Beholders of Divine Secrets: Mysticism and Myth in the Hekhalot and Merkavah Literature (Book Review) Beholders of Divine Secrets: Mysticism and Myth in the Hekhalot and Merkavah Literature (Book Review)

Beholders of Divine Secrets: Mysticism and Myth in the Hekhalot and Merkavah Literature (Book Review‪)‬

The Journal of the American Oriental Society 2005, Jan-March, 125, 1

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Publisher Description

Beholders of Divine Secrets: Mysticism and Myth in the Hekhalot and Merkavah Literature. By VITA DAPHNA ARBEL. Albany: STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK PRESS, 2003. Pp. xii + 250. $71.50 (cloth); $23.95 (paper). Beholders of Divine Secrets is a brave and adventurous book. Most previous studies of Hekhalot literature have attempted to situate this enigmatic collection of Jewish liturgical, ritual, and ascent texts from Late Antiquity in its immediate historical, cultural, or literary contexts. The Hebrew Bible and New Testament; early Jewish and Christian apocalyptic works (both canonical and non-canonical); the vast corpus of rabbinic exegetical, legal, and narrative writings; early Christian and patristic sources (especially those materials classed as "Gnostic"); late antique Jewish and Christian liturgy; Neoplatonic theurgy and mysticism; Greco-Roman magical literatures and practices: all of these have served as comparative material for assessing the religious world-view of Hekhalot literature and the socio-cultural location of its authors. Vita Daphna Arbel has instead taken up the more uncertain course of locating in Hekhalot texts "mythological themes and patterns" from ancient Mesopotamia and analyzing how they have acquired "new mystical meanings" (pp. 56, 65, and passim) in their new literary and religious context. Beyond its potential contribution to our understanding of early Jewish mysticism as a discrete historical phenomenon, this study also holds out the alluring promise of tracing the enduring impact of ancient Near Eastern religion and literature on the formation of post-biblical Judaism--and with it the great religious traditions of the western world.

GENRE
Non-Fiction
RELEASED
2005
1 January
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
8
Pages
PUBLISHER
American Oriental Society
SIZE
198.5
KB

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