Gillian Glass reviews Hicks-Keeton’s Arguing with Aseneth: Gentile Access to Israel’s Living God in Jewish Antiquity.
Read MorePublications | Christian Dialogues and Late Antiquity
The volume is conceived as a comprehensive guide to Christian dialogues composed in Greek and in Syriac from the earliest examples in the second century until the end of the sixth century.
Read MoreWeek in Review (10/11/19)
Illustration of Moses before Pharaoh | f.8r in the Syriac Bible of Paris (Bibliothèque Nationale, MS syr. 341) | Image Source
Illustration of Moses before Pharaoh | f.8r in the Syriac Bible of Paris (Bibliothèque Nationale, MS syr. 341) | Image Source
This Week: Apocalypse now, Pseudo-Matthew, imperial women and Lactantius, Allegro Qumran images online, Syriac teaching – and more!
Read More“The Time Is Fulfilled”: Jesus’s Apocalypticism in the Context of Continental Philosophy
In this book, I aim to expand beyond the traditional critical-exegetical methods (while these always remain indispensable) to show how Continental philosophy, with its emphasis on disrupting metaphysical and dualistic orders, offers a useful hermeneutical resource that poses new lines of questioning to the biblical texts.
Read MoreThe Manichaeans of Kellis: Religion, Community, and Everyday Life
When would the Manichaeans of Kellis have felt “Manichaeanness” as the most relevant factor to define their behavioral choices?
Read MoreThe Masada Myth(s)
Jodi Magness discusses the myths of Masada while offering a preview of her recent book, Masada: From Jewish Revolt to Modern Myth (Princeton University Press, 2019).
Read MoreBook Note | Synagogues in the Works of Flavius Josephus: Rhetoric, Spatiality, and First-Century Jewish Institutions
This nuance does not help scholars reconstruct detailed synagogue practices, but helps us understand an idea of what synagogues could mean for Jews of the first-century CE.
Read MoreFood and Transformation in Ancient Mediterranean Literature
In other words, if transformational eating like hierophagy is something that ancient authors took for granted, why is it that eating or tasting other-worldly food has such a profound effect?
Read MoreBook Note | Rewriting Masculinity
Kelly Murphy’s Rewriting Masculinity: Gideon, Men, and Might (OUP 2019)offers a fascinating journey through the multiple and layered maculinities of the biblical character Gideon (Judges 6-8), while providing a methodological model for biblical masculinity studies to emulate.
Read MoreExecution and Irony
Dr. Beth Berkowitz writes a retrospective of her first book, Execution and Invention: Death Penalty Discourse in Early Rabbinic and Christian Cultures (Oxford UP, 2006).
Read MoreBook Note | Pantheon
For students of the rabbis, Roman religion is often thought of as a constant. It is a yardstick against which we measure changing conceptions and ideas of the rabbis. But we would do well to remember that the period in which the rabbis, writ large, were active, is one of the headiest periods of religious change and upheaval in the Roman Empire.
Read MoreHow to Get a Head in Ancient Israel: Women-Turned-Warriors and Queer Theory
Judith and the Head of Holofernes by Gustav Klimt.
Judith and the Head of Holofernes by Gustav Klimt.
Caryn Tamber-Rosenau provides an overview of her recent publication, Women in Drag: Gender and Performance in the Hebrew Bible and Early Jewish Literature (Gorgias, 2018).
Read MorePerforming Exercises, Performing Exorcisms
The wedding night of Tobias and Sarah by Jan Steen (1660)
The wedding night of Tobias and Sarah by Jan Steen (1660)
Sara Ronis describes the pedagogical impact of role playing exorcisms.
Read MoreBook Note | The Donatist Church in an Apocalyptic Age
Anxiety over the end of time was deeply felt in Late Antiquity. In The Donatist Church in an Apocalyptic Age, Jesse Hoover turns our attention to the role of apocalypse for the Donatists, a currently neglected aspect of their theological and ecclesial vision.
Read MoreDivining Student Engagement: Studying Divination and Prophecy in the Classroom
Patrick Angiolillo describes his divination role-playing activity: “The students would be asked to develop their own forms of ritual divination, underscoring the concept that prophecy and divination were highly physical, calculated, lived experiences, and concretizing those aspects of the concept in practice.”
Read MoreIntroducing the Hebrew Bible and the History of Ancient Israel
Andrew Tobolowsky shares his classroom handout: “A Short Introduction to the Bible and the History of Ancient Israel.”
Read MoreChavruta and the Culture of Partnered Learning
Krista Dalton describes using chavruta text-study as a habitual part of the religious studies classroom.
Read MoreBook Note | Paul and the Emergence of Christian Textuality: Early Christian Literary Culture in Context
The thoroughgoing analysis, broad learning, and original theses evinced in this volume are a lodestar for scholars.
Read MoreUsing Star Trek to Teach Rabbinics
Rebecca Kamholz uses Star Trek fan discussions to teach Talmud: “What I finally realized was that there is a genre familiar to us in modern life that closely parallels the form and flow of the Talmud: the internet discussion board.”
Read MoreBook Note | Ancient Prophecy: Near Eastern, Biblical, and Greek Perspectives
With scholarship of the highest caliber, Ancient Prophecy is one of the most complete and authoritative accounts of the prophetic phenomenon in the ancient Eastern Mediterranean, says reviewer William Kelly.
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