Biblical Studies Carnival #220 (September 2024)

Well, it’s October 1st! We are rapidly approaching the best holiday of the year (Halloween) and for those of us with school-aged children we are well into another year of homework, extracurricular sports, stomach bugs, and more. Here in Louisiana, it’s hot. Too hot. I hate it. But what better way to beat the heat than to head down to the (Biblical Studies) Carnival?

As I did the last time I hosted, this Carnival is divided quite simply into two broad categories: Hebrew Bible & Related and New Testament & Related (heavy on New Testament). It’s a simple layout for a simple man (i.e., me). If you don’t like this format or you think I missed some important stuff (which I surely did), then you should contact Phil Long, the Keeper of the Carnivals, and host a carnival yourself! You can email him (plong42@gmail.com) or message him on Twitter (https://x.com/Plong42).

Enjoy!

Hebrew Bible & Related

New Testament & Related

6 thoughts on “Biblical Studies Carnival #220 (September 2024)

  1. Unknown's avatar

    Great job, and thanks for the plug.

    Like

  2. SocraticGadfly's avatar

    Re Judas, since Paul doesn’t even mention him, he may well not be historical.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. SocraticGadfly's avatar

      Also on Judas, if one takes παραδίδωμι as middle instead of passive, Paul doesn’t talk about a “betrayal.” https://wordsofsocraticgadfly.blogspot.com/2009/04/paul-passover-jesus-gnosticism.html

      Liked by 1 person

      1. SocraticGadfly's avatar

        Oh, I got here via Paul’s “Is That in the Bible?” If you need or want material for another one of these roundups? I’ve riffed on a piece by him, combined with grokking Idan Dershowitz’s work on Moses Wilhelm Shapira’s apparent proto-Deuteronomy, to properly title that: https://wordsofsocraticgadfly.blogspot.com/2023/11/standing-josiah-and-deuteronomy-on.html

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  3. Unknown's avatar

    Yep, listened to the discussion between Bowen, Davis, and Leuchter during bouts of housework. Interesting stuff. And there should be more along these lines to come. My recollection is that Kipp and Josh are hoping to produce a series of deep dive interviews with additional scholars about the biblical Conquest narrative’s alignments and misalignments with the archaeological and anthropological evidence.

    Coincidentally (?), Seth Sanders just published a thought-provoking post about the function the Conquest story and rhetoric of חרם might have served in the development of Israelite/Judahite national identify. Very much read-worthy: https://sethlsanders.wordpress.com/2024/09/30/religious-mass-murder-of-canaanites-in-iron-age-israel-did-it-really-happen-and-where-did-the-idea-come-from/

    –Lex Lata

    Liked by 1 person

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