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| | Literature - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Popular belief commonly holds that the literature of a nation, for example, comprises the collection of texts which make it a whole nation. |  | | The Hebrew Bible, Persian Shahnama, Thirukural, Beowulf, the Iliad and the Odyssey and the Constitution of the United States, all fall within this definition of a kind of literature. |  | | The term has generally come to identify a collection of texts. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literature
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| | MyJewishLearning.com - Ideas & Belief: Women in Rabbinic Literature |
 | | Women do utter words of wisdom in rabbinic stories, but generally such stories either confirm a rabbinic belief about women's character, such as women's higher degree of compassion for others (BT Avodah Zarah 18a; BT Ketubot 104a), or deliver a rebuke to a man in need of chastisement (BT Eruvin 53b; BT Sanhedrin 39a). |  | | Extrapolating from hearing to seeing, rabbinic prohibitions on male/female contact in worship eventually led to a physical barrier (mehitzah) between men and women in the synagogue, to preserve men from sexual distraction during prayer. |  | | Rachel Adler suggests that Beruriah's story expresses rabbinic ambivalence about the possible place of a woman in their wholly male scholarly world, in which her sexuality was bound to be a source of havoc. |
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http://www.myjewishlearning.com/ideas_belief/genderfeminism/Fem_Traditional_TO/Fem_InRabbinic.htm
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| | 4. Rabbinic Literature |
 | | This storehouse of literature from the variety of communities which together constituted Judaism, including the Pharisees, Essenes, and Christians, reveal to us the vitality and longevity of the Hebrew Bible. |  | | One valuable source of insight into the nature of Rabbinic Judaism is its translations of the Bible. |  | | This discussion provides an example of the Rabbinic Jewish practice of "making a hedge around Torah." That is to say, laws were often applied more strictly than was dictated by the original statement of the law in the Hebrew Bible. |
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http://www.hope.edu/academic/religion/bandstra/RTOT/AHB/AHB_4.HTM
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| | Tales of the Neighborhood: CHAPTER ONE |
 | | Of course, it is possible to suggest as a scholastic justification that in the Rabbinic world of ideas the seeming disproportion, if not injustice, meted out to the poor woman's ill-fated sons (who absolutely had not sinned) will be compensated in the world to come. |  | | The Sermon on the Mount is a text that includes a number of intertextual references to the Hebrew Bible as well as to Rabbinic literature. |  | | Another Rabbinic text illuminating the narrative is the Halakha in the Mishnah Pesahim 3.4: |
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http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/9804/9804.ch01.html
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| | Reed, "Apocrypha, 'Outside Books,' and Pseudepigrapha," PSCO 2002 |
 | | Of course, anyone familiar with the Rabbinic literature will know that, if there was any threat to the Bible's exclusive claim to divine revelation and authority within the Rabbinic movement, it lay not in these "outside books" but rather in the teachings of the Rabbis themselves. |  | | In earlier literature, the unique status of these texts is described primarily in halachic terms, as books which "defile the hands" due to their special holiness (e.g., m. |  | | The exclusivity of the Rabbinic category of "Holy Scripture" is even more clear from the famous list of those Jews who "have no place in the World to Come" in Mishnah Sanhedrin 10.1. |
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http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/psco/year40/areed1.html
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| | References to Jesus in Early Rabbinic Literature |
 | | Rabbinic texts dealing with other figures (e.g., ben ["son of"] Stada, Peloni ["a certain person"], [ben] Netzer) became subsequently misapplied to Jesus. |  | | They were responding to the Gospel polemic by showing that fairness was always the Rabbinic practice, even in the case of Jesus. |  | | In terms of the rabbis' cumulative understanding of Jesus, some had come to think that Jesus, while in Egypt [the newborn Jesus is depicted in Egypt in Matthew 2:13-23], had become schooled in the art of sorcery along with the charms and formulae needed to perform feats of magic. |
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http://www.bc.edu/research/cjl/meta-elements/texts/cjrelations/resources/articles/cook_rabbis_and_Jesus.htm
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| | Traditions of the Rabbis from the Era of the New Testament (T-R-E-N-T) by David Instone-Brewer |
 | | Primary texts originating before the destruction of the Temple in 70 ce, which are preserved in rabbinic literature. |  | | TRENT follows the traditional order of subject divisions, which dates back to the first century or soon after, so that these texts are seen in a context which was determined by their first editors. |  | | For the first time, scholars will have ready access to rabbinic traditions which are shown to parallel the New Testament era. |
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http://www.tyndale.cam.ac.uk/Brewer/PPages/TRENT
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| | Introduction to Rabbinic Literature by Jacob Neusner @ CenturyOne Bookstore |
 | | In short, this book explores the formative age of rabbinic literature, and tells in a simple, straightforward way what these documents are, where to find them, how to read them, and why their contents matter - and it does this all within the confines of one volume. |  | | With the publication of this volume, the Anchor Bible Reference Library achieves a landmark in the history of rabbinic literature and religion. |  | | VII The Talmud of the Land of Israel |
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http://www.centuryone.com/9751-2.html
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| | Courses |
 | | Introduction to the literature of the Classical Rabbinic or Talmudic period of Judaism (2nd to 7th centuries CE). |  | | Readings in Hebrew literature, class conducted in Hebrew. |  | | Acquisition of language skills to read Hebrew texts of this period, including Mishna, Tosephta, and Midrash. |
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http://www.wisc.edu/grad/catalog/letsci/jewishC.html
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| | FFF Jesus: Rabbinic Sources |
 | | In the end, one must admit that the yield from these rabbinic passages about the Pharisees in debate with the Sadducees is meager. |  | | To be sure, various legal decisions and sayings in the Mishna are attributed to sages who lived before or roughly around the time of Jesus (e.g., Hillel and Shammai). |  | | Hence one cannot always be sure that the opposition between perusin and sadduqin is original in the passage; without that opposition, perusin might simply mean "religious deviant." |
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http://www.faithfutures.org/JDB/rabbinic.html
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| | Bregman: Pseudepigraphy in Rabbinic Literature |
 | | The notion that all specific rabbinic teachings derive from a collective tradition should, of course, be compared with the traditional view that all "torah" (written and oral) derives from the divine revelation given to Moses on Sinai and transmitted to subsequent generations, including the rabbinic sages, see m. |  | | The preservation of the names of individual masters gives rabbinic Judaism its traditional character, that is to say, it provides a tangible connective between the present and the past. |  | | At the Orion Symposium it was suggested that this phenomenon might be termed "pseudo-God" (M. Bernstein, "The Degrees and Functions of Pseudepigraphy at Qumran") or "divine pseudepigraphy" (L. Schiffman, "The Temple Scroll and the Halakhic Pseudepigrapha of the Second Temple Period"). |
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http://orion.huji.ac.il/symposiums/2nd/papers/Bregman97.html
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| | DIVINE RETRIBUTION IN RABBINIC LITERATURE by Solomon Schechter |
 | | DIVINE RETRIBUTION IN RABBINIC LITERATURE by Solomon Schechter |  | | But we may indicate our doubt about one doctrine by putting another by its side, which we may not affirm to be more absolutely true, but more probable. |  | | The question, then, how to reconcile hard reality with the justice of God, remained as difficult as ever. |
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http://www.adath-shalom.ca/div_retr.htm
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| | Midrash Bibliography, General Studies |
 | | "Rabbinic Interpretation of Scripture." In Hellenism in Jewish Palestine, 47-67. |  | | "Romancing the Tome: Rabbinic Hermeneutics and the Theory of Literature." Semeia (1987): 147-68. |  | | "'Who's Kidding Whom?: A Serious Reading of Rabbinic Word Plays." Journal of the American Academy of Religion 55 (1988): 756-88. |
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http://www.huc.edu/midrash/genstud.html
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| | Yeshiva - Courses |
 | | Attention will be paid to the structure of Biblical poetry, linguistic aspects of Psalms, theological and spiritual messages of the Psalms, the relationship between the Psalms studied and other passages of Biblical narrative and poetry. |  | | Oral teachings (torot), especially as they originated in the first three generations of tzadikim, the disciples of R. Yisrael Ba'al Shem Tov and their disciples who recorded and edited these texts, created the sacred literature (kitvei hakodesh) of Hasidism. |  | | We will begin with an introductory unit examining the rabbinic exegetical enterprise as they themselves understood it - especially as questions of exegesis relate to authority, tradition, and continuity. |
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http://www.uscj.org/israelcenter/yeshiva/educational_program/courses.shtml
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| | Judaism: Insiders or outsiders: women and rabbinic literature |
 | | I then wish to address the way rabbinic texts portray women and the ways in which women perceive they are regarded by such texts. |  | | That I was an oddity was driven home to me when a cousin wanted to use me to demonstrate to a friend that there actually were women who could read the Talmud! |  | | What I propose to do in this essay is to unpack both the question and my own responses to it. |
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http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0411/is_3-4_52/ai_n6126884
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| | Gender Studies and Rabbinic and Mishnaic Judaism |
 | | _____, "Rabbinic Interpretation of Scripture," FCRB (1997), 472-486. |  | | Goldfeld, A., "Women as Sources of Torah in the Rabbinic Tradition," Judaism 24 (1975), 245-56. |  | | Geller, M.J., "New Sources for the Origins of the Rabbinic Ketubah," HUCA 49 (1978), 227-45. |
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http://www.arts.ualberta.ca/JHS/biblio/jhs-rabbin.html
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| | The Use of Electricity on Shabbat / Rabbi Michael Broyde & Rabbi Howard Jachter and Yom Tov |
 | | The Chazon Ish, however, asserts that it is merely a rabbinic prohibition of extracting fire from wood and stones. |  | | Since there are those who permit the lighting of electric lights on Yom Tov, one should not strongly rebuke people who turn on lights on Yom Tov - specifically since many congregations in the Diaspora have this tradition with the approbation of their rabbis. |  | | According to those authorities who locate the prohibition in turning on a light in burning, as most do, every increase in intensity would logically seem to be an additional violation. |
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http://www.daat.ac.il/daat/english/journal/broyde_1.htm
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| | Instructor Class Description |
 | | This course is taught in translation and thus presupposes no prior knowledge of rabbinic Hebrew. |  | | Students taking HEBR 490 should present their own translation of a rabbinic text to be selected in consultation with me. |  | | Suggested Prior Experience: One or more courses dealing with ancient Judaism or some aspect of oral tradition in a folkloristic or comparative literature perspective. |
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http://www.washington.edu/students/icd/S/intljewish/490jaffee.html
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| | Search Results for rabbinic - Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | In rabbinic thinking the establishment of God's kingdom was tied to the Messiah, who was to be a descendant of King David, wise, just, a great scholar, a moral leader, and courageous king. |  | | Collection of articles concerning scriptural and rabbinic verification of Jewish beliefs and practices. |  | | (Palestinian Judaism): Solomon Schechter, Aspects of Rabbinic Theology (1961), a concise, authoritative, and engaging treatment of classical (i.e., rabbinic) Judaism. |
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http://www.britannica.com/search?query=rabbinic&submit=Find&source=MWTEXT
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| | Jacob Neusner, Rabbinic Literature and the New Testament |
 | | But when we see the point in each case we realize that knowledge kept alive in some form both in the Gospel and in rabbinical passages makes it easier to understand what Jesus or his ventriloquists are talking about. |  | | And is the disclosure of parallels between, say, Gospel parables and rabbinical parables simply pointless, as Neusner hints a propos of poor Brad Young (Jesus and His Jewish Parables. |  | | He does not suggest that Jesus relied on a tradition which is reflected in those passages. |
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http://www.depts.drew.edu/jhc/dmdneus.html
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| | Messianic Jewish Theological Institute |
 | | As students understand rabbinic texts on their own terms, they can legitimately and deeply reflect on their relationship with Scripture and Messianic tradition. |  | | Schiffman, L. From Text to Traditon: A History of Second Temple and Rabbinic Judaism. |  | | An introduction to the Mishnah, Tosefta, and the early Midrash collections - the basic texts of early, formative period of Rabbinic Judaism. |
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http://www.mjti.org/mjti/r401.htm
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| | Untitled Document |
 | | Jacob Neusner, "The Babylonian Talmud as a Document of Religion and Literature," pp. |  | | Are there competing Rabbinic attitudes and visions in regards to many of these aspects of religion, culture, and society? |  | | Most important, what do the Rabbis reveal about their view of humanity, God, and the ways of the world through their reformulations of biblical texts? |
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http://www.amherst.edu/~religion/Syllabi/Religion41.html
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| | Catholic Biblical Quarterly, The: Stranger within Your Gates: Converts and Conversion Rabbinic Literature, The |
 | | The beneficial consequence of this strategy is that the author has been able to survey a huge number of texts within a reasonable compass; the negative consequence is that the reader is never given the original texts, or the original contexts of the texts. |  | | 1 Porton deals with the usual introductory questions; he identifies the tension between Judaism as ethnicity (or descent group) and Judaism as religion as the core problem addressed by many of the rabbinic texts. |  | | 2 through 6 P gives a document-by-document survey of the major texts of rabbinic Judaism (Mishnah, Tosefta, tannaitic midrashim, Yerushalmi, Bavli). |
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http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3679/is_199704/ai_n8765958
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| | Rabbinic literature - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Meforshim is a Hebrew word meaning "(classical rabbinical) commentators" (or roughly meaning "exegetes"), and is used as a substitute for the correct word perushim which means "commentaries". |  | | Introduction to Rabbinic Literature Jacob Neusner, (Anchor Bible Reference Library/Doubleday) |  | | Rabbinic literature, in the broadest sense, can mean the entire spectrum of Judaism's rabbinic writing/s throughout history. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rabbinic_literature
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| | TALMUD & RABBINIC LITERATURE |
 | | Extensive attention is paid to the geo-cultural aspect and its influence on eating practices and rabbinical halakhic rulings among the communities of Ashkenaz and Provence and among the eastern communities (particularly Yemen and North Africa). |  | | Israel Najara, who lived in the 16th century in Safed, Damascus and Gaza, is known not only as a poet, but also as a preacher and scholar. |  | | This book deals with rabbinic enactments and prohibitions from the |
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http://www.biu.ac.il/Press/talmud.htm
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| | About Rabbinic Literature/Talmud |
 | | Regardless of the time of its genesis, the Oral Torah was the Sages' method of making the Written Torah meaningful to the people of their day. |  | | Maqom: A Place for the Spiritually Searching admits students of any race, color and national or ethnic origin. |  | | Source Date Finished Place Finished Abbreviation Mishnah 200 C.E. The Land of Israel M.+tractate name Tosefta 220-230 C.E. The Land of Israel T.+tractate name Yerushalmi 400 C.E. The Land of Israel Y.+tractate name Midrash 400-500 C.E. The Land of Israel full name used Bavli 427-560 C.E. Babylonia B.+tractate name |
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http://www.maqom.com/backg.html
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| | Religious Studies at the University of Virginia |
 | | he cultural history of Buddhism in Tibet, Nepal, and India; the history of the arts and sciences in Tibet; Buddhist canonical literature in Tibet; Tibetan biography, autobiography, and historiography; Tibetan poetry. |  | | ebrew Bible/Old Testament; biblical Hebrew; history and religion of Ancient Israel; wisdom literature; biblical interpretation in the Second Temple period; canonical process; history of biblical scholarship; literary approaches to the Hebrew Bible. |  | | nthropology of Judaism, women in Judaism, material culture and the study of religions, new ritual, healing in Jewish tradition, literature of spiritual journeys |
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http://www.virginia.edu/religiousstudies/admin/faculty.html
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| | Midrashic Women: Formations of the Feminine in Rabbinic Literature |
 | | Recent feminist scholarship has illuminated many aspects of the significance of gender in biblical and halakhic texts, but there has been little previous study of how aggadic literature portrays females and the feminine. |  | | Distinguishing Differences: The Otherness of Women in Rabbinic Judaism |  | | "A Separate People": Rabbinic Delineations of the Worlds of Women |
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http://www.zooscape.com/cgi-bin/maitred/WhitePulp/isbn1584651784
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| | Review of Rabbinic Judaism, 7 Volume 7 (2004) |
 | | Rabbinic Texts in the Exegesis of the New Testament |  | | No other annual in "Jewish studies" focuses upon the study of religion, let alone upon the single most important Judaism of all time. |  | | Scholarship presently obscures the fundamental unity and continuity of Rabbinic Judaism from beginning to the present. |
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http://www.brill.nl/product_id22639.htm
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| | Prof. Schofer's CV |
 | | In Seeking Selves in Ancient Religion, edited by D. Brakke, M. Satlow, and S. Weitzman. |  | | 1998, "Divine Justice and Human Spiritual Exercises in Rabbinic Judaism." Institute for |  | | 2003, "Spiritual Exercises in Rabbinic Culture." Association for |
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http://polyglot.lss.wisc.edu/hebrew/SchoferCVoct04.html
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| | UC E-News |
 | | Baskin’s lecture will be based on Rabbinic literature created by rabbis, Jewish religious leaders and teachers during the late period of antiquity, between the first century and the sixth century. |  | | “I will also discuss the consequences for women and men, and for Judaism, of the tension many rabbinic sages apparently felt between the benefits of marriage and the desire to devote themselves completely to God and divine study.” |  | | As well as author, she acted as the editor of Jewish Women in Historical Perspective in 1991 and 1998, and Women of the Word: Jewish Women and Jewish Writing in 1994. |
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http://www.uc.edu/news/public_PrintableRelease.asp?information=1247
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| | Rabbinic Literature, Introduction To - 12390 |
 | | The rabbis are as important today as they were two thousand years ago, at the dawn of the literature that came to be named after them. |  | | What began as the rabbis' comments and decisions on practical matters were eventually written down and preserved. |  | | It explores the formative age and the forces that gave rise to rabbinic literature, and tells in a simple, straightforward way what these documents are, where to find them, how to read them, and why their content matters. |
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http://www.catholicstore.com/index.asp?PageAction=VIEWPROD&ProdID=10514
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| | Amazon.com: Books: Introduction to Rabbinic Literature |
 | | This is less relevant perhaps to Rabbinical Literature where transmission is part of the tradition, but that doesn't change the fact that, as with any ancient, or even medieval, text there are still variant text sources for many of the documents described and an estimate of place and time of composition and transmission is useful. |  | | SIPs: line with this verse, base verse, afterward one blesses, fixed associative logic, requirement that the writ (more) |  | | The achievement of a lifetime from one of today's most eminent Judaic scholars--a landmark commentary on the history of rabbinical teachings in the Christian era: the Mishnah, the Tosefta, the Talmuds, and more. |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0385497512?v=glance
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| | UMass Amherst : In the Loop : Weekly Bulletin : Scholar to discuss women and rabbinic literature |
 | | Baskin's research specialties include the study of women in rabbinic literature and Jewish women in the Middle Ages. |  | | She is the editor of Cambridge Dictionary of Jewish History, Religion, and Culture (forthcoming), and author of “Midrashic Women: Formations of the Feminine in Rabbinic Literature.” |  | | Baskin is director of the Harold Schnitzer Family Program in Judaic Studies at the University of Oregon, and currently president of the Association for Jewish Studies. |
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http://www.umass.edu/loop/weeklybulletin/articles/12874.php
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| | The Seder In Rabbinic Literature By Noah Gradofsky |
 | | The Seder In Rabbinic Literature By Noah Gradofsky |  | | This is a compilation of selections from rabbinic literature relating to the seder, combined with my own comments and thoughts, as well as the comments and thoughts of some of my teachers. |  | | The selections follow the order of our Haggadah, and not necessarily the order in which these texts appear. |
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http://www.dovberger.com/noah/seder.html
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| | History and Literature of Rabbinic Judaism - A. Y. Reed, McMaster University 2003/2004 |
 | | Persona in Rabbinic Tradition - Introductory material by Mahlon Smith; see also his page on Rabbinic Texts and Traditions |  | | Jewish Language Resource Site - Summaries and bibliographies; see esp. sections on Hebrew and Aramaic. |  | | History and Literature of Rabbinic Judaism - A. Reed, McMaster University 2003/2004 |
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http://www.aarweb.org/syllabus/syllabi/r/reed/20050210D/resources.html
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| | MyJewishLearning.com - Ideas & Belief: Biblical and Rabbinic Ideas |
 | | Neither the Bible nor rabbinic literature are explicitly philosophical, but they nonetheless contain precedents invoked by later Jewish thinkers. |  | | Both the Bible and rabbinic literature contain explicit views about God, man, and the world. |  | | In rabbinic literature, the term epicurean (apikoros) is used, but it usually refers to a heretic rather than to someone who embraces Epicurus' doctrines. |
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http://www.myjewishlearning.com/ideas_belief/About_Jewish_Thought/About_Ideas_TO/AboutIB_BibRab.htm
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| | [No title] |
 | | Front Cover: "The first complete modern guide to the great books of the Jewish Tradition: What they are and how to read them - written by today's leading scholars. |  | | Chapters Include: 1) Bible, 2) Talmud, 3) Midrash, 4) Medieval Bible Commentaries, 5) Medieval Jewish Philosophy, 6) Kabbalistics Texts, 7) Teachings of the Hasidic Masters, 8) Prayer and the Prayer Book Online Ordering available in association with AMAZON.COM at the following address: http://www.amerisoftinc.com/bookset.htm (click on "Rabbinic Literature"). |  | | is English speaking readers with an interest in rabbinic Juadism who wish to know the character of each of the Judaism's normative and canonical writings, beyond the Hebrew Scriptures. |
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http://www.hebroots.org/hebrootsarchive/9712/971203_j.html
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| | Karaite Judaism and Historical Understanding |
 | | He contrasts early Karaite scripturalism with the literature of rabbinic Judaism, which, embodying historical views that carry a moralistic burden, draws upon the chain of tradition to suppose a generation-to-generation transmission of divine knowledge and authority. |  | | Examines the changing relationship of this Jewish sect to rabbinic Judaism and the influence of Muslim and Christian environments |  | | Notions of history and the past contained in literature of the Karaite Jewish sect offer insight into the relationship of Karaism to mainstream rabbinic Judaism and to Islam and Christianity. |
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http://www.sc.edu/uscpress/2003/3518.html
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| | Paulist Press -- Stories from the main works of classical rabbinic literature, which were produced by Jewish sages in ... |
 | | The book treats the rabbinic stories not as accurate history, but as didactic fictions that model character, teach virtue and provide lessons.There is no standard corpus of rabbinic stories available, says Rubenstein, and therefore this volume is a unique resource for courses on Judaism and rabbinic culture, comparative religions and religious narrative. |  | | Paulist Press -- Stories from the main works of classical rabbinic literature, which were produced by Jewish sages in either Hebrew or Aramaic, between 200 and 600 C.E. Advanced |  | | Stories from the main works of classical rabbinic literature, which were produced by Jewish sages in either Hebrew or Aramaic, between 200 and 600 C.E. Illustrator: |
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http://www.paulistpress.com/4024-1.html
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| | CR: JS/0041 (sec 1) Introduction to Rabbinic Literature |
 | | Because the texts are in translation, they are accessible to everyone, though some knowledge of Judaism or Hebrew can be helpful at times. |  | | "Introduction to Rabbinic Literature" introduces students to the Mishnah and the Talmud through intensive study of selected chapters and application to theoretical situations. |  | | View JS/0041 in the Brown Online Course Announcement. |
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http://www.brown.edu/Students/Critical_Review/2000.2001.1/JS0041_1COH.html
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| | Introduction: A Messianic Jewish Reading of Rabbinic Literature |
 | | The course will show how an authentically Jewish Messianic theology can intelligently reinterpret the tradition in light of Yeshua and the New Covenant Scripture without sitting in judgment of tradition. |  | | Anyone who is in dialogue with the Jewish world must be able to understand what rabbinic Judaism is saying and where it is coming from when it expresses itself in praxis, theology, and apologetics. |  | | The course will familiarize the student with the types of literature that are foundational to Jewish beliefs, values, and religious thought, and will establish the importance for Messianic Jewish leaders of interacting with the millennia-old discussion of how to apply the Torah to daily life. |
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http://www.fuller.edu/swm/ecds/013/MJ510_Schiffman.html
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| | Review of Biblical Literature |
 | | Subjects: Bible, New Testament, Mishnah, Talmudic and Rabbinic Literature, Mishnah and Talmud, Other Rabbinic Works, Literature, Methods, Historical Approaches, History, History of Judaism, Greco-Roman Period, Early Church Origins |  | | Rabbinic Literature and the New Testament: What We Cannot Show, We Do Not Know |  | | Citation: Charlotte Fonrobert, review of Jacob Neusner, Rabbinic Literature and the New Testament: What We Cannot Show, We Do Not Know, Review of Biblical Literature [http://www.bookreviews.org] (2000). |
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http://www.bookreviews.org/bookdetail.asp?TitleId=2348
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| | CLASSICAL RABBINIC LITERATURE IN TRANSLATION |
 | | Green, "Palestinian Holy Men: Charismatic Leadership and Rabbinic Tradition," |  | | This course offers a general introduction to the literature of the Classical Rabbinic or Talmudic period of Judaism. |  | | oni the Circle Drawer, and Rabbinic Holy Men (March 27, 29, April 3, 5) |
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http://polyglot.lss.wisc.edu/hebrew/328syS2001.html
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| | The Institute of Jewish Studies - General |
 | | Ta-Shma, I. Rabbi Zerachya Ha-Levi of Lunel and His Colleagues - Rabbinic Literature in 12th Century Provence. |  | | Ta-Shma, I. (1994) The chain of tradition: South Italian rabbinic literature in the 12th and 13th centuries. |  | | Midrash and Talmudic literature; early Christianity in relation to Judaism. |
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http://www.hum.huji.ac.il/jewish/talmud/staff.htm
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| | Harvard University Press/Parables in Midrash/Reviews |
 | | Stern's comparative discussions of parables ascribed to Jesus and the use of the mashal in later Hebrew literature make this book of great interest to students of New Testament, rabbinics, and literary theory. |  | | Stern argues persuasively that...the mashal's narrative becomes in itself a distinctly rabbinic form of scriptural exegesis. |  | | Parables in Midrash is one of the most sophisticated and mature works on rabbinic literature in this century. |
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http://www.hup.harvard.edu/reviews/STEPAR_R.html
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| | Introduction to Rabbinic Literature - By: Jacob Neusner - Christianbook.com |
 | | Jewish Literature Between the Bible and the Mishnah, |  | | Discover what they are, how to read them, why they matter, and how they pertain to the Old Testament and Christianity. |  | | Motivated by his sheer love of the writings, this noted scholar weaves together the rich tapestry of documents that make up the literature of the rabbis---the Mishnah, Tosefta, Talmuds, Midrash compilations, and more. |
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http://www.christianbook.com/Christian/Books/product?item_no=97512
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 | | Rabbi Aaron Panken, Ph.D., has taught Rabbinic and Second Temple Literature at Hebrew Union College - Jewish Institute of Religion in New York since 1995, and has served as Dean since 1998. |  | | Aaron Panken to speak at "September 11: Religious Perspectives on the Causes And Consequences" (2002) |  | | He currently serves on faculty for the Wexner Foundation, as a member of the Birthright Israel Education Committee, the International Council of the New Israel Fund, the Rabbinical Placement Commission, the CCAR Ethics Committee and in a variety of other leadership roles within the Reform movement and greater Jewish community. |
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http://www.huc.edu/faculty/faculty/panken.shtml
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