This article reads Genesis 18-19 in the light of the principal of exchange at work in ancient religious belief concerning divine justice. Genesis 18.1-15 and 19.1-29, as examples of the well-worn tale of the divine visitor, are narrative expressions of confidence in a divine justice that rewards the kind and punishes the inhospitable. In the dialogue of 18.6-33, Abraham explicitly raises the question of divine justice, but complicates it by also exploring the possibility of divine mercy. The second divine visitor tale in Gen. 19.1-29, in which Sodom is justly destroyed while Lot is spared out of mercy, shows that Yahweh operates according to more stringent ideas of justice than humanity would wish
The article contrasts two views of “land” in two texts which both originated in priestly circles. Th...
In the late middle ages, the Biblical story of Abraham and Isaac formed an ideal platform to develop...
Most people who follow one of the major contemporary religions, particularly in the Abrahamic tradit...
Trading Yahweh's word for a price is an attempt to articulate the implications of the mercenary atti...
Genesis 15:1-6, because of its content, provides singular opportunities for the study of ancient mid...
The article offers a panoramic overview of goddesses attested in the Southern Levant, that is within...
The historical development of Israelite theology must be understood in relation to the social antago...
The article reviews the book God in Translation: Deities in Cross-Cultural Discourse in the Biblica...
In the Hebrew Bible, the do-ut-des-relationship, so often used to describe the exchange between the ...
Trading Yahweh’s word for a price is an attempt to articulate the implications of the mercenary atti...
This article is an examination of Micah’s theory of justice within the overall context of his oracle...
AbstractIn this article, I read the meeting between Abraham and Yahweh as an exemplary story about t...
In this study, Michael Hundley explores the diverse deities of ancient Near Eastern and biblical lit...
This article suggests that Genesis 1 and Psalms 8, 18 and 89 reflect a mythological tradition which ...
In this article, the author discusses the ways such as common law, and contracts employed by religio...
The article contrasts two views of “land” in two texts which both originated in priestly circles. Th...
In the late middle ages, the Biblical story of Abraham and Isaac formed an ideal platform to develop...
Most people who follow one of the major contemporary religions, particularly in the Abrahamic tradit...
Trading Yahweh's word for a price is an attempt to articulate the implications of the mercenary atti...
Genesis 15:1-6, because of its content, provides singular opportunities for the study of ancient mid...
The article offers a panoramic overview of goddesses attested in the Southern Levant, that is within...
The historical development of Israelite theology must be understood in relation to the social antago...
The article reviews the book God in Translation: Deities in Cross-Cultural Discourse in the Biblica...
In the Hebrew Bible, the do-ut-des-relationship, so often used to describe the exchange between the ...
Trading Yahweh’s word for a price is an attempt to articulate the implications of the mercenary atti...
This article is an examination of Micah’s theory of justice within the overall context of his oracle...
AbstractIn this article, I read the meeting between Abraham and Yahweh as an exemplary story about t...
In this study, Michael Hundley explores the diverse deities of ancient Near Eastern and biblical lit...
This article suggests that Genesis 1 and Psalms 8, 18 and 89 reflect a mythological tradition which ...
In this article, the author discusses the ways such as common law, and contracts employed by religio...
The article contrasts two views of “land” in two texts which both originated in priestly circles. Th...
In the late middle ages, the Biblical story of Abraham and Isaac formed an ideal platform to develop...
Most people who follow one of the major contemporary religions, particularly in the Abrahamic tradit...