From Creation to Sinai

William Adler

William Adler

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North Carolina State University
William is a professor in the Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies at North Carolina State University. His research interests are early Judaism and Christianity, Jewish and Christian historiography and the reception of texts from the Second Temple period.
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Esther Eshel

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Bar-Ilan University
Esther is a professor in the Bible Department at Bar-Ilan University. Her research interests are Jewish literature of the Second Temple period, including later books of the Hebrew Bible, early Jewish exegesis and epigraphy of the First and Second Temple periods.
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Bas ter Haar Romeny

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Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Bas is a professor in the Faculty of Humanities at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. His research interests are the reception of the Hebrew Bible in ancient the versions and late antique biblical commentaries, in particular in Syriac and Greek; history and identity of ancient and late a
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Thomas H. Tobin S.J.

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Loyola University Chicago
Thomas is a professor in the Department of Theology at Loyola University Chicago. His research interests are Hellenistic Judaism, Philo of Alexandria, the Letters of Paul, Middle Platonism, and Gnosticism.
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Joseph Witztum

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The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Joseph is a professor in the Department of Arabic Language and Literature at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His research focuses on Quran and Hadith and their interaction with rabbinic and Syriac traditions.
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Hagit Amirav

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Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Hagit is a professor in the Faculty of Texts and Traditions at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. Her research interests are early Christianity and Patristics, particularly biblical exegesis; ancient rhetoric and techniques of literary expression, sociology and ancient history.
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Menahem Kister

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The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Menahem is a professor in the Departments of Bible and Talmud at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His research interests are the Jewish literature of the Second Temple period (Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, the Dead Sea Scrolls); Midrash and Talmudic literature, early Christianity in relation to J
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Gary Anderson

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University of Notre Dame
Gary is a professor in the Department of Biblical Studies/Christianity and Judaism in Antiquity at the University of Notre Dame. His research interests are the religion and literature of the Old Testament/Hebrew Bible, its reception in early Judaism and Christianity, biblical narrative, canonical ex
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Hillel Newman

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University of Haifa
Hillel is a professor in the Department of Jewish History at the University of Haifa. His research interests are: Jews and Christians in Late Antiquity; apocalyptic literature; and classical and early medieval rabbinic literature.

Research Groups:From Creation to Sinai - Jewish, Christian, and Qur'anic Traditions in Interaction

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[RG # 149]  From Creation to Sinai: Jewish, Christian, and Qur'anic Traditions in Interaction

September 1, 2016- July 1, 2017

Organizers: 
Esther Eshel (Bar-Ilan University)
Menahem Kister (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem)

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The Book of Genesis and the beginning of the Book of Exodus are of utmost importance for many fundamental issues in the study of Judaism, Christianity, and nascent Islam. The traditions related to the narrative passages of these books refer, inter alia, to the Creation of the World, Adam as bearer of God's image, angels and demons, Enoch, Divine election, the covenants with the patriarchs prior to Sinai, the establishment of monotheism, the formation of Israel as a nation, and the Exodus. These themes were highly significant in the formulation of the competing religious worldviews and self-understanding of Second Temple and rabbinic Judaism, early Christianity, Gnosticism, and eventually early Islam. It should be emphasized that the relevant material is not confined to works dedicated expressly to the exegesis of these biblical books; rather, themes of Genesis and the beginning of Exodus are part and parcel of the religious messages of Jewish, Christian and nascent Islamic thought.

Themes and traditions from Genesis and Exodus may be found in a vast array of sources in Antiquity. The Qur'an – unlike medieval Islamic traditions – is one of the latest products of Late Antiquity. While scholarship by and large has tended toward the study of the relevant biblical themes in each religion unto itself, comparative studies transcending the boundaries between the corpora of varying religious traditions are often mutually illuminating. The group’s purpose is not merely to map and compare divergent traditions, but also to elucidate the dynamics of transformation among them, considering the relationships (including polemics and influence) among the religious groups of Antiquity. The anticipated collaboration of scholars from diverse backgrounds in the proposed Research Group will be a rare opportunity for productive synergy.
 

 

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