Latest Essays
Abraham Sends His Servant to Find a Wife for Isaac, then Disappears
Abraham Sends His Servant to Find a Wife for Isaac, then Disappears
Abraham tells his servant to go to his hometown to find a wife for Isaac. When the servant returns, he never reports back to him or introduces Rebecca to him. Why does Abraham disappear from the narrative? And, as Rebecca is his great-niece, why not send the servant to her father’s home directly?
Was Abraham Really a Man of Faith?
Was Abraham Really a Man of Faith?
Abraham does not comply with the very first command that YHWH gives him, and throughout his life, he doubts and questions YHWH. Does Abraham ultimately become the man of faith he is reputed to be?
Abraham’s Migration and Name Change: A Story for the Babylonian Exiles
Abraham’s Migration and Name Change: A Story for the Babylonian Exiles
Abram’s journey from Ur of the Chaldeans to Canaan, and God’s changing his name to Abraham, “father of a multitude of nations,” presage the struggles and aspirations of his descendants’ return migration from Babylon to Judah. At stake is Isaiah’s vision about the place of Israel among the nations.
The Human Desire to Be Godlike
The Human Desire to Be Godlike
The stories of Enosh, Noah, Nimrod, the Tower of Babel, and the marriage of the “sons of God” to human women (Genesis 4–11) all feature the Leitwort החל “began,” signaling an attempt to be more than just human.
The Tower of Babel: A Polemic against Marduk’s Temple Esagil
The Tower of Babel: A Polemic against Marduk’s Temple Esagil
Enuma Elish describes the Babylonian god Marduk’s plans for a city with a single tower that will serve as his seat of power and as the nexus of all gods. The story of Babel responds to this myth by having YHWH disrupt the construction and decentralize Babylon.
Noah’s Curse: On the Eve of the Civil War, a Rabbi Declares Black Slavery Biblical
Noah’s Curse: On the Eve of the Civil War, a Rabbi Declares Black Slavery Biblical
In 1861, Rabbi Morris Raphall of New York attempted to save the Union by declaring from his pulpit that slavery was the will of God, as per the Torah’s story of the curse of Ham. Some rabbis and Jewish scholars approved of the message, but others, such as Michael Heilprin and David Einhorn, pushed back with biting criticism.
What Really Happened in the Garden of Eden
What Really Happened in the Garden of Eden
The primordial man and woman may believe they ate from the Tree of Knowledge, but they actually ate from the Life-Giving Tree. This causes a chain reaction leading to the emergence of sexuality, procreation, and continuity for the human species.
The Secret of the Garden of Eden: Knowledge or Immortality
The Secret of the Garden of Eden: Knowledge or Immortality
YHWH advises Adam and Eve not to eat from the Tree of Knowledge but does not disclose that the reason they will die is because they will lose access to the Tree of Life. YHWH does not allow humans to become gods, both wise and immortal (Genesis 3:22), and thus expels them from the garden. Consequently, the woman must bear children to perpetuate the species, and the man must till the earth to produce food.
Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden: An Etiology for the Human Condition
Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden: An Etiology for the Human Condition
The expulsion from the garden of Eden is not a story about human error or sin. It is the inevitable result of the human desire for knowledge.
How the Forbidden Fruit Became an Apple
How the Forbidden Fruit Became an Apple
Wheat, grapes, citrons, figs, pomegranates, and olives have all been presented as the fruit that Adam and Eve ate, yet the apple, which only entered the scene in the 12th century C.E., became the most popular candidate.
Why Is Creation in the Torah?
Why Is Creation in the Torah?
History according to Rashi, science according to Maimonides. In Maimonides’ view, the Sages knew that hidden behind the allegorical language of the creation account is Aristotelian physics. This knowledge was lost until he (Maimonides) figured out the secret on his own.
Kohelet: The Earth Versus Humanity
Kohelet: The Earth Versus Humanity
Kohelet, the book of Ecclesiastes, complains about almost everything. The medieval commentator in MS Hamburg 32, however, argues that in his opening discourse, Kohelet is contrasting earth’s permanence with humanity’s transience, presenting the world, if not humanity, in a positive light.
Enforcing YHWH’s Covenant with Blessings and Curses—Imperial Style
Enforcing YHWH’s Covenant with Blessings and Curses—Imperial Style
The blessings and curses formulae in Deuteronomy 27–28 reveal a rich, complex and innovative interaction with ancient Near Eastern and Achaemenid parallels.
War at the Command of the Gods
War at the Command of the Gods
The ancient Near East, including biblical Israel, tried to come to terms with the horrific realities of war by understanding the destruction it wreaks as an act enjoined by divine command, whether of YHWH, Dagan, Ashur, Marduk, Kemosh, Teshub, etc., who also participated in the battles.
Does an Intentional Sinner Attain Atonement?
Does an Intentional Sinner Attain Atonement?
Leviticus 16 describes how the scapegoat ritual on Yom Kippur attains atonement for all of Israel’s sins, even acts of rebellion. Numbers 15, however, states that a person who sins unintentionally can bring an offering and be forgiven, but the person who sins intentionally is cut off from the people.
The Book of Jonah: God’s Didactic Lesson on Repentance
The Book of Jonah: God’s Didactic Lesson on Repentance
The book begins with Jonah running away and ends with YHWH rebuking the prophet, but the book is unclear as to whether Jonah ever repents. Why?
Why Does “Our” God Send Jonah to Save the Assyrians in Nineveh?
Why Does “Our” God Send Jonah to Save the Assyrians in Nineveh?
The Book of Jonah is unique in describing an Israelite prophet sent to an Assyrian city to rebuke them for their sins and persuade them to repent. Were the Assyrians merely bit players in the divine plan for Israel, or does God really care about the sins of non-Israelites? Radak, Abravanel, and ibn Ezra have very different theological approaches to this question.
How Long Did Gedaliah Govern before He Was Assassinated?
How Long Did Gedaliah Govern before He Was Assassinated?
After destroying Jerusalem and taking the king captive, Nebuchadnezzar appoints Gedaliah, a former royal steward, as the governor of Judah. But Ishmael, a scion of the royal family, conspires with Baalis, king of Ammon, assassinates Gedaliah, and kills the Babylonian soldiers stationed in Judah. How did Nebuchadnezzar respond?
Taking Refuge in God beyond the Temple Walls—Psalm 27
Taking Refuge in God beyond the Temple Walls—Psalm 27
Seeking a permanent connection with their god, ancient Mesopotamians would place votive statues of themselves in front of their god. Psalm 27 represents the Israelite alternative: the spoken request to see YHWH face-to-face uses words, not statues, to give the petitioner a refuge with God that endures even after departing the Temple.
Hannah: More Than Just the Mother of Samuel
Hannah: More Than Just the Mother of Samuel
The book of Samuel opens with the patriarch Elkanah’s annual pilgrimage to Shiloh, but it is his barren wife, Hannah, who emerges as the key figure in the story. Through her clever negotiations with God for a son, Hannah finds a way to transcend the bounds of her role as wife and mother and carve out an honorable niche for herself in the Israelites’ sacred chronicles.
YHWH’s Word Is Not Contained in a Single Scroll
YHWH’s Word Is Not Contained in a Single Scroll
In Deuteronomy, “these words,” “this torah,” and “this scroll” refer not to a specific delimited text, but point instead to the total revelation of YHWH to Israel that cannot be limited to one set of words or texts.
Rosh Hashanah: The Original Meaning of Blowing a Teruah
Rosh Hashanah: The Original Meaning of Blowing a Teruah
Rosh Hashanah in the Torah is described as a day of teruah, a reference to one of the two types of blasts: a regular horn blast (tekiah) and a teruah blast. Interpreters ancient and modern understand the distinction as differing in sound, length, or pitch, but the biblical description of the shofar blowing during the siege of Jericho implies that the nature of a teruah lies in the people’s response to the blast.