Latest Essays
Joining Rebellions: Dathan and Abiram Merge with Korah, Leader of the Levites
Joining Rebellions: Dathan and Abiram Merge with Korah, Leader of the Levites
Dathan and Abiram’s civic rebellion against Moses and Aaron was independent of the Levites’ challenge to their religious demotion in relation to the Aaronides. The composite narrative underscores, more emphatically than either story could do alone, the principle that divinely-appointed leaders are to be accepted by the nation of Israel.
Is Modern Critical Study a Jewish Way of Studying Torah?
Is Modern Critical Study a Jewish Way of Studying Torah?
The works of medieval exegetes such as Maimonides, Rashbam and Ibn Ezra demonstrate that Judaism has a long-standing tradition of studying the Torah critically.
Neglected from Birth to Adolescence, Jerusalem Struggles to Love YHWH
Neglected from Birth to Adolescence, Jerusalem Struggles to Love YHWH
Deemed loathsome from the very moment of her birth (Ezekiel 16), Jerusalem was unwashed, unsalted, and abandoned—left to flail in her own blood. In every sense, she grew to womanhood neglected and alone. With such a stark beginning, it is no wonder that she fails to engage lovingly and devotedly in her marriage to YHWH.
Elisha’s Miracles: Holiness or Hubris?
Elisha’s Miracles: Holiness or Hubris?
With a miracle of an overflowing jar of oil, Elisha saves a widow’s sons from debt-slavery. He then grants the Shunammite woman a child and later resurrects that child from an untimely death. Both stories craft a portrait of a prophet exercising powers usually reserved for God. Is this prophetic hagiography or criticism of his encroachment on God’s domain?