Constructing Justice: The Selective Use of Scripture in Formulating Early Jewish Accounts of the Courts

Updated by: 
Shiran Shevah
Research notes: 
SHS/not checked/21/12/2018
Reference type: 
Journal Article
Author(s): 
Flatto, David C.
year: 
2018
Full title: 

Constructing Justice: The Selective Use of Scripture in Formulating Early Jewish Accounts of the Courts

Journal / Book Title || Series Title: 
Harvard Theological Review
Volume: 
111
Issue / Series Volume: 
4
Abbreviated Series Name: 
HTR
Pages: 
488-515
Work type: 
Essay/Monograph
Abstract: 

Elaborate depictions of the court system in Second Temple and rabbinic literature signify its centrality for the Jewish legal tradition. Rather than offering positivistic descriptions, these representations are better thought of as templates of how to organize justice. While historically less informative, they are vivid expressions of the early Jewish legal imagination and its fascinating fixation on the architecture of justice.

A measure of the ahistoric quality of early accounts of judicial administration is their considerable exegetical strata. This article surveys how four seminal Second Temple and rabbinic works constructed accounts of the judiciary on the foundation of Scripture. The variances among them unfold from decisive hermeneutical choices, beginning with the threshold question of which among several, internally inconsistent, biblical sources to select as a base text. What animates these various choices, in turn, are competing conceptions of the origin and nature of legal authority within a religious tradition that enshrines the role of law.

URL: 
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/harvard-theological-review/article/constructing-justice-the-selective-use-of-scripture-in-formulating-early-jewish-accounts-of-the-courts/356B3C2304F2B4B1EBEC83359BDEC43D
Label: 
07/01/2019
Record number: 
104 176