The Culture of Apocalypticism: Is the Rabbinic Work Pesiqta Rabbati Intertextually Related to the New Testament Book The Revelation to John?

Full title
The Culture of Apocalypticism: Is the Rabbinic Work Pesiqta Rabbati Intertextually Related to the New Testament Book The Revelation to John?
Research notes

Reader Checked|25/06/2013 SE

Reference type
Author(s)
Ulmer, Rivka
Year
2011
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Review of Rabbinic Judaism
Volume
14
Number of volumes
0
Pages
37-70
Label
16/05/2011
Abstract

In its apocalyptic rhetoric of destruction and redemption, the rabbinic homiletic work Pesiqta Rabbati draws upon multiple textual sources to map a progressive apocalypse. Previous scholarship relating to the apocalypse in Pesiqta Rabbati focused mainly on the interrelationship with the apocalypses of 2 Bar. and 4 Ez.,1 while this article argues that Pesiqta Rabbati was not only in conversation with Jewish apocalyptic texts but also with Christian visions concerning the events transpiring at the End of Days. The contribution of Christian apocalyptic rhetoric in the New Testament book The Revelation to John (= Revelation) has previously been overlooked in the analysis of the apocalyptic passages in Pesiqta Rabbati, although there are numerous suggestive parallels to Revelation, such as characteristics of apocalyptic language, the progression of the apocalypse in thirds, an apocalyptic messiah, Gog and Magog, hurling satan into a pit or Gehinnom, the Pearly Gate at the End of Time, and the New Jerusalem.