Donkeys In The Biblical World

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Donkeys in the Biblical World

Author : Kenneth C. Way
Publisher : Penn State Press
Page : 289 pages
File Size : 49,9 Mb
Release : 2011-06-23
Category : History
ISBN : 9781575066431

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Donkeys in the Biblical World by Kenneth C. Way Pdf

In this volume, Kenneth Way explores the role of donkeys in the symbolism and ceremonies of the biblical world. His study stands alone in providing a comprehensive examination of donkeys in ancient Near Eastern texts, the archaeological record, and the Hebrew Bible. Way demonstrates that donkeys held a distinct status in the beliefs and rituals of the ancient Near East and especially Canaan-Israel. The focus on ceremony and symbol encompasses social and religious thoughts and practices that are reflected in ancient texts and material culture relating to the donkey. Ceremonial considerations include matters of sacrifice, treaty ratification, consumption, death, burial, “scapegoat” rituals, and foundation deposits; symbolic considerations include matters of characterization, association, function, behavior, and iconographic depiction. However, the distinction between ceremony and symbol is not strict. In many cases, these two categories are symbiotic. The need for this study on donkeys is very apparent in the disciplines that study the biblical world. There is not a single monograph or article that treats this subject comprehensively. Philologists have discussed the meaning of the Amorite phrase “to kill a jackass,” and archaeologists have discussed the phenomenon of equid burials. But until now, neither philologists nor archaeologists have attempted to pull together all the ceremonial and symbolic data on donkeys from burials, ancient Near Eastern texts, and the Hebrew Bible. Way’s study fills this void.

Mouth of the Donkey

Author : Laura Duhan-Kaplan
Publisher : Wipf and Stock Publishers
Page : 79 pages
File Size : 40,5 Mb
Release : 2021-05-13
Category : Religion
ISBN : 9781725259072

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Mouth of the Donkey by Laura Duhan-Kaplan Pdf

The Hebrew Bible is filled with animals. Snakes and ravens share meals with people; donkeys and sheep work alongside us; eagles and lions inspire us; locusts warn us. How should we read their stories? What can they teach us about ecology, spirituality, and ethics? Author Laura Duhan-Kaplan explores these questions, weaving together biology, Kabbalah, rabbinic midrash, Indigenous wisdom, modern literary methods, and personal experiences. She re-imagines Jacob's sheep as family, Balaam's donkey as a spiritual director, Eve's snake as a misguided helper. Finally, Rabbi Laura invites metaphorical eagles, locusts, and mother bears to help us see anew, confront human violence, and raise children who live peacefully on the land.

Camels in the Biblical World

Author : Martin Heide,Joris Peters
Publisher : Penn State Press
Page : 433 pages
File Size : 40,6 Mb
Release : 2021-07-20
Category : History
ISBN : 9781646021703

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Camels in the Biblical World by Martin Heide,Joris Peters Pdf

Camels are first mentioned in the Bible as the movable property of Abraham. During the early monarchy, they feature prominently as long-distance mounts for the Queen of Sheba, and almost a millennium later, the Gospels tell us about the impossibility of a camel passing through a needle’s eye. Given the limited extrabiblical evidence for camels before circa 1000 BCE, a thorough investigation of the spatio-temporal history of the camel in the ancient Near and Middle East is necessary to understand their early appearance in the Hebrew Bible. Camels in the Biblical World is a two-part study that charts the cultural trajectories of two domestic species—the two-humped or Bactrian camel (Camelus bactrianus) and the one-humped or Arabian camel (Camelus dromedarius)—from the fourth through first millennium BCE and up to the first century CE. Drawing on archaeological camel remains, iconography, inscriptions, and other text sources, the first part reappraises the published data on the species’ domestication and early exploitation in their respective regions of origin. The second part takes a critical look at the various references to camels in the Hebrew Bible and the Gospels, providing a detailed philological analysis of each text and referring to archaeological data and zoological observations whenever appropriate. A state-of-the-art evaluation of the cultural history of the camel and its role in the biblical world, this volume brings the humanities into dialogue with the natural sciences. The novel insights here serve scholars in disciplines as diverse as biblical studies, (zoo)archaeology, history, and philology.

Talking Donkeys and Wheels of Fire

Author : J. Stephen Lang
Publisher : FaithWords
Page : 217 pages
File Size : 44,7 Mb
Release : 2009-10-31
Category : Religion
ISBN : 9780446567633

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Talking Donkeys and Wheels of Fire by J. Stephen Lang Pdf

Bible trivia expert J. Stephen Lang pulls together some wild and wacky biblical tales. Think the Bible is boring? Think again. These tales will both entertain and enlighten the reader, and engender a desire to read the Bible in search of more.

Reading the Hebrew Bible with Animal Studies

Author : Ken Stone
Publisher : Stanford University Press
Page : 292 pages
File Size : 41,5 Mb
Release : 2017-09-19
Category : Religion
ISBN : 9781503603769

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Reading the Hebrew Bible with Animal Studies by Ken Stone Pdf

“An excellent introduction to the field of animal studies . . . [the] applications of these ideas to biblical passages . . . illuminate the text in new ways." -- Brandon R. Grafius, Horizons in Biblical Theology Animal studies may be a recent academic development, but our fascination with animals is nothing new. Surviving cave paintings are of animal forms, and closer to us, as Ken Stone points out, animals populate biblical literature from beginning to end. This book explores the significance of animal studies for the interpretation of the Hebrew Bible. Combined with biblical scholarship, animal studies sheds useful light on animals, animal symbolism, and the relations among animals, humans, and God—not only for those who study biblical literature and its ancient context, but for contemporary readers concerned with environmental, social, and animal ethics. Without the presence of domesticated and wild animals, neither biblical traditions nor the religions that make use of the Bible would exist in their current forms. Although parts of the Bible draw a clear line between humans and animals, other passages complicate that line in multiple ways and challenge our assumptions about the roles animals play therein. Engaging influential thinkers, including Jacques Derrida, Donna Haraway, and other experts in animal and ecological studies, Reading the Hebrew Bible with Animal Studies shows how prehumanist texts reveal unexpectedly relevant dynamics and themes for our posthumanist age. “[Stone’s] ecological sensibilities, theoretical acumen, and incisive exegetical arguments open up fresh perspectives.” —Stephen D. Moore, The Theological School, Drew University “This monograph is poised to become a key work in the field.” —Anne Létourneau, Reading Religion “Groundbreaking.” —Carol J. Dempsey, OP, Horizons

The Donkey Who Carried a King

Author : R. C. Sproul
Publisher : Unknown
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 55,5 Mb
Release : 2012
Category : Juvenile Fiction
ISBN : 1567692699

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The Donkey Who Carried a King by R. C. Sproul Pdf

"Davey the donkey was never chosen to do anything, until the day he found himself carrying the King. After that, he felt proud of himself, until he saw what the King had to carry"--Page 4 of cover.

The Unchained Bible

Author : Hugh S. Pyper
Publisher : A&C Black
Page : 201 pages
File Size : 44,7 Mb
Release : 2012-12-06
Category : Religion
ISBN : 9780567187062

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The Unchained Bible by Hugh S. Pyper Pdf

This volume explores a number of instances of unexpected but influential readings of the Bible in popular culture, literature, film, music and politics. The argument in all of them is that the effects of the Bible continues to have an effect on contemporary culture in ways that may surprise and sometimes dismay both religious and secular groups. That the Bible was at one time chained in churches is true. The subversive misreading of this enchainment as a symbol of a book in captivity to the established church is hard to suppress, however. Yet, once released from these chains, the Bible proves to be a text that gets everywhere and which undergoes surprising and sometimes contradictory metamorphoses. The pious advocates of making the Bible accessible who sought to free it from the churches' chains are the very people who then decry some of the results when the Bible is free to roam.

The Horsemen of Israel

Author : Deborah O’Daniel Cantrell
Publisher : Penn State Press
Page : 163 pages
File Size : 46,8 Mb
Release : 2011-06-23
Category : History
ISBN : 9781575066479

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The Horsemen of Israel by Deborah O’Daniel Cantrell Pdf

Almost every book in the Hebrew Bible mentions horses and chariots in some manner, usually in a military context. However, the importance of horses, chariots, and equestrians in ancient Israel is typically mentioned only in passing, if at all, by historians, hippologists, and biblical scholars. When it is mentioned, the topic engenders a great deal of confusion. Notwithstanding the substantial textual and archaeological evidence of the horse’s historic presence, recent scholars seem to be led by a general belief that there were very few horses in Iron Age Israel and that Israel’s chariotry was insignificant. The reason for this current sentiment is tied primarily to the academic controversy of the past 50 years over whether the 17 tripartite-pillared buildings excavated at Megiddo in the early 20th century were, in fact, stables. Although the original excavators, archaeologists from the University of Chicago, designated these buildings as stables, a number of scholars (and a few archaeologists) later challenged this view and adopted alternative interpretations. After they “reassessed” the Megiddo stables as “storehouses,” “marketplaces,” or “barracks,” the idea developed that there was no place for the horses to be kept and, therefore, there must have been few horses in Israel. The lack of stables, when added to the suggestion that Iron Age Israel could not have afforded to buy expensive horses and maintain an even more expensive chariotry, led to a dearth of horses in ancient Israel; or so the logic goes that has permeated the literature. Cantrell’s book attempts to dispel this notion. Too often today, scholars ignore or diminish the role of the horse in battle. It is important to remember that ancient historians took for granted knowledge about horses that modern scholars have now forgotten or never knew. Cantrell’s involvement with horses as a rider, competitor, trainer, breeder, and importer includes equine experience ranging from competitive barrel-racing to jumping, and for the past 25 years, dressage. The Horsemen of Israel relies on the author’s knowledge of and experience with horses as well as her expertise in the field of ancient Near Eastern languages, literature, and archaeology.

The Donkey in Human History

Author : Peter Mitchell
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 337 pages
File Size : 55,9 Mb
Release : 2018
Category : Nature
ISBN : 9780198749233

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The Donkey in Human History by Peter Mitchell Pdf

Donkeys carried Christ into Jerusalem while in Greek myth they transported Hephaistos up to Mount Olympos and Dionysos into battle against the Giants. They were probably the first animals that people ever rode, as well as the first used on a large-scale as beasts of burden. Associated with kingship and the gods in the ancient Near East, they have been (and in many places still are) a core technology for moving people and goods over both short and long distances, as well as a supplier of muscle power for threshing and grinding grain, pressing olives, raising water, ploughing fields, and pulling carts, to name just a few of the uses to which they have been put. Yet despite this, they remain one of the least studied, and most widely ignored, of all domestic animals, consigned to the margins of history like so many of those who still depend upon them. Spanning the globe and extending from the donkey's initial domestication up to the present, this book seeks to remedy this situation by using archaeological evidence, in combination with insights from history and anthropology, to resituate the donkey (and its hybrid offspring such as the mule) in the unfolding of human history, looking not just at what donkeys and mules did, but also at how people have thought about and understood them. Intended in part for university researchers and students working in the broad fields of world history, archaeology, animal history, and anthropology, but it should also interest anyone keen to learn more about one of the most widespread and important of the animals that people have domesticated.

The Donkey King

Author : Emily Selove
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 145 pages
File Size : 43,7 Mb
Release : 2023-12-21
Category : Religion
ISBN : 9781009084437

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The Donkey King by Emily Selove Pdf

The 13th-century Arabic grimoire, al-Sakkākī's Kitāb al-Shāmil (Book of the Complete), provides numerous methods of contacting jinn. The first such jinn described, Abū Isrā'īl Būzayn ibn Sulaymān, arrives with a donkey. In the course of offering an explanation for his ritual, this Element reveals the double-sided nature of asinine symbology, and explains why this animal has served as the companion of both demons and prophets. Focusing on two nodes of donkey symbology—the phallus and the bray-it reveals a coincidentia oppositorum in a deceptively humble and comic animal form. Thus, the donkey, bearer of a demonic voice, and of a phallus symbolic of base materiality, also represents transcendence of the material and protection from the demonic. In addition to Arabic literature and occult rituals, the Element refers to evidence from the ancient Near East, Egypt, and Greece, as well as to medieval Jewish and Christian texts.

And God Said? Let There Be Donkeys!

Author : Jeannie Thompson
Publisher : Unknown
Page : 122 pages
File Size : 40,9 Mb
Release : 2015-03-13
Category : Electronic
ISBN : 1511584009

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And God Said? Let There Be Donkeys! by Jeannie Thompson Pdf

and God said... Let there be donkeys! Seven adventurous donkeys find themselves in true Bible events! Seymour and Shaula What was it like to be the very first don- key? Seymour, who was one of God's many wonderful creations, was soon joined by Shau- la. They lived in the beautiful Garden of Eden until one fateful day when the devil, disguised as a serpent, entered the Garden and intro- duced sin to God's once-perfect world. Manny and Dovey Noah's donkeys, Manny and Dovey, car- ried loads of supplies to help Noah build the ark according to God's instructions. Later, they became fellow passengers with the other animals God had sent to the ark to find refuge from the approaching flood. Jenny God used Jenny, Balaam's "talking" don- key, to assist the angel of the Lord in teaching Jenny's wicked master an important lesson about loving the one true God and doing His will. Did Balaam learn God's lesson? Read the story to find out. Gabe Gabe, whose name is short for "Gabriel", was used by God to transport Mary safely as she and Joseph traveled the hazardous journey from Nazareth to Bethlehem, where Mary gave birth to Jesus Christ, the Son of God. Moshey Moshey, whose name is a derivative of the name "Moses", was the donkey colt Jesus chose to ride for His triumphal entry into Jeru- salem. Just a few days later, Moshey witnessed our Savior's death, burial and resurrection.

Go and Find a Donkey

Author : Celesta Letchworth
Publisher : Fermata House
Page : 80 pages
File Size : 47,8 Mb
Release : 2019-03-31
Category : Electronic
ISBN : 1947566024

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Go and Find a Donkey by Celesta Letchworth Pdf

Go and Find a Donkey is the latest installment of the Choose This Day Multiple Choice Bible Studies series. Designed to be used during Holy Week, this nine-day Bible study takes you from Palm Sunday through Easter Monday. The entertaining multiple choice answers make this an excellent choice for family devotional time. Use this book personally during a coffee break or with the family in the car or at the breakfast table. They're short. They're fun. They're easy. Use them on the suggested dates, or skip around. Use your own Bible to read the Scripture passages or read them as they're printed in each chapter (from the World English Bible translation). The short meditative questions can serve as discussion starters at the dinner table. No need to feel intimidated if you're not familiar with some of these Scriptures - the answers to the multiple choice questions are in the back of the book. Those who have test-driven these Bible studies range from seminary graduates to those who are new to the faith. Yes, donkeys are stubborn. But it's only because they have a strong sense of self-preservation - turns out they're just being cautious. The Gospel writers never mention a stubborn donkey when describing Jesus' Triumphal Entry into Jerusalem. Evidently, the donkey trusted Jesus and felt safe wherever Jesus led it. Do I trust Jesus wherever he leads me? Is the fear of the future making me stubborn? Jesus fulfilled Zechariah's prophecy when he rode the donkey into Jerusalem. War-faring kings rode horses; peaceful kings rode donkeys. Donkeys represent humility and peace. Does my life represent humility and peace? The disciples found the donkey and her colt in the village, just as Jesus described. They were in the right place at the right time and were available to be used by our Lord. Am I willing and making myself available to be used by our Lord? But this book isn't all about donkeys. It's about the last week that Jesus spent on Earth as the Son of Man - the week that we call Holy Week. Starting on Palm Sunday and ending on Easter Monday, these nine multiple choice Bible studies will take you through these events, as recorded in the Gospel of Matthew.

Dictionary of Daily Life in Biblical & Post-Biblical Antiquity: Donkeys & Mules

Author : Edwin M. Yamauchi,Marvin R. Wilson
Publisher : Hendrickson Publishers
Page : 42 pages
File Size : 51,6 Mb
Release : 2022-05-17
Category : Religion
ISBN : 9781619707856

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Dictionary of Daily Life in Biblical & Post-Biblical Antiquity: Donkeys & Mules by Edwin M. Yamauchi,Marvin R. Wilson Pdf

This unique reference article, excerpted from the larger work (Dictionary of Daily Life in Biblical and Post-Biblical Antiquity), provides background cultural and technical information on the world of the Hebrew Bible and New Testament from 2000 BC to approximately AD 600. Written and edited by a world-class historian and a highly respected biblical scholar, each article addresses cultural, technical, and/or sociological issues of interest to the study of the Scriptures. Contains a high level of scholarship. Information and concepts are explained in detail and are accompanied by bibliographic material for further exploration. Useful for scholars, pastors, teachers, and students—for biblical study, exegesis, or sermon preparation. Possible areas covered include details of domestic life, technology, culture, laws, or religious practices. Each article ranges from 5 to 20 pages in length. For the complete contents of Dictionary of Daily Life in Biblical and Post-Biblical Antiquity, see ISBN 9781619708617 (4-volume set) or ISBN 9781619701458 (complete in one volume).

The Amorite Dynasty of Ugarit

Author : Mary E. Buck
Publisher : BRILL
Page : 390 pages
File Size : 48,9 Mb
Release : 2019-09-16
Category : History
ISBN : 9789004415119

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The Amorite Dynasty of Ugarit by Mary E. Buck Pdf

In The Amorite Dynasty of Ugarit Mary Buck pursues a nuanced view of populations in the Bronze Age Levant, with the objective of understanding the ancient polity of Ugarit as a kin-based culture that shares close ties with neighbouring Amorite populations.

Dictionary of Daily Life in Biblical & Post-biblical Antiquity

Author : Edwin M. Yamauchi,Marvin R. Wilson
Publisher : Hendrickson Publishers
Page : 1865 pages
File Size : 40,9 Mb
Release : 2017
Category : Religion
ISBN : 9781619701458

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Dictionary of Daily Life in Biblical & Post-biblical Antiquity by Edwin M. Yamauchi,Marvin R. Wilson Pdf

The Dictionary of Daily Life in Biblical & Post-Biblical Antiquity is a unique reference work that provides background cultural and technical information on the world of the Hebrew Bible and New Testament from 4000 BC to approximately AD 600. Also available as a 4-volume set (ISBN 9781619708617), this complete one-volume edition covers topics from A-Z. This dictionary casts light on the culture, technology, history, and politics of the periods of the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament. Written and edited by a world-class historian and a highly respected biblical scholar, with contributions by many others, this unique reference work explains details of domestic life, technology, culture, laws, and religious practices, with extensive bibliographic material for further exploration. There are 115 articles ranging from 5-20 pages long. Scholars, pastors, and students (and their teachers) will find this to be a useful resource for biblical study, exegesis, and sermon preparation. "This is not your standard Bible dictionary, but one that focuses on aspects of daily life in Bible times, addressing interesting and sometimes puzzling topics that are often overlooked in other encyclopedias. I highly recommend the Dictionary of Daily Life in Biblical and Post-Biblical Antiquity and will be giving it 'shout-outs' in my classes in the years to come." --James K. Hoffmeier, Professor of Old Testament and Near Eastern Archaeology, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School "This wonderful resource is much more than a dictionary. It is a compendium of substantive essays on numerous facets of daily life in the ancient world. I am frequently asked by pastors and students for recommendations on books that illuminate the manners, customs, and cultural practices of the biblical world. Now I have the ideal set of books to recommend." --Clinton E. Arnold, Dean and Professor of New Testament, Talbot School of Theology, Biola University