Latest Essays
The Subversive Kaddish
The Subversive Kaddish
The Mourner’s Kaddish strengthens the connection of living Jews with their deceased relatives. The custom was developed by twelfth century Ashkenazi Jews as a way of saving their loved ones from Gehenna (hell) and making heaven available to all.
Yom Kippur and the Nature of Fasting
Yom Kippur and the Nature of Fasting
Jewish tradition places a strong emphasis on the importance of repentance on Yom Kippur. It finds its way into Yom Kippur through a post biblical association between fasting and repentance. But what does fasting signify in the Bible and what did it mean originally in the context of Leviticus 16?
The Biblical Prohibition of Polygyny?
The Biblical Prohibition of Polygyny?
Popular legend tells us that Rabbenu Gershom (d. ca 1028) was the first to prohibit polygyny. The Damascus Covenant’s understanding of the law in Leviticus 18:18, however, suggests that polygyny may have been prohibited more than a thousand years earlier by the Priestly authors.
Israel’s Departure from Egypt: A Liberation or an Escape?
Israel’s Departure from Egypt: A Liberation or an Escape?
The oldest layer of the exodus story has the Egyptian people, panicked by the plague of darkness, force the Israelites out under the king of Egypt’s nose. The story is later revised to credit the exodus to God's smiting the firstborn sons, and then drowning Pharaoh and his army in the sea. The final, Priestly editor added his signature theological innovation: God forces Pharaoh to give chase by hardening his heart.
The Ethical Problem of Hardening Pharaoh’s Heart
The Ethical Problem of Hardening Pharaoh’s Heart
It seems unethical for God to deny Pharaoh free will and then punish him for his actions. Rashi, Nahmanides, and Maimonides all struggle with this problem, and each assumes that even Pharaoh deserves to be treated fairly.
The Treatment of Non-Israelite Slaves: From Moses to Moses
The Treatment of Non-Israelite Slaves: From Moses to Moses
The Bible already expresses ambivalence about Hebrew slavery, the rabbis expand upon it and Maimonides takes the next step, applying the negative evaluation of slavery even to non-Israelites.
Can Elijah Reconcile Fathers and Sons?
Can Elijah Reconcile Fathers and Sons?
Biblical tradition often depicts difficult father and son relationships. Accordingly, the concluding verses of Malachi—the final book of the Prophets—imagines ultimate redemption through a metaphor of father-son reconciliation, in which the fire and brimstone prophet Elijah is its unlikely harbinger. Leave it to the poet Yehuda Amichai to step in and offer a counter-model to rescue the metaphor.
Sex During Menstruation: From Impurity to Prohibition
Sex During Menstruation: From Impurity to Prohibition
Leviticus 15:24 does not declare sex with a menstruating woman to be forbidden, only that it results in temporary impurity. Leviticus 18:19 and 20:18, however, strictly prohibit it. What accounts for these two different approaches?