黑料社 All and Jewish Publication Society Celebrate Launch of Outside the Bible with Evening of Discussion
On December 3, 黑料社 All and the Jewish Publication Society (JPS) celebrated the publication of (JPS, December 2013) at a special Hanukkah event at the .
Dr. Lawrence Schiffman, left, and Dr. Alex Jassen discuss major themes in Outside the Bible.
鈥淚 think it is a remarkable tribute to this University that two of our three lead editors on this monumental 12-year, 70-scholar project serve on the faculty here, as do several other notable contributors,鈥 said Rabbi Barry Schwartz, director of JPS, as he introduced the evening, which began with a communal candlelighting ceremony led by YU President Richard M. Joel to mark the seventh night of Hanukkah.
鈥淲e have to advance earnest and meaningful Jewish literacy, and this book demonstrates so much the beauty and importance that lies beyond the basics,鈥 said President Joel. 鈥淎 reading of these volumes鈥攆illed with apocalyptic visions and prophecies, folktales and legends, collections and sayings, laws and rules of conduct, commentaries and ancient prayers鈥攂uilds a more colorful and textured understanding of our Jewish history and Jewish story.鈥
The book, a three-volume anthology of Second Temple literature that gathers portions of the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Septuagint, the biblical apocrypha and pseudepigrapha, and the writings of Josephus and Philo of Alexandria together for the first time, was edited by Dr. Louis H. Feldman, the Abraham Wouk Family Chair in Classics and Literature at YU; Dr. James L. Kugel, director of the Institute for the History of the Jewish Bible at Bar-Ilan University; and Dr. Lawrence H. Schiffman, vice provost for undergraduate education and professor of Judaic studies at YU.
In addition, more than 70 scholars contributed to the 3,000 page compilation, including several YU faculty members. Dr. Joseph Angel, assistant professor of Bible, was a contributor to the anthology. Dr. Yaakov Elman, Herbert S. and Naomi Denenberg Chair in Talmudic Studies and professor of Jewish history, and Dr. Richard Hidary, assistant professor of Jewish history, were editorial advisors.
President Richard M. Joel leads a candlelighting ceremony at the event to mark the seventh night of Hanukkah.
The evening featured a discussion between Schiffman and Dr. Alex P. Jassen, associate professor of Hebrew and Judaic studies at New York University and a contributor to the volumes, about the work鈥檚 main themes, including how the disparate texts included in the work impacted the people of their time as well as the Jewish and Christian traditions that came after them. 鈥淭his is a period during which massive changes are going on in the Jewish people and the Jewish community,鈥 said Schiffman. 鈥淭he most important thing about the Second Temple Period is that when you understand it, you understand much more about how the rabbinic tradition came into being after a very long process of debate, disagreement and all kinds of differing approaches鈥攁nd it enables us to better understand how Christianity developed as well.鈥
鈥淭his was an incredibly vibrant time of creativity when Jews were trying to make sense of their sacred scriptures and how to live their lives as Jews when they see themselves as heirs to the Israelite tradition,鈥 said Jassen. 鈥淎ll of the thought patterns and speculation and literary activity you find in these volumes are things that Jews were doing because their sacred scriptures had to be constantly reinterpreted鈥攖hey never stood as just literary artifacts鈥攁nd they provided a window into the same type of activity which would later go on in rabbinic Judaism and early Christianity.鈥
Schiffman and Jassen also spoke about the challenging decision-making process used by the editors to organize texts written by very different authors for very different purposes and audiences. 鈥淚 wanted us to be looking at what types of biblical interpretation and non-biblical texts were floating around in post-biblical Judaism, which requires that you get away from classifying the books by where they came from and instead classify them by what they say, because that鈥檚 how you can understand and bring to life the library of Second Temple Judaism,鈥 said Schiffman.
鈥淵ou have to remember that people were writing these texts with the intention that they would be scriptural, authoritative and sacred,鈥 added Jassen. 鈥淭hey meant for these books to be part of what we call the Bible, but for one reason or another, they didn鈥檛 make the cut.鈥
Harold Dershowitz of West Orange, NJ, felt Outside the Bible鈥slaunch dovetailed perfectly with the celebration of Hanukkah. 鈥淲e鈥檙e celebrating Hanukkah now and it鈥檚 necessary to understand this very significant period of Jewish history to expand our appreciation of both the holiday and the period,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e heard Dr. Feldman and Dr. Schiffman speak at our synagogue before鈥攖hey鈥檙e both incredible fonts of Jewish history.鈥
Dr. Louis Feldman
鈥淭his gives a lot of validity to the study of texts which weren鈥檛 deemed sacred but weren鈥檛 wholly secular either and were written largely by Jews,鈥 said Rachel Renz 鈥14S, a double-major in Judaic studies and English literature who took a graduate course titled 鈥淢accabean Revolt鈥 taught by Schiffman and is undertaking an independent study with him as well.
Feldman, who has taught at YU for more than 50 years, delivered the evening鈥檚 closing remarks. 鈥淲e are proud that we could produce a work that we hope will be available to a large audience,鈥 he said. 鈥淢any of the original topics have never been put together in print. Now they鈥檒l be in correlation with one another.鈥