Saturday, September 13, 2025

Cao, Job's Wisdom (Peeters)

NEW BOOK FROM PEETERS PRESS:
Job's Wisdom
When Ethics and Aesthetics Collide

SERIES:
Analecta Biblica. Dissertationes, 243

AUTHOR:
Cao G.A.

PRICE: 40 euro
YEAR: 2025
ISBN: 9789042955561
PAGES: IV-352 p.

SUMMARY:

Job’s final response to Yhwh, as poetically wrapped up in Job 42:1-6, represents the culmination of Job’s transformative journey in his understanding Yhwh and himself. The poem is read in light of its literary framework as an attempt to prove that Job’s final stance displays a sapiential attitude which can only be properly understood when one takes into account the collision between the two essential viewpoints supported by the book as a whole, that is, ethics and aesthetics. Throughout the entire drama of Job’s situation from the prologue right to the epilogue, the author of the book of Job does not present the protagonist as a penitent, but rather as a righteous sufferer. Job’s final stance reflects a sapiential attitude deriving from a direct experience of the righteous sufferer with the aesthetic dimension of the mysterious God.

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Friday, September 12, 2025

The "Christ(?) the magician(?)" cup is back

GREEK EPIGRAPHY: World's first reference to Christ discovered on 2,000-year-old 'Jesus Cup.' (Stacy Liberatore, Daily Mail).
A ceramic bowl discovered off the coast of Egypt may contain the world's first reference to Christ.

The so-called 'Jesus Cup' was unearthed in 2008 by a team led by French marine archaeologist Franck Goddio during an excavation of Alexandria's ancient great harbor.

Remarkably well preserved, the bowl is missing only a handle and bears a Greek inscription: DIA CHRSTOU O GOISTAIS, translated as 'Through Christ the chanter.'

[...]

I'm not sure why this story has resurfaced, but this Mail article from a few days ago has generated some interest in the media (here, here, here, here, and MSN reprint here).

As indicated, the story is from 2008 and PaleoJudaica and others covered it then. Details at the link.

Briefly, it's an interesting artfact, but it is not at all clear what it is about. The word translated "Christ" is an odd spelling and could have other meanings. The word goistas, if that's what it is, is not a known Greek word as far as I can tell. It bears some resemblance to Greek goēs ("sorcerer" or "enchanter") or goētēs ("wailer"), but the resemblance is not very strong and the word could mean other things.

The Mail article gives a range of possible interpretations. See also my link above for more discussion.

Also, Roy D. Kotansky has published an article that critiques the "Christ the Magician" intepretation and offers another one. It is posted on his Academia.edu page:

The So-Called "Christ" Magician's Cup Roy D . Kotansky
2021, Early Christianity
https://doi.org/10.1628/EC-2021-0017

Abstract

A ceramic cup recovered in 2006 during maritime explorations of Alexandria is thought to record a reference to Christ as a "sorcerer". Dated to ca. the 1st cent. BCE / 1st cent CE, a modestly restored version of the text more likely preserves a gnomic phrase, "By a creditor is the complainer!" Or, "By a usurer (comes) the grumbler!" -- a reading that has nothing to do with magic. Analogies with ancient "drinking songs" (skolia) are examined that often promote such sayings. Other examples, introduced in passing, include the famed Nestor's Cup inscription, which may also be proverbial, and a mimic composition finely etched on a painted glass beaker (also possibly from Alexandria) that preserves fragments of a scene, with text. Plausible lyric features of the gnomic cup are also examined.

Kotansky is an expert in such matters and he would have good judgment. Beyond that, it's always a good idea to go with Frank Moore Cross's epigraphic principle, "The more banal interpretation is to be preferred." (Should we call that Cross's Razor?)

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The culinary archaeology of the ANE

THE BIBLE AND INTERPRETATION:
Culinary Technology in the Ancient Near East

Examination of culinary technologies in the Ancient Near East, from the Neolithic to the Early Roman period, shows how food preparation was central to social, political, and religious life. Innovations ranging from bread and beer production to hearths, ovens, stoves, and milling systems highlight advanced knowledge of chemistry, thermodynamics, and materials science. Far from primitive, these practices reveal sophisticated engineering and cultural traditions that shaped modern cooking. Cooking emerges as both a scientific achievement and a source of joy, creativity, and communal identity.

See also Culinary Technology of the Ancient Near East: From the Neolithic to the Early Roman Period (Routledge, 2025).

By Jill L. Baker
Independent Researcher of Ancient Near Eastern Archaeology
September 2025

Naturally, one of the first culinary technologies people figured out was how to brew beer.

Cross-file under New Book.

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Gaza antiquities reportedly evacuated

GAZA ARCHAEOLOGY: Gaza antiquities rescued ahead of Israeli strike (AFP via Times of Israel).
On Wednesday morning, Israeli authorities ordered EBAF — one of the oldest academic institutions in the region — to evacuate its archaeological storehouse located on the ground floor of a residential tower in Gaza City that was due to be targeted.

The Israeli army did not confirm the warning when asked by AFP, but several sources say France, UNESCO and the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem played a key role in securing a brief reprieve that allowed most of the artifacts to be removed.

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

Thursday, September 11, 2025

de Hemmer Gudme on Portier-Young, The Prophetic Body

ANCIENT JEW REVIEW continues its review series on Anathea Portier-Young’s The Prophetic Body: Embodiment and Mediation in Biblical Prophetic Literature with an essay by Anne Katrine de Hemmer Gudme:

Prophetic Mediation and Ritual Practice

For this AJR Forum, I have decided to focus on one question which kept resurfacing as I was reading, namely how the prophetic practices that Portier-Young analyzes in the book fit into religious practices in the Hebrew Bible more generally. This question is fundamental to our understanding of prophecy as a socio-religious phenomenon in the Hebrew Bible, and it is a good illustration of how The Prophetic Body invites its reader to re-think texts and concepts that otherwise seemed ‘settled’ and well-known. ...
Previous posts on the series are here and links.

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Shepherd, How Did They Read the Prophets? (Eerdmans)

NEW BOOK FROM EERDMANS:
How Did They Read the Prophets?
Early Jewish and Christian Interpretations

by Michael B. Shepherd

Imprint: Eerdmans

190 Pages, 5.50 x 8.50 in

PAPERBACK
9780802885418
Publication Date: July 31, 2025
$24.99
£18.99

EBOOK
9781467469968
Publication Date: July 31, 2025
$24.99
£18.99

DESCRIPTION

Learn how ancient readers interpreted the Bible’s prophetic literature—and why their views have enduring value

How Did They Read the Prophets? explores the world of ancient exegesis, focusing on how early Jewish and Christian readers understood the Hebrew Bible’s prophetic literature. In this illuminating study, Old Testament scholar Michael B. Shepherd takes modern readers on a guided tour through the earliest readings of key passages from Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and the Book of the Twelve. He also surveys shifts in ancient conceptions of prophecy—shifts that reflect the dynamic and complex relationship between speaking, writing, and interpreting.

Shepherd’s well-researched study is distinctive in several respects. One is its focus on ancient readings of prophetic literature in particular, rather than biblical literature in general. Another distinguishing feature is its attention both to inner-biblical interpretation and to early post-biblical exegesis. Finally, the book stands out for its insights into the enduring value of ancient interpretation in the modern period. Rigorous yet accessible, How Did They Read the Prophets? is a remarkable resource for students and general readers interested in biblical studies and the history of interpretation.

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Ancient Yahwistic echoes of Achaemenid Zoroastrianism

BIBLIOGRAPHIA IRANICA: Achaemenid Zoroastrian Echoes.

Open-access article: Barnea, Gad. 2025. Some Achaemenid Zoroastrian echoes in early Yahwistic sources. Iran. 1–10.

The early Yahwistic sources are mostly, but not entirely, 5th-century BCE materials from Elephantine.

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Greenspoon obituary

BIBLE HISTORY DAILY: Milestones: Leonard J. Greenspoon (1945–2025). Wide-ranging Bible scholar and beloved BAR columnist (Jonathan Rosenbaum).
Leonard J. Greenspoon, a towering scholar of particular depth and breadth who made biblical scholarship accessible to Biblical Archaeology Review readers for nearly two decades, passed away on May 22, 2025, at the age of 79. For 20 years, he was a distinguished member of the Clemson University faculty. In 1996, he became the Philip M. and Ethel Klutznick Chair in Jewish Civilization at Creighton University, where he was also a professor of theology and classical and Near Eastern studies.

[...]

Background here.

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Wednesday, September 10, 2025

The Sifting project found a potsherd with reed-impression decorations

THE TEMPLE MOUNT SIFTING PROJECT: FIND AND FINDER OF THE MONTH: REED IMPRESSIONS IN CERAMIC ORNAMENTATION.
Leah Navarre from France made an exciting discovery while volunteering with the Temple Mount Sifting Project—a ceramic fragment bearing ancient reed impressions.

[...]

Reed impressions span much of ancient history, but the suggested date for this sherd is "the late First Temple period (ca. 800–586 BCE)."

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Tuesday, September 09, 2025

BBC report on Mount Sinai and St Catherine's Monastery

SAINT CATHERINE'S MONASTERY: One of the world's most sacred places is being turned into a luxury mega-resort (Yolande Knell, BBC News).
The 6th century St Catherine's Monastery, run by the Greek Orthodox Church, is also there - and seemingly its monks will stay on now that Egyptian authorities, under Greek pressure, have denied wanting to close it.

However, there is still deep concern about how the long-isolated, desert location - a Unesco World Heritage site comprising the monastery, town and mountain - is being transformed. Luxury hotels, villas and shopping bazaars are under construction there. Ariel view of Mount Sinai pictured before transformation as a long-isolated desert location and pictured mid-transformation with hotels, villas etc under construction.

It is also home to a traditional Bedouin community, the Jebeleya tribe. Already the tribe, known as the Guardians of St Catherine, have had their homes and tourist eco-camps demolished with little or no compensation. They have even been forced to take bodies out of their graves in the local cemetery to make way for a new car park.

This BBC report is getting a lot of attention in other media. It appears to be a geniune effort to present all sides of the debate. But I don't have any inside information on it myself, so it's hard to judge.

In any case, as I have said before, the situation should be watched closely.

Background here.

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The Israel National Archaeological Database

DIGITIZATION: Israel unveils massive national archaeology database with millions of records. (Ynet Global).
Ahead of the Jewish High Holidays, the Israel Antiquities Authority launched a massive digital platform with nearly 4 million records, including artifacts, photos, 3D models, excavation reports, and archival documents—now accessible to researchers and the public globally.
The site is here. You can access it in Hebrew or English.

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

Nissinen on Portier-Young, The Prophetic Body

ANCIENT JEW REVIEW continues its review series on Anathea Portier-Young’s The Prophetic Body: Embodiment and Mediation in Biblical Prophetic Literature with an essay by Martti Nissinen:

Prophetic Bodies in the Ancient Near East.

In mapping the embodied nature of human consciousness, Portier-Young fruitfully adopts insights from anthropology, psychology, and neuroscience, demonstrating the benefit of the empirical research on human body even for the study of ancient texts. In this short review, I would like to give some examples of how I have found her study relevant from the point of view of ancient Near Eastern sources. The scope of The Prophetic Body is purely biblical, but a similar embodied approach can be applied to any set of sources of prophetic activity.
The main ANE examples are from the Mari prophecies.

Previous posts on the series are here and links.

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

Monday, September 08, 2025

Late antique Samaritan estate excavated in Israel

SAMARITAN WATCH: Lots of exciting discoveries at the Kafr Qasim excavation, announced last week when I was away from my desk.

Mosaics, mikvehs and oil lamps found at grand estate shed new light on ancient Samaritans. Unprecedented 4th century site recently uncovered by archaeologists in central Israel offers insights into the life of the Israelite sect — and opens many new questions (Rossella Tercatin, Times of Israel).

A magnificent agricultural estate, active between the 4th and 7th centuries CE, has recently been uncovered in Kafr Qasim, central Israel, the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) announced on Tuesday.

The site offers striking evidence of its ties to the ancient Samaritan community. Yet, many mysteries surrounding its inhabitants and their lives remain, one of the archaeologists excavating the site told The Times of Israel.

[...]

In Israel, a Festival of Fruit Adorns a Spectacular Ancient Samaritan Site. An estate from the early Christian era found in Kafr Qasem shows the rise and decline of the Samaritans in Byzantine times as luxury was replaced by the industrial production of olive oil (Ruth Schuster, Haaretz).
That said, the site was just a 10-minute walk from a Roman road that would likely have been used to sell the estate's products. The place also falls within the archaeological span of Khirbet Kafr Hatta, birthplace of Menander, the Samaritan magician who succeeded the famed Simon Magus, who could levitate and converted to Christianity, according to early Christian sources. Hence he needed a successor.

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The Theosophical Society and the Gnostic Jesus

THE ANXIOUS BENCH: Feminists, Lost Gospels, And A Lost History Of Christianity (Philip Jenkins).
My current series of posts concerns what I call the first discovery of lost gospels and scriptures, which became a major force in both scholarship and religious life at the turn of the twentieth century – the start of that century, rather than the end.. Today, I look at a critical component of this sweeping cultural change, namely the vital role played by esoteric movements, and especially the Theosophical Society. To oversimplify, the ideas they presented in the late nineteenth century, and which then stood at the far distant margins of respectable thought, have today become pretty standard and orthodox, and you may well hold them yourself.

[...]

Some related PaleoJudaica posts are here and links.

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

Chan on Portier-Young, The Prophetic Body

ANCIENT JEW REVIEW continues its review series on Anathea Portier-Young’s The Prophetic Body: Embodiment and Mediation in Biblical Prophetic Literature with an essay by Xenia L. Chan:

The Decolonial Prophetic Body

The possibilities for me in embodiment that Portier-Young invites us to bring Hebrew Bible prophecy back into a magical world—one that unravels objectification and begins to reconstitute land and community as enfleshed together.
Previous posts on the series are here and links.

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

Sunday, September 07, 2025

Scarlata, The Theology of the Book of Leviticus (CUP)

NEW BOOK FROM CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS:
The Theology of the Book of Leviticus

Series: Old Testament Theology
Author: Mark W. Scarlata, St. Mellitus College, London
Published: August 2025
Availability: Available
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9781108970112
Looking for an inspection copy?

£22.99 GBP
Paperback

£75.00 GBP
Hardback

Description

Leviticus is often considered to be one of the most challenging books of the Bible because of its focus on blood sacrifice, infectious diseases, and complicated dietary restrictions. Moreover, scholarly approaches have focused primarily on divisions in the text without considering its overarching theological message. In this volume, Mark W. Scarlata analyses Leviticus' theology, establishing the connection between God's divine presence and Israel's life. Exploring the symbols and rituals of ancient Israel, he traces how Leviticus develops a theology of holiness in space and time, one that weaves together the homes of the Israelites with the home of God. Seen through this theological lens, Leviticus' text demonstrates how to live in the fullness of God's holy presence and in harmony with one another and the land. Its theological vision also offers insights into how we might live today in a re-sacralized world that cherishes human dignity and cares for creation.

  • Provides an in-depth theological analysis of the text of Leviticus
  • The book is organized into thematic chapters that break down specific aspects of Leviticus' theology
  • The book offers connections with historic and modern understandings of the Bible to demonstrate how Leviticus has had a significant influence in both Judaism and Christianity

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