Abstract

Josephus's Interpretation of the BibleProfessor Louis Feldman, perhaps the world's foremost scholar of Flavius Josephus, here offers a major summary of his many years' study of the interpretive work of the first-century historian. Known best for the Jewish War, which treats the Jewish revolt against Rome (66-73 CE), Josephus also wrote a major account of the whole of Jewish history up to the eve of the revolt, The Antiquities of the Jews. The first half of this twenty-volume work paraphrases scripture, and Feldman's volume aims to illuminate the aims and procedures of that paraphrase.Feldman organizes his study into two sections. The first (pp. 1-220) offers a synthetic treatment of all the issues raised by Josephus's paraphrase. The second (pp. 221-669) provides a series of case studies of individual biblical Josephus's treatments of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Moses, Joshua, Samson, Samuel, Saul, David, Solomon, and Daniel. A comprehensive bibliography and detailed indices conclude the volume.The introductory chapters display the kind of erudition and attention to detail characteristic of all of Professor Feldman's work, and on each topic he engages in critical dialogue with the full range of contemporary Josephan scholarship. In Feldman's analysis Josephus emerges as a careful historian, aware of the traditions of Greek historiography, labeled by Feldman the Isocratean and Aristotelian. Although conscious of other attempts to paraphrase part or all of scripture, Josephus had no model for his whole enterprise, on which he exercised considerable originality. The biblical texts that he paraphrased probably included Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek versions. Whatever his texts, and precise identification is often difficult, Josephus felt free to modify them considerably, despite his promise not to do so (Ant. 1.5). Josephus also drew on extra-canonical books and early forms of rabbinic midrashic traditions. The intended audience of the Antiquities, explicitly addressed to Greeks and Romans, included Jews of the Diaspora as well.The biblical history that Josephus produced displayed his biases as a priest and prophet, but it served above all apologetic ends. Feldman (Chapter 3) suggests that Josephus's primary apologetic vehicle was his focus on the great men of Israelite history. The categories of Hellenistic encomia structure their portraits, and they appear to be endowed with both physical beauty and intellectual prowess, rendering them exemplary leaders. …

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