'The Gods of My Father Terah': Abraham the Iconoclast and the Polemics with the Divine Body Traditions in the Apocalypse of Abraham

Full title
'The Gods of My Father Terah': Abraham the Iconoclast and the Polemics with the Divine Body Traditions in the Apocalypse of Abraham
Research notes

13/12/2011|AS|Reader checked|26/12/2011 SE

Reference type
Author(s)
Orlov, Andrei A.
Year
2008
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Journal for the Study of the Pseudepigrapha
Volume
18
Number of volumes
0
Issue / Series Volume
1
Pages
33-53
Alternative title
JSP
Label
15/09/2008
Abstract

The first eight chapters of the Apocalypse of Abraham recount the early years of the young hero of the faith who is depicted as a fighter against the idolatrous practices of his father Terah. The conceptual developments found in this section of the work, especially in the depictions of the idolatrous statues, seem to play an important role in the work's overall retraction of the anthropomorphic understanding of the deity. In the depictions of the idol Bar-Eshath (`the Son of Fire') and some other human-like figures, whose features are vividly reminiscent of the familiar attributes of the anthropomorphic portrayals of the deity in Ezekiel and some other biblical and pseudepigraphical accounts, one can detect subtle polemics with the divine body traditions. This article investigates these conceptual developments in the Apocalypse of Abraham and seeks to understand their place in the larger anti-corporeal ideology of the Slavonic pseudepigraphon.

Primary Texts: Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha
Composition / Author
Passage
5