If any of you readers have enjoyed through the years, as I have, the work of Rachel Elior, Daphan Arbel and Andrei Orlov have edited a Festschrift for her: With Letters of Light: Studies in the Dead Sea Scrolls, Early Jewish Apocalypticism, Magic, and Mysticism in Honor of Rachel Elior.
Professor Orlov was kind to forward the below information about the volume. You’ve just got to love a book that includes a chapter titled something like Jodi Magness’ “The Impurity of Oil and Spit among the Qumran Sectarians”! Rock it, sister! Ptui! Seriously, though, this collection promises to be a fascinating read. The names of several of the authors are already familiar to me and appreciated for their consistent skill and care in dealing with the materials. Those whom I don’t recognize (through the lack of breadth of my own reading, I’m sure), will I’m sure have interesting things to say, as well.
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This collection of essays is a tribute to Rachel Elior’s decades of teaching, scholarship and mentoring. If a Festschrift reflects the individuality of the honoree, then this volume offers insights into the scope of Rachel Elior’s interests and scholarly achievements in the study of the Dead Sea Scrolls, Jewish apocalypticism, magic, and mysticism from the Second Temple period to the later rabbinic and Hekhalot developments. The majority of articles included in the volume deal with Jewish and Christian apocalyptic and mystical texts constituting the core of experiential dimension of these religious traditions.
Contents of the volume:
Daphna Arbel and Andrei Orlov
Rachel Elior – An Appreciation from her Colleagues and Students – 1-5
Frances Flannery
The Consideration of Religious Experience in the Work of Rachel Elior – 6-10
I. Exegesis
Kelley Coblentz Bautch
Peter and the Patriarch: A Confluence of Traditions? – 13-27
Silviu N. Bunta
In Heaven or on Earth: A Misplaced Temple Question about Ezekiel’s Visions – 28-44
James R. Davila
Scriptural Exegesis in the Treatise of the Vessels, a Legendary Account of the Hiding of the Temple Treasures – 45-61
Dan Merkur
Cultivating Visions through Exegetical Meditations – 62-91
Sergey Minov
“Serpentine” Eve in Syriac Christian Literature of Late Antiquity – 92-114
Annette Yoshiko Reed
From “Pre-Emptive Exegesis” to “Pre-Emptive Speculation”? Ma‘aseh Bereshit in Genesis Rabbah and Pirqei deRabbi Eliezer – 115-132
Mark Verman
Earthly and Heavenly Jerusalem in Philo and Paul: A Tale of Two Cities – 133-156
II. Ritual
Crispin Fletcher-Louis
The Book of Watchers and the Cycle of New Year Festivals – 159-168
Yuval Harari
A Different Spirituality or ‘Other’ Agents?: On the Study of Magic in Rabbinic Literature – 169-195
Rebecca Lesses
“They Revealed Secrets to Their Wives”: The Transmission of Magical Knowledge in 1 Enoch – 196-222
Jodi Magness
The Impurity of Oil and Spit among the Qumran Sectarians 223-231
Andrei Orlov
“The Likeness of Heaven”: The Kavod of Azazel in the Apocalypse of Abraham – 232-253
Pieter W. van der Horst
Mystical Motifs in a Greek Synagogal Prayer? – 254-264
III. Transformation
Daphna Arbel
“A Chariot of Light Borne by Four Bright Eagles”: Eve’s Vision of the Chariot in the Greek Life of Adam and Eve – 267-284
Joseph Dan
“Messianic Movements in the Period of the Crusades” – 285-298
April D. DeConick
Jesus Revealed: The Dynamics of Early Christian Mysticism – 299-324
Celia Deutsch
Aseneth: Ascetical Practice, Vision, and Transformation – 325-348
Naomi Janowitz
“You Are Gods”: Multiple Divine Beings in Late Antique Jewish Theology – 349-364
Alan F. Segal
Transcribing Experience – 365-382
It looks spectacular, but a wee bit pricey.
It certainly would be interesting reading, especially in view of the “contrarian thesis” of Rachel Elior regarding the “Essenes”. It has a bearing on the “origins” of Christianity, the “breakaway Jewish sect” (one of the many “Judaisms”). No more Essenes, no more “Jewish sects”. Christianity sits firmly in the mainstream of the prophetic-priestly-biblical tradition.
I’m happy to hear about this new volume and will seek it out. I read Elior’s book “The Three Temples” when it first came out in English (2004) but got busy soon afterward and haven’t had a chance to follow up until now. Its implications for the origins of Christianity, the gospel writings, and various solar symbolisms that surround Jesus are striking, to say the least. Can anyone recommend subsequent work that Elior has done on this subject, or that others have done in response to Elior’s work?