A collection of essays commemorating the career contributions of Peter W. Flint
An international group of scholars specializing in various disciplines of biblical studies, including the Dead Sea Scrolls, Septuagint, Hebrew Bible/Old Testament, Second Temple Judaism, and Christian Origins, present twenty-seven new contributions that commemorate the career of Peter W. Flint (1951-2016). Each essay interacts with and gives fresh insight into the fields shaped by Professor Flint's life work. Part one explore the interplay between text-critical methods, the growth and formation of the Hebrew Scriptures, and the making of modern critical editions. Part two maps some dynamics of scriptural interpretation and reception in ancient Jewish and Christian literatures of the Second Temple period.
Features
- Essays that assess the state of the field and reflect on the methods, aims, and best practices for text-criticism and the making of modern critical text editions
- Demonstrations of how the processes of scriptural composition, transmission, and reception converge and may be studied together for mutual benefit
- Clarification of the state/forms of scripture in antiquity and how scripture was extended, rewritten, and recontextualized by ancient Jewish and Christian scribes and communities