Women in Israelite Religion: The State of Research Is All New Research
Abstract
:1. What Does Traditional Scholarship Look Like?
2. Now: What Does Contemporary Scholarship Look Like?
3. Women in Ancient Israelite Religion
4. Final Thoughts
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | For a discussion of the negative consequences of this approach, as found in European (primarily German) biblical scholarship, see Albertz (1994, pp. 1–17). |
2 | For the challenges faced when utilizing the Hebrew Bible to reconstruct the lives of Iron Age women, see Nakhai (2007, 2018a, pp. 195–99). |
3 | Ismar J. Peritz’s 1898 article, “Women in the Ancient Hebrew Cult,” is a rare exception. Peritz (1898) endeavored to identify every biblical reference to women’s religious activities. He considered women’s participation in religion to have been legitimate, and he criticized those scholars who dismissed women’s agency in cultic and ritual matters. |
4 | Two examples make the point. William F. Albright, the “father of biblical archaeology,” included nothing whatsoever about women’s religious practices or beliefs in his highly influential Archaeology and the Religion of Israel (Albright 1942). In his classic study, Ancient Israel: Its Life and Institutions, Roland de Vaux restricted his consideration of women to only a few biblically determined social categories: wife, divorcée, widow, and slave (de Vaux 1961). |
5 | At the same time, not all women study ancient women, nor should they be expected to. For the challenges faced by women working in Near Eastern archaeology, see Nakhai (2018a, pp. 291–95). |
6 | For a history of women engaged in biblical interpretation, see (Newsom 1992; Bellis 2000). |
7 | |
8 | Albertz notes that “… the personal piety of family members constituted a specific stratum of beliefs and ritual practices within the religion of ancient Israel and Judah,” prior to and during the Monarchy (Albertz 2010, p. 135; see also Albertz 1994). |
9 | |
10 | See Ackerman (1992, pp. 37–99) for a discussion of this passage, which concludes that some women worshipped the god Tammuz. Zevit, on the other hand, suggests that the reference is to a certain kind of ritual wailing rather than to the worship of a specific deity (2001, pp. 555–61). |
11 | The Jerusalem Temple was constructed by Solomon (mid-10th c. BCE; 1 Kgs 6:1–8:65) and destroyed by the Babylonians (587 BCE; 2 Kgs 25:8–9). For a recent discussion of “popular” and “official” religion, see Stavrakopoulou (2010). |
12 | This statue was sometimes described as a sacred pole, symbolic of the Tree of Life (Deut 16:21). |
13 | For the agricultural roots of Israel’s pilgrimage festivals, see Albertz (1994, pp. 82–91). |
14 | |
15 | The Hebrew root drš is typically used for prophetic inquiries. |
16 | For the work of diviners, soothsayers, magicians, and witches, who might heal by appealing to divinities other than Yahweh, see Gerstenberger (2014). |
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Nakhai, B.A. Women in Israelite Religion: The State of Research Is All New Research. Religions 2019, 10, 122. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10020122
Nakhai BA. Women in Israelite Religion: The State of Research Is All New Research. Religions. 2019; 10(2):122. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10020122
Chicago/Turabian StyleNakhai, Beth Alpert. 2019. "Women in Israelite Religion: The State of Research Is All New Research" Religions 10, no. 2: 122. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10020122