Visions and Violence in the Pseudepigrapha

Full title
Visions and Violence in the Pseudepigrapha
Updated By
Research notes

SB/not checked/28/06/2023

Reference type
Author(s)
Evans, Craig A.
LePort, Brian
Sloan, Paul T.
Year
2022
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Jewish and Christian Texts in Contexts and Related Studies
Volume
34
Publisher
Bloomsbury
Place of Publication
New York
Work type
Label
10/07/2023
Abstract

The nine essays that make up this volume provide cutting-edge studies of how sacred tradition is given new expression through vision and interpretation. The first four essays focus on the expansion of the sacred tradition primarily through vision. The evolution of the Solomon legacy, from wise king to healer and exorcist, is explored, as well as its contribution to the demonology of the desert fathers, especially as it concerns eroticism and sexual temptation. The varied receptions of the Revelation of the Magi and Shepherd of Hermas are also considered.
|The remaining five essays address important questions relating to polemic and violence in the Pseudepigrapha. How does the author of the Liber Antiquitatum Biblicarum justify God's alternating judgment and favor? How does Enoch's Animal Apocalypse make use of the Exodus tradition in its expression of deliverance? On what basis can the author of Qumran's War Scroll confidently predict Israel's vindication? And finally, what accounts for the appearance of the tradition of Gehenna, in which the wicked will meet their fiery end?