Renowned Judaic scholar David Weiss Halivni explores internal inconsistencies in the Pentateuch and examines the question of how the Rabbinic tradition has been able to accommodate evidence of human intervention in a text that derives its authority from divine revelation.
Renowned Judaic scholar David Weiss Halivni explores internal inconsistencies in the Pentateuch and examines the question of how the Rabbinic tradition has been able to accommodate evidence of human intervention in a text that derives its authority from divine revelation.
David Weiss Halivni is Lucius N. Littauer Professor of Classical Jewish Civilization at Columbia University.
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword: Revelation Restored as Postcritical Theology Foreword: A Christian Perspective Acknowledgments Introduction The Compilers' Editorial Policy Traditional and Critical Perspectives The Return from Babylonian Captivity Inconsistencies of Law The Inviolability of Text Ezra's Project in Review Overcoming Maculation The Emergence of Exegesis An Analogy to the Babylonian Talmud Exegesis on the Rise The Post-Talmudic Period Revelation Restored: Theological Consequences Tradition and Criticism Out of the Middle Ages Revelation Restored Afterword: Continuous Revelation Notes About the Book and Author Subject Index Index of Textual References Index of Names
Foreword: Revelation Restored as Postcritical Theology Foreword: A Christian Perspective Acknowledgments Introduction The Compilers' Editorial Policy Traditional and Critical Perspectives The Return from Babylonian Captivity Inconsistencies of Law The Inviolability of Text Ezra's Project in Review Overcoming Maculation The Emergence of Exegesis An Analogy to the Babylonian Talmud Exegesis on the Rise The Post-Talmudic Period Revelation Restored: Theological Consequences Tradition and Criticism Out of the Middle Ages Revelation Restored Afterword: Continuous Revelation Notes About the Book and Author Subject Index Index of Textual References Index of Names
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