Latest Essays
Psalm 104 and Its Parallels in Pharaoh Akhenaten’s Hymn
Psalm 104 and Its Parallels in Pharaoh Akhenaten’s Hymn
Themes from the Egyptian Great Hymn of the Aten, the divine sun disk, appear in Psalm 104: dangerous animals at night, human activity during the day, a focus on humans as opposed to Israelites, the great power of water, and many more.
The Scouts’ Report: From Rhetoric to Demagoguery
The Scouts’ Report: From Rhetoric to Demagoguery
The scout’s initial report is only skeptical, but Caleb’s good-intentioned challenge pushes them to take a dishonest stand against entering the land.
The Story of the Anonymous Scouts, Modified by the Book of Numbers
The Story of the Anonymous Scouts, Modified by the Book of Numbers
Why do the Israelites try to stone Joshua and Caleb instead of Moses and Aaron? Why do Moses and Aaron remain on their faces throughout Joshua and Caleb’s speech? If the story takes place in Israel’s second year in the wilderness, and they are punished to wander for 40 years, shouldn’t the total duration in the wilderness be 41+ years?
How Many Trumpet Blasts to Travel? MT+SP=LXX
How Many Trumpet Blasts to Travel? MT+SP=LXX
YHWH instructs Moses to sound a teruah blast to get the eastern camp to travel, and a second for the southern camp. What about the western and northern camps? The answer can be found by comparing the Masoretic Text, the Samaritan Pentateuch, and the Septuagint: It was a parablepsis.
Moses’ Kushite Wife Was Zipporah the Midianite
Moses’ Kushite Wife Was Zipporah the Midianite
Moses is married to a Kushite woman (Numbers 12:1). While the term Kushite is generally understood as meaning black African, several places in the Bible refer to other locations as Kush, including Midian, the home of Moses’ wife Zipporah.
What Is a Nazir, and Why the Wild Hair?
What Is a Nazir, and Why the Wild Hair?
Like many prophets, a nazirite once characterized holy people living on the periphery of society, with wild flowing hair to mark their separate status. Some were divine messengers, like the prophets Elijah and Samuel. Others were warriors, like Samson, a wild-man warrior reminiscent of the Sumerian hero Enkidu. The priestly legislation neutralizes the nazir, making the hair itself the focus.
The Human Face on the Divine Chariot: Jacob the Knight
The Human Face on the Divine Chariot: Jacob the Knight
Jacob the patriarch’s face is said to be carved on the divine throne. Similarly, a 13th cent. masorah figurate of the four creatures drawing Ezekiel’s chariot portrays Jacob as the human creature in the form of a knight, playing off the phrase אביר יעקב, avir Yaakov (Genesis 49:24).
The Decalogue’s Opening Laws, Written in Response to the Golden Calf
The Decalogue’s Opening Laws, Written in Response to the Golden Calf
Originally, the golden calf story was just one among many incidents in which the Israelites sin and antagonize YHWH in the wilderness. Later scribes expanded the story as a critique of northern worship sites and also added the Decalogue, with the first few laws being composed as a point-by-point response to Israel’s sin.
What Ancient Scrolls Teach Us about the Torah’s Formation
What Ancient Scrolls Teach Us about the Torah’s Formation
Examining ancient Egyptian papyri, as well as scrolls from animal skins in Levantine sites such as Deir Alla and Qumran, highlights how scribes would add text to preexisting scrolls and showcases the limited size of scrolls intended for regular use.
Lechem Hapanim: Bread in the Presence of YHWH
Lechem Hapanim: Bread in the Presence of YHWH
Each week, twelve fresh loaves of bread were placed before YHWH in the Tabernacle and Temple. What do we know about the practice and its significance?
Between Holy and Mundane: The Development of the Term Havdalah
Between Holy and Mundane: The Development of the Term Havdalah
In pre-exilic texts, לְהַבְדִּיל lehavdil means “to select, appoint, designate.” In the Priestly text, the term is used to refer to physical separation, while in the Holiness Text, it takes on an abstract meaning, to distinguish between objects and people in a cultic sense. The book of Ezra uses a new form of the term, לְהִבָּדֵל lehibbadel, to urge separating from non-Jews, prompting Trito-Isaiah to argue against separating (lehavdil) any faithful person from YHWH and His Temple.
Why Does the Bible Prohibit Marrying a Father’s Wife?
Why Does the Bible Prohibit Marrying a Father’s Wife?
Ancient Near Eastern law collections do not unequivocally prohibit a son from marrying his father's wife, and neither do modern incest laws. And yet, the Bible repeats this prohibition multiple times. Six reasons why.
Does the Bible Believe in the Evil Eye?
Does the Bible Believe in the Evil Eye?
The belief in the power of an angry or jealous person’s eye to damage others was pervasive in the ancient Near East, in Jewish antiquity, and medieval times. But what does the Bible say?
What Is Better than Wine?
What Is Better than Wine?
Song of Songs opens with: “Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth, for דֹּדֶיךָ (MT “your loving”) or mastoi sou (LXX “your breasts”) are better than wine.” Why does the LXX translate this way and which version is correct?
Israelites in Egypt: Slaves or Sojourners?
Israelites in Egypt: Slaves or Sojourners?
The earliest biblical traditions describe Israel as sojourners who dwelt in the land of Egypt, and focused on YHWH bringing them up to the land of Canaan. The depiction of Israel as slaves in Egypt, whom YHWH brought out with a strong hand, only developed later.
A Nitpicking Lover in Song of Songs 1:7
A Nitpicking Lover in Song of Songs 1:7
The woman in Song of Songs wishes to know where her lover will be, asking: “Why should I be like an ʿōṭǝyâ (כְּעֹטְיָה).” Translators struggle with this phrase, and suggest meanings as disparate as “be veiled like a prostitute,” “be as a wanderer,” or even “pick at my nits.” How do scholars use ancient translation, cognate words, and content to translate a word in the Bible whose meaning is so obscure?
Punishing Egypt Measure-for-Measure
Punishing Egypt Measure-for-Measure
The plagues and the drowning of the Egyptians were designed to showcase YHWH’s power throughout the world (Exodus 9:16). Both the Wisdom of Solomon (1st cent. C.E.) and Mekhilta (2nd cent. C.E.) develop systematic interpretations of the plagues, showing how the details were measure-for-measure punishments, they differ on the meaning of the lesson when it comes to non-Jews.
YHWH Battles the Egyptians with a Fiery Cloud
YHWH Battles the Egyptians with a Fiery Cloud
When the Egyptians pursue Israel into the wilderness, Moses tells the Israelites to “stand by and witness the deliverance which YHWH will work for you today” (Exodus 14:13). YHWH brings panic upon the enemy, as he does in the battle of Gibeon and the war against Sisera. This is J’s story of Israel’s escape, hidden in the biblical accounts of the escape by the sea.
Pharaoh’s Daughter: A Woman Worthy of Raising Moses
Pharaoh’s Daughter: A Woman Worthy of Raising Moses
In Exodus, the daughter of Pharaoh is presented as an empathetic princess who saves the infant Moses after discovering him in the Nile and raises him as one of her own. Late Second Temple and rabbinic writers reimagine her based on their own values, and even give her a name.