Latest Essays
The Chronicles of Divine Justice: Why God Destroyed Judah
The Chronicles of Divine Justice: Why God Destroyed Judah
When does God reward and when does God inflict punishment and why? A comparison of the books of Kings and Chronicles demonstrates that the Chronicler, troubled by the theology of Kings in which children can be punished for the sins of their parents, rewrote Israel’s history.
The Prohibition of Joining the Assembly of the Lord
The Prohibition of Joining the Assembly of the Lord
Deuteronomy prohibits certain groups from “enter[ing] the assembly of YHWH,” לא יבואו בקהל י־הוה, which likely reflects a ban on citizenship. Nevertheless, the oldest and most commonly known explanation for the term is as a prohibition against marriage, an interpretation already found in Kings and Ezra-Nehemiah.
The Law of the Disrespectful Son and Daughter
The Law of the Disrespectful Son and Daughter
Deuteronomy’s law of the rebellious son (Deuteronomy 21:18–21) poses numerous problems. Like the rabbis, Josephus interprets the law, but his conclusions are quite different.
Keeping Excrement out of God’s Presence
Keeping Excrement out of God’s Presence
Deuteronomy requires Israelite soldiers to carry a shovel with them for covering their feces, outside the war camp, because God is in the camp. The Qumranites and Karaites assume that feces must be impure, while the rabbis extend the law to include times of prayer and Torah study, and maintaining human decency at all times.
The Guilt of the Slanderer and the Sotah: From Certainty to Uncertainty
The Guilt of the Slanderer and the Sotah: From Certainty to Uncertainty
The original laws of the slandering husband (מוציא שם רע) and the Sotah woman accused of adultery — both take one party’s guilt as a given. Each of these laws was subsequently redacted in a way that eliminated the automatic assumption of guilt.
In What Sense Did Orthodoxy Believe the Torah to be Divine?
In What Sense Did Orthodoxy Believe the Torah to be Divine?
Decades before Facebook, blogs, and the Internet, at a time Orthodoxy was trying to distinguish itself from the Conservative movement, ten Orthodox thinkers responded to the question of what the divine revelation of the Torah meant in Orthodox Judaism. Did they meet the challenge of Biblical Criticism?
The Mitzvah of Covering the Blood of Wild Animals
The Mitzvah of Covering the Blood of Wild Animals
Leviticus requires covering the blood of undomesticated animals; Deuteronomy requires pouring out the blood of slaughtered domesticated animals onto the ground. How do these laws jibe with each other? The Essenes have one answer, the rabbis another, the academics a third.
Why Deuteronomy Has an Account of Aaron’s Death in the Wrong Place
Why Deuteronomy Has an Account of Aaron’s Death in the Wrong Place
Bewildered, Rashi asks why Deuteronomy records Aaron’s death at Moserah (not Mt. Hor) and why it does so in the middle of Moses’ description of his (second) forty-day stay upon Mount Horeb. Academic biblical scholarship sheds light on these questions.