Ancient Readers and their Scriptures, : Engaging the Hebrew Bible in Early Judaism and Christianity.

explores the various ways that ancient Jewish and Christian writers engaged with and interpreted the Hebrew Bible in antiquity, focusing on physical mechanics of rewriting and reuse, modes of allusion and quotation, texts and text forms, text collecting, and the development of interpretative traditi...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Ancient Judaism and early Christianity ; Volume 107
:
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Leiden,, Boston: : Brill,, 2019.
Year of Publication:2019
Language:English
Series:Ancient Judaism and Early Christianity 107.
Physical Description:1 online resource (xviii, 312 pages).
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Description
Other title:Front Matter --
Copyright page --
Contributors --
Preface /
Reading the Hebrew Bible in Jewish and Christian Antiquity /
Reading Scripture in the Second Temple Period --
What Did Ben Sira’s Bible and Desk Look Like?1 /
Creation as the Liturgical Nexus of the Blessings and Curses in 4QBerakhot /
The Qumran Library and the Shadow it Casts on the Wall of the Cave /
The New Testament and Practices of Reading and Reusing Jewish Scripture --
Exegetical Methods in the New Testament and “Rewritten Bible”: A Comparative Analysis /
Scriptural Quotations in the Jesus Tradition and Early Christianity: Textual History and Theology /
The Return of the Shepherd: Zechariah 13:7–14:6 as an Interpretive Framework for Mark 13 /
The Hybrid Isaiah Quotation in Luke 4:18–19 /
Reading Scripture in Rabbinic Judaism --
A Single, Huge, Aramaic Spoken Heretic: Sequences of Adam’s Creation in Early Rabbinic Literature* /
The Variant Reading ולא / ולו of Psalm 139:16 in Rabbinic Literature /
Jewish and Christian Exegetical Controversy in Late Antiquity: The Case of Psalm 22 and the Esther Narrative /
Reading Retrospective --
What does ‘Reading’ have to do with it? Ancient Engagement with Jewish Scripture /
Back Matter --
Bibliography --
Index of Ancient Sources --
Index of Subjects --
Index of Modern Authors.
Summary:explores the various ways that ancient Jewish and Christian writers engaged with and interpreted the Hebrew Bible in antiquity, focusing on physical mechanics of rewriting and reuse, modes of allusion and quotation, texts and text forms, text collecting, and the development of interpretative traditions. Contributions examine the use of the Hebrew Bible and its early versions in a variety of ancient corpora, including the Septuagint, Dead Sea Scrolls, New Testament, and Rabbinic works, analysing the vast array of textual permutations that define ancient engagement with Jewish scripture. This volume argues that the processes of reading and cognition, influenced by the physical and intellectual contexts of interpretation, are central aspects of ancient biblical interpretation that are underappreciated in current scholarship.
ISBN:9004383379
Hierarchical level:Monograph