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Biblical Interpretation in Ancient Israel

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TLDR
The role of scribes in the transmission of biblical literature lexical and explicative comments was discussed in this paper, where the scope and content of biblical law as a factor in the emergence of exegesis was discussed.
Abstract
Part 1 Scribal comments and corrections: the role of scribes in the transmission of biblical literature lexical and explicative comments pious revisions and theological addenda. Part 2 Legal exegesis: the scope and content of biblical law as a factor in the emergence of exegesis legal exegesis with verbatim, paraphrastic, or pseudo-citations in historical sources legal exegesis with covert citations in historical sources legal exegesis and explication in the Pentateuchal legal corpora. Part 3 Aggadic exegesis: preliminary considerations aggadic exegesis of legal traditions in the prophetic literature aggadic transformations of non-legal Pentateuchal traditions aggadic exegesis in historiographical literature. Part 4 Mantological exegesis: the shape and nature of mantological material as factors for exegesis the mantological exegesis of dreams, visions, and omens the mantological exegesis of oracles generic transformations. Epilogue.

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Dissertation

Sanctifying a Darke Conceit: Seeing the Bible in the Faerie Queene

Luke Wayland
TL;DR: Bible, Edmund Spenser, Faerie Queene, Old Testament, Hebrew Bible, Canonical Criticism, Biblical Poetics, Reception history as discussed by the authors, Reception History

One Becomes Two: The Gender Anthropology of the Eden Narrative and Its Reception Journey

TL;DR: In this paper, a literary study of the female-male pair in the non-P creation narrative (Gen 2:4a-3:24) is presented, which develops the notion that the human partnership of the Eden narrative foreshadows the cooperative work of diverse humanity in the task of serving and keeping the earth.

Rewriting Eden With the Book of Mormon: Joseph Smith and the Reception of Genesis 1-6 in Early America

TL;DR: In this article, the authors rewrote Eden with the Book of Mormon: Joseph Smith and the Reception of Genesis 1−6 in Early America, focusing on the early American pioneers.