students and teachers.

    Features

    • Essays concerned with establishing the original text of New Testament writings
    • Nine essays published in English for the first tim
    • Two previously unpublished essays
    [more]


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