![[The Bible As It Was, by James Kugel]](images/title.gif)
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Was the snake in the Garden of Eden the devil, or the Garden itself "paradise"? Did Abraham discover monotheism, and was his son Isaac a willing martyr? Not until the ancient interpreters set to work. Poring over every little detail in the Bible's stories, prophecies, and laws, they let their own theological and imaginative inclinations radically transform the Bible's very nature. Their sometimes surprising interpretations soon became the generally accepted meaning. These interpretations, and not the mere words of the text, became the Bible in the time of Jesus and Paul or the rabbis of the Talmud. Drawing on such sources as the Dead Sea Scrolls, ancient Jewish apocrypha, Hellenistic writings, long-lost retellings of Bible stories, and prayers and sermons of the early church and synagogue, Kugel reconstructs the theory and methods of interpretation at the time when the Bible was becoming the bedrock of Judaism and Christianity. Here, for the first time, we can witness all the major transformations of the text and recreate the development of the Bible "As It Was" at the start of the Common era--the Bible as we know it.
For more information on The Bible As It Was: Sample Chapter: 10. Lot and Lot's Wife Some Questions the Ancient Interpreters Sought to Answer
James Kugel is Starr Professor of Hebrew Literature at Harvard University and Professor of Bible at Bar Ilan University in Israel. His books include The Idea of Biblical Poetry, Early Biblical Interpretation, and In Potiphar's House: The Interpretive Life of Biblical Texts (Harvard).
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