scholarly journals Recent Literature on the Old TestamentGrammaire hébraïque abrégée. J. TouzardEinleitung in das Alte Testament. Hermann L. StrackOld Testament Introduction. General and Special. John Howard RavenThe Origin and Permanent Value of the Old Testament. Charles FosterOutlines for the Study of Biblical History and Literature. F. K. Sanders , H. T. FowlerThe Book of Leviticus.The Book of Numbers. G. F. GenungThe Book of Job in the Revised Version. S. R. DriverThe Book of Psalms: With Introduction and Notes. W. F. CobbDie Profeten Israels in sozialer Beziehung. Paul KleinertDie Stellung des Propheten Jesaja zur Politik seiner Zeit. Friedrich KüchlerDie messianische Erwartung der vorexilischen Propheten: Zugleich ein Protest gegen moderne Textzersplitterung. Wilhelm MöllerDas Buck Habakuk: Text, Übersetzung und Erklärung. Bernhard DuhmDie Lade Jahves. Eine religionsgeschichtliche Untersuchung. Martin DibeliusEhe- und Familienrecht der Hebräer. T. EngertSozialismus und Individualismus im Alten Testament: Ein Beitrag zur alttestamentlichen Religionsgeschichte. Max LöhrHebrew Life and Thought: Being Interpretative Studies in the Literature of Israel. Louise Seymour Houghton

1907 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 139-150
Author(s):  
Ira M. Price

scholarly journals Some Recent Literature on the Old TestamentOutlines of an Introduction to the Old Testament. John Walter BeardsleeSyllabus for Old Testament Study. John R. SampeyIšố dâdh's Stellung in der Auslegungsgeschichte des Alten Testamentes an seinen Commentaren zu Hosea, Joel, Jona, Sacharja 9-14 und einigen angehängten Psalmen. G. DiettrichThe Biblical History of the Hebrews. F. J. Foakes-JacksonAbraham als Babylonier; Joseph als Aegypter. Hugo WincklerJoseph and Moses, the Founders of Israel. Buchanan BlakeDie Schätzung des Königtums im Alten Testament. Karl BuddeDie Genealogie des Königs Jojachin und seiner Nachkommen (1 Chron. 3:17-24) in geschichtlicher Beleuchtung. J. W. RothsteinKeilinschriftliches Textbuch zum Alten Testament. Hugo WincklerA History of Egypt, from the End of the Neolithic Period to the Death of Cleopatra VII. E. A. Wallis BudgeAegyptologische Studien. H. Schack-SchackenburgHebräische Grammatik mit Paradigmen, Litteratur, Uebungstücken und Wörterverzeichnis. Carl SteuernagelDie Sprüche Jesus', des Sohnes Sirachs. Hermann L. StrackGenesis übersetzt und erklärt. Hermann GunkelCursus Scripturae Sacrae: Commentarius in Librum Josue. Fr. de HummelauerDer Aufbau der Amosreden. Eberhard BaumannJeremiah the Prophet. John RobsonThe Only Key to Daniel's Prophecies. W. S. AuchinclossStudien zur israelitischen Religionsgeschichte. Johannes MeinholdDie Entwickelung der alttestamentlichen Gottesidee in vorexilischer Zeit. Wilhelm MöllerNatur und Character Jahwes nach den vordeuteronomischen Quellen der Bücher Genesis-Könige. Carl HunniusDie Sicherstellung des Monotheismus durch die Gesetzgebung in dem vorexilischen Juda. W. ErbtCritica Biblica; Or, Critical Notes on the Text of the Old Testament Writings. T. K. CheyneDer Schöpfungsbericht der Genesis (1:1-2:3), mit Berücksichtigung der neuesten Entdeckungen und Forschungen. Vinc. ZapletalDie Gesetze Hammurabis, Königs von Babylon um 2250 v. Chr.Hugo WincklerMoses und Hammurabi. Johannes JeremiasThe Linear Measures of Babylonia about B. C. 2500. W. Shaw-CaldecottAssyrisches und Talmudisches: Kulturgeschichtliche und lexikalische Notizen. Hermann PickDas Buch Hiob: Nach der Auffassung der rabbinischen Litteratur in den ersten fünf nachchristlichen Jahrhunderten. Isaac WiernikowskiHeinrich Ewald, Orientalist and Theologian, 1803-1903: A Centenary Appreciation. T. Witton DaviesThe First Bible. C. R. ConderBiblical Quotations in Old English Prose Writers. Albert S. CookDe la sincérité dans l'enseignement de l'histoire sainte de l'Ancien Testament aux enfants. X. KœnigLa Question biblique chez lez Catholiques de France au XIXe siècle. Albert HoutinStories from the Old, Old Bible. L. T. MeadeStudies in the Book: Old Testament. Franklin WeidnerPalästinischer Diwan als Beitrag zur Volkskunde Palästinas. Gustav H. Dalman

1904 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 180-198
Author(s):  
George S. Goodspeed ◽  
Ira Maurice Price ◽  
Herbert L. Willett

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
Jerome A. Lund

Abstract In recent literature, the noun ‮ܫܡܝܐ‬‎ has been described as a singular in the book of Isaiah, ostensibly on the basis of the lack of syame. I will argue to the contrary, demonstrating that it should be described as a plural in this corpus. The key to proper interpretation of the form is agreement with other clausal and phrasal constituents, not the presence or absence of syame.


Author(s):  
Brian Doak

The book of Job is the longest and most thematically and linguistically challenging of the “wisdom books” in the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament. In the book’s prologue (Job 1–2) the narrator introduces readers to a man named Job (Hebrew ‘iyyōb; etymology unclear). Job’s prosperity extends into all areas of his life, and seems at least potentially linked to his moral status as completely righteous and blameless before God. The earthly scene then gives way to a heavenly setting, where a figure called “the accuser” (literally “the satan”; haśśātān) appears before God. God boasts about Job’s righteousness, but the accuser counters, suggesting that Job’s moral achievement has been merely the byproduct of God’s protection. The accuser and God enter into a bet: Job’s children will be killed, Job’s possessions stripped, and Job’s body afflicted with a painful disease—all to see whether Job will curse God. Job initially responds to the distress with pious statements, affirming God’s authority over his life. In a state of intense suffering, Job is joined by three friends—Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar, and then eventually a fourth, Elihu—who offer rounds of speeches debating the reasons for Job’s situation (Job 3–37). Job responds to the friends in turn, alternately lamenting his situation and pleading for a chance to address God directly and argue his case as an innocent man. The friends accuse Job of committing some great sin to deserve his fate; they urge repentance, and defend God as a just ruler. God enters the dispute in a forceful whirlwind (Job 38), and proceeds for several chapters (Job 38–41) to overwhelm Job with resounding statements on creation (38:1–38), animal life (38:39–40:14), and visions of two powerful creatures, Behemoth (40:15–24) and Leviathan (41:1–11). The book ends with Job acknowledging to God the fact that he is overmatched in the face of divine power. God condemns the friends for not speaking “what is right, as my servant Job has” (42:7), and then restores Job’s lost possessions and children (42:10–17). Job has enjoyed a rich reception history in Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and, perhaps more than any other book in the Bible except Genesis, as a world literary classic in its own right. Within the Bible, it is the most bracing statement on the problem of suffering, as it presents a situation wherein a clearly righteous person suffers immensely—putting it at odds with more straightforward descriptions of why people suffer in Proverbs, Deuteronomy, and other texts. Scholarly research on Job has focused on the book’s place among other ancient Near Eastern wisdom materials, on questions of language (given the large amount of difficult Hebrew terms in the book), on historical-critical concerns about authorship and the way the book may have come together in its present form, and on the history of the translation of the text into Greek and other ancient languages. In the 21st century, interpreters have increasingly taken up readings of Job that situate it among concerns related to economics, disability, gender, and the history of its reception in many different eras and communities.


Author(s):  
Jon Stewart

Chapter 2 presents an account of the nature of the Old Testament or the Hebrew Bible. This includes a brief analysis of its historical context, tradition, and authorship. It treats a few episodes from the beginning of Genesis, specifically, the Creation, the Fall, the Tower of Babel, and the Flood. Comparisons are made with similar stories in The Epic of Gilgamesh. An interpretation is given of the Hebrew anthropology as it appears in the account of the creation of humans and original sin. It is argued that this is the story of how humans first separated themselves from nature and became self-conscious. The second half of the chapter gives a reading of The Book of Job. This story raises similar questions to those found in Gilgamesh about the issue of divine justice. An account is given of the different layers of the text and the different views of its authors. Both works represent a human protest against the divine and the nature of the universe, where humans suffer and die.


1990 ◽  
Vol 109 (2) ◽  
pp. 327
Author(s):  
Lowell K. Handy ◽  
John H. Hayes ◽  
Paul K. Hooker ◽  
E. W. Faulstich

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