Although rabbinic compilations were composed hundreds
of years after the destruction of the Second Temple, and despite differences in
language, genre, and cultural setting, Dynamics of Midrashic Traditions seeks
to demonstrate that both corpora preserve a common heritage, albeit replete
with conflicting traditions and polemics. The integrative study carried out in
this book sheds light on both corpora, paying special attention to the dynamics
that shape and reshape the midrashic traditions throughout their transmission.
The book deals with exegetical aspects incorporated in textual variants of the Bible, in Second Temple Literature (especially the "rewritten Bible", Sirach, Book of Jubilees, the Dead Sea scrolls, Hellenistic Jewish works, Philo of Alexandria), as well as passages of Paul and early Christian writers, scrutinizing them in tandem with parallels from rabbinic literature, Targum and ancient piyyutim. Among the themes discussed are the following: the knowledge of good and evil given to Adam; Abraham the monotheist; Moses’s death; Pesher and allegoristic interpretation; and halakhic issues in rabbinic literature and the Dead Sea scrolls.