Judaism's Story of Creation: Scripture, Halakhah, Aggadah

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BRILL, 6 sept 2021
During the formative age of Judaism, the first seven centuries CE, the great rabbis thought deeply about beginnings in light of endings. They imposed upon their sequential reading of each passage the accumulated results of their reflection about all passages. Thus, they encompassed Scripture, so as to describe the world as God had intended it to be.
This act of intellect resulted in two distinct, ahistorical media of thought and expression, the Halakhah, law, and Aggadah, lore.
The author provides three systematic accounts of the Halakhic reading, and two Aggadic accounts. The Halakhic accounts cover [1] Work and Rest, [2] Ownership and Possession, Eden and the Land, and [3] Ownership and Possession in the Household. The Aggadic accounts pertain to [1] the Six Days of Creation, and [2] Adam and Eve.

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Introduction
1
In the Beginning
21
1 Work and Rest
49
2 Ownership and Possession Eden and the Land
81
3 Ownership and Possession in the Household
121
1 The Six Days of Creation
163
2 Adam and Eve
219
The Halakhic and the Aggadic Reconfiguration of Scripture
265
General Index
285
Scripture Index
289
THE BRILL REFERENCE LIBRARY OF ANCIENT JUDAISM
297
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Sobre el autor (2021)

Jacob Neusner is Research Professor of Religion and Theology at Bard College. Member of the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton NJ, and Life Member of Clare Hall, Cambridge University, in England.

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