Through the centuries, scholars and readers have looked through a variety of lenses to discover what might be revealed by the story of Tsipporah’s circumcision of her son in Exodus 4, and to assign meanings to it. The ambiguity of the language and the particular interests of readers in their contexts allow for a breadth of possibilities. However, in most cases, the son and his body fail to attract much scholarly concern. In this reading, I suggest that considering more intently the bodies of the son, Tsipporah, and the deity through the lens of affect theory offers a fresh understanding of Tsipporah’s utterance following the cutting of her son’s foreskin. Teresa Brennan’s work on the transmission of affect breaks down the “foundational fall...
This article examines a number of contested and contentious issues in the reception of Hosea 1–3, ex...
The story of Abraham and Sarah in Egypt (Gen. 12:10-20) is part of the great epos of the three ances...
There is no biblical conception that so interferes with public life and invites endless debates and ...
Through the centuries, scholars and readers have looked through a variety of lenses to discover what...
The crux in Ex 4 seems to be the apotropaic function of blood of the circumcision to avert death. Th...
This thesis examines Exodus 4:24-26 in its context in order to determine the function and meaning of...
This article investigates the possibility that Ruth 3:7, where Ruth went to lie at Boaz’ ‘feet’, can...
What is the relationship between God, Moses, Zipporah, and Jethro her Pagan Priest father and the de...
What is the relationship between God, Moses, Zipporah, and Jethro her Pagan Priest father and the de...
Amongst the approximately 250 body parts which are mentioned in the Hebrew Bible, the foreskin is me...
My purpose in this paper is to explore the theological significance of circumcision within the narra...
This dissertation presents readings across a series of disparate texts in which circumcision--as ini...
The Word is made flesh. Christ dwells among us. This mystery of the Incarnation in promise and fulfi...
In his discussion of Abraham’s circumcision (Romans 4:9-12), Paul uses the term ἀκροβυστία, or ‘fore...
Widows appear in every genre of biblical text, and yet there has been little research into the way i...
This article examines a number of contested and contentious issues in the reception of Hosea 1–3, ex...
The story of Abraham and Sarah in Egypt (Gen. 12:10-20) is part of the great epos of the three ances...
There is no biblical conception that so interferes with public life and invites endless debates and ...
Through the centuries, scholars and readers have looked through a variety of lenses to discover what...
The crux in Ex 4 seems to be the apotropaic function of blood of the circumcision to avert death. Th...
This thesis examines Exodus 4:24-26 in its context in order to determine the function and meaning of...
This article investigates the possibility that Ruth 3:7, where Ruth went to lie at Boaz’ ‘feet’, can...
What is the relationship between God, Moses, Zipporah, and Jethro her Pagan Priest father and the de...
What is the relationship between God, Moses, Zipporah, and Jethro her Pagan Priest father and the de...
Amongst the approximately 250 body parts which are mentioned in the Hebrew Bible, the foreskin is me...
My purpose in this paper is to explore the theological significance of circumcision within the narra...
This dissertation presents readings across a series of disparate texts in which circumcision--as ini...
The Word is made flesh. Christ dwells among us. This mystery of the Incarnation in promise and fulfi...
In his discussion of Abraham’s circumcision (Romans 4:9-12), Paul uses the term ἀκροβυστία, or ‘fore...
Widows appear in every genre of biblical text, and yet there has been little research into the way i...
This article examines a number of contested and contentious issues in the reception of Hosea 1–3, ex...
The story of Abraham and Sarah in Egypt (Gen. 12:10-20) is part of the great epos of the three ances...
There is no biblical conception that so interferes with public life and invites endless debates and ...