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On the Boundaries of Talmudic Prayer

(Autor)

Buch | Hardcover
377 Seiten
2015
Mohr Siebeck (Verlag)
978-3-16-153421-8 (ISBN)

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On the Boundaries of Talmudic Prayer - Yehuda Septimus
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Yehuda Septimus untersucht in dieser Arbeit ein Grenzphänomen im talmudischen Gebet: rituelle Sprache mit einem anderen Adressaten als Gott. Er bietet einen neuen Blickwinkel auf das mögliche Leistungsspektrum talmudischer Gebetsriten und setzt es in den historischen Kontext der raschen Entstehung des Gebets als Kernstück des jüdischen Gottesdienstes in der ersten Hälfte des ersten Jahrtausends nach Christus.
In this work, Yehuda Septimus investigates a boundary phenomenon of talmudic prayer: ritual speech with addressees other than God. These addressees included socially conventional addressees, like judges or celebrants at a religious rite as well as unconventional addressees, like angels and dead people. But whether the addressees were the types one might expect an individual to address in a non-ritual context, they were definitely not the types we would expect a rabbinic Jew to address in a prayer context. And yet talmudic passages treated ritual speech addressed to beings other than God as they treated other forms of conventional prayer. Such treatment forces us to question the way prayer was conceived by the rabbis. Septimus argues that the rabbis conceived and practiced something similar to but broader than what is conventionally called prayer. He accomplishes this through close analyses of a number of specific ritual recitations with these atypical addressees as they appear embedded in talmudic literature. The English term "prayer" is usually understood as communication with God or the gods. Scholars of Jewish ritual until now have accepted this characterization and applied it to Jewish tefillah. But does rabbinic prayer indeed necessarily entail second-person address to God, as many scholars of rabbinic prayer to this point have presumed? Often God is the target of communication, even when ritual speech does not address God in the second person. But what if that speech is specifically addressed to beings other than God? What does this phenomenon teach us about the beliefs, ritual tendencies, and prayer culture of the formulators of such ritual speech? Septimus' book qualifies the assumption that rabbinic ritual communication is directed to God alone. The liturgical relationship between ritual prayer and other ritual recitations is complex; the historical relationship between classical Jewish prayer and a broader range of ritual addresses even more complex. Septimus offers a fresh look at the possible range of performances undertaken by talmudic ritual prayer. Moreover, he places that range of performances into the historical context of the rapid emergence of prayer as the centerpiece of Jewish worship in the first half of the first millennium CE.

Born 1977; 2008 PhD in religious studies from Yale; 2008-09 Gruss Scholar in Residence at New York University's School of Law; 2009-10 Postdoctoral Fellowship at Columbia University; he has taught at universities including Yale, Columbia, and Brooklyn College.

Erscheint lt. Verlag 28.5.2015
Reihe/Serie Texts and Studies in Ancient Judaism
Verlagsort Tübingen
Sprache englisch
Maße 164 x 239 mm
Gewicht 700 g
Themenwelt Religion / Theologie Christentum Bibelausgaben / Bibelkommentare
Geisteswissenschaften Religion / Theologie Judentum
Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Literaturwissenschaft
Schlagworte Angels • Gebet (Judentum) • Jewish • Liturgy • Magic • rabbinic • Ritual • Talmud
ISBN-10 3-16-153421-2 / 3161534212
ISBN-13 978-3-16-153421-8 / 9783161534218
Zustand Neuware
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