The archive of the Judean woman Babatha, with its 35 legal papyri in Aramaic and Greek (P. Yadin 1-35), which was hidden by her in a cave on the western side of the Dead Sea in 135 CE and rediscovered in 1961, offers unique insights into the social world of the region from 94-132 CE. This is because legal documents reflect significant opportunities and challenges in people's lives and frequently bring to the surface underlying social issues and pressures. Babatha's documents, which reflect lively interactions between Judeans, Nabateans and Romans across a wide range of situations, do precisely this. They allow us better to understand the context in which New Testament texts appeared and how they made sense to their original audiences. Matth...
The Babatha archive contains thirty-five legal papyri dating from 94 to 132 CE. They belonged to a J...
This dissertation is concerned with the acerbic relationship between the Matthean community and the ...
When the shepherd boy Muhammad ed-Deeb ( The Wolf”) of the half-nomadic tribe Ta\u27amire threw a st...
The archive of the Judean woman Babatha, with its 35 legal papyri in Aramaic and Greek (P. Yadin 1-3...
The archive of the Judean woman Babatha, with its 35 legal papyri in Aramaic and Greek (P. Yadin 1–3...
The archive of the Judean woman Babatha, with its 35 legal papyri in Aramaic and Greek (P. Yadin 1-3...
This article seeks to explain Matthew’s description of Joseph as righteous (δίκαιος) by investigati...
This article will seek to interpret Matthew 4:1-11, commonly referred to as the “temptation account”...
In 1947, a shepherd in the hills north of the Dead Sea visited a contact in Bethlehem, a dealer of a...
M materials refer to any content in Matthew that is not found in Mark and Luke and hence considered ...
This article focuses on reading culture as an aspect of the Dead Sea Scrolls textual community in it...
This paper explores the consensus and disagreements between the contributors to this first interdisc...
CITATION: Scholtz, J. J. 2010. Matthew 13 and the feasts of the Lord. In die Skriflig/In Luce Verbi,...
This work considers the story behind papyri discovered in 1960 in the Cave of Letters by the Dead Se...
This article argues that wisdom in the Dead Sea Scrolls is not a continuation of the biblical Wisdom...
The Babatha archive contains thirty-five legal papyri dating from 94 to 132 CE. They belonged to a J...
This dissertation is concerned with the acerbic relationship between the Matthean community and the ...
When the shepherd boy Muhammad ed-Deeb ( The Wolf”) of the half-nomadic tribe Ta\u27amire threw a st...
The archive of the Judean woman Babatha, with its 35 legal papyri in Aramaic and Greek (P. Yadin 1-3...
The archive of the Judean woman Babatha, with its 35 legal papyri in Aramaic and Greek (P. Yadin 1–3...
The archive of the Judean woman Babatha, with its 35 legal papyri in Aramaic and Greek (P. Yadin 1-3...
This article seeks to explain Matthew’s description of Joseph as righteous (δίκαιος) by investigati...
This article will seek to interpret Matthew 4:1-11, commonly referred to as the “temptation account”...
In 1947, a shepherd in the hills north of the Dead Sea visited a contact in Bethlehem, a dealer of a...
M materials refer to any content in Matthew that is not found in Mark and Luke and hence considered ...
This article focuses on reading culture as an aspect of the Dead Sea Scrolls textual community in it...
This paper explores the consensus and disagreements between the contributors to this first interdisc...
CITATION: Scholtz, J. J. 2010. Matthew 13 and the feasts of the Lord. In die Skriflig/In Luce Verbi,...
This work considers the story behind papyri discovered in 1960 in the Cave of Letters by the Dead Se...
This article argues that wisdom in the Dead Sea Scrolls is not a continuation of the biblical Wisdom...
The Babatha archive contains thirty-five legal papyri dating from 94 to 132 CE. They belonged to a J...
This dissertation is concerned with the acerbic relationship between the Matthean community and the ...
When the shepherd boy Muhammad ed-Deeb ( The Wolf”) of the half-nomadic tribe Ta\u27amire threw a st...