Latest Essays
Did Early Christians Mourn the Destruction of the Temple?
Did Early Christians Mourn the Destruction of the Temple?
When the Temple was destroyed by the Romans in the summer of 70 C.E., the Jews lost their religious and political center. Practically speaking, this did not adversely affect Jesus’s followers, who continued to grow and flourish in this period. But what did they feel about the Temple’s destruction?
Ar Moab
Ar Moab
The Israelites travel to the east of Moab, through the wilderness, specifically to avoid encountering them. And yet, we are told that they travel through Ar-Moab, and even buy food and water from the locals. Do they walk through Moabite territory or not?
The War Against Midian: A Study for How the Priestly Torah Was Compiled
The War Against Midian: A Study for How the Priestly Torah Was Compiled
In revenge for the Midianite seduction, Phinehas takes the sacred utensils from the Tabernacle and leads the war against Midian. Many details in this story contradict other Priestly texts, giving us a glimpse into how the Priestly Torah was compiled.
Ataroth and the Inscribed Altar: Who Won the War Between Moab and Israel?
Ataroth and the Inscribed Altar: Who Won the War Between Moab and Israel?
Ataroth is an obscure Transjordanian city, referenced only twice in the Bible. Nevertheless, due to modern archaeological discoveries, it has become a central piece of evidence for reconstructing the history of the Moabite rebellion against Israel and King Mesha’s expansion of the Moabite kingdom described in both 2 Kings and the Mesha Stele.
Targum Onkelos and the Translation of Place Names
Targum Onkelos and the Translation of Place Names
The standard Aramaic translation of the Torah, Targum Onkelos, usually renders place names in the original Hebrew or leaves them out. However, there are exceptions.
Spinoza: Who Wrote the Bible Determines How We Read It
Spinoza: Who Wrote the Bible Determines How We Read It
Baruch Spinoza was excommunicated for his controversial beliefs about Judaism, including his rejection of the tenet of Mosaic authorship. However, Spinoza’s real originality is his radical and innovative claim that the origin of the biblical texts holds great significance for how they are to be read and interpreted.
Waheb in Suphah, the Forgotten “Town in the Stream”
Waheb in Suphah, the Forgotten “Town in the Stream”
Describing the Israelites crossing the Arnon Stream into Amorite territory, the Torah quotes the Book of YHWH’s Battles that speaks of “Waheb in Suphah,” a phrase that appears nowhere else in the Bible. Many creative explanations have been given, but based on a survey on the ground we can identify it as the “Town in the Stream,” an ancient biblical town whose name had long been forgotten.
Black People in Jewish Tradition: Eliminating Racism Requires Honesty
Black People in Jewish Tradition: Eliminating Racism Requires Honesty
Like many traditions with a long historical pedigree, Judaism has inherited its share of texts with racial bias. Failure to acknowledge this is one reason for prevalent conscious and subconscious racist views that can be found in the American Orthodox Jewish community—the community of which I am a part—which sometimes reveal themselves in overt statements and actions.
Sin of the Spies: God’s Ruse to Keep Israel in the Wilderness
Sin of the Spies: God’s Ruse to Keep Israel in the Wilderness
The Torah is clear that God refuses to allow the exodus generation to enter the land as a punishment for their sinful reaction to the spies’ report. Maimonides, however, argues that the punishment was a ruse; God never intended to allow that generation to enter the land.
Louis Jacobs: We Have Reason to Believe
Louis Jacobs: We Have Reason to Believe
Rabbi Dr. Louis Jacobs, voted “the greatest British Jew,” is best-known for his 1957 book that denied traditional notions of Torah min HaShamayim, the divine origin of the Torah. The resulting controversy still reverberates today.
The Two Arks: Military and Ritual
The Two Arks: Military and Ritual
Tradition and source criticism both see two ark traditions in the biblical text: The Ark of the Covenant and the Ark of the Testimony. The former accompanies Israelite troops into battle; it appears in Numbers 10 (וַיְהִי בִּנְסֹעַ הָאָרֹן) and in the stories of battles against the Philistines and Ammonites in Samuel. The latter remains in the Tabernacle, serving as a seat for YHWH’s glory and revelation.
The Paradox of Pesach Sheni
The Paradox of Pesach Sheni
As a historical commemoration, Passover is tied to a specific date. Nevertheless, the Torah gives a make-up date for bringing the offering a month later. Gerim, non-Israelites living among Israelites as equals, are also allowed to bring this offering, even though it wasn’t their ancestors who were freed. How do we make sense of these anomalies?
Did Moses Become Celibate?
Did Moses Become Celibate?
The Israelite men are commanded to separate from their wives before the revelation at Sinai. The rabbis learn from this that Moses permanently separated from his wife (Num 12), to be available to speak with God at all times. Joseph ibn Kaspi (14th c.), however, claims that this distorts the plain meaning of the text and that celibacy is an affront to Jewish values.
Shaming Women Suspected of Adultery - What About Men?
Shaming Women Suspected of Adultery - What About Men?
The Mishnah adds further humiliation to the biblical sotah ritual for a suspected adulteress. Other rabbinic texts from the same period critique this expansion, as well as the gender inequality inherent in the ritual itself.
Praise YHWH All You Nations: Psalm 117
Praise YHWH All You Nations: Psalm 117
Short does not mean simple: Psalm 117 is one of the more difficult psalms. It is only two verses long and exhorts non-Israelites to praise YHWH. Why would such a psalm be written? A look at the worldview of the exilic prophet Deutero-Isaiah provides one answer, while reading this psalm together with the beginning of Psalm 118 provides another.
Kedushah: Did the Angels Actually Say It?
Kedushah: Did the Angels Actually Say It?
The Kedushah prayer is based on two quotes from angels: “Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord of Hosts...” (Isaiah 6:3) and “Blessed be the Glory of the Lord from its place” (Ezekiel 3:12). However, Shadal, the 19th century polymath, explains that the second verse is not a quote by angels, but the result of a scribal error.
Boaz Married Ruth at the Threshing Floor: A Grammatical Solution to Ruth 4:5
Boaz Married Ruth at the Threshing Floor: A Grammatical Solution to Ruth 4:5
Boaz’s speech to the unnamed kinsman (Ruth 4:5) is difficult. By interpreting one element as an enclitic mem, as found in Eblaite, and by making use of the alternative textual option known as the ketiv, a new meaning for Boaz’s claim emerges.
Land or Torah: What Binds Israel as a Nation?
Land or Torah: What Binds Israel as a Nation?
This fundamental question lies at the heart of two stories: God suspending Mount Sinai over the Israelites to compel them to accept the Torah, and Joshua, with the Jordan River suspended over the Israelites, compelling them to accept mutual responsibility for each other's private sins.
The Substance of Kinship: How Ruth the Moabite Became a Daughter in Judah
The Substance of Kinship: How Ruth the Moabite Became a Daughter in Judah
Ruth’s consumption of barley and wheat gleaned from the field of Boaz was an integral step in her transformation from a “foreigner” who arrived from the fields of Moab to a “daughter” in Judah.
Speaking Truth to Power, Job Accuses God of Being Unjust
Speaking Truth to Power, Job Accuses God of Being Unjust
Job’s friends piously justify God’s actions and challenge Job to accept that he has done wrong. Yet God sides with Job and rebukes the friends for not “speaking about me in honesty as did my servant Job.”
Scribal Features That Helped the Priestly Text Survive
Scribal Features That Helped the Priestly Text Survive
The biblical priestly text is unique in the ancient Near East, in that it utilizes scribal features such as colophons, cross references, and casuistic laws (when... then...), aimed at making the text accessible to the public. This preserved Israelite priestly writing past the destruction of the Jerusalem Temple.
God Shelters the Faithful: The Prayer of Psalm 91
God Shelters the Faithful: The Prayer of Psalm 91
Psalm 91 expresses confidence that God will protect the righteous from plagues, demons, and wild animals, while allowing the wicked to perish. How are we to understand this psalm when pandemics and other disasters often hit the weakest and most vulnerable the hardest?
Jeremiah Buys Land in Prison, Symbolizing a Future Redemption
Jeremiah Buys Land in Prison, Symbolizing a Future Redemption
During the Babylonian siege, while Jeremiah was in King Zedekiah’s prison, he redeems his cousin’s land, upon YHWH’s instruction. The incarcerated prophet thus symbolically enacts the future restoration for the people who will soon be exiled from their land.