Saturday, April 26, 2025

Khan Festschrift (Open Book)

CONGRATULATIONS TO GEOFFREY KHAN on the two-volume Festschrift in his honour published by Open Book Publishers.

Interconnected Traditions: Semitic Languages, Literatures, Cultures—A Festschrift for Geoffrey Khan. Volume 1: Hebrew and the Wider Semitic World (many editors, see link)

Interconnected Traditions: Semitic Languages, Literatures, Cultures—A Festschrift for Geoffrey Khan. Volume 2: The Medieval World, Judaeo-Arabic, and Neo-Aramaic (ditto).

The notice for both volumes:

Geoffrey Khan’s pioneering scholarship has transformed the study of Semitic languages, literatures, and cultures, leaving an indelible mark on fields ranging from Biblical Hebrew and Aramaic dialectology to medieval manuscript traditions and linguistic typology. This Festschrift, celebrating a distinguished career that culminated in his tenure (2012–2025) as Regius Professor of Hebrew in the Faculty of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Cambridge, brings together contributions from a vast and representative array of scholars—retired, established, and up and coming—whose work has been influenced by his vast intellectual legacy.

Reflecting the interconnected traditions that Khan has illuminated throughout his career, this volume presents cutting-edge research on Hebrew and Aramaic linguistics, historical syntax, manuscript studies, and the transmission of textual traditions across centuries and cultures. Contributors engage with topics central to Khan’s scholarship, including the evolution of the Biblical Hebrew verbal system, the intricacies of Masoretic notation, Geniza discoveries, Samaritan and medieval Judaeo-Arabic texts, and computational approaches to linguistic analysis.

As Khan retires from his role as Regius Professor, this collection stands as both a tribute and a continuation of his work, honouring his lifelong dedication to understanding and preserving the linguistic and literary heritage of the Semitic world.

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

Friday, April 25, 2025

More on the Ostia mikveh, etc.

VARIANT READINGS: More on the mikveh at Ostia and Other Jewish Materials (Brent Nongbri).

Including information on the Jewish materials now on display in the Ostia Museum.

Background here.

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

Satlow on AI and Word Similarity in the Talmud

MICHAEL L. SATLOW: Word Similarity in the Talmud. Professor Satlow has an ongoing project "to explore ways in which AI and machine learning can contribute to the academic study of early rabbinic literature."
Our first output is a tool that maps the similarity of word use in the tractates of both the Babylonian and the Palestinian Talmuds.

This is an experimental tool that uses machine learning techniques to show word similarities in the Babylonian and Jerusalem Talmuds. It will also allow you to compare how specific tractates use a word. It works by first mapping phrases (the length of which is determined by the “Window”) into a multidimensional matrix, then computing the distance between those occurrences, and finally sorting these occurrences into clusters based on the distances. The parameters are explained further in the menu. You can hover over the points on the visualization to see more data.

Cross-file under Talmud Watch and Algorithm Watch.

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Aramaic postdoc in Madrid

ARAMAIC WATCH; REPOSTED FROM THE AGADE LIST:
From Jonathan Valk (jonathan.valk@gmail.com):
====================

The ERC-funded ARAMAIZATION project (The Aramaization of the Middle East: Revisiting the Fall and Rise of Written Traditions, 2025–2030, https://doi.org/10.3030/101163243) based in Madrid at the Spanish National Research Council’s (CSIC) Institute of Languages and Cultures of the Mediterranean and the Near East invites applications for a Postdoctoral position in Aramaic Studies. The appointment is for three years, starting in September 2025 or at a mutually agreed upon date.

Job description

The ARAMAIZATION project seeks to better understand the rise of written Aramaic across the ancient Middle East in the first half of the first millennium BCE. The successful applicant will work with Principal Investigator Jonathan Valk to collect, edit, and make available all Aramaic writing from the Assyrian world in the first half of the first millennium BCE within the broader cuneiform context in which this writing was produced. Publication of the Aramaic evidence will be both online and in print. The position comes with substantial freedom to shape the research process and with the resources required to ensure its successful implementation, including museum visits and research tools. Salary is set at the conditions for Personal contratado Doctor FC3 in the Spanish system, amounting to a total compensation package before tax and social security payments of 55,327.25 €

Eligibility

Candidates will possess expertise in Aramaic philology and a capacity to work directly with inscribed objects. Familiarity with Assyriology and broader comparative Semitics is desirable. Applicants should hold a PhD degree in a relevant discipline.

Applicants should possess an excellent command of written and spoken English, as well as excellent research and communication skills. The ability to work collaboratively with other members of the team is essential.

Application procedure

Applications should consist of the following:

· a curriculum vitae

· a cover letter explaining your motivation for applying for the position and demonstrating your capacity to fulfill the requirements successfully

· a writing sample (preferably published work)

· contact information (email) for two referees

Please merge these items into a single pdf file and submit them via email to jonathan.valk@gmail.com by 26 May 2025.

Please submit any questions about the position or the application process to the same address. Applicants will receive confirmation that their materials have been received and will be notified of any developments via email. Shortlisted applicants will be invited to an online interview.

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Open-access titles from Project Muse

THE AWOL BLOG notes some open-access Brown Judaic Studies monographs, all reprinted in 2020 by Project Muse:

Ben Sira’s View of Women: A Literary Analysis (Warren C. Trenchard, 1982)

Sectarian Law in the Dead Sea Scrolls: Courts, Testimony and the Penal Code (Lawrence H. Schiffman, 1983)

Semites, Iranians, Greeks, and Romans: Studies in their Interactions (Jonathan Goldstein, 1990)

Some Jewish Women in Antiquity (Meir Bar-Ilan, 1998)

And for a bonus, here's another Project Muse reprint:

Rabbinic Judaism in the Making: The Halakhah from Ezra to Judah I (Alexander Guttmann, Wayne State University Press, 1970, rpt. 2018)

It is great to have these older volumes readily available again. But be aware that you may have to poke around a bit to find the original publication dates. They really should be listed at the top of the Project Muse page with the reprint date.

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

Thursday, April 24, 2025

Caviezel, Gibson, Passion of the Christ 2, and the fall of the angels?

CINEMA: Passion of the Christ 2: Jim Caviezel Explains Different Mindset for Sequel (Anthony Nash, ComingSoon.net).
Jim Caviezel is currently preparing to return to the role of Jesus Christ for the upcoming Passion of the Christ 2, and recently opened up about how he’s preparing.
I noted a year ago that Passion of the Christ 2 was in the works. It was supposed to be out by about now, but it seems it is still at a preliminary stage. You can read about Caviezel's thoughts in this article, but what caught my eye was a detail from Mel Gibson's Joe Rogan interview from January of this year.
“I’m hoping next year sometime. There’s a lot required because it’s an acid trip,” he said. “My brother and I and Randall all sort of congregated on this. So there’s some good heads put together, but there’s some crazy stuff. And I think in order to really tell the story properly you have to really start with the fall of the angels, which means you’re in another place, you’re in another realm. You need to go to hell.”
Sounds like the film will start with the fall of the angels, which may mean that Mel will be looking at legends of the fall of the watchers in 1 Enoch and related Second Temple Jewish texts. I hope he takes note of the Book of Giants as well, since it is effectively another Second Temple Enochic book and it covers that ground from its own perspective - that of the doomed giant offspring of the watchers.

All surviving translatable fragments of the Book of Giants are now available in Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, volume 2, More Noncanoncial Scriptures. I may have mentioned this already, but its formal publication date is today!

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

More on the Punic lack of Levantine ancestry

PUNIC WATCH, UPDATE: Who Were the Carthaginians? Ancient DNA Study Reveals a Stunning Answer Carthage and its empire were established by Phoenicians, but new research finds that the archenemies of Rome had little genetic link to their Levantine founders (Ariel David, Haaretz).
Now, a team of researchers has extracted the DNA of scores of people buried in ancient Punic settlements across the western and central Mediterranean, including Carthage itself, and has made a startling discovery.

... Instead, it seems the Punic people were exceptionally diverse, and derived most of their ancestry from a genetic profile similar to that of ancient people from Sicily and Greece. The second major ancestry component came from local North African populations and steadily grew as Carthage's political importance rose, the researchers report.

The finding is unexpected because, throughout the centuries, the Carthaginians maintained clear cultural links to their Levantine roots, speaking a semitic language, using the Phoenician alphabet and worshipping the Canaanite gods of their founders.

I have mentioned this story already here when the underlying article was at the prepublication stafe. I comment there on why the result is not all that surprising.

Now the article has been published the journal Nature. And, as usual for the Haaretz archaeological reporters, Ariel David provides useful background and commentary. The article:

Punic people were genetically diverse with almost no Levantine ancestors

Harald Ringbauer, Ayelet Salman-Minkov, Dalit Regev, Iñigo Olalde, Tomer Peled, Luca Sineo, Gioacchino Falsone, Peter van Dommelen, Alissa Mittnik, Iosif Lazaridis, Davide Pettener, Maria Bofill, Ana Mezquida, Benjamí Costa, Helena Jiménez, Patricia Smith, Stefania Vai, Alessandra Modi, Arie Shaus, Kim Callan, Elizabeth Curtis, Aisling Kearns, Ann Marie Lawson, Matthew Mah, …David Reich

Nature (2025)

Abstract

The maritime Phoenician civilization from the Levant transformed the entire Mediterranean during the first millennium BCE1,2,3. However, the extent of human movement between the Levantine Phoenician homeland and Phoenician–Punic settlements in the central and western Mediterranean has been unclear in the absence of comprehensive ancient DNA studies. Here, we generated genome-wide data for 210 individuals, including 196 from 14 sites traditionally identified as Phoenician and Punic in the Levant, North Africa, Iberia, Sicily, Sardinia and Ibiza, and an early Iron Age individual from Algeria. Levantine Phoenicians made little genetic contribution to Punic settlements in the central and western Mediterranean between the sixth and second centuries BCE, despite abundant archaeological evidence of cultural, historical, linguistic and religious links4. Instead, these inheritors of Levantine Phoenician culture derived most of their ancestry from a genetic profile similar to that of Sicily and the Aegean. Much of the remaining ancestry originated from North Africa, reflecting the growing influence of Carthage5. However, this was a minority contributor of ancestry in all of the sampled sites, including in Carthage itself. Different Punic sites across the central and western Mediterranean show similar patterns of high genetic diversity. We also detect genetic relationships across the Mediterranean, reflecting shared demographic processes that shaped the Punic world.

The Haaretz article does flag one result that I do find surprising:
The later and secondary addition of North African ancestry likely has to do with the rise to prominence of Carthage as the capital of the Punic empire, the researchers note. But what is unusual is that this "radical mix" occurred pretty homogenously across the empire: it's not that the Phoenicians in Sicily mixed with the local Sicilians and Greeks, while the ones in Tunisia intermarried with Africans. The genetic analysis shows that this population churn was constant and spread all over the empire. This is likely connected to the great mobility of the Carthaginians who created a "Mediterranean highway" of maritime trade, Ringbauer says.
I would have expected the genetic diversity to be more tied to the local populations in the individual colonies.

At this post is a reminder why PaleoJudaica posts so frequently on Phoenician and Punic (Carthaginian) language and society.

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

Why so many churches in the late-antique Levant?

SOCIAL-ARCHAEOLOGICAL RECONSTRUCTION: Private churches and public synagogues – how devotion and ambition shaped the religious landscape of Israel in Late Antiquity (All Israel News).
Late Antiquity (4th–7th centuries A.D.), saw a surge of private church construction in the land of Israel and the broader Near East, driven by Christian patrons’ desire for prestige and devotion to local saints, according to new research by Prof. Jacob Ashkenazi of Kinneret College on the Sea of Galilee.

Published in the Levant journal, Ashkenazi's findings also show a clear contrast with nearby Jewish communities, which focused their resources on single, centralized synagogues that served as village community centers.

[...]

Prof. Ashkenazi's article in the journal Levant, "Why so many? Analysing church multiplicity in Late Antique southern Levant," is behind the subscription wall, but you can read the abstract for free at the link above.

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

Hybrid Lecture: Alexander the Great in Jerusalem and the Origins of the Alexander Romance

UNIVERSITY OF LIVERPOOL:
Alexander the Great in Jerusalem and the Origins of the Alexander Romance

The ACE [Archaeology, Classics and Egyptology] department is thrilled to announce an Ancient History Seminar titled 'Alexander the Great in Jerusalem and the Origins of the Alexander Romance' delivered by Ory Amitay, (University of Haifa) on the 6 May 2025, Rendall Building, Lecture Theatre 7.

Tuesday 6 May 5pm (UK) | Rendall, Lecture Theatre 7 or online | Open to the public, and University of Liverpool staff and students
This is a hybrid event, we encourage in-person attendance which facilitates discussion. To join on zoom please click here.

Abstract

The topics presented in this talk come from a comprehensive study of the tradition concerning the meeting between Alexander the Great and the Judeans of Jerusalem. Historically, even if Alexander did visit Jerusalem, it was essentially a non-event, nothing to write home about. The historical void provided an opportunity for consecutive Judean storytellers to fill it with political myths of their own creation.

The overall purpose of these myths—so I argue in my new book Alexander the Great in Jerusalem: Myth and History (OUP, 2025) —was on the one hand to negotiate the installation of successive forms of foreign rule over Judea, and on the other to find room for these foreign rules within Judean sacred history. The earliest of these stories, scarcely discussed in previous scholarship, is preserved in the epsilon recension of the Alexander Romance (AR).

[...]

Follow the link for more details.

The abovementioned New Book just came out:

Alexander the Great in Jerusalem

Myth and History

Ory Amitay

£84.00

Hardback
Published: 18 April 2025 (Estimated)
220 Pages
234x156mm
ISBN: 9780198929529

Also Available As:
E-book

Description

Alexander the Great in Jerusalem: Myth and History discusses four different stories told in antiquity about the meeting between Alexander the Great and the Judeans of Jerusalem. In history, this meeting passed without noticeable events. Into the historical void stepped various Judean storytellers, who wrote not what was, but what could (or even should) have been.

The tradition as a whole deals with an issue that resurfaced time and again in ancient Judean history: conquest and regime installment by new foreign rulers. It does so by using Alexander as a cipher for a current Hellenistic and Roman foreign rule. The earliest version can be traced to the context of the Seleukid monarch Antiochos III "the Great", and postulates a Judean text from that time that has been hitherto unknown, and which survived in a Byzantine recension (epsilon) of the Alexander Romance. The second and third chapters turn to rabbinic sources, and deal with the Judean approaches and attitudes towards Roman occupation and rule, first at the advent of Pompey and then at the institution of Provincia ludaea at the expense of the Herodian dynasty. The final story is the most famous, previously considered the earliest, rather than the latest; that of Josephus.

Alexander the Great in Jerusalem demonstrates how the historical tradition consistently maintained the moral and sacral superiority of the Jerusalem temple and of Judaism, making Alexander either embrace monotheism or prostrate himself before the Judean high priest. This not only bolstered Judean self-confidence under conditions of military and political inferiority, but also brought the changing foreign rulers into the fold of Judean sacred history.

For many PaleoJudaica posts on Alexander the Great and his connection with ancient Jewish traditions, notably in the Alexander Romance, see here and links. There are lots of links there too to posts on books about Alexander and the Alexander tradition published in recent years

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

Wednesday, April 23, 2025

MOTP2: Introduction to the Book of Giants

THE BIBLE AND INTEPRETATION:
The Descent of Heavenly Beings to Earth from the Book of Giants

The Book of Giants survives, in a highly fragmentary state, in two versions: the original, known from remnants of Dead Sea Scrolls written in Aramaic, and a later Manichean version, known from manuscript scraps found in Central Asia written in three old Iranian languages and in Old Turkic (Uigur). The Book of Giants recaps the story of the descent of the angelic watchers from heaven to mate with mortal women, who bore them giant offspring with catastrophic results (cf. 1 Enoch 1–36 and Genesis 6:1-4). The rest of the book tells the tragic story of these offspring from their own perspective.

Chapter from James R. Davila and Richard Bauckham (eds.), Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, vol.2, More Noncanonical Scriptures (Eerdmans, 2025).

By James Davila
School of Divinity
Professor of Early Jewish Studies
University of St. Andrews
April 2025

As promised earlier, more on the giants! And a free chapter from MOTP2! For you, special deal!

The chapter includes a detailed summary of the reconstructed Book of Giants. But it does not include any translations of the actual surviving manuscripts. For that you need to buy the book. Official publication is tomorrow.

For many PaleoJudaica posts on the Book of Giants and some, relatedly, on the Rephaim, follow the links.

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

On Dalton, How Rabbis Became Experts (Princeton)

ANCIENT JEW REVIEW: From Dinner to Donor: the Social Exchanges at the Heart of Rabbinic Expertise ( Krista Dalton).
How Rabbis Became Experts: Social Circles and Donor Networks in Jewish Late Antiquity. Princeton University Press, 2025.

... In the book, I demonstrate how gifts for rabbis were situated amidst a broader landscape of Jewish piety and socialization. I examine major gift transactions alongside dinner parties, conversations between neighbors, and more in order to consider the everyday instances of mutual exchange that, I argue, lay at the heart of these gifts. ...

Cross-file under New Book.

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BIAJS 2025 Student Essay Prize

NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS:
Open for 2025: BIAJS 2025 Student Essay Prize

Deadline for Submissions: 16 June 2025

We are delighted to announce the BIAJS 2025 student essay prize details, which is now open for both the undergraduate and the postgraduate categories.

On behalf of the BIAJS committee, we are pleased to announce the launch of the 2025 BIAJS student essay prize. Two prizes of £400, ordinarily for one outstanding undergraduate and one postgraduate essay by students at institutions in the UK and Ireland, are awarded annually.

[...]

Follow the link for detailed application information.

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

Tuesday, April 22, 2025

Antiquities seized in Dimona

APPREHENDED: Police find ancient treasures, weapons in Dimona antiquities probe. A Dimona resident was detained for questioning after the search uncovered not only the archaeological treasures but also a cache of weapons, ammunition, and currency (JOANIE MARGULIES, Jerusalem Post).
Two hundred ancient coins, arrowheads, and pottery vessels were found in the home of a Dimona resident in part of a joint operation between the police and the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA), according to the agencies involved in the bust.

[...]

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

Permanent Hebrew Bible Lectureship at KCL

THE TIMES HIGHER:
Lecturer in Hebrew Bible

Employer
KINGS COLLEGE LONDON

Location
London (Greater) (GB)

Salary
£44,105 - £51,485 per annum, including London Weighting Allowance

Closing date
27 Apr 2025

... The Department of Theology and Religious Studies at King’s College London is seeking to appoint a permanent Lecturer in Hebrew Bible.

You will contribute to a department that has a long and distinguished tradition of contribution to Biblical and Jewish Studies and that is known for, among other things, its excellence in the integrated study of Theology, Religious Studies and the Arts. ...

Follow the link for further particulars and application information.

This just came up in my searches. The closing date is soon. Don't dilly-dally.

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Nancy Lapp (1930–2025)

SAD NEWS FROM BIBLE HISTORY DAILY: Milestones: Nancy Lapp (1930–2025). Pioneering biblical archaeologist (Morag Kersel and Meredith Chesson).
On March 3, 2025, we lost an understated and under-recognized giant in the field of biblical archaeology. Nancy Lapp (née Renn) was steadfast in her dedication to her family, to her scholarship, and to making the world a better place through her social justice efforts. ...
Requiescat in pace.

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

Monday, April 21, 2025

First review of MOTP2

READING ACTS: James R. Davila and Richard Bauckham, eds. Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, vol. 2: More Noncanonical Scriptures (Phil Long).
Davila, James R. and Richard Bauckham, eds. Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, vol. 2: More Noncanonical Scriptures. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 2025. ix+694 pp. Hb; $89.99. Link to Eerdmans

Eerdmans published volume one of Old Testament Pseudepigrapha: More Noncanonical Scriptures (MOTP) in 2013. After a twelve-year wait, volume two of this important expansion of the original Old Testament Pseudepigrapha (1983, edited by James Charlesworth) adds another twenty-three texts to the collection. This valuable collection expands scholarship’s database of Jewish and Christian texts beyond the canonical Hebrew Bible and the Apocrypha to shed light on the history and culture of the Second Temple period.

[...]

This volume isn't officially published until Wednesday Thursday, but it looks like Phil got an advance review copy. If you have ordered a copy, it should ship to you very soon.

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

Syriac text-excerpting and the Talmud?

SYRIAC WATCH MEETS TALMUD WATCH: Could AI solve the enigmas of ancient Talmud-like Christian manuscripts in Aramaic? An Israeli researcher uses computational technology to showcase that the scribes compiling Syriac texts made active editorial choices, similar to the redactors of Jewish Gemara (Rossella Tercatin, Times of Israel).
For nearly 2,000 years, Near East Christian communities have used Syriac, an Aramaic dialect, as their liturgical and cultural language. Over the centuries, they produced an extensive corpus of manuscripts that included passages from biblical texts, philosophical treatises, classical literature and theological commentaries, whose purpose often remains obscure to modern scholars.

Now, an Israeli researcher has harnessed computational technology to showcase how the scribes compiling the documents made active editorial choices, shaping the knowledge for future generations and serving a role comparable to that of the redactors of another foundational Aramaic work from Late Antiquity: the Jewish Talmud.

[...]

I have mentioned this research before here. But this article runs with the creative angle, in conversation with the researcher, of noting parallels in the Syriac material to the Talmud. Worth a read.

The caveats about AI in my earlier post still apply. There is no comprehensive catalogue of either Talmud comparable to Wright's catalogue of the Syriac material, so there is a long way to go before this computational technology can be applied to the Talmud(s).

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

Jesus' crucifixion and a lunar eclipse?

BELATEDLY EASTER/GOOD FRIDAY-RELATED: Lunar eclipse over Jerusalem may mark date of Jesus's crucifixion, NASA reports. some believe that the new data from NASA, paired with Biblical text, could pinpoint the day Jesus was crucified (Jerusalem Post Staff).

This is an old idea. I commented on it in one of my earliest blog posts. I was going to ignore this one, but when I saw how dreadful this article is, I thought I'd better comment on it.

The suggestion, which has been around for a very long time, is that the reported period of afternoon "darkness over the whole land" (or "earth") on the day of the crucifixion of Jesus (Mark 15:33 par. Matthew 27:45 and Luke 23:44-45) was due to a lunar eclipse of the sun. The third-century church father Julius Africanus argued that the lunar celestial configuration at Passover made this impossible. Briefly, if the moon is full, the sun is shining full on it from the perspective of the earth, which means the moon is on the opposite side of the earth from the sun. It is not in a position to occlude the sun.

Be that as it may, the Jerusalem post article consists largely of misconceptions.

NASA scientists believe that a lunar eclipse occurred during the crucifixion of Jesus, based on data from its astronomical models.

An article from the space agency noted that the Christian Bible wrote that the moon turned to blood in the skies over Jerusalem after Jesus's crucifixion.

“From noon until three in the afternoon darkness came over all the land,” reads one iteration of Matthew 27:45.

The NASA article Eclipses: History does say that "Christian texts" (not "the Christian Bible") say that the moon turned to blood:
Eclipses also appear in religious texts. Christian texts mention that the Moon turned to blood after Jesus’s crucifixion – potentially referring to a lunar eclipse, during which the Moon takes on a reddish hue. Using this textual source, scholars narrowed down a possible date of crucifixion to Friday, April 3, 33 C.E. because a lunar eclipse occurred that day.
The passage in Matthew, quoted in the JP article, says nothing about the moon, only that there was darkness over the whole land.

Matthew's text is "one iteration" of the story, which also appears in Mark and Luke, as noted above. None of them mention the moon. The Gospel of John doesn't mention the darkness at all.

But there's more evidence, right? The JP continues:

Additionally, early Christian texts prophesied that on the day of Jesus's crucifixion, the sky would look eerie.

In a gathering 50 days before Jesus's death, the apostle Peter predicts in Acts 2:20: “The sun will be turned to darkness and the moon to blood before the coming of the great and glorious day of the Lord.”

Peter's reported speech took place on Pentecost (Shavuot), 50 days after the crucifixion. He is speaking about the end times.

But there's still more:

Supposed eyewitness events of the situation also note that the skies looked strange after Jesus died on the cross.

“At his crucifixion the sun was darkened; the stars appeared and in all the world people lighted lamps from the sixth hour till evening; the moon appeared like blood,” notes Pontius Pilate's report of Jesus's crucifixion.

This is not exactly wrong, but it's reproachably misleading. This "supposed eyewitness" account is from the Anaphora Pilati, a late work from the Pilate apocrypha cycle. J. K. Elliot thinks it is an expansion of the Letter of Pilate to Claudius, which he dates to the end of the second century. You can read it here. This account is a "Christian text," but it has zero eyewitness (or even living memory) value.

I have no view on the proposed date of the crucifixion. Most specialists seem to think that it was in 30, not 33, but we just don't know.

Enough. I didn't mean to spend so much time on this.

The darkness in Matthew's Gospel is a miraculous event, like the "walking dead" episode and, probably, the earthquake, both in the same passage. John doesn't refer to it and none of the other Gospels mention the other two. No need to look for naturalistic explanations, although one is possible for the last one.

Jerusalem Post, what happened? There is potentially a story here, but the treatment in this article is just careless.

I want to blame it on AI generated content, but the article doesn't give any indication of that. If it was actually produced by "Jerusalem Post Staff," the JP, which is usually good at articles about archaeology and history, should stop using them for those purposes and stick to named authors who know what they are talking about.

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

Sunday, April 20, 2025

Easter 2025

HAPPY EASTER to all those celebrating.

The Easter post for 2023 is here with links. And a few loosely Easter-related posts from 2023-24 are here, here, and here.

My 2016 Easter post contains links leading to biblical and related passages concerning Easter and to correct information on the origin of the word. And this post gives biblical references for the Passion narrative.

I don't see any current stories of interest, but you can review some past Easter-related posts starting with the 2023 post and following the links back.

UPDATE (21 April): More here.

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

Unruly Books (T&T Clark)

NEW BOOK FROM BLOOMSBURY/T&T CLARK:
Unruly Books

Rethinking Ancient and Academic Imaginations of Religious Texts

Esther Brownsmith (Anthology Editor) , Liv Ingeborg Lied (Anthology Editor) , Marianne Bjelland Kartzow (Anthology Editor)

Hardback
£110.00 £99.00

Ebook (PDF)
£99.00 £79.20

Ebook (Epub & Mobi)
£99.00 £79.20

Product details

Published 23 Jan 2025
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Extent 288
ISBN 9780567715685
Imprint T&T Clark
Dimensions 234 x 156 mm
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

Description

This volume explores the idea of the unruly book, from books now known by their titles alone to books that subverted structures of power and gender. The contributors show how these books functioned as “sticky” objects, and they examine the story of what such books signified to the people who wrote, read, discussed, yearned for, or even prohibited them. The books examined are those of the first millennium of the Common Era, and the writings of Judaism, Christianity, Islam and related traditions. In particular, the contributors examine the bounty of books within this period that are hard to pin down, whether extant, lost, or imagined-books that challenge modern scholars to reconceptualize our notions of books (biblical or otherwise), religion, manuscript culture, and intellectual history. Through the critical analyses presented in this volume, the contributors negotiate the diverse stories told by unruly books and show that by listening to the stories that books tell, we learn more about the worlds that imagined and discussed them.

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