Saturday, June 29, 2013

Laderman, Images of Cosmology in Jewish and Byzantine Art

NEW BOOK FROM BRILL:
Images of Cosmology in Jewish and Byzantine Art
God’s Blueprint of Creation


Shulamit Laderman, Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies

Does the design of the Tabernacle in the wilderness correspond to God’s blueprint of Creation? The Christian Topography, a sixth-century Byzantine Christian work, presents such a cosmology. Its theory is based on the “pattern” revealed to Moses on Mount Sinai when he was told to build the Tabernacle and its implements “after their pattern, which is being shown thee on the Mount.” (Exod. 25: 40). The book demonstrates, through texts and images, the motifs that link the Tabernacle and Creation. It traces the long chain of transmission that connects the Jewish and Christian traditions from Syria and ancient Israel to France and Spain from the first through the fourteenth century, revealing new models of interaction between Judaism and Christianity.

Friday, June 28, 2013

BNTC 2013 - last weekend of special deal

REGISTRATION FOR THE 2013 MEETING OF THE BRITISH NEW TESTAMENT CONFERENCE in St. Andrews (29-31 August) is still open and you can book online here.

Early-bird registration is open only until 30 June, i.e., this Sunday. After that the price goes up substantially, so why not register now? For you, special deal!

Sapiential Deuterocanonica

OLD TESTAMENT APOCRYPHA WATCH: Philip Jenkins: FROM THE MOUTH OF THE MOST HIGH.
I recently suggested that we should pay much more attention to the Deuterocanonical books that are no longer found in most Protestant Bibles. Partly this is because of their artistic and cultural influence, but their religious significance is immense.

Two substantial “Second Canon” books in particular demand our attention, namely Wisdom (“the Wisdom of Solomon” and Sirach (Ecclesiasticus). Together with the canonical books of Proverbs and Ecclesiastes, they are major components of the once-vast wisdom literature of the ancient Jewish world, which reached its height in the last two centuries before the Christian era.

[...]

Yadin anniversary

YIGAEL YADIN died 29 years ago today: This day in Jewish history / An archaeologist who brought Israel's history to life, dies: Yigael Yadin helped acquire the Dead Sea Scrolls, identified the historical significance of Masada, and made Israelis feel connected to their ancient history (David B. Green, Haaretz).

UPDATE: Dead link now fixed. Sorry about that.

Pots in a cistern

IAA PRESS RELEASE:
Two Thousand Year Old Evidence of the Siege in Jerusalem (June 2013)

Three complete cooking pots and a small ceramic oil lamp were uncovered inside a small cistern in a drainage channel that runs from the Shiloah Pool in the City of David to Robinson’s Arch


Photograph of the finds in the cistern: Vladimir Naykhin.

The artifacts will be exhibited in a study conference on the City of David organized by the Megalim Institute, which will be held this coming Thursday, July 4, at Ramat Rahel

Recently a small cistern belonging to a building was exposed in an archaeological excavation the Israel Antiquities Authority is conducting near the Western Wall, in the vicinity of Robinson’s Arch in the Jerusalem Archaeological Park. Inside the cistern were three intact cooking pots and a small ceramic oil lamp that date to the time of the Great Revolt.
The vessels were discovered inside the drainage channel that was exposed in its entirety from the Shiloah Pool in the City of David to the beginning of Robinson’s Arch.

According to Eli Shukron, excavation director on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority, “This is the first time we are able to connect archaeological finds with the famine that occurred during the siege of Jerusalem at the time of the Great Revolt. The complete cooking pots and ceramic oil lamp indicate that the people went down into the cistern where they secretly ate the food that was contained in the pots, without anyone seeing them, and this is consistent with the account provided by Josephus”.

In his book The Jewish War Josephus describes the Roman siege of Jerusalem and in its wake the dire hunger that prevailed in the blockaded city.

In his dramatic description of the famine in Jerusalem he tells about the Jewish rebels who sought food in the homes of their fellow Jews in the city. These, Josephus said, concealed the food they possessed for fear it would be stolen by the rebels and they ate it in hidden places in their homes.

“As the famine grew worse, the frenzy of the partisans increased with it….For as nowhere was there corn to be seen, men broke into the houses and ransacked them. If they found some they maltreated the occupants for saying there was none; if they did not, they suspected them of having hidden it more carefully and tortured them.”
“Many secretly exchanged their possessions for one measure of corn-wheat if they happened to be rich, barley if they were poor. They shut themselves up in the darkest corners of the their houses, where some through extreme hunger ate their grain as it was, others made bread, necessity and fear being their only guides. Nowhere was a table laid…” (Josephus The Jewish War. Translated by G.A. Williamson 1959. P. 290).

The artifacts will be on display in a study conference on the City of David organized by the Megalim Institute which will take place this coming Thursday, July 4. For details about the conference visit the institute’s website at www.cityofdavid.org.il
That's quite a lot of narrative to get out of some pots in a cistern and an anecdote by Josephus, but maybe.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Jacobus et al. (eds.), Studies on Magic and Divination in the Biblical World

NEW BOOK FROM GORGIAS PRESS:
Studies on Magic and Divination in the Biblical World
Edited by Helen R. Jacobus, Anne Katrine de Hemmer Gudme & Philippe Guillaume


Title: Studies on Magic and Divination in the Biblical World
Series: Biblical Intersections 11
Availability: In Print
Publisher: Gorgias Press

Availability: In Print
Publication Date: 5/2013
Language: English
Format: Hardback, Black, 6 x 9 in
Pages: 330

This collection of essays by participants in the Magic and Divination in the Biblical World research group of the European Association of Biblical Studies represents a wide ranging, analytical, and often unconventional approach to a relatively neglected area within Biblical Studies. These original articles by new and established scholars include Mesopotamian demonology, Akkadian literary influences, exorcism, healing, calendars, astrology, bibliomancy, dreams, ritual magic, priestly divination, prophecy, magic in the Christian Apocrypha and the New Testament, magic in rabbinic literature, and Jewish Aramaic magic bowls.
Follow the link for TOC etc. and ordering information. This and other Gorgias titles are 30% off until the end of this month. For you, special deal.

Forgotten Palmyra inscription

ROGER PEARSE: A Christian inscription from Palmyra dated 135 AD? Could be. Those two marks framing the last line certainly aren't text-speak kissy x's. I wonder what Larry Hurtado would say about them.

Cross-file under "Aramaic Watch." More on Palmyra and its inscriptions here and links.

When prophecy fails

MARK GOODACRE: The joy of failed predictions. Mark's track record for being ahead of the times with technology is exemplary, but he seems happy enough to have made one wrong call. It's nice of him also to flag one of my prophecies from the same era which seems to be holding up pretty well. That said, the mainstream media is still pretty resistant to correction, but I think we're even making slow progress on that front.

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

God in a cake box

A GROOM'S WEDDING CAKE: The Ark of the Covenant … in Cake Form!

What have the Romans ever done for us?

IAA PRESS RELEASE:
Greetings from the Roman Empire! A Section of an 1,800 Year Old Road was Exposed in Jerusalem (June 2013)

According to the excavation director on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority, “This is the first time we have encountered such a finely preserved section of the road in Jerusalem”.


Photographic credit: Assaf Peretz, courtesy of the Israel Antiquities Authority

An ancient road leading from Yafo to Jerusalem, which dates to the Roman period (second–fourth centuries CE), was exposed this past fortnight in the Beit Hanina neighborhood in northern Jerusalem. The road remains were revealed in an archaeological excavation the IAA conducted in Beit Hanina prior to the installation of a drainage pipe by the Moriah Company.

The wide road (c. 8 m) was bounded on both sides by curbstones. The road itself was built of large flat stones fitted to each other so as to create a comfortable surface for walking. Some of the pavers were very badly worn, indicating the extensive use that was made of the road, and over the years the road also underwent a series of repairs.

According to David Yeger, excavation director on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority, “Several segments of the road were previously excavated by research expeditions of the IAA, but such a finely preserved section of the road has not been discovered in the city of Jerusalem until now”.
“The Romans attached great importance to the roads in the empire. They invested large sums of money and utilized the most advanced technological aids of the period in order to crisscross the empire with roads. These served the government, military, economy and public by providing an efficient and safe means of passage. Way stations and roadside inns were built along the roads, as well fortresses in order to protect the travelers. The construction and maintenance of the roads was assigned to military units, but civilians also participated in the work as part of the compulsory labor imposed on them by the authorities.”

The road section discovered in the IAA excavations in Beit Hanina is part of the imperial network of roads that led to Jerusalem from the coastal plain. We know about these roads from both historical sources and archaeological excavations. Two main arteries led from Yafo to Jerusalem during the Roman period. One is the road that passes through Bet Horon and the other runs via Shaar HaGai. This particular segment belongs to the Bet Horon road. The road began in Yafo and passed through Lod where it split it two different directions: one to Shaar HaGai and the other by way of Modiin along the route of what is today Highway 443 to Bet Horon. From there the road continued eastward as far as Bir Nabala and turned south to Kefar Shmuel where it merged with the highlands road that led to the Old City of Jerusalem.

In some places we can see that the modern Bir Nabala road was paved just a few centimeters above the route of the ancient road, which indicates that until a few decades ago the ancient road in this region was visible and was used.

More on reviving Aramaic

ARAMAIC WATCH: The Ben Yehudas of Aramaic: The one-time lingua franca of the Fertile Crescent is spoken by only 400,000 people around the world today. But efforts are being made, especially in one village in the Galilee, to ensure that Aramaic does not go quietly into the night (Dorit Shilo, Haaretz).
Shady Khallul and his brother Amir have been working for years to revive the holy language of Aramaean Christians in Israel and to bring it back into everyday use. Their model, Shady says, is none other than Eliezer Ben Yehuda, father of the contemporary Hebrew language renaissance.

"If you, the Jews, were able to revive Hebrew and turn it into a modern language, why can't we?" he asks. "Last year we received permission from the Education Ministry to teach Aramaic in first and second grades at the school in Jish, and we had to draft a curriculum from scratch. Amir wrote the textbooks and I traveled around the world to buy dictionaries and grammar books so that we could translate and adapt them for use in Israel. I brought most of the teaching material from Sweden, and the dictionaries from France. Most Aramaic books today are printed in Lebanon, but we have no way of bringing them in from there."

Unlike biblical Aramaic, written in Hebrew letters, the modern dialect - the Western variant of which is called Syriac - is written in another ancient script, which resembles a melding of the Hebrew and Arabic alphabets. Like Hebrew, the language comprises 22 characters and is written right to left. Each of Aramaic's two principle dialects - Western and Eastern - has its own alphabet. Both, however, share a classical written alphabet, Estrangela, reserved for prayers and religious texts.

The challenge before the Aramaeans in Israel, who use the Western dialect, is twofold: On the one hand they must teach their children to speak the language and persuade them to use it in their everyday lives, with family, friends and at school, and on the other hand teach them to read and write in the two alphabets (the Western and the Estrangela).
More on the Maronite revival of Aramaic in Jish here and links.

The ever-present Temple

THIS WEEK'S DAF YOMI COLUMN BY ADAM KIRSCH IN TABLET: In the Talmud’s Timeless Laws, a Vast Temple of the Mind: Long after the Jerusalem Temple was destroyed, Talmudic rabbis kept it alive in their imaginations, and ours.
All of this is remarkable, not just for its attention to detail, but because of the way the rabbis of the Talmud think about the Temple. There is no acknowledgment, in the cases of the bandage, the wart, and the hinge, that these rules apply to a Temple that does not exist. At the time the Gemara was being composed, the Temple had been gone for three centuries; most of the sages of Babylonia had never even seen the spot where it stood. Yet they continued to legislate for the Temple, to reconcile their own rules with the Temple’s rules, as if it existed in the present tense.
Earlier Daf Yomi columns are noted here and links.

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Michael Baigent, R.I.P.

MICHAEL BAIGENT HAS DIED:
Writer who sued over Da Vinci Code dies
Updated: 16:06, Tuesday June 25, 2013 (SkyNews.com.au)

New Zealand writer Michael Baigent, who gained attention for launching a lawsuit contending that The Da Vinci Code stole ideas from his own book, has died of a brain hemorrhage at age 65, his literary agent says.

Baigent is best-known for writing the 1982 non-fiction book The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail, which explores theories that Jesus married Mary Magdalene, the couple had a child and the bloodline survives.

In 2006 Baigent and co-author Richard Leigh made international headlines when they sued Dan Brown's publisher for copyright infringement, claiming that Brown 'appropriated the architecture' of their book in a high-profile London court case they eventually lost.

[...]
I followed the case back in the spring of 2006. See here, here, here, here, and here. Also note here.

Stec, The Geniza Psalms

NEW BOOK FROM BRILL:
The Genizah Psalms
A Study of MS 798 of the Antonin Collection. Cambridge Genizah Studies Series

David Stec

The Genizah Psalms (MS 798 of the Antonin Collection) is a Hebrew document of messianic character, apparently presenting itself as the work of David. It is taken by some to date to the time of the second temple, and to be approximately contemporary with some of the literature of Qumran, while others regard it as a medieval composition. From the point of view of a classical hebraist, David M. Stec explores how this text relates to classical Hebrew literature as a whole and considers how viable it is to regard it as a genuine constituent of that body of literature. He presents an edition of the Hebrew text and English translation, together with an introduction, commentary and analysis of language.
These psalms have been translated for the More Old Testament Pseudepigrapha Project by G. W. Lorein and E. van Staalduine-Sulman with the view that they are earlier rather than later.

Oh, and have I mentioned that the first volume of MOTP texts is due out in September: Old Testament Pseudepigrapha: More Noncanonical Scriptures? We're currently working on the page proofs.

Monday, June 24, 2013

BNTC 2013 one-week countdown

REGISTRATION FOR THE 2013 MEETING OF THE BRITISH NEW TESTAMENT CONFERENCE in St. Andrews (29-31 August) is still open and you can book online here.

Early-bird registration is open only until 30 June, i.e., this Sunday. After that the price goes up substantially, so why not register now? For you, special deal!

Congratulations to Matthew Goff

A HUMBOLT RESEACH FELLOWSHIP has been granted to Matthew Goff: Self-proclaimed Bible nerd studies scrolls: FSU associate professor Germany-bound to continue research on Dead Sea Scrolls. I look forward to seeing his work on the giants and the Nephilim.