Sunday, April 05, 2026

Easter 2026

HAPPY EASTER to all those celebrating.

The Easter post for 2025 is here with links. More recent Easter-related posts are here, here, and here.

My 2016 Easter post contains links leading to New Testament and related passages concerning Easter and to correct information on the origin of the word (dead link, but summary intact). And this post gives NT references for the Passion narrative.

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Isaiah between Judaism and Christianity (Mohr Siebeck)

NEW BOOK FROM MOHR SIEBECK:
Isaiah between Judaism and Christianity Early Christian Reception and Interpretation
Edited by Tobias Nicklas, Judith König, Stefan Green and Antti Laato

2026. 395 pages.
Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 2. Reihe (WUNT II) 647
DOI 10.1628/978-3-16-163287-7

€109.00
including VAT

sewn paper
available
978-3-16-163286-0

Also Available As:
eBook PDF

Summary

The contributors to this volume illustrate the way in which exegesis of the book of Isaiah was developed in early Christianity. Reception unfolded within spaces opened, shaped, and defined along Judaeo-Christian borderlines. The book of Isaiah was of utmost importance to the first Jesus followers and their literary production, particularly in the way they articulated their beliefs. Consequently, scholars have often referred to Isaiah as »the fifth Gospel.«
The present volume collects investigations into the specific ways the book of Isaiah was received in various early Christian contexts - from the canonical gospels to early Syriac Christian literature. The contributors explore the different modes and purposes of reading Isaiah and integrating its ideas, style, and concepts into new writings.

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Saturday, April 04, 2026

Does the Exodus story subvert Egyptian propaganda?

FOR PASSOVER: How the Exodus story subverts pharaonic texts to mock ancient Egypt. According to Bar-Ilan University’s Joshua Berman, who curated the new hagaddah ‘Echoes of Egypt,’ the biblical narrative ‘culturally appropriates’ facets of Egyptian culture — by design (Rossella Tercatin, Times of Israel).
In the new “Echoes of Egypt: A Haggada,” curated by Berman and recently published by Koren, the scholar argues that the term “a mighty hand and outstretched arm” represents just one of the many examples where the Torah seems to employ tools of the Egyptian narrative or propaganda and use them against the very people who enslaved the ancient Israelites.
For more on that biblical phrase, see here and links.

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Levin, The Chronicles of David and Solomon (T&T Clark)

NEW BOOK FROM BLOOMSBURY/T&T CLARK:
The Chronicles of David and Solomon

1 Chronicles 10 - 2 Chronicles 9: A New Translation and Commentary

Yigal Levin (Author)

Hardback
$175.00 $157.50

Ebook (PDF)
$157.50 $126.00

Product details

Published Jan 22 2026
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Extent 584
ISBN 9780567674302
Imprint T&T Clark
Dimensions 9 x 6 inches
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

Description

The book of Chronicles, the last book of the Hebrew Bible and a central historical book of the Christian Old Testament, has in recent decades gone from being “the Cinderella of biblical studies” to being one of the most researched books of the Bible. The anonymous author, often simply called “the Chronicler” by modern scholars, looks back at the old Israelite monarchy, before the Babylonian exile, from his vantage point in the post-exilic early Second Temple Period, and attempts to “update” the older historiographies of Samuel and Kings in order to elucidate their meaning to the people of his own time.

In The Chronicles of the David and Solomon, Yigal Levin does the same for the modern reader. He offers a brand-new translation and commentary on 1 Chronicles 10 – 2 Chronicles 9, examining the period of David's and Solomon's reign as presented in the text in exhaustive detail.
The Chronicles of David and Solomon is preceded in publication by The Chronicles of the Kings of Judah on 2 Chronicles 10 – 36, and will be followed by The Chronicles of All Israel on the genealogies of 1 Chronicles 1-9 and including comprehensive essays on the book of Chronicles, its time, purposes, methods and meanings.

I noted the publication of The Chronicles of the Kings of Judah (2017) here.

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Friday, April 03, 2026

On Easter and the Passover Haggadah

PROF. ADELE REINHARTZ: Easter with the Women at Jesus’ Empty Tomb: The Four Gospels (TheTorah.com).
Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John all include accounts of women discovering Jesus’ tomb empty three days after his crucifixion that share a common structure, but vary considerably in their details. Christians reading the story at Easter experience vicariously the women’s fear and awe, just as Jews re-experience the Exodus through the Haggadah.

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Jewish Responses to Jesus’ Crucifixion and Resurrection

DR. BARRY DOV WALFISH AND DR. RABBI ZEV FARBER: Behind the Mockery: Jewish Responses to Jesus’ Crucifixion and Resurrection (TheTorah.com).
The products of a period in which Judaism was considered to have been superseded by Christianity and Jews were treated as inferiors, the Talmud and Toledot Yeshu literature developed a biting, farcical retelling of Jesus’ story, which, at the same time, reveals the Jewish struggle to explain his massive impact on world religion. Yet, medieval rabbis also responded to Jesus’ death in a serious way, noting that ultimately, things turned out for the best: Jesus always planned to be crucified, and Jesus asked God to forgive everyone involved.
For more on Toledot Yeshu start here and follow the links. Arguably on linguistic grounds, the earliest (Aramaic) version was composed as early as the third or fourth century. For some discussion see, e.g., here.

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"Reclining" or sitting during the Last Supper?

BIBLE HISTORY DAILY: Laying Out the Last Supper. What Did Jesus's Final Meal Actually Look Like? (Clinton J. Moyer).
When Jesus and his disciples gathered for the Last Supper, how was the meal laid out? Did the group emulate the Roman dining practice of the triclinium, reclining at low tables arranged in a U shape and eating from individual place settings? Or did they sit around an arrangement of communal dishes from which all individuals partook? In the Spring 2026 issue of Biblical Archaeology Review, in his feature article titled “What Did the Last Supper Really Look Like?,” Matthew J. Grey considers these questions, shedding valuable light on the workings of this famous feast.

[...]

The article is behind the subscription wall, but this BHD essay summarizes it. Grey thinks that they were sitting in the domestic common room, not reclining in the triclinium.

Be that as it may, you can get a glimpse of a reconstructed Roman triclinium at Cartagena here. For a clearer reconstruction of one, see the Haaretz article linked to here.

Some other PaleoJudaica posts on the Last Supper are here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, and here.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Thursday, April 02, 2026

A late-antique baptismal ointment receptacle excavated at Hippos?

LITURGICAL ARCHAEOLOGY? Enigmatic Artifact Found in Hippos May Reveal Forgotten Stage in Baptism. Marble slab with three identical cups carved into its top found in cathedral in northern Israel may have held oils for 3-stage baptism and anointment, archaeologists suggest (Ruth Schuster, Haaretz).
In one of [the Hippos cathedral's] two baptismal halls, the expedition unearthed a unique object, in that nothing like it has been found before in such contexts: a marble block with three hemispheric cavities carved out of its top, excavation directors Michael Eisenberg and Arleta Kowalewska of the Zinman Institute of Archaeology at the University of Haifa reported in Palestine Exploration Quarterly in March. They cannot explain its function, but have a theory.

This artifact may be rare solid evidence of a forgotten stage in the baptism rite, they suggest. The cup shapes carved into its surface may have housed oils or other sanctified liquids. No known parallel to the object exists in the archaeological record, they add. So it may not only be a forgotten stage but an unusual one.

In late antiquity, a candidate for baptism was anointed with oil before the baptismal ceremony. For a near contemporary (early sixth-century) account of the process, see chapter 2 of Pseudo-Dionysius's Ecclesiastical Hierarchy. Baptism is called the rite of "illumination" there. The same work describes the rite of the consecration of the sacred ointment (the myron), used for baptism and other liturgical rituals, in chapter 4. Perhaps the cups in this marble block once held the baptismal ointment.

For many PaleoJudaica posts on artifacts and architecture recovered in and around the site of Hippos-Sussita (here a.k.a. Antiochia Hippo) from the Maccabean era to the Byzantine period, start here and follow the links. Hippos is one of those sites that just keeps on giving.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Does the number of plagues matter?

FOR PASSOVER: Why Ten Plagues? (Prof.Steven Weitzman, TheTorah.com).
The answer isn’t found in the Bible—but in Greek philosophy.
Excerpt:
There is no way to answer the question definitively of whether the ten-ness of the plagues in the exodus story is an incidental detail, an unintended byproduct of how the Torah was composed, or encodes some kind of hidden message as scholars like Zevit argue. But we can gain some insight by investigating what led early interpreters of the Bible to read meaning into the number of plagues.

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Sifting out an Egyptian-motif seal impression for Passover

PASSOVER-RELATED: TAKING EGYPT OUT OF THE ISRAELITES (The Temple Mount Sifting Project Blog).
Cynics might say Israeli archaeologists always “pull out” discoveries right before the holidays (just like last summer when we found a First Temple destruction clay sealing right before Tisha B’Av). But it turns out reality beats any timing!

This past Sunday, Arbel Monnickendam and his family came to sift soil from the Temple Mount (don’t worry, we have a protected space), and they found a fragment of a clay sealings from the First Temple period. The sealing features distinct Egyptian symbols, including a winged sun (a symbol of rule under divine protection) and parts of a cartouche (an oval frame enclosing Egyptian names).

We can’t publish more details or a closeup photo just yet, as the artifact requires proper scientific research and publication before being presented to the wider public. But because of the amazing timing right before Passover night, we just had to share our excitement with you!

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Wednesday, April 01, 2026

Passover 2026

HAPPY PASSOVER (PESACH) to all those celebrating! The festival begins this evening at sundown.

Last year's Passover post is here, with links. Subsequent Passover-related posts are here here, here, here, and here. Also, today's first post.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Assyrian New Year 2026

THE ASSYRIAN NEW YEAR 6776 is celebrated today—this year the same day that Passover starts. The current Akitu Festival is a modern revival of the ancient Mesopotamian New Year festival with the same name.

Some articles from the Syriac Press on this year's observance:

Akitu: Shared Memory and Horizons of Coexistence

Kha-Nisan—Akitu celebrations canceled in Iraq amid regional war, celebrations in Gozarto (Jazira), Syria, still plan to go ahead

International new year greetings reflect growing recognition of Kha Nison-Akitu

For more on the modern festival, see here and links. And follow the links from there for more on the ancient festival. Cross-file under Modern Aramaic Watch.

Happy New Year to all those celebrating!

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The hand and arm of the Lord

FOR PASSOVER: YHWH’s “Egyptian” Strong Hand and Outstretched Arm (Prof. Brent A. Strawn, TheTorah.com).
“Remember that you were a slave in the land of Egypt, and YHWH your God brought you out from there with a strong hand and with an outstretched arm...”( Deuteronomy 5:15). Two Egyptian motifs—military dominance and divine benevolence—lie behind this image of YHWH.
The motifs of the hand and arm of the Lord continued to develop during and after the biblical period in sometimes surprising ways. For an overview of some of them, see here.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Who really wrote the Pentateuch?

SOURCE CRITICISM: Who really wrote the Old Testament? These are the theories. When analyzing the oldest books of the Bible, scholars have identified the work of various writers and editors. But how did the final version come to be? (Javier Alonso López, National Geographic).

The headline over-promises (not the author's fault), since the article is about the origins of the Pentateuch. I would nuance this or that, but overall it is a quite good overview of the traditional Documentary Hypothesis.

That said, many specialist now have considerable reservations about elements of the traditional hypothesis. I think there is widespread agreement on a Deuteronomy source and a Priestly source. Beyond that, there is less agreement. D and P are embedded in the Pentatuech with a lot of other stuff that I like to think of as the Sticky Goo source(s) (a.k.a. JE). And some specialists want to break even D and P down into sub-sources.

For more comments on the current state of the question, see here and here.

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What does the Hebrew particle נא- (-na') mean, please?

PHILOLOGY: Naʾ נָא — Translate This Word Now, Please! (Prof. Steven E. Fassberg, TheTorah.com).
The Hebrew particle נָא naʾ appears almost four hundred times in the Bible. How should it be translated? To answer this question, we need to look at: 1) the biblical contexts; 2) the ancient translations of the Bible; 3) medieval grammarians; and 4) modern grammarians.
If we move a little further afield and look at cognates, Akkadian has an enclitic particle -ma which has an emphatic sense. I've wondered if biblical Hebrew -na' had that usage too. It often fits the context. Then there's the baffling Ugaritic enclitic particle -m ...

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More on that Sardinian Phoenician scarab

PHOENICIAN WATCH: Phoenician Scarab Found in Sardinia. New excavations reveal the island played a much more extensive role in Phoenician trade than initially thought (MICAH VAN HALTEREN, Armstrong Institute of Biblical Archaeology).
Excavators digging at the ancient site of Nuraghe Ruinas of Arzana on the Italian island of Sardinia have found a Phoenician-type scarab seal, the Superintendency of Archaeology for the Sassari and Nuoro provinces in Sardinia announced on February 3. This discovery further confirms the presence of the Phoenicians on the island during the Iron Age (c. 950-500 b.c.e.).

[...]

I have already noted the discovery here. But this article is worth a read for its more detailed biblical background. And for a recent post on the Phoenician Nora Stone Inscription and the Phoenicians at Nora (Sardinia), see here.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Monday, March 30, 2026

Persian-era mass grave of infants excavated at Azekah

FUNERARY ARCHAEOLOGY: Archaeologists Find 2,500-year-old Mass Grave of Infants in Israel. The jumbled remains of dozens of skeletons at Azekah may help explain why children are not found in biblical-era cemeteries (Ariel David, Haaretz).
More than a decade ago, archaeologists investigating a cistern among the ruins of Azekah, an ancient town southwest of Jerusalem, made a gruesome discovery. The millennia-old water reservoir was not only filled with broken pottery and sediment washed in during centuries of abandonment, as one would expect. It also contained dozens of skeletons of children.

This mass grave for infants, most of them less than two years old, was likely in use during the Persian Period, some 2,500 years ago. It housed the fragile, jumbled remains of up to 89 individuals, the researchers say.

[...]

The underlying open-access peer-review article in the Palestine Exploration Quarterly:
A mass grave of young children and infants from the Persian period in Tel Azekah and its importance for the understanding of burial practices of unweaned infants

Oded Lipschits, Annika Hauser, Noa Shatil, Manfred Oeming, Omer Sergi, Liora Freud, Tal Nemet, Hila Mayl & Sabine Kleimana
Published online: 27 Mar 2026
Cite this article https://doi.org/10.1080/00310328.2025.2589646

ABSTRACT

During the excavations at Tel Azekah, a cistern was discovered on the tell’s lower plateau containing the remains of a minimum of 68 individuals, almost all of whom were infants and young children. The osteological analysis revealed that approximately 90% of the individuals were under five years of age, 70% even less than two years old. The burial seems to be primary, and the deposition of the remains was dated to the Persian period (ca. 5th century bce) based on the analysis of ceramics and small finds. This paper presents the archaeological context, ceramics, small finds, and human remains. We propose that during the Persian period, the cistern functioned mainly as a mass burial site for infants who were not granted individual interments since they were not yet weaned. The findings address broader questions, such as the social status of infants, weaning as a rite of passage, and mortuary practices during the Persian Period.

For more on the Ashkelon brothel infant burials, see here and here and the links in between. For many posts on the infant burials at Carthage, which are widely, but not universally, taken to be human sacrifices, start here and follow the links.

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AI and Israeli archaeology

ALGORITHM ARCHAEOLOGY: From dust to data: How technology is transforming Israeli archaeology. Israel’s archaeologists are harnessing artificial intelligence, cloud computing, and cutting-edge science to transform how the past is uncovered – and understood (Shlomo Cesana, Jerusalem Report).
The first stage, then, was the creation of an open and accessible database. The second stage, currently underway, is transforming the database into an advanced scientific repository. To this end, thousands of archives, laboratory data, and additional information that the IAA collected are being fed into it, and in the future it will include research articles from around the world.

“In the second stage, which we are in right now,” said [Alby] Malka, head of the IAA Technologies Division], “the Israel Antiquities Authority is using Google’s artificial intelligence tools. A pilot project has already scanned 5,000 archaeological research articles relevant to finds discovered in Israel.”

The third and most ambitious stage will enable the AI system not only to retrieve information but also make connections, suggest new perspectives, and answer complex questions. The system will integrate archaeological finds, scientific articles, and general knowledge, performing a synthesis that can serve as a research tool. Completing this stage will undoubtedly constitute a significant breakthrough in combining new technology with the findings of the past.

The first stage is done. Great. AI will be quite useful for the second stage, which amounts to advanced bean counting.

The catch comes with the third stage. The achilles heel of LLM AI is that there is no one home. Its a collection of automated processes—advanced autocorrect—which give a result with no one reviewing it against baseline reality. That's why it hallucinates. AI will speed up the third stage as long as humans oversee it to correct its misapprehensions.

When I get a chance, I may say more about this. Meanwhile, this is a good article that understands the benefits and limitations of AI.

Cross-file under Technology Watch.

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Honor Frost: Selected Works (open access, Sidestone Press)

THE AWOL BLOG: Honor Frost: Selected Works.

A collection of essays by pioneering underwater archaeologist Honor Frost. For more on her and her her contribution to Phoenician and Punic marine archaeology, as well as to the archaeology of Jericho, see here and here.

Cross-file under marine (maritime, underwater) archaeology.

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