Time and Tradition: Temporal Thinking in Ecclesiastes in the Context of Emerging Apocalypticism and the History of Ideas in the Hellenistic Period

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Research notes

AC/26/01/2026/not checked

Reference type
Author(s)
Adam, Moritz F.
Year
2025
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Forschungen zum Alten Testament
Volume
191
Abbreviated Series Name
FAT
Publisher
Mohr Siebeck
Place of Publication
Tübingen
Work type
Language
Orion Center Library has physical copy
Hebrew bible
Book
Qoheleth / Ecclesiastes
Abstract

Moritz F. Adam explores conceptions of time in the book of Ecclesiastes and its place in the history of thought in Hellenistic Judaism. He situates Ecclesiastes before a wider panorama of emerging apocalyptic thought and investigates how the text reflects, resists, and reworks prevailing ideas about time, history, knowledge, and meaning. Adam shows how Ecclesiastes stands at an important moment of conceptual transformation to the manner in which time was thought about in ancient Judaism, and how the book reflects new, broader, totalising, and abstract concerns in conversation with contemporary interlocutors. Through textual studies, comparative discussions and theoretical engagements with the fields of Classics and Literature, Adam challenges scholarly boundaries between wisdom, apocalypticism, and other genres, and highlights Ecclesiastes' pluralistic, open-ended discourse as a vital part of ancient Jewish thought.