ABSTRACT

"Rethinking Biblical Scholarship" brings together seminal essays to provide readers with an assessment of the archaeological and exegetical research which has transformed the discipline of biblical studies over the last two decades. The essays focus on history and historiography, exploring how scholarly constructs and ideologies mould historical, literary and cultural data and shape scholarly discourse. Most of the essays illustrate the development of what has been called a "minimalist" methodology. Among the many central topics examined are the formation of the Jewish scriptural canon and how the concepts of "prophecy" and "apocalypse" illuminate the emergence of Judaism in the late Persian and Hellenistic periods.

part |39 pages

Method

chapter |14 pages

Whose history? Whose Israel? Whose Bible?

Biblical histories, ancient and modern

chapter |4 pages

‘House of David' built on sand

The sins of the biblical maximizers

part |80 pages

History

chapter |15 pages

God of Cyrus, God of Israel

Some religio-historical reflections on Isaiah 40–55

chapter |12 pages

Josiah and the law book

chapter |17 pages

Judaeans in Egypt

Hebrew and Greek stories

part |68 pages

Prophecy and apocalyptic

part |41 pages

Canon