Although Job has been universally admired, his encounters with evil have met with diverse and often contradictory interpretations. In contrast to the tradition that exalts patient Job, recent scholars have focused attention on the impatient Job who questions divine justice. I will suggest thatJob is essentially a book about questions and assertions, a bookthat leads us to consider the significance of theological questioning
Reading the book of Job can be an uncomfortable, dissatisfying and ambiguous experience...
David Clines once famously asked, 'Why is there a book of Job, and what does it do to you if you rea...
This dissertation examines Jewish exegesis of the book of Job to two ends. First, it explores four ...
Although Job has been universally admired, his encounters with evil have met with diverse and often ...
The paper seeks to delve into an existential question at the confluence of Scripture studies, metaph...
This study aims to determine whether Job, staunchly established as innocent in the prosaic introduct...
Job's piety in The Book of Job is so ideal that it becomes problematic on two levels. First, it rend...
The book of Job presents a unique and detailed contrastive study of two fundamental and fundamentall...
This article identifies dialogical interpretation in Job as a form of aggadic inner-biblical exegesi...
Job is one of the most difficult books in Hebrew Scripture: in language, poetic rhetoric, subject ma...
Joel S. Kaminsky, Professor of Religion and Morningstar Family Professor in Jewish Studies at Smith ...
Questions concerning evil and suffering are those, which people ask the most often. What is their re...
Not withstanding its presence across the full message of the Old Testament, the question of justice...
The innocent Job suffers, friends are no help, and then Job screams at Yahweh, demanding justice. Th...
Recent scholarship has tended to see the book of Job as sweeping away an earlier, mechanistic theolo...
Reading the book of Job can be an uncomfortable, dissatisfying and ambiguous experience...
David Clines once famously asked, 'Why is there a book of Job, and what does it do to you if you rea...
This dissertation examines Jewish exegesis of the book of Job to two ends. First, it explores four ...
Although Job has been universally admired, his encounters with evil have met with diverse and often ...
The paper seeks to delve into an existential question at the confluence of Scripture studies, metaph...
This study aims to determine whether Job, staunchly established as innocent in the prosaic introduct...
Job's piety in The Book of Job is so ideal that it becomes problematic on two levels. First, it rend...
The book of Job presents a unique and detailed contrastive study of two fundamental and fundamentall...
This article identifies dialogical interpretation in Job as a form of aggadic inner-biblical exegesi...
Job is one of the most difficult books in Hebrew Scripture: in language, poetic rhetoric, subject ma...
Joel S. Kaminsky, Professor of Religion and Morningstar Family Professor in Jewish Studies at Smith ...
Questions concerning evil and suffering are those, which people ask the most often. What is their re...
Not withstanding its presence across the full message of the Old Testament, the question of justice...
The innocent Job suffers, friends are no help, and then Job screams at Yahweh, demanding justice. Th...
Recent scholarship has tended to see the book of Job as sweeping away an earlier, mechanistic theolo...
Reading the book of Job can be an uncomfortable, dissatisfying and ambiguous experience...
David Clines once famously asked, 'Why is there a book of Job, and what does it do to you if you rea...
This dissertation examines Jewish exegesis of the book of Job to two ends. First, it explores four ...