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Handbook of Patristic Exegesis
Charles Kannengiesser
SBL Press, 2016

Now in paperback!

This essential volume presents a balanced and cohesive picture of the Early Church. It gives an overall view of the reception, transmission, and interpretation of the Bible in the life and thought of the Church during the first five centuries of Christianity, the so-called patristic era. The handbook offers the context and presuppositions necessary for understanding the development of the interpretative traditions of the Early Church, in its catechesis, its liturgy and as a foundation of its systems of theology. The handbook presents a comprehensive overview of the history of patristic exegesis.

Features:

  • Paperback format of an essential Brill resource
  • Essays by leading patristic scholars on the most important Church Fathers, such as Augustine, Irenaeus, Origen, and Gregory of Nyssa
  • Comprehensive bibliography of editions and studies on patristic exegesis published from 1945 until 1995
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    Life of Aesop the Philosopher
    Grammatiki A. Karla
    SBL Press, 2024

    The Life of Aesop the Philosopher, an anonymous Greek literary work, presents one version of the novelistic biography of Aesop, which dates to the fourth to fifth century CE. In this volume, Grammatiki A. Karla offers an extended introduction to the Life of Aesop in general, the history of the textual tradition, and the MORN manuscript family and its relationship to other versions and papyrus fragments. She then presents a new edition of the late antique version (MORN) alongside David Konstan’s English translation. A commentary addresses editorial choices and focuses on words and phrases that are of interest for the history of the Greek language.

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    front cover of Texts and Contexts of the Book of Sirach / Texte und Kontexte des Sirachbuches
    Texts and Contexts of the Book of Sirach / Texte und Kontexte des Sirachbuches
    Gerhard Karner
    SBL Press, 2017

    Now available from SBL Press

    Thirteen essays, some in German and others in English, tackle the complicated history of textual transmission of Sirach. This book presents the proceedings of an international conference held in 2014 in Eichstaett, Germany on the text of Ben Sira within its historical contexts.Contributors include James K. Aitken, Pierre-Maurice Bogaert, Franz Böhmisch, Anthony J. Forte SJ, Jan Joosten, Otto Kaiser, Siegfried Kreuzer, Jean-Sébastien Rey, Werner Urbanz, Knut Usener, Oda Wischmeyer, Markus Witte, Benjamin G. Wright, and Burkard M. Zapff.

    Features:

    • A sociocultural and theological history of Sirach
    • Philological and textual problems of the Hebrew, Greek, Syriac, and Latin versions
    • Translation strategies based on Greek, Syriac, and Latin text traditions and related hermeneutical questions
    [more]

    front cover of Lucifer of Cagliari and the Text of 1-2 Kings
    Lucifer of Cagliari and the Text of 1-2 Kings
    Tuukka Kauhanen
    SBL Press, 2018

    The most up-to-date study of the text history of 1 and 2 Kings

    In this book, Tuukka Kauhanen approaches the challenging case of the textual history of 1 and 2 Kings through citations of the text found within the writings of the fourth-century bishop of Sadinia, Lucifer of Cagliari. Kauhanen presents evidence that Lucifer's Latin text sheds important light on lost Hebrew and Greek pieces of the textual puzzle in Kings. In doing so, he compares all of Lucifer's extensive quotations of Kings to extant Greek witnesses as well as Old Latin witnesses where available and subsequently analyzes the probable reasons for textual variations. In each instance he attempts to choose the best possible candidate for the Old Greek reading and where that reading might reflect a now-lost Hebrew text.

    Features

    • Use of the most current research into the text of the Hebrew Bible and the Septuagint, including the Hebrew Bible: A Critical Edition series and the forthcoming Göttingen Septuagint edition of King
    • An appendix listing readings from the analysis sections arranged according to agreement patterns and other meaningful criteria
    • Charts comparing readings
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    front cover of Impurity and Purification in Early Judaism and the Jesus Tradition
    Impurity and Purification in Early Judaism and the Jesus Tradition
    Thomas Kazen
    SBL Press, 2021
    This collection of essays by Thomas Kazen focuses on issues of purity and purification in early Judaism and the Jesus tradition. During the late Second Temple period, Jewish purity practices became more prominent than before and underwent substantial developments. These essays advance the ongoing conversation and debate about a number of key issues in the field, such as the relationship between ritual and morality, the role and function of metaphor, and the use of evolutionary and embodied perspectives. Kazen's research stands in constant dialogue with the major currents and main figures in purity research, including both historical (origin, development, practice) and cognitive (evolutionary, emotional, conceptual) approaches.
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    front cover of The Struggle over Class
    The Struggle over Class
    Socioeconomic Analysis of Ancient Christian Texts
    G. Anthony Keddie
    SBL Press, 2021

    An interdisciplinary discussion engaging classics, archaeology, religious studies, and the social sciences

    The Struggle over Class brings together scholars from the fields of New Testament and early Christianity to examine Christian texts in light of the category of class. Historically rigorous and theoretically sophisticated, this collection presents a range of approaches to, and applications of, class in the study of the epistles, the gospels, Acts, apocalyptic texts, and patristic literature. Contributors Alicia J. Batten, Alan H. Cadwallader, Cavan W. Concannon, Zeba Crook, James Crossley, Lorenzo DiTommaso, Philip F. Esler, Michael Flexsenhar III, Steven J. Friesen, Caroline Johnson Hodge, G. Anthony Keddie, Jaclyn Maxwell, Christina Petterson, Jennifer Quigley, Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza, Daniëlle Slootjes, and Emma Wasserman challenge both scholars and students to articulate their own positions in the ongoing scholarly struggle over class as an analytical category.

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    front cover of Imprints, Voiceprints, and Footprints of Memory
    Imprints, Voiceprints, and Footprints of Memory
    Werner H. Kelber
    SBL Press, 2013
    Jesus and his followers defined their allegiances and expressed their identities in a communications culture that manifested itself in voice and chirographic practices, in oral-scribal interfaces, and in performative activities rooted in memory. In the sixteen essays gathered in Imprints, Voiceprints, and Footprints of Memory, Werner Kelber explores the verbal arts of early Christian word processing operative in a media world that was separated by two millennia from our contemporary media history. The title articulates the fact that the ancient culture of voiced texts, hand-copying, and remembering is chiefly accessible to us in print format and predominantly assimilated from print perspectives. The oral-scribal-memorial-performative paradigm developed in these essays challenges the reigning historical-critical model in biblical scholarship. Notions of tradition, the fixation on the single original saying, the dominant methodology of form criticism, and the heroic labors of the Quest—stalwart features of the historical, documentary paradigm—are all subject to a critical review. A number of essays reach beyond New Testament texts, ranging from the pre-Socratic Gorgias through medieval manuscript culture on to print’s triumphant apotheosis in Gutenberg’s Vulgate, product of the high tech of the fifteenth century, all the way to conflicting commemorations of Auschwitz—taking tentative steps toward a history of media technologies, culture, and cognition of the Christian tradition in the West.
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    front cover of Warfare, Ritual, and Symbol in Biblical and Modern Contexts
    Warfare, Ritual, and Symbol in Biblical and Modern Contexts
    Brad E. Kelle
    SBL Press, 2014

    New perspectives on Israelite warfare for biblical studies, military studies, and social theory

    Contributors investigate what constituted a symbol in war, what rituals were performed and their purpose, how symbols and rituals functioned in and between wars and battles, what effects symbols and rituals had on insiders and outsiders, what ways symbols and rituals functioned as instruments of war, and what roles rituals and symbols played in the production and use of texts.

    Features:

    • Thirteen essays examine war in textual, historical, and social contexts
    • Texts from the Hebrew Bible are read in light of ancient Near Eastern texts and archaeology
    • Interdisciplinary studies make use of contemporary ritual and social theory
    [more]

    front cover of The Formation of a Modern Rabbi
    The Formation of a Modern Rabbi
    The Life and Times of the Viennese Scholar and Preacher Adolf Jellinek
    Samuel Joseph Kessler
    SBL Press, 2022

    An intellectual biography that critically engages Adolf Jellinek’s scholarship and communal activities

    Adolf Jellinek (1821–1893), the Czech-born, German-educated, liberal chief rabbi of Vienna, was the most famous Jewish preacher in Central Europe in the second half of the nineteenth century. As an innovative rhetorician, Jellinek helped mold and define the modern synagogue sermon into an instrument for expressing Jewish religious and ethical values for a new era. As a historian, he made groundbreaking contributions to the study of the Zohar and medieval Jewish mysticism. Jellinek was emblematic of rabbi-as-scholar-preacher during the earliest, formative years of communal synagogues as urban religious space. In a world that was rapidly losing the felt and remembered past of premodern Jewish society, the rabbi, with Jellinek as prime exemplar, took hold of the Sabbath sermon as an instrument to define and mold Judaism and Jewish values for a new world.

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    front cover of Biblical Peoples and Ethnicity
    Biblical Peoples and Ethnicity
    An Archaeological Study of Egyptians, Canaanite
    Ann E. Killebrew
    SBL Press, 2005
    Ancient Israel did not emerge within a vacuum but rather came to exist alongside various peoples, including Canaanites, Egyptians, and Philistines. Indeed, Israel’s very proximity to these groups has made it difficult—until now—to distinguish the archaeological traces of early Israel and other contemporary groups. Through an analysis of the results from recent excavations in light of relevant historical and later biblical texts, this book proposes that it is possible to identify these peoples and trace culturally or ethnically defined boundaries in the archaeological record. Features of late second-millennium B.C.E. culture are critically examined in their historical and biblical contexts in order to define the complex social boundaries of the early Iron Age and reconstruct the diverse material world of these four peoples. Of particular value to scholars, archaeologists, and historians, this volume will also be a standard reference and resource for students and other readers interested in the emergence of early Israel.
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    front cover of The Philistines and Other Sea Peoples in Text and Archaeology
    The Philistines and Other Sea Peoples in Text and Archaeology
    Ann E. Killebrew
    SBL Press, 2013
    The search for the biblical Philistines, one of ancient Israel’s most storied enemies, has long intrigued both scholars and the public. Archaeological and textual evidence examined in its broader eastern Mediterranean context reveals that the Philistines, well-known from biblical and extrabiblical texts, together with other related groups of “Sea Peoples,” played a transformative role in the development of new ethnic groups and polities that emerged from the ruins of the Late Bronze Age empires. The essays in this book, representing recent research in the fields of archaeology, Bible, and history, reassess the origins, identity, material culture, and impact of the Philistines and other Sea Peoples on the Iron Age cultures and peoples of the eastern Mediterranean. The contributors are Matthew J. Adams, Michal Artzy, Tristan J. Barako, David Ben-Shlomo, Mario Benzi, Margaret E. Cohen, Anat Cohen-Weinberger, Trude Dothan, Elizabeth French, Marie-Henriette Gates, Hermann Genz, Ayelet Gilboa, Maria Iacovou, Ann E. Killebrew, Sabine Laemmel, Gunnar Lehmann, Aren M. Maeir, Amihai Mazar, Linda Meiberg, Penelope A. Mountjoy, Hermann Michael Niemann, Jeremy B. Rutter, Ilan Sharon, Susan Sherratt, Neil Asher Silberman, and Itamar Singer.
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    front cover of Migration and Diaspora
    Migration and Diaspora
    Exegetical Voices of Women in Northeast Asian Countries
    Hisako Kinukawa
    SBL Press, 2014

    Engage and explore readings from a multi-religious, globalized, multicultural region

    The papers in this collection were presented at the third meeting of the Society of Asian Biblical Studies held at the Sabah Theological Seminary, Malaysia in 2012. The essays represent the work of women/feminist scholars in biblical hermeneutics in this region who have raised questions against traditional, male-centered interpretations, offering distinct perspectives based on their experiences of pain, subjugation, and a forced sacrificial philosophy of life.

    Features:

    • Articles focused on finding justice for women through dialogue with biblical texts
    • Reflections on migration, diaspora, displacement, discrimination, and conditions generated by poverty and systemic oppression
    • Five essays from women in China, Japan, and Korea
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    front cover of Going West
    Going West
    Migrating Personae and Construction of the Self in Rabbinic Culture
    Reuven Kiperwasser
    SBL Press, 2021
    This new book by Reuven Kiperwasser examines the social, cultural, and religious aspects of third- to sixth-century narratives involving rabbinic figures migrating between Babylonia and Palestine. Kiperwasser draws on migration and mobility studies, comparative literature, humor and satire studies, as well as social history to reveal how border-crossing rabbis were seen as exporting features of their previous eastern context into their new western homes and vice versa. Through their writing, rabbinic authors articulated the nature and legitimacy of their own scholastic practices, knowledge, and authority in relationship to their internal others.
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    Agur's Wisdom and the Coherence of Proverbs 30
    Alexander T. Kirk
    SBL Press, 2024

    In this first in-depth study of Proverbs 30, the Words of Agur, Alexander T. Kirk examines a puzzling text attributed to an unknown figure that has long fascinated scholars. While this material has been read as everything from a devout confession to a cry of despair, few interpreters have found any real coherence in the chapter. In this detailed philological study engaging both genre and tone, Kirk demonstrates that the chapter is best read as a coherent collection that mocks pride and greed while it commends humility and contentment. Kirk draws out many subtle literary features that augment Agur’s message, including humor and animal imagery. Ultimately, Proverbs 30 deepens the presentation of wisdom in the book of Proverbs by orienting it toward a proper relationship with God.

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    front cover of Interfigural Readings of the Gospel of John
    Interfigural Readings of the Gospel of John
    Ingrid Rosa Kitzberger
    SBL Press, 2019

    New and challenging readings of biblical characters

    This volume of collected essays introduces the concept of interfigurality, the interrelations and interdependence between characters in the Gospel of John and in the Synoptic Gospels and the Hebrew Bible.The essays are informed by a narrative-critical reader-response, (post)feminist hermeneutics and an autobiographical approach to biblical texts. This volume encourages transformative encounters between present-day readers and the ancient biblical texts.

    Features:

    • Previously unpublished conference papers and published essays
    • A new perspective on the relation between New Testament and Hebrew Bible
    • Foreword by Fernando F. Segovia

    Ingrid Rosa Kitzberger is an independent scholar and the author of Transformative Encounters: Jesus and Women Re-viewed (1999) and the editor of The Personal Voice in Biblical Interpretation (1998) and Autobiographical Biblical Criticism: Between Text and Self (2002).

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    front cover of Allusive Soundplay in the Hebrew Bible
    Allusive Soundplay in the Hebrew Bible
    Jonathan G. Kline
    SBL Press, 2016

    The first study to focus exclusively on the use in the Hebrew Bible of soundplay to allude to and interpret earlier literary traditions

    This book focuses on the way the biblical writers used allusive soundplay to construct theological discourse, that is, in service of their efforts to describe the nature of God and God's relationship to humanity. By showing that a variety of biblical books contain examples of allusive soundplay employed for this purpose, Kline demonstrates that this literary device played an important role in the growth of the biblical text as a whole and in the development of ancient Israelite and early Jewish theological traditions.

    Features:

    • Demonstrates that allusive soundplay was a productive compositional technique in ancient Israel
    • Identifies examples of innerbiblical allusion that have not been identified before
    • A robust methodology for identifying soundplay in innerbiblical allusions
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    front cover of Editing the Bible
    Editing the Bible
    Assessing the Task Past and Present
    John S. Kloppenborg
    SBL Press, 2012
    The Bible is likely the most-edited book in history, yet the task of editing the Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek texts of the Bible is fraught with difficulties. The dearth of Hebrew manuscripts of the Jewish Scriptures and the substantial differences among those witnesses creates difficulties in determining which text ought to be printed as the text of the Jewish Scriptures. For the New Testament, it is not the dearth of manuscripts but the overwhelming number of manuscripts—almost six thousand Greek manuscripts and many more in other languages—that presents challenges for sorting and analyzing such a large, multivariant data set. This volume, representing experts in the editing of the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament, discusses both current achievements and future challenges in creating modern editions of the biblical texts in their original languages. The contributors are Kristin De Troyer, Michael W. Holmes, John S. Kloppenborg, Sarianna Metso, Judith H. Newman, Holger Strutwolf, Eibert Tigchelaar, David Trobisch, Eugene Ulrich, John Van Seters, Klaus Wachtel, and Ryan Wettlaufer.
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    front cover of Royal Apologetic in the Ancient Near East
    Royal Apologetic in the Ancient Near East
    Andrew Knapp
    SBL Press, 2015

    A fresh exploration of apologetic material that pushes beyond form criticism

    Andrew Knapp applies modern genre theory to seven ancient Near Eastern royal apologies that served to defend the legitimacy of kings who came to power under irregular circumstances. Knapp examines texts and inscriptions related to Telipinu, Hattusili III, David, Solomon, Hazael, Esarhaddon, and Nabonidus to identify transhistorical common issues that unite each discourse.

    Features:

    • Compares Hittite, Israelite, Aramean, Assyrian, and Babylonian apologies
    • Examination of apologetic as a mode instead of a genre
    • Charts and illustrations
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    front cover of The Bible and Posthumanism
    The Bible and Posthumanism
    Jennifer L. Koosed
    SBL Press, 2014

    What does it mean, and what should it mean to be human?

    In this collection of essays, scholars place the philosophies and theories of animal studies and posthumanism into conversation with biblical studies. Authors cross and disrupt boundaries and categories through close readings of stories where the human body is invaded, possessed, or driven mad. Articles explore the ethics of the human use of animals and the biblical contributions to the question. Other essays use the image of lions—animals that appear not only in the wild, but also in the Bible, ancient Near Eastern texts, and philosophy—to illustrate the potential these theories present for students of the Bible. Contributors George Aichele, Denise Kimber Buell, Benjamin H. Dunning, Heidi Epstein, Rhiannon Graybill, Jennifer L. Koosed, Eric Daryl Meyer, Stephen D. Moore, Hugh Pyper, Robert Paul Seesengood, Yvonne Sherwood, Ken Stone, and Hannah M. Strømmen present an open invitation for further work in the field of posthumanism.

    Features:

    • Coverage of texts that explore the boundaries between animal, human, and divinity
    • Discussion of the term posthumanism and how it applies to biblical studies
    • Essays engage Derrida, Foucault, Wolfe, Lacan, Žižek, Singer, Haraway, and others
    [more]

    front cover of XVI Congress of the International Organization for Septuagint and Cognate Studies
    XVI Congress of the International Organization for Septuagint and Cognate Studies
    Stellenbosch, 2016
    Gideon R. Kotzé
    SBL Press, 2019

    Essays from experts in the field of Septuagint studies

    This latest volume from the International Organization for Septuagint and Cognate Studies (IOSCS) includes the papers given at the XVI Congress of the IOSCS, South Africa, in 2016. The articles contribute to the study of the Septuagint and cognate literature by identifying and discussing new topics and lines of inquiry and developing fresh insights and arguments in existing areas of research. Scholars and students interested in different methods of studying the Septuagint corpora, the theology and reception of these texts, as well as the works of Josephus will find in this collection critical information for future work in Septuagint studies.

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    front cover of XVII Congress of the International Organization for Septuagint and Cognate Studies
    XVII Congress of the International Organization for Septuagint and Cognate Studies
    Aberdeen, 2019
    Gideon R. Kotzé
    SBL Press, 2022

    This volume from the International Organization for Septuagint and Cognate Studies (IOSCS) includes the papers given at the XVII Congress of the IOSCS, which was held in Aberdeen in 2019. Essays in the collection fall into five areas of focus: textual history, historical context, syntax and semantics, exegesis and theology, and commentary. Scholars examine a range of Old Testament and New Testament texts. Contributors include Kenneth Atkinson, Bryan Beeckman, Elena Belenkaja, Beatrice Bonanno, Eberhard Bons, Cameron Boyd-Taylor, Ryan Comins, S. Peter Cowe, Claude Cox, Dries De Crom, Paul L. Danove, Crispin Fletcher-Louis, Frank Feder, W. Edward Glenny, Roger Good, Robert J. V. Hiebert, Gideon R. Kotzé, Robert Kugler, Nathan LaMontagne, Giulia Leonardi, Ekaterina Matusova, Jean Maurais, Michaël N. van der Meer, Martin Meiser, Douglas C. Mohrmann, Daniel Olariou, Vladimir Olivero, Luke Neubert, Daniel Prokop, Alison Salvesen, Daniela Scialabba, Leonardo Pessoa da Silva Pinto, Martin Tscheu, and Jelle Verburg.

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    XV Congress of the International Organization for Septuagint and Cognate Studies
    Munich, 2013
    Wolfgang Kraus
    SBL Press, 2016

    Essays from experts in the field of Septuagint studies

    The study of Septuagint offers essential insights in ancient Judaism and its efforts to formulate Jewish identity within a non-Jewish surrounding culture. This book includes the papers given at the XV Congress of the International Organization for Septuagint and Cognate Studies (IOSCS), held in Munich, Germany, in 2013. The first part of this book deals with questions of textual criticism. The second part is dedicated to philology. The third part underlines the increasing importance of Torah in Jewish self-definition.

    Features:

    • Essays dealing with questions of textual criticism, mostly concerning the historical books and wisdom literature and ancient editions and translations
    • Philological essays covering the historical background, studies on translation technique and lexical studies underline the necessity of both exploring general perspectives and working in detail
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    front cover of Saul, Benjamin, and the Emergence of Monarchy in Israel
    Saul, Benjamin, and the Emergence of Monarchy in Israel
    Biblical and Archaeological Perspectives
    Joachim J. Krause
    SBL Press, 2020

    Ponder questions of the united monarchy under Saul and David in light of current historical and archaeological evidence

    Reconstructing the emergence of the Israelite monarchy involves interpreting historical research, approaching questions of ancient state formation, synthesizing archaeological research from sites in the southern Levant, and reexamining the biblical traditions of the early monarchy embedded in the books of Samuel and Kings. Integrating these approaches allows for a nuanced and differentiated picture of one of the most crucial periods in the history of ancient Israel. Rather than attempting to harmonize archaeological data and biblical texts or to supplement the respective approach by integrating only a portion of data stemming from the other, both perspectives come into their own in this volume presenting the results of an interdisciplinary Tübingen–Tel Aviv Research Colloquium.

    Features:

    • Essays on Israel's monarchy by experts in biblical archaeology and biblical studies
    • Methods for integrating archaeology and biblical traditions in reconstructing ancient Israel's history
    • New research on the sociopolitical process of state formation in Israel and Judah
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    The Bible in Greek
    Translation, Transmission, and Theology of the Septuagint
    Siegfried Kreuzer
    SBL Press, 2015
    Essential reading for scholars and students

    This volume presents English and German papers that give an overview on important stages, developments, and problems of the Septuagint and the research related to it. Four sections deal with the cultural and theological background and beginnings of the Septuagint, the Old Greek and recensions of the text, the Septuagint and New Testament quotations, and a discussion of Papyrus 967 and Codex Vaticanus.

    Features:

    • A complete list of Kreuzer’s publications on the text and textual history of the Hebrew Bible and the Septuagint
    • Criteria for analysis of the Antiochene/Lucianic Text and the Kaige-Recension
    • A close examination of the origins and development of the Septuagint in the context of Alexandrian and early Jewish culture and learning
    [more]


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