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Settling into Slovenia and IOTS Abstracts

Hotel LevWell after a delayed flight I arrived in the capital of Slovenia, safe and sound. The room is very nice at Hotel Lev and I am settling in to finish my paper (with my socks and “things” hanging to dry in the bathroom; they wanted €2,80 to wash a pair of socks!). I have been hunting on Google maps to see where our conference will be. Why the first listed hotel, the one I choose, assuming that like the SBL that would mean it is closest to the conference, is the farthest from the university is beyond me. So here is my Google Map with the Hotel Lev an the Law School located on it.

I just received the abstracts from Willem Smelik who will be our acting chair since Paul Flesher will be unable to attend. These are posted below, just follow the link. The schedule of the papers can be found here.
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Biblical Studies Carnival XIX: Is Up On Biblische Ausbildung

The very well done Biblical Studies Carnival XIX is now up!

Welcome, one and all, Step Right Up to Biblical Studies Blog Carnival 19. Thank you for the honor of hosting this month’s carnival here at Biblische Ausbildung. There are plenty of attractions here, so let’s hurry in…

Be sure to find it over at Stephen Cooks’ Biblische Ausbildung.

 

The Passing of a Great Scholar

This is truly sad news. Stephen Cook is reporting that Prof. Michael O’Connor, perhaps best known for co-authoring the magnificent work Introduction to Biblical Hebrew Syntax with Bruce Waltke, has died of cancer. He was a great scholar and will be sorely missed.

Let light perpetual shine upon him.

Biblische Ausbildung: Sad, Shocking News: Death of Dr. Michael Patrick O’Connor

Prof. Michael Patrick O’Connor, renown semitist and personal friend of mine, most recently of the Semitics Dept. of Catholic University, died of liver cancer this morning. This came as a huge shock. Apparently, this became known and serious in just a matter of weeks. Michael was always a great friend and supporter of folks and a model scholar for all of us. Also, please keep the Semitics Department students in your prayers, because it is such a small department and this is a huge personal loss

Please read this wonderful memoriam from Jim Esienbraun.

 

Vth Congress of the International Organization for Targumic Studies

The schedule for the Vth Congress of the International Organization for Targumic Studies (IOTS) is now available! The conference will be in Ljubljana, Slovenia on 12-13 July 2007. If you are in the area please stop by! :-) I will probably post the abstracts later, at least mine, so please feel free to offer feedback.

Thursday 12 July

8.45-13.00 Lecture Room
Welcome and Greetings
Keynote
9.00-10.30 Eveline van Staalduine-Sulman, Aramaic Branches Bursting into Leaves: Towards a Critical Edition of Targum Samuel
Chair: Paul V.M. Flesher

10.30 Refreshments

Targum Onqelos, Targum Jonathan, and Targum Presentation
Chair: David Shepherd
11.00 Willem Smelik, A New Edition of Targum Onqelos: The Task Ahead
11.30 Arie van der Kooij, Targum Onkelos and Jonathan and Josephus: A discussion of some parallels
12.00 David Kroeze, Exploring the Targum Manuscripts Database
12.30 Beate Ego, Presentation of the Project Dictionary of the History of the Bible

Studies in Targum Jonathan
14.30 Lecture Room
Chair: Christian Brady
14.30 Pere Casanellas, Some aspects of the ideology of Targum Zechariah
15.00 Alinda Damsma, The Language of the Tosefta-Targums to Ezekiel: JLA and/or LJLA?
15.30 Luis Díez Merino, The Sephardic Targum Tradition and the missing Tosefta in the Antwerpian Polyglot

16.00 Refreshments

Targums of the Writings
16.30 Lecture Room
Chair: Luis Díez Merino
16.30 Jan-Wim Wesselius, Targum Beginnings as Programmatic Introductions
17.00 Andrew Fincke, Targum Lamentations 1:1-4
17.30 Christian M.M. Brady, The Use of “Eschatological Lists” within the Targumim to the Megillot.

18.00 Break

18.10 Business Meeting

Friday 13 July

9.00-13.00 Lecture Room
Keynote
9.00-10.30 Douglas Gropp, The Aramaic of Targums Onkelos and Jonathan
Chair: Robert Hayward

10.30 Refreshments

Targum Pseudo-Jonathan and the Palestinian Targums
Chair: Willem Smelik
11.00 Robert Hayward, Targum Pseudo-Jonathan and the Chronology of the Giving of the Torah
11.30 Gudrun E. Lier, Targum Pseudo-Jonathan and the Rendition of Genesis 1:26-27
12.00 Yaacov Azuelos, Are Angels “Flesh and Blood”? A Study in the Pentateuchal Targums
12.30 Martin McNamara, Neofiti revisited: Father in heaven, Shekinah, Memra and Holy Spirit

What is a Targum?
14.30 Lecture Room
Chair: Eveline van Staalduine-Sulman
14.30 David Shepherd, What’s in a name? Targum and Taxonomy in the Caves of Qumran
15.00 Simon Adnams Lasair, Selective Appropriation: A Biblical Phenomenon According to Targumic Eyes
15.30 Paul V.M. Flesher, Defining “Targum”: How do we know one when we see one?

16.00 Refreshments

16.30 Business Meeting

 

New Review of “The Rabbinic Targum of Lamentations”

Dr. Bernard Grossfeld has recently written a fairly positive review of my book,
The Rabbinic Targum of Lamentations: Vindicating God, Studies in the Aramaic Interpretation of Scripture, vol. 3, (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 2003)
. It has been published in the Journal of the American Oriental Society 125.3 (2005). The last four years of volumes are not yet available on JSTOR so I cannot link to the review.

Grossfeld notes (as has one other reviewer) in his criticisms that the footnotes are not always coordinated with the pages on which the original citation occurs. This was a decision I made (since I produced the camera ready copy in Nisus Writer) because the other option was to have 2-3 sentences on a page with the rest of the page as footnotes. I accept the criticism and that others would format it differently. (I, for example, hate endnotes and think they are a plague to be isolated by the CDC and eradicated from all publications.) Grossfeld also noted some typos. Talk about embarrassing!

More substantially Grossfeld says

Yet, I find myself in disagreement with Brady on the general tone of his conlcusions. True, the Book of Lamentations confronts the horrors of war that have befallen Israel and Jerusalem. However, to claim that “God is named Israel’s enemy” (p. 134) is not in line with the general tone of the Biblical [sic] book, which acknowledges the sinful ways of Jerusalem and Israel in skillfully placed verses throughout the text.

I certainly agree with the last portion of his comment quoted above, but would quibble (as a quibble it is, I think) with his suggesting that my claim is not “in line with the general tone” of Lamentations. It is true, for example, that in Lam. 2.4 and 2.5 God is “like” an enemy ‏כאויב, as opposed to being “the enemy,” however my assertion is that the general tone of the biblical book of Lamentations, and what was (is?) so disturbing to the targumist, is that God is responsible for everything that has happened to Jerusalem and so he has become, ultimately, Israel’s enemy.

As I said, this is a quibble and Dr. Grossfeld has offered a very complimentary review for which I am grateful. Perhaps I should have been more precise in my language at that moment; after all, it is this sort of parsing that I do with the targumists and rabbis, so why not with my own work? I will let you all decide. The relevant paragraph is here:

The Book of Lamentations lays bare the poet’s soul and confronts the
horrors of war and the tragedy of struggling to survive. God is named as
Israel’s enemy and has completely ravaged Jerusalem. Mothers boil their
young in order to stave off starvation and the royalty cling to dung heaps.
The poets of Lamentations struggle to come to terms with their experiences.
At times they look forward, trying to perceive if they have a future, but for
the most part they speak of their pain and grief. Moments of confession
occur and are quickly overcome by the magnitude of the punishment that
was visited upon them by God. And it is God who has done this to Zion.
The poets do not waver in that belief. Quite the contrary, they vigorously
assert that it is the the LORD who has rejected, humiliated, and “destroyed
without mercy” (Lam. 2.2).

I also need to add that Grossfeld notes the forthcoming volume on TgLam in the Aramaic Bible series as being authored by me. At one point Philip Alexander and I were going to co-author this. It is now, however, being authored solely by Alexander.