Are there different interpretations of the bible or is it just one?
| vigorous underhanded pervert state | 08/13/17 | | obsidian dashing electric furnace | 08/13/17 | | Alcoholic fortuitous meteor stage | 08/13/17 | | plum pocket flask | 08/13/17 | | Violet center laser beams | 08/13/17 | | Overrated purple idea he suggested depressive | 08/13/17 | | emerald razzle trailer park trust fund | 08/13/17 | | emerald razzle trailer park trust fund | 08/13/17 |
Poast new message in this thread
|
Date: August 13th, 2017 7:20 PM Author: emerald razzle trailer park trust fund
The rabbinic Midrash is the most far-flung of all of them, from a textual perspective.
For example in last week's Torah reading, Rashi quotes a Midrash that invents a narrative of the Israelites facing battle with the Canaanites and retreating from it, all to explain a textual difficulty (of the reversal of itinerary details of the travels in the desert vis a vis the itinerary elsewhere recorded in the Torah).
When Ahron the Priest died the Clouds of Glory disappeared from above the Israelites, so it would make sense that the Israelites had no confidence to wage war. It also is connected by the text (moses recounting of the Tablets shattering) to their loss of confidence in God when Moses delayed in arriving down from the Mt Sinai, but still it's without real textual basis.
Just one example for you.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3700038&forum_id=2#33980889)
|
Date: August 13th, 2017 7:20 PM Author: emerald razzle trailer park trust fund
The rabbinic Midrash is the most far-flung of all of them, from a textual perspective.
For example in last week's Torah reading, Rashi quotes a Midrash that invents a narrative of the Israelites facing battle with the Canaanites and retreating from it, all to explain a textual difficulty (of the reversal of itinerary details of the travels in the desert vis a vis the itinerary elsewhere recorded in the Torah).
When Ahron the Priest died the Clouds of Glory disappeared from above the Israelites, so it would make sense that the Israelites had no confidence to wage war. It also is connected by the text (moses recounting of the Tablets shattering) to their loss of confidence in God when Moses delayed in arriving down from the Mt Sinai, but still it's without real textual basis.
Just one example for you.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3700038&forum_id=2#33980886) |
|
|